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recent posts

  • Pinhoti 100, 2023–The DNF that was an epiphany
  • Pinhoti 100 2021 DNF
  • The Pinhoti 100 Article
  • Crusher Ridge 42K: a few pics
  • Scenes from Pinhoti 100

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Dad | Professor | Dept. Chair | Historian | Ultramarathoner
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  • Portrait of a Day

    16 Sep 2011

    It has been a long time since I had the energy or time to draft a blog entry. I feel horrible. I have so much to say. Where have I been? I’ve been in the state of chaos.  To give you an idea of why it is hard to sit and reflect for this blog, I present to you last Tuesday:

    4:15 am:  wake, eat, coffee, dress, prep for run, poop, pee, do some of my core routine

    5:20 am: out the door for run. head lamp, blinkie on, pre dawn walk to start point

    5:30-7:00 am: 10 mile tempo run in 1:18

    7-7:30: shower, eat, dress, feed kids, feed dog, pack backpacks, out door for school “What do you want for breakfast?” “I dunno. There’s nothing to eat here!” (there is plenty to eat here!) “Did you brush your teeth?!” “yes!” I don’t believe them. “Let me smell your breath.  Ugh. Go brush!”

    7:30-8: drive to school, play “punch buggy” with the boys, accumulate bruises on arms, drive to work, open up office

    8-3:45: work

    3:45: sneak out to pool for quick 24 minute swim session, 1150 yds.

    4:15: or so: shower dress, close up office, pick up kids from school

    4:30-5:15: kids snack, play with crazy dog, kids start homework, dress preston for soccer practice, prep dinner

    5:15-5:30: drive Pres to soccer practice

    5:30-7:45: soccer practice

    7:45-8:30: home, dinner, kids ready for bed, finish homework, do dishes, pack lunches for next day

    8:30-9:30 bedtime for kids. fall asleep on Hudson’s bed, wake up, prep for next day workout, eat snack, stretch, bed

     

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  • Can you help Hannah?

    10 Aug 2011

    My friend Megan’s daughter Hannah wants to run her first 10K with her Aunt Jen. This is a really cool race called “The Giant Race.” To do so, she must raise 500 dollars for a bib.

    The money goes to a great cause. Project Open Hand delivers meals to the homebound, senior citizens, the  critically ill, and HIV/AIDS patients in the Bay Area.

    If you could spare 5 or 10 dollars (or more!) she would be very appreciative and you would know that you are supporting the running growth of a fine 10 year old girl while also supporting a great cause.

    Thanks!

    Here is her donation page:

    http://www.race-sfgiants.com/TheGiantRace2011/HannahPStorms

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  • Can you tell I am proud of him?

    7 Aug 2011

    This was taken by the local newspaper at the finish line of the 5k.

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  • Preston’s second 5K

    7 Aug 2011

    Last June I ran the Honda 5k with my son Preston. It was his first 5k. He had done some kid runs, including a Family Fun Run in Myrtle Beach the previous February, but never a 5k. Running with him was the proudest moment of my running life. So when he told me he wanted to do another, I jumped at the chance and registered him for the Woodstock 5k, which is our signature local race with some 1,300 runners annually.

    Today, on little training, Preston ran his second race in a pretty rough environment. Hot temps, high humidity and a hilly course for a 12 year old made his race tough. We ran at his pace and if he needed to walk, then we walked. Running across the finish line with him was as special as the first time.

    This is a kid who borrows my Garmin on a whim for a 1 mile jaunt in the neighborhood, with no prodding from me! He is motivated to be a good runner and a super fit soccer player.

    And I am proud to be his dad!

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  • San Francisco Marathon 2011

    3 Aug 2011

    Official results for the SF Marathon 2011:
    3:33:23 finish.
    Overall rank: 578 out of 5,988 finishers
    Male: 511 out of 3,991
    40-44 age group: 78 out of 572

    Splits:
    7.4 miles: 57:57 (7:50 pace)
    13.1 miles: 1:42:58 (7:52 pace)
    20 miles: 2:40:14 (8:01 pace)

    More soon. But was a good result. Learned a lot and exorcised some race demons once and for all.

    Thank you for your support and encouragement.

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  • I love/hate Mountain Street

    24 Jun 2011

    So, I have this relationship, you see.  I love something and hate it all at the same time.  What is it? It is Mountain Street.  The street that leads to Chimney Peak, a local small mountain/foothill in my town. We’ve decided that the hills I was doing (11th St and just the first 1.5 miles of Mountain Street) weren’t quite enough. While not abandoning them, we have decided that future hill runs leading up to the SF Marathon will be up Mountain and down Mountain.   The run has it all, 1.5 miles of slight grade that wears on you as you run, about half a mile of straight up “death shuffle” climb, and then another mile of winding uphill steadiness, enough to raise the heart rate to near max, make the legs burn, and the lungs cry for more air.  Perfect. I love it. And I hate it!

    But, if I plan to have hill strength and meet my goals in SF, I need this run. So, I do it each hill run day, as I have for the past 2 weeks.  Here is the elevation:

    So, I warm up for 1.5 or so miles, climb mountain, and then run 2 miles at goal marathon pace (7:37 or better), then cool down.  Ten miles of fun!  I can see from last week to this week a gain in strength and stamina already. The climbing is getting slightly easier and I’m transitioning into MP more efficiently. I am excited about what this is doing for my strength not only on hills but in flats as well.

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  • SF Marathon Training: Why I Embrace the Alabama Heat!

    10 Jun 2011

    I’ve lived in the American South for my entire life.  I’ve spent 44 summers here.  I’ve melted away in each. Running, playing sports as a youth, or just being a kid on a hot Alabama day.  To be honest with you, I’d rather live in a place where it is 58 degrees year round, with occasional spikes into the 70s.  I prefer cool weather.  As a runner, I LOVE cool weather.  I thrive in it.  Even frigid temps!

    That said, I don’t live in such a runner’s paradise.  So I deal with the heat. I acclimate myself to it each summer and then wait for the cooler temps of late fall to kick in.  I KNOW that running in this heat and humidity makes me a stronger runner.  I KNOW that dealing with it each run pays off over time.  Of course, that does not stop me from whining about it!

    But this year, as I do something I’ve never done before, namely train for a marathon in the high heat of summer, I embrace this stuff.  I embrace it like a runner who trains at high altitude embraces the lack of oxygen.  For she knows, when she comes off that mountain top and runs at sea level, she will have an advantage of training with less oxygen but racing with gobs of oxygen rushing into her lungs and blood stream.

    Like that runner, I am training in the Alabama heat, where the low recently has been in the high 60s F.  As I type this at 2:30 on a Friday afternoon, it is 95 F outside my office.  We are literally baking.

    But what comforts me (as I prepare for a 20 mile run this coming Sunday) is that the heat in Alabama will make San Francisco feel like a winter wonderland.  My body, which has coped with high humidity, high heat, and the physiological adaptation that it brings, will thrive in the cooler temps of the City by the Bay come July 31.  Take a look at the chart below.  This why I smile on my hot runs.  (Ok. Well, maybe not smile, per se, but if Dorothy can chant “There’s no place like home. There’s no place like home.”  Then I say to myself: “It won’t be this hot. It won’t be this hot!”)

    Temps on the past 6 SF Marathon Race Days

    As you can see, the heat this summer, like every summer, is my friend.  A recent Running Times article (July/August 2011 issue) discussed the role of hot-weather training and its impact on racing in a cooler environment.  It likened the advantage gained by hot-weather training to that with high-altitude training.  Here is a quote from the article, which reported the results of a recent study of cyclists and heat training and performance.

    “Across the board, heat trained riders showed gains in the measures all runners hope to improve: VO2 Max, lactate threshold, maximal cardiac output, maximal power output, and 1-hour time trial performance. Yet the only piece of the training that varied was the exposure to heat.  The magnitude of the effect was similar to altitude training.” p. 55

    So, the heat really is my friend.  Yes, I call it names, and utter profane words at it.  I stay angry at the heat for days and days.  Sometimes I treat it badly, ignoring it for days.  But it never leaves me.  It stays around, ready to “help” me out on each run.  What a true friend!  But don’t tell heat that I am not taking it to San Francisco.  It has to stay home. IT HAS TO!

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  • Four Things Before Friday

    2 Jun 2011

    Yes, I am ripping off other bloggers, who do a “Three Things Thursday” post. So to avoid the scorn and shunning and ostracization, I will call mine “Four Things Before Friday”.  That title stinks so bad, that I am sure no one has thought to use it before!

    1) The more we complain about the heat and humidity, the more it will affect our runs BEFORE we start them. It is summer time. Don’t like the heat? Get up early or just stop running. It is here to stay. Know that these conditions make us stronger.

    2) I love the way my 9-year-old looks in his new eyeglasses.  He is nearsighted like dad, and he looks so cute in them. (But don’t tell him I said he was cute. He’d hurt me.)

    3) I have a serious craving for potato soup.

    4) I swam 2,000 yards non-stop last night. Farthest I’ve gone yet.

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  • Adaptive Training: San Francisco Marathon Hills (pt 3)

    30 May 2011

    Ok, time to wrap this series up with a brief post on the role of hills in the long run. As I’ve said before, one cannot expect to perform well on a hilly course by reducing hill training to one mid-week session. Hills must become a staple of the long run, especially as you practice your goal marathon pace (GMP). The body, and perhaps more important, the mind must become accustomed to running hills at something close to marathon pace and in a marathon type situation.

    A better strategy is to build long runs to resemble the general profile of the race course. A glance at the SF profile shows early climbs that the runner must negotiate. So below you’ll find two recent long runs of mine that try to build on the idea of 1)race course profiling and 2)early hills and leg fatigue followed by late miles at GMP.

    Two weeks ago I did a 16 miler with two circuits up Mountain Drive. The plan looked like this:
    2 miles warmup
    2 miles @ 7:50-8:00 pace
    4 miles running up and down Mountain Drive
    7 miles @ GMP
    1 mile cool

    Other than being chased by a mean dog, the run went well and I grew hill strength and the ability to find and hold GMP after climbing and descending. Here is the elevation chart:

    20110530-041356.jpg

    This past Sunday my long run called for 17 miles split thusly:
    2 miles warm up
    2 @ 7:50-8:00
    5 miles climbing 11th Street
    6-7 miles at GMP (7:37)
    1-2 cool

    Here is the elevation chart:

    20110530-041819.jpg

    So the design behind all of this, as it was last year with Megan’s uber successful SF marathon experience (she had a big PR and BQd), is to replicate, if not exceed, the type of elevation one will see on course, so that when race day comes not only will the runner be able to maintain GMP on the hills but also to train in such a way that what she sees on race day is less than what she faced in training.

    Ok, so enough about hills. I’ll have some more stuff soon about marathon training and the SF Marathon. Perhaps tempo runs?

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  • The Emotional Side of Running

    27 May 2011

    I wrote this on my old blog more than 18 months ago. But I think it still merits a read. So I am reposting here.

    The Emotional Side of Running

    (Originally posted on December 26, 2009)
    No one who has set out for a run can deny that they have felt a range of emotions about their running. From frustration on a bad run, anger over an injury, optimism about an upcoming race, and pride in a new PR, runners experience and draw upon all the basic emotions. Take this list of emotions and ask yourself if you have NEVER felt at least one before, during, or after a run: fear, joy, trust, sadness, anger, anticipation, optimism, submission, awe, remorse, aggressiveness, even love. Hard to find one that we haven’t experienced.

    Consider the role of music in running. How many of has NOT used some playlist on our mp3 players to get through some tough miles, to find some emotional inspiration in lyrics or a special musical rhythm? In fact, there are people who specialize in supplying running music for runners, whether to match a specific cadence/pace requirement or to help runners lose themselves in their running. When I need that special oomph in a run, I turn to a couple of special songs that have struck an emotional chord in me. Who hasn’t done so?

    So why is it then, that we are often taught to ignore or suppress the emotional side of our running; to treat our running like a clinical exercise? There are those who would prescribe forgetting a bad run (or even a good run for that matter, to prevent overconfidence or complacency) as a means of moving forward, of getting past the past. What good does it do us to suppress the emotional, spiritual side of running in order to perform better? And is that even possible if our genetic makeup requires addressing that emotional, mental side of running?

    I’m here to submit to you that running is not a clinical, soulless exercise. That it is okay to experience and express emotions before, during, and after running. In fact, we can become better runners if we learn to understand what out emotional side requires from us and from our supporters. If we do not learn to understand what our emotions tell us, then we cannot grow as individuals, as runners. But the issue is a little deeper than learning to express emotion in a healthy way. The issue gets to the very nature of humanity itself.

    We now know, thanks to the Human Genome project that no two humans are alike (well, we knew it for a long time, but some geeks in lab coats confirmed it for us). If this is true (and why wouldn’t it be, anyone found their exact twin recently?), then we must grant that runners as individuals are different. I’m not talking about paces, stride length, foot strike, or speed. What I’m writing about is runner temperament, runner emotions, and runner psyche. We are distinct, each of us possessing a set of ideals and beliefs and attitudes that derive from nature or have been nurtured in our environment. And as runners, we are no different. Each runner has a different temperament, attitude, outlook; a set of world views as they relate to the sport we all so dearly love (and sometimes hate—see, emotion!).

    So what’s my point? My point is that the secret to runner success can be found not only in the training, the miles, the hill work, the speed work, the gear, or the race-day conditions, but also, and perhaps most important, in the runner’s mind! There has been a lot of recent literature and focus recently on the mind of the runner, but most of it (at least that which I have read) focuses on the necessity of understanding that the mind controls the body, that the body can do more than the mind “thinks” it can, and that once one understands that, then running progress can occur quicker. In short, this literature has focused on the mind/body relationship. But what about the need to understand a runner’s emotional needs? If we are not all alike, then we must realize that each runner has certain emotional needs. Some runners need positive reinforcement in their training and races. Others need “tough love” as a motivator to improve. There are those runners who exhibit a dispassion for their running, a sort of mechanical nature to their emotional side, but they too have an emotional side that they are suppressing.

    We do a disservice to ourselves and those we support, then, when we appreciate that strides and gaits are distinct, yet ignore the variety of runners’ emotional needs. Imagine trying to fit all runners into the same model and style of running shoe. Chances are that someone will become injured by this “one size fits all” mentality. Yet, we do this when we neglect the emotional differences in runners. And worse yet, when we dispense running advice to one another we should fully appreciate those physical and emotional differences. Just because one runner may be able to take a bad run or a lousy race and forget it, to clear it out of the mind immediately, doesn’t mean that the next runner will be able to do the same. If the former can forget the bad, the latter might require a purging of the bad memories of a race or negative running result. And without that purging the runner may fail to move on with a clear and focused mind for fear of reliving a unique event. Without a discussion of what happened, why it happened, and what can be done to prevent or overcome a negative event, some runners are unable to move on. And yet this is not rocket science. Often the answer is a simple: not your fault. Other times the answer can contain specific actions a runner did or did not take. Regardless of WHAT the answer is, the runner who requires this closure MUST get this closure. Some runners need a beer after the race in order to move on. Others need more elaborate measures, from deep-thinking conversation, to a boat load of tears. The sooner that we realize what kind of runner we are emotionally, then the quicker we can adapt to those needs and grow. Just because you are able to quickly come to terms with a bad result doesn’t mean that the person you are advising or training can. The essence of a good running friendship or training relationship is the mutual awareness of these differences and needs that each person has. One size most definitely does not fit all.

    So why am I writing this? Well, for one, I’m on vacation and my mind is not occupied with work matters. Second, I’ve thought about this issue for some time now. When you cry after your first marathon and get mocked for it ever since, you find yourself thinking about why some people express emotions and others don’t. And third, being able to observe the training programs of several friends and their various successes and failures has given me an opportunity for observation and analysis. Running is like that. It is one of the few sports where we’ve all been through what every other runner has been through (except maybe BQing or winning a marathon, but you get my drift). So running lends itself to be, at once, objectively and subjectively analyzed. It offers a level of experiential analysis that few other sports can claim. I mean, really, how many of us could identify fully with Derek Jeter winning the World Series as part of the Yankees Baseball Club?

    So just as we need to be aware of our physical needs and limitations, we should also be aware of our emotional needs. And more important we need to let fellow runners know what they are and how best they can support us in our running.

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  • Product Review: Champion Double Dry Jacket and Shorts

    20 May 2011

    A few weeks back, Champion sent me a jacket and pair of shorts to sample and review for the blog.  When I first started running I relied a lot on Champion’s C-9 brand sold at Target, a full line of affordable workout gear. Pretty good stuff and not a budget breaker, either.

    Over the past few years, Champion has made a conscious effort to really up the quality of their clothing,I assume in a pitch to make inroads into the market share currently held by other retail giants such as Nike, Adidas, etc.

    Champion Double-Dry + Sprint Running Shorts

    I am a running snob when it comes to my running shorts. If they don’t feel right, or if they are too long, or if the seam is too thick, I just have a hard time handling it.  So I was interested in trying the shorts on a recent Zone 2 recovery run.  I figure if they didn’t feel great or if all the sudden I was attacked with bionic chafing, I could soldier through it on a run that wasn’t as “key” as my other runs, such as hills or tempo.  I was pleased with the performance of the shorts. Very light material, I wanted to say fabric, but tech material isn’t quite fabric, no?  The fit is nice and the sizing is fairly true to what I wear (these were size medium).  There are mesh panels on each side and in the crotch.  The crotch mesh panel made me giggle a bit, but as any runners know, man or woman, a mesh panel in the crotch ain’t a bad idea at all!

    I’ve run in the shorts 4 times, including an 11 mile hill workout this morning.  They are light and well-fitted. And  I’m very pleased with the quality of these shorts. Of course, with summer beginning here in Alabama they will be put to the ultimate test in heat, humidity, and human grime!  For a quality run short, they are also fairly priced in the low 20’s, and compared to price points of  the likes of Nike and Adidas, they are a relative bargain.

    Champion Double-Dry Ultimate All-Weather Soft-Shell Jacket

    Since it has warmed quite a bit here, I have had no chance to run in the jacket. But I have worn it extensively to my kids’ baseball and soccer practices, as well as a nice late spring cool-weather jacket for work. I LOVE this jacket. Just heavy enough to block the wind and cold from 50 degree evenings at the baseball park, but also water-resistant enough to block the rain. In fact, I love how the rain jut beads up and rolls off the jacket. Reminds me of how water used to bead on an old car I had back in the 1980s after I waxed it.

    The jacket has a trimmer fit for running and activity and to prevent it from becoming a sail in windy conditions.  It has two side zipper pockets on the outside and two slip pockets on the inside.  In the left hand outer pocket there is a sleeve for a MP3 player or phone, which holds it securely from bumping around.  Here is a pic of me wearing it.

    Yes, I'm wearing jammies! What of it?! 😉

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