Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Jumpin' January

January 2024 in review!

Total mileage for the month: 327.8
  • Jan. 1-7: 72.9
  • Jan. 8-14: 76.3
  • Jan. 15-21: 70.2
  • Jan. 22-28: 72.5
  • Jan. 29-Feb. 4: 78.6
#jumpingjanuary, snow edition
Races:
  • Jan. 1: Chilly 5k in 19:20 for first overall female and the perfect way to start 2024.
  • Jan. 6: Frostbite Series 20k(ish) in 1:25:32 for a fast long run while I was in St Louis. 
  • I haven't run two races 5 days apart for quite some time, but it went mostly well!
Feels like -19* run before sunrise
Workouts:
  • Jan. 3: Hill workout of 2 x 2:00, 2 x 1:30, 2 x 1:00, 2 x 0:30, which felt really hard but I suppose went well because I got faster each rep - but we ran on two different hills and no one had Strava premium for grade-adjusted pacing so who really knows. 
  • Jan. 9: Hill workout of 10 x 1:00 hills in the middle of a 12 mile run. I ran pretty even across reps and felt better than I have on any of these hill rep workouts so far. Again no one with Strava premium was on this run so we can't say grade-adjusted pace but I'll just call it a win.
  • Jan. 12: 3 mile net uphill threshold with paces (GAPs) of 7:14 (6:25), 6:25 (6:30), 6:37 (6:15). This was the fastest I've run this course with 340 ft gain in 3 miles and I felt very strong. It continues to be quite interesting to me how amazing I feel on this workout and how very hard short faster hills are for me.
  • Jan. 18: Hill workout of 6 x 2:00 + 4 x 0:45, where I had 1093 ft of elevation gain during my 12 mile run. The GAP paces for my 2:00s were 6:00-6:11 and for my 0:45s were 5:14-5:34, which seems about right. It was a hard workout for me, as always on hill reps!
  • Jan. 21: Split tempo during a long run that went like: 4.2 easy, 3 mile net uphill tempo that was also against the wind, 6.5 easy, 1 mile rolling tempo, 1.5 easy. Paces (GAPs) were 7:21 (6:32), 6:40 (6:45), 6:58 (6:36) | 6:26 (no GAP available due to no premium Strava users running at this point, but I'd say it was probably a wash). For the 3 mile uphill tempo we ran the usual route, and I was not as quick as I was on Jan. 12, but for running against the wind in -4* wind chill I was happy with it! And it felt good to finish with the 6:26 mile with having 14 miles already on my legs.
  • Jan. 24: Wild Card Workout, which was: 4 warm up, 2 x 400 m at 5k w/ 200 m jog, 2 x 800 m at 10k w/ 200 m jog, 1 x 500 m at 5k w/ 300 m jog, 3 x 300 m at whatever w/ 100 m jog, 2 x 0.5 at 5k/make the second faster w/ 1:30 jog, cool down to 12. My splits were: 1:32, 1:32, 3:08, 3:05, 1:50, 1:04, 1:06, 1:04, 2:58, 2:54. The WCW concept was inspired by coaches who give their athletes some workouts one portion at a time. It's a mental challenge not knowing what you're doing until immediately before you're doing it, and it is good practice at just running the rep you're in. Each person who comes to the workout is supposed to come with a pre-decided set in their mind, with a maximum of 1 mile in distance. The location where we are running these at has a flat half mile road loop, a track, and a hill nearby. You could choose 1 mile threshold, 2 x 800 m at 5k pace, 4 x 200 m at hard, 5 x 1:00 on/1:00 off, 4 x 1:00 hills, etc. The possibilities are endless! Then in random order we run everyone's portion, which is announced just before starting it. For this workout we had Casey, Karen, Lisa, Sally, and me, in that order (alphabetical order by first name).
  • Jan. 28: 6 miles at 20k pace during a 15 mile run on our local 20k course in 7:05, 6:33, 6:39, 6:34, 6:39, 6:47. I averaged exactly the same pace I ran for a 20k on Jan. 6 (6:43), but I felt terrible for this whole tempo and fell off the group by about 10 seconds during the final mile. I could not have run another 6.4 miles at that pace on this day, that is for sure! 
  • Jan 31: Wild Card Workout, which was 4 x 200 m at mile-ish pace w/ 200 m jog, jog to road, 1 mile threshold with an Indian Run (continuously repeating the back person surging to the front), jog to track, 800 m at MP, 400 m at HMP, 200 m at 5k w/ 200 m jog, jog to road, 0.75 at threshold straight into 0.25 uphill hard, jog down hill, 0.25 uphill threshold. This was the same procedure as Jan. 24 and our order was Lisa, Casey, Karen, me (youngest to oldest, oof). Splits were: 0:43, 0:44, 0:43, 0:43, 6:33, 3:27, 1:32, 0:44 6:15 pace, 6:24 pace, 6:28 pace. This was fun!
  • Favorite workout: It's hard to choose because I loved several of them, but I'll go with Jan. 12 because I love the workout and PRed the course.
Hills for breakfast Jan. 3

Hills for breakfast Jan. 9
Hills for breakfast Jan. 18

WILD Jan. 24
Long Runs:
  • Jan. 6: 15.5 miles, including 12.7 at 6:43 pace.
  • Jan. 13: 14.2 miles (7:53) in feels like -1*. This week was abnormal because I ran 12 miles on Jan. 9, 13 miles on Jan. 11, and 12.2 miles on Jan. 12 because I kept thinking it was going to get too bad to run due to winter weather, so I'd better get at least a short long run in early. Instead I ended up with 4 short long runs for the week.
  • Jan. 21: 16.2 miles (7:48) in feels like -4*, that included some work as described above. We had a tough weather stretch but I am proud to say I didn't miss any runs!
  • Jan. 28: 15.2 miles (7:41), with a tempo workout described above. I didn't feel so hot on this workout or the cool down; I was going to do 16 but when Sally finished at 15 I decided I was also very done. We moved this run from the day before due to feels like 27* and rain on Jan. 27 (which I still ran 10 miles easy in, which I feel like is a major accomplishment).
  • Favorite long run: Jan. 6 because it was by far the best weather and I felt great!
Jumping January post-long run
#jacketjanuary in feels like 27* rain
Running Highlights:
  • A new PR for the coldest wind chill I've ever run in, -22 degrees F on Jan. 14. I credit this mostly to cold weather running gear being exponentially better now than it was 10 years ago! So, I have already set a PR this year. ;-) I had my second coldest run ever on Jan. 16, at -19 degrees wind chill. Before this year my best was -18 degrees. I do not mind if I don't surpass this PR, but if Missouri weather makes me I probably will.
-22 does not stop us

There was breakfast after this very cold run so that helped

Too cold to jump or pose
Life Highlights:
  • OMRR annual banquet, a work after-Christmas party, and lots of reading!
Books:
Bold = 5 stars, but this month I read several page-turners that I gave 4 stars (I'm stingy with my 5 stars!), and since they made me want to read them constantly I gave them an asterisk
  • Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand
  • *Everyone Here is Lying by Shari Lapina
  • Remember Us by Jacqueline Woodson
  • *The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
  • Fast Girl: A Life Spent Running from Madness by Suzy Favor Hamilton
  • The Elephant's Girl by Celesta Rimington
  • Catching the Sky by Colten Moore
  • Running on Veggie: Plant-Powered Recipes for Fueling and Feeling Your Best by Lottie Bildirici
  • Today We Die A Little: The Inimitable Emil Zatopek, the Greatest Olympic Runner of All Time by Richard Askwith
  • *The Housemaid by Freida McFadden
  • The Book Club Hotel by Sarah Morgan
  • The Women Could Fly by Meg Giddings
  • *The Quiet Tenant by Clemence Michallon
  • *The Six: The Untold Story of America's First Women Astronauts by Loren Grush
Theme for the month:
  • Technically jumping January, but Hills for Breakfast photos come out a lot better than jumping photos do before sunrise.
#justusjanuary

Jan. 31!


Sunday, January 7, 2024

St. Louis Frostbite Series 20k

The short:

My husband needed to go to St. Louis this week, and I told him that if there was a race there on Saturday I'd go with him. I found the St. Louis Track Club Frostbite Series 20k and registered for $20 the day before. The race was a lot bigger than I expected (over 900 runners between the 20k and 5k!) and a little longer than I expected, but I also felt better than I expected to! There was snow on the ground in Forest Park, helping the race live up to its name, but it was really nice out for the morning of January 6 in Missouri, at 33* with virtually no wind.

I ended up running 1:25:32, which was 6:43 pace for 12.73 miles per my Garmin (Strava said my 20k was 1:23:36). I ran the first half of the race at 6:46 pace and the second half at 6:40 pace, finishing with 6:37, 6:31, 6:30 so I think I got about all I could have out of myself on the day. I ended up placing 4th overall female, after running in 3rd for about half the race and getting passed with less than a half mile to go, so that left a bit of a bad taste in my mouth - but I was still mostly pleased because I gauged my effort well and ran way under 7:00 pace, plus Premium Strava said to subtract 4-5 seconds for grade-adjusted pace!).

Results are here, my details here.

My activity on Strava is here.

The long:

I wasn't sure how I'd feel for the race having raced the Chilly 5k five days prior, not adjusting my training to account for racing since it wasn't pre-planned, and doing no training focused on long-race prep since October (although you could possibly count the Jack is Back 30k as one). I'd debated on whether to run my hill workout on Wednesday or Thursday that week, and ended up doing it Wednesday so I was glad for that at least! I looked up results of the races in the series that had already taken place when I registered, and from those I figured it was doubtful I could win overall female, which made it easier to not care if I didn't feel good and needed to make it into a moderate long run.

We left our house at 4:15 a.m. on race morning. I brought breakfast and planned to eat around 5:00, but ended up falling asleep until 7:20, which is quite late for me! The race started at 8:20, so being only 30 minutes out from my warm up I didn't want to eat anything. I had a couple of gels so figured I'd use one during my warm up and one during the race.

Jon dropped me off at the race and I picked up my number, used the bathroom, and started my warm up. The Frostbite series is a 5-race series, with a short and long race each time. I found the 5k start on my warm up but had to ask a few people where the 20k started. I found it with about 10 minutes to spare, so continued my warm up jog, took a gel, and stashed my throw away shirt (which I got back after the race, so wasn't throw away this time). I only had time for 1.6 miles of jogging and 2 strides, but I figured I'd just ease into the race and be fine. During my warm up I saw many, many fast-looking women and it seemed like a larger percentage of people were warming up than usual, which made me feel like the race was going to be competitive.

The grassy areas of the park were snow-covered, but the roads were just wet. The temps had been warm enough that the snow didn't last on the roads, but they were a little sloppy and the bridges were slick the first time we crossed them (they seemed to melt after that, I imagine from cars and runners going over them). The temperature was 33* and I ran in a my uniform very thin long sleeve shorts, shorts, and gloves. I ended up being both cold and hot during the race, and wished I'd worn a tank top and capris instead - though if I'd worn that I might have wished I'd worn long sleeves and shorts!

The race consisted of two laps of the course, with each lap including two out-and-backs. The first out was only about a mile, then we went around a round about. It was easy to see what place I was in, which was 4th female. There were also what seemed like 50 women right behind me. The second out and back was longer and much hillier, and had a hair-pin turn. Again, I was in 4th female with what seemed like 50 women close behind. At that point I was going back and forth between "I'm going to catch the two in front of me" [it seemed #1 was a lost cause because she was so far out, which made sense once I realized who she was] and "50 women are going to pass me!". But I was also focusing on and reeling in men one by one.

I was gaining on woman 3, so that kept me going from about miles 4-6. I passed her a little before halfway, and got excited that I was in 3rd! The course was a bit of a cluster from about 5-8, because we were running through slower 5k runners, the faster 5k runners were leaving the parking lot right off the course (the roads weren't closed to traffic), volunteers were waving 5kers to turn, and then when I was coming back lots of other 20kers were going out. I was relieved to get through that part. I was going to take my gel at halfway but forgot about it and didn't, so this wasn't my best fueled race.

I started feeling really great on the second tour of the course, and kept picking off the men in front of me. I saw fewer women close to me on that turn around the round about, and started feeling confident that I could go with anyone who tried to pass me.

Mile 10 included a long uphill, a gain of 82 ft per Garmin (on the first lap it was during mile 4-5). It wasn't steep but just long. I knew it was coming since we'd run the course once, and I kept reminding myself that I'd get to go back down it. I also told myself that it was to my advantage because it would take some of others' speed, plus I've been doing hill work. I caught and passed a man on it, which helped keep me going. As I approached and went around the hair-pin turn, I learned that there was no way I could catch the women in front of me, but one woman behind me was dangerously close and also running with a man she seemed to know. Though I was tired, I also felt strong and like I'd be able to push the end. The man who I'd passed going uphill passed me back when the course flattened out, and I went with him. It was hard to stay with him but I kept telling myself it was easier with someone else and I needed to stay with him to stay ahead of the woman.

I was able to stay right behind or beside him, and as we passed the 12 mile mark I started feeling confident I wasn't going to get caught. But then I heard footsteps and a man talking behind us, and it was clear the man was coaching the woman to go by me. I mentally prepared myself to fight for position, but when she passed me she was hammering it and I couldn't hang. I felt strong and finished strong relative to my other splits, but unfortunately I didn't have what she had. As we made the final turn one of the volunteers said something like, "2nd and 3rd woman, who wants it more??" and I guess I was really hurting at that point because I thought "she does." (also he must have missed a woman because we were actually 3rd and 4th).

The guy in gray was the one I ran with for the final
 few miles, woman in green had just passed us here

After it was clear I wasn't going to get her, I didn't hammer quite as hard as I should have for the final bit, but it was also on a curvy sidewalk that made it very difficult to run fast. Jon got back just in time to see me run by on her tail then he ran to the finish. He tried to take pictures in the rush that didn't come out great, but at least they show the snow on the ground!

Finish

I stopped my watch to see it showed me as averaging 6:43 pace, which I was happy with! I wasn't sure I'd be under 7:00, and don't look at my watch during races so had no idea what I was going to end  up with. All of my miles were under 7:00, even the 82 ft hill. The course read 12.73 on my watch. I don't think I've ever had a certified half read more than 13.25, and rarely have they read more than 13.15-13.20 unless they have a ton of turns. With this one being two out and backs I'd buy 12.50 or a smidge more for a 20k but not 12.73 (most others on Strava had 12.65+ too)! Plus they have a certified half that follows almost the same course and it is barely longer than what we ran for the 20k. Strava said my 20k was 1:23:36, and of course Strava isn't perfect either but had it been certified I'd probably have run 1:24-something. With non-certified races you get what you get and everyone in the race gets it, but everyone in that race should get credit for faster paces than the results show...especially me, hahaha!

I decided that I was first place masters female; the overall female was also in masters, but since she got overall I took her out of the very unofficial masters standings. I admit I am using a double-standard here, because when I have won both overall and masters I thought I deserved both, but this is my blog so I can do what I want, right? The race did not have masters, but I have to take my victories where I can find them. I am getting better about being happy with running well for me "right now" instead of being upset about running slower than I used to, which is probably the biggest victory of my 2024 races! I also wish Springfield had a cheap multi-race winter series like this; I'd love to do all 5 races but driving to St. Louis that many times in a winter seems excessive.

Elevation gain per mile, in feet, with my splits:

  1. 3 - 6:39
  2. 16 - 6:47
  3. 36 - 6:52
  4. 69 - 6:48
  5. 49 - 6:48
  6. 23 - 6:43
  7. 23 - 6:42
  8. 16 - 6:33
  9. 30 - 6:47
  10. 82 - 6:57
  11. 33 - 6:37
  12. 30 - 6:31
  13. (final 0.73) 20 - a little faster than 6:30, I stopped my watch 3 seconds after I finished

Thursday, January 4, 2024

Chilly 5k

The short:

I jumped into a New Years Day 5k and it was a great way to kick off the year! I was unsure what to expect time-wise but I aimed to compete, and came away with the overall female win in 19:20. I got to run through a finishing banner, got a few great photos, was interviewed post-race, and had a fun day with friends, so 2024 can really only go downhill from here. ;-)

Results are here, my personal results are here.

A Joplin Globe photo of me from the race is here, and an article that I am quoted in and pictured in is here.

I love a breaking the tape action shot!

The long:

A friend told me about the Chilly 5k in Joplin a couple of months ago, and I wrote it in my training calendar for reference but didn't really think I'd run it. The week before the race, a very tentative girls' day in Pittsburg started becoming more definitive, and I decided if the girls' day happened it only made sense to run the race on my drive to Pitt, since I'd be driving by Joplin anyway. 

I haven't done any time-based workouts since before the Bass Pro Marathon, but I have been running consistently and doing hill workouts so figured it would be fine enough. I also figured that no one is 5k sharp on January 1! My primary goal was to place as high as I could, going for the overall female win if it was within reason, and not worry about my time.

The race is point-to-point, from downtown Joplin to the YMCA on the south side of town. I parked at the Y and ran to the start plus a little more to warm up. It was simple to do, but the downside was that I didn't have a car at the start to toss clothes into. I dressed between what I would wear for an easy run and a race in the conditions (air temp 30*, wind chill 22*) in a thin long sleeve, gloves, an ear warmer, and tights. I was a little cold on my warm up and a little hot during the race as expected.

The race was decent-sized at around 300 participants. I wasn't sure who my competition would be, but as I was warming up I saw another woman warming up and thought, "She looks fast!" As I got closer I saw it was my friend Liz, who is fast! After I got my race number I connected with my friends Natalie and John, and stashed my phone in their car. I'd warmed up with it in a pocket because I was paranoid about getting lost on my warm up and missing the start, which ended up being a very unfounded fear. 

The start that I was not ready for

I lined up near the front, not far from John, Liz, and a woman who I know from Joplin, Christy. After the National Anthem and a prayer, we were off! It seemed like many men and boys went out fast, but I zeroed in on women and noted I was in 3rd behind a teenager and Christy. I settled into 5k effort and found myself right next to John. The first two women weren't too far out, and staying steady I reeled them in and passed them both around the mile.

Around that time a young man (from the results I know he was 23) settled in just behind me. Passing for the lead and having him on my shoulder was good motivation to push, and the second mile had several hills so it wasn't easy. After a bit he came up and ran beside me. Going up a hill shortly before the 2 mile mark, he pulled away slightly, but after the hill I closed the gap. When we hit mile 2 I pushed harder and gapped him, then extended my lead to 15 seconds by the finish.

This course was interesting because it was a net uphill for the first 2 miles. I thought mile 1 was pretty gentle, but I could tell it in my pace and by the elevation chart. Mile 2 seemed harder with more hills, though still nothing extreme for a Missouri runner. Then mile 3 had almost all down, which was fun! I felt like I ran in a way that mile 3 would be my fastest mile, but the downhill made it even faster. It felt really good to push and I felt strong coming towards the finish. I definitely felt better in this race than I have been feeling doing short hill reps in training!

About a quarter mile out from the finish, the lead bike came back for me after leading the top male in. As he rode me closer to the finish he waved his arms up and down, I assume to signal the finish line that the first female was coming in. I heard the announcer say something to that effect and saw the finish line volunteers put up a finishing banner. I love getting to break a tape! I gave a huge smile and the announcer said, "Keep that smile right through the finish line!" He was also announcing where the clock was at as I came down the final stretch, and when I heard 19:10 I was pleasantly surprised; I wasn't completely sure I could run under 20:00 but I was going to be way under!

Final bit

I had a huge smile on my face as I came in, and saw a photographer snapping photos in the finish chute, indicating that I was surprisingly coherent. I ran through the finishing tape, which was supposed to break at a Velcro attachment but did not. I then ended up tripping over the banner that didn't break, and narrowly avoided falling down. I was hoping I'd get finishing photos of that part, but they were either too nice to take them or too nice to post them. My official time was 19:20. I thought there were a ton of men in front of me but it turns out there were only 4.

Not my best photo but a big smile

I turned around to see where my competition and friends were. The second and third women came in at 19:43 and 19:48 (Christy), then John came though, then Liz, then Jacob - all pretty quickly after I finished. As I started walking out of the chute, a reporter from the Joplin Globe asked if he could ask me some questions, so I of course obliged. I think my runners high was clear from one of my quotes here, "It's great, a great way to start the year...I highly recommend it for everybody."

Joplin Globe article

My mention

John was planning to run back to the start to get his car prior to the awards, and I'd told him I'd run back with him when I stashed my phone in his car, because I wanted about 10 miles for the day. We ran the course backwards along with Liz for about a mile, and cheered for those we knew who were running. We ran 3.5 more miles total at my request, then hopped in his car and hightailed it back to the awards. I ended up just missing my overall award, but Natalie picked it up for me and later they called me back on the podium.

The podium was a nice touch!

My run on Strava matched with a couple of people who have premium Strava, one of whom was only 14 seconds behind me, so I was able to figure out my grade-adjusted paces for the race. My actual splits were 6:19, 6:27, 5:55 (5:25 final 0.12) - grade adjusted was 6:12, 6:22, 6:06. I felt like I got out well, eased up a little during mile 2, then hammered the final mile, so this makes sense to me. It's also faster than I expected to run, so I was happy about that.

I think 2024 is going to be my year of running races like this where I can compete for the win, because this race felt really right and I want to do it again!

Cute unique award

Post-race girls' afternoon!

The other Joplin Globe mention


Wednesday, January 3, 2024

2023 Running Recap

Quick stats:

  • Miles run: 3619.7
  • Teams/Support: rabbitELITE, UCAN, Nike, Miles from Mentor
  • Races run: 11
  • Races won (OA female): 5
  • Races won (masters female): 10
  • PRs: 30k, by default, though I have run much faster 30ks during numerous marathons
  • Records:
    • Missouri state road racing record for 30k for females age 43
    • Kansas state #2 female 50k of all time (behind my 2022 50k record)
  • Highlights:
    • My amazing running group continued to grow!
    • I was accepted onto my third rabbitELITE team.
    • I was "promoted" to Team UCAN Inspire.
Longer Impressions:

I nearly didn't write a running recap for the year, which is why this is being published later than Dec. 31. On one hand I feel like I didn't necessarily get much performance-wise out of the miles I put in this year, but on the other hand it's all relative and I enjoyed running just as much or more than ever! The day-to-day is my favorite part; I genuinely love getting up early every morning and running in all seasons and circumstances.

I enjoyed running many races on a whim and racing (for places vs. focusing on times). I enjoyed aiming for masters wins in nearly all of the races I ran (the only exception being Chicago). I never really understood the masters category, even when I was 39-40, but now it's one of the best things ever in running! Going for overall female wins is still nice, but not having to compete with 20-30 year olds in a division is also nice.

I ran 3 marathons and a 50k, which is quite a bit of long racing for a year. My spring marathon was a training run for my 50k, then I hoped to run sub-3 in a fall marathon and believe I was there fitness-wise, but I ended up with the beginnings of COVID for Chicago and was feeling weak post-COVID at Bass Pro, so in the end I got two 3:07s instead. Another lowlight of my year was a weird imbalance issue that resulted in pretty low mileage in April and May.

I love my training group and it has continued to grow this year. We have 5:30 a.m. runs with 10-15 people often. I coach many of my training buddies free of charge, and I love seeing my friends excited about running and running fast! I hope I can help others through running since it's given me so much. The sport continues to be a cornerstone in my life, and I am thankful for every run!


Race Recaps:
Monthly Recaps:
Previous Yearly Recaps: