Tuesday, November 27, 2007

The riding continues...

Got to get out on a quick but effective 15-miler on Saturday. Felt best I've felt yet... though still pretty weak. I have a long way to go to get back to the shape I wanna be in. Sunday was an off day... and Monday as well due to lots of rain and generally crappy weather. Today is a new day. Partly sunny and highs in the upper 50's. Good day to ride. It'll be another short ride. 17-mile loop around Hickory.

BLING report. My new Thomson stem should be in today. I hope to throw that baby on before the ride today... pics to follow.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

It's COLD!


The day after Thanksgiving was pretty docile. Had to work but got to go on a quick 15-mile ride. It was cold. Low 40's and windy. The kind of wind that cuts right through you. Thanks to a lot of warm clothing (leg warmers, shoe covers, full finger gloves, fleece beanie, wool undershirt, winter jersey) I did pretty well. Today it's even colder... gonna go out and do another little 15 or so mile loop. Every little bit helps. I plan on trying to put as many miles in every day at an easy endurance pace this winter and try to get a jump on spring 2008. As much as I hate the cold... an easy endurance pace suits me when it's uncomfortable outside. I hope the freezing rain and ice stays away... cause as much as I hate riding in the cold... I hate indoor trainers even more.

BLING: Installed some pretty cool Stella Azzurra handlebars yesterday. Can't wait to get my new Thomson stem and Eriksen Titanium post. I also need to order some new tires... mine are about done. eBay here I come!

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Another ride... and some BLING!

Did a nice easy 13 mile ride today with Jon "Johnny Metro" Hogaboom today. Had a good time in some great fall weather. I also gave my wife my Christmas list. It consisted of one item... a Titanium Seat post. yeah, that's right... a seat post. But it's no ordinary seat post mind you... it's titanium... and it's custom made. Made by Eriksen Cycles. They make the king of all seat posts and some sweet Ti frames as well. It's total bike BLING! Okay... so it's a bike thing... you wouldn't understand.

I also dropped the hammer and ordered a new stem... it's a Thomson Elite X2 stem. I've always thought Thomson made some of the best stuff anywhere. It's silver and will look great on my Ti frame. Here's a pic.









Anyway it's a little gift to myself to celebrate my reemergence on the bike. Hey, it's the little things... sue me.

Tomorrow is Thanksgiving and I have much to be thankful for. I have 4 healthy children... a beautiful baby girl... a great job... great friends... a great wife... and hey... why not throw a sweet bike into the mix. I have my health, and my faith. I cannot complain. Happy Thanksgiving to you all and God bless you.

Come back to see how I do in my first cold ride of the year. Friday it's only supposed to be in the high 40's. Brrrrrrrr! I hate the friggin cold!

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Squint and maybe you can see it!

...My cycling legs coming back that is. Did a nice 15 miler today and though every little ant-hill climb was terrible... I felt happy. I felt like I was supposed to actually be on a bike today. The weather was perfect... the course was good... and it was a good day to be a cyclist. I had this "hollow" not quite there feeling you get in your legs an hour after the ride that felt great. Just enough to remind me that I did something good today. I hope I never take it for granted again. I rode easy today. I never pushed too hard or attacked on climbs. I just put it in a gear I liked and rode. Didn't care about average speed... didn't care about cadence... didn't care about whether I was in the saddle or out. I just rode and enjoyed the surroundings. It's the purity of cycling that I missed. I've grown so tired of all the bike snob arrogant pro wannabe group ride idiots. How about an "Alternative", alternative bike culture. One that isn't full of posers. One that doesn't have an agenda... that doesn't criticize other riders for the bike they ride, the way they dress, or how they "represent" the scene. Just blue collar folks who like to ride. Who like the machines. Who respect the history, but don't so caught up into it that they lose site of "the ride". After all... it's about propulsion. Getting from one point to another and enjoying the journey and hopefully enjoying it with a friend. Here's to cycling... and here's to the new "alternative" Alternative culture. Here's to "just ride your freakin bike and chill out."

All gone...

It's all gone. Everything I built up in June, July, and August is gone. I did my first ride yesterday since the birth of my daughter and it bout killed me. I rode (get this) ten miles!! My lungs burned up what was a easy climb and my legs were weak and achy. But I was happy. Happy to be out on the bike again. Happy to breath in cool fall air. Happy to be doing something productive. Happy to break a sweat. I'm gonna try 17 miles today. Can't wait!

Monday, November 19, 2007

Change of plans.

This blog is taking a dramatic turn due to a dramatic and wonderful event. My beautiful daughter, Dagen, who is now 8 weeks old… was born prematurely and we went through a crazy 2 months. She is doing fantastic now and is a normal, chubby, lively little baby. Up to the time that she was born, I was logging my efforts here in this blog and sharing my training in order to fulfill a dream of competing in a long-course triathlon. I entered the Florida Half-Ironman in May, 2008… and began training. At the time, I was confident that I could continue my triathlon training and help take care of a baby along with my three other kids. In short… I was wrong. Technically, it is possible… but in order to do it it would me taking away precious time from my wife and children. I value my family too much to take away much needed time from them. To sacrifice my time with my family to fulfill a personal goal was selfish at best. So after many weeks of thought and reflection I have decided to cease my multisport training. I have cancelled withdrawn my entry in the Florida 70.3 Ironman and regretfully am selling the beautiful Quintana Roo triathlon bike I just finished building. So, that chapter in my life has ended. So now what?

Back on the bike.

It was back in 1999 that I began cycling. I was a 210lb. muscle-head that desperately needed a change. So, to make a long story short, I got a road bike and took a turn at cycling. My first ride was only eight-miles. But at the end of the ride… I toppled off my bike and threw up. I was hooked. Over the next several years, I kept cycling. My work schedule, along with family obligations, coupled with my severe dislike of the cold, kept me from developing into the cycling that I always wanted to be. My highest mileage fro a season (for me a season is 4-months) was 1500 miles. I reached a few milestones. I completed many metric century rides (63miles) including the very tough Hurt, Pain, and Agony ride in North Wilkboro, NC. I also completed the bridge to Bridge Incredible Cycling Challenge in 2006; a grueling 102 mile pain-fest that caps with a 2.2 mile ascent up Grandfather Mountain. In short, I love cycling and I love bikes in general.

So now what?

So now, the Endurance Chronicles will be a diary of my training to become a far better cyclist than I ever have been. There will be many challenges now that I have a baby in the house, and that my wife took a new job that has her working crazy hours in a town an hour and a half from here. At least focusing on one discipline will be much easier than three… to become truly “good” at cycling will be tough. Especially for a guy with the complete antithesis of the cyclists physique. However, I really believe this challenge is doable with everything else I have in my life. So, I polished up and tuned up my trusty Merlin Agilis road bike this weekend… and will venture out today to do a little ten-mile ride that symbolically announces that I am back. So, if you’re into the cycling thing… or just want to read about an overworked stressed out dad trying to stay fit at 39… then come back often. I’m also looking at today as being the first day of my 2008-cycling season. I’m starting several months early this year as opposed to my usual late season start. Which also means that this Florida boy who HATES cold weather will have to suffer through bone chilling North Carolina rides. Stay tuned!

Seven weeks later... and a new baby... I'm back!

Kind of. My triathlon aspirations are dead. However, my quest to become a proficient cyclist and fit 40-year-old forges ahead. More later... stay tuned!

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Fianally Home...


After five weeks and the most stressful yet wonderful experience of my life... my little angel is home safe. She is doing great. It was a perfect Saturday. My daughter came home... the Seminoles beat Alabama, the Gators lost, and I got to sleep in my own bed!

Though my life will not be "normal" again for some time... I can't wait to get back to training tomorrow. I'm looking forward to a very productive fall of training during my favorite time of year. Much more to come.... stay tuned!

Friday, September 21, 2007

Welcome to the world.


I'd like to announce the arrival of my daughter, Dagen Elizabeth Goodwin. Born 9/18/07 at 6:17pm. We're hoping to have her home in the next couple days. Both mom and baby are doing great.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

So much training... so little time.

Well Bridge to bridge is tomorrow and sadly I am not a part of it. Best of luck to my buddy Jon who I'm sure will do great. Beers in the man cave on me soon!

This weekend... I have to work Saturday, I have to get my house ready for in-laws coming into town, I have to take care of kids, and I have to get in a 30-minute swim, an hour run, and a hour bike ride. I'm not sure when or how I'm gonna do it... but I assure you I will. This is the great advantage of having a pre-built training plan. You feel guilty if you do not fill in the blanks. I hate it when my training calendar has missed workouts on it. I always want my planned vs. actual training minutes to be balanced. So this weekend I'll fit it all in even if I'm running at 10pm or swimming at 5am. I'll get it done. Only three days until I welcome my newest little training partner into the world. Wish me luck... it's gonna be a crazy weekend. Luckily we're seeing the first of some cooler weather! 70's on Sunday! Woo hoo!

Friday, September 14, 2007

What happened? I'm the freak?

If you've been reading this blog then you know what's going on with my wife and the fact that we've been living at the hospital for two weeks now. We've got one week to go. The Doctor will induce labor on Tuesday bringing our little girl into the world. Living at the hospital has brought its share of challenges. Among them is being able to train. Yesterday my plan had me riding one hour and running 30-minutes. I got the hour ride in at lunch but knew if I was going to be able to run I'd have to do it late after work. So, at around 8pm I arrived at the hospital. I greeted my wife... then changed into my running clothes and headed out. Luckily there is a little walking/running path around the hospital. I was the only one on it. The thing that got me was the amount of strange looks I got and the whispers I received after returning to the hospital entrance after my run. Not to be mean... but I noticed that everyone exiting the building was less than in good shape. It was as if I was the strange minority? The "fitness geek". Like it was a bad thing! But I guess I should not be surprised. I see it everywhere I go. It's like Night of the Living Dead. Everyone walks around like a dead person. Just going through life's motions without any purpose or passion. We are sedated by junk food... and infected with the sickness of laziness and greed. As long as we have the latest iPod, cell phone, plasma TV and 400 channels to keep the IV drip of mediocrity going we're OK. Not me. Not ever. I will always challenge the limits of my body and mind. I will always strive to be an example to my children. I will never grow up. I'll keep pushing until my body no longer lets me... which I hope will be a very long time from now. The way I see it... I'm an 18-year old with 20 years experience. Keep training hard!

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Run, swim...

Today was a wonderful day. After a very stressful 2 weeks of living in the hospital waiting for my daughter to enter the world and having a very limited training schedule... I'm back on track today. Had a good 5k run today followed by a strong 550 yard swim. It's the best hour I've spent in a while. The swim felt great after a hot run. Good to feel my upper body muscles working hard again. Though I'm still at the hospital for one more week... I see the end on the horizon and I look forward to cooler fall weather, hard training, and spending time with my new little girl.

Tomorrow it's my first ride on my new Tri bike. I'll spend an hour on the bike tomorrow then tomorrow evening I'm due for a 40 minute run which I'll do at the hospital. They have a nice walking track there I can use.

Till tomorrow... happy training!

Friday, September 7, 2007

Baby's still cookin... training continues...

We're still hunkered down at the hospital letting the baby cook a bit longer to get ready for her debut to the world. Apparently, Sept 17th is the day. So, one more week before I meet my daughter.

Because of all the time spent at the hospital I've been primarily running. I really think this has been good for me. A solid week of run training is beginning to pay off. My pace is still crazy slow but my endurance is improving. For now I don't care how fast I am as long as I can reach the finish line.

I did get to spend a little time in the Man Cave last night. While washing some clothes for the pregnant one... I built up my new machine. I've got it as far as I feel comfortable. I'll be taking her down to the local bike shop to have their mechanic run the cables, adjust the derailleurs and dial it in. By next week I should be able to take her on her maiden voyage. Here's a rare photo inside the Man Cave!

Monday, September 3, 2007

No Bridge of Death this year...

Well, it's official. The Doctor informed us (my wife and I) that the baby can come into the world at 34 weeks. They plan to induce labor at that time. 34 weeks will occur exactly on September 17th. One-day after the Bridge to Bridge Incredible Cycling Challenge. Sadly, with everything that is going on right now... I can not do the ride. I'm officially out. It sucks... I wanted to do this ride one more time before making the full-time shift to tri training. Oh well. The one bright side is that I can focus solely on my 3 training disciplines. I can run and swim more without feeling guilty about not riding 4-5 days a week... which is what it takes to complete a hilly century ride without dying. I have 8 months to become a very proficient swimmer and runner. I'm not as concerned about the running... but I'm gonna need all eight months to dial in my swimming.

Anyway... ditching the Bridge ride is no big deal compared to the birth of my little girl. Hopefully I'll be posting her official results (birthday, weight, etc.) real soon. Who knows, maybe next year I'll have 4 kids cheering me across the finish instead of 3. One thing I know... as soon as she's born... she's grounded!

Sunday, September 2, 2007

Girl interrupted!

Well,... right smack dab into my training and just before a welcomed 4-day holiday weekend... my daughter decided she wanted to come into this world early. My wife's water broke and we rushed her to the hospital. It was one of those "driving down the highway with flashers on doing 90 miles per hour" moments. She is eight-weeks early. So, my wife is on 100% bed rest until the baby "cooks" long enough for a trouble-free birth. "Long enough" is a little over two-weeks. She has to live in a hospital bed for two weeks! That means me sleeping on a hospital couch, and driving back and forth to home, driving kids to school, etc. Life's gonna be nuts for the next few weeks. And, when the little nipper is finally born, she must stay in the baby intensive care ward for two weeks. So basically my new address is Catawba Memorial Hospital in Hickory, NC. For the time being my cycling is pretty much shot. I've been able to squeeze in runs between being at the hospital and elsewhere. I'll be able to swim at the club on lunch breaks. But training right now is waaaaay down the list of important things next to my daughter's entrance into this world and the comfort and sanity of my wife. She's being a real trooper right now. God bless her. More later.... Peace.

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Been a while... /Bike Porn!

It's been a while! Guess I havn't posted cause it's been business as usual. Been plitting equal time between bike and run. I'm gonna get back into the swim flow next week.

I got my tri bike! (Well... sort of). I purchased the frame fork and seat post. I'm beginning to build it up now. I'm waiting on a few parts. I'm hoping to take it on it's maiden voyage later next week. Here's a picture for your pleasure. I love bike porn!

Monday, August 13, 2007

Recovery

For two weeks I've felt a bit off. I couldn't figure it out. I didn't think it would happen to me. I was over-trained. Jon and I did a hilly 30 miler last Sunday that wore me out. So I did it... apart from a little 10 mile easy recovery ride on Wednesday, I took the whole week off... even the weekend. Man I'm glad I did. Though I only went on a quick 15 miler at lunch today... I felt great. No fatigue, fresh, strong. I enjoyed riding today... and the ride itself energized me rather than wearing me out. I learned first hand the importance of recovery. From now on... I'm gonna take a week of recover (slow, easy rides with a few days off) about every four weeks. What goes up, must come down. What tears down, must build up. Rest is good.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Bike Lust...

Now that I'm pretty well into a triathlon program and enjoying it immensely, I now know that multisport will be something I'll be committed to for some time. It's definitely something I plan to do as long as my body will allow. So with that, I have the strong desire to bite the bullet and buy a true, dedicated triathlon bike. Triathlon is all about speed and aerodynamics... tri bikes are built around an aggressive geometry that puts the rider in an "aero" position at all times. Tri bikes are great on flat or rolling terrain... but not a great choice for climbing or the local group ride. Obviously I'll keep my beloved Merlin road bike... but a tri bike is definitely in order.

I've pretty much all but decided on a Quintana Roo. I was going to go with Cervelo, but once I got to check out a QR close up I was blown away. Quintana Roo was the first company to make ONLY tri bikes... and they do it VERY well. The 2007 QR Lucero looks like the one for me. My 2nd choice? It would have to be a Cervelo P2C. Both are carbon fiber bikes... both light, aero, with an aggressive geometry that's built for speed.

So, how do I land this beauty without my wife moving me into the doghouse with Toby (my dog)? Simple... clean out the garage! As some of you might know I used to own a bike shop. I closed the bike shop after learning that owning a bike shop sucks. Take my advice... think twice before making your hobby your job. Screws everything up. Anyway... I have a lot of bike junk laying around in boxes in my garage. I've begun the process of selling all this stuff and to my surprise I should have enough from the sale of this garb to purchase a really nice tri bike! I have many of the parts and components I need already. The only thing I will have to purchase is the bike frame and fork... and a couple other little things like brake levers, cables, etc. Nothing big. So, hopefully soon I'll be posting my new tri bike for all to see along with a review. I hope to have the bike built and be well accustomed to it before my Half Ironman in May.

Here's a stock photo of the bike I'm lusting over until I get to show off my own. Cheers!

**CLICK
PHOTO for LARGER VIEW**



Thursday, August 9, 2007

Yeah... whatever


It was hot as HELL today!! Okay... so I said I would not run in this heat again. You'd think I'd know better. I went out on a recovery ride yesterday in the oppressive heat and (get this) forgot my freakin water bottle!! So I found a walking park at a rec center that had a water fountain in it. I rode around the mile walking path several times stopping to get water on a couple occasions. Is was even hot on the bike.

So anyway... back to what I said I would not do...Today... against my better judgement... I ran again. 1:30 in the afternoon AGAIN! I'm an idiot!. The first 1.5 miles I was cruising... then the heat hit me like a wall! Okay... this time is it... no more afternoon running in 110 degree death-heat! Bike tomorrow... swim Saturday. Did I mention that it is hot out here?

Tuesday, August 7, 2007

Heed the warnings... for death surely awaits!


I ran today. 1:30 pm, no clouds, air thick like a veil. It was Viet Nam hot. Deathly hot. Hotter than... you get the picture. I ran a miserable 10 minute pace on a 5k. Had to stop once on a hill and walk. I'll bet it was 115 degrees on that black pavement. I had no legs. As long as it stays this hot... I'll stick to early morning or late evening runs. It'll take me the rest of the evening to replace all the fluids. However, a run like that can only make you tougher. There truly is beauty in suffering.

WARNING!

There's actually warnings posted about the dangerous air quality today mixed with record high temps. I'm scheduled to run today at 1:00pm. Ought to be outright miserable for sure... but life threatening? It's already 95 degrees at 11:30am. Wish me luck! (If I don't chicken out and hit the treadmill instead.)

Monday, August 6, 2007

CLEAN (Part 3 of Dog Days)....

Clean eating today to cleanse the body

5:30am: Kashi Go-Lean crunch w/ fresh blueberries & skim milk

9:45am: 2 scoops of muscle milk w/ p-nut butter mixed with water & ice

2:30pm: Almond Crusted Salmon over 1/4 cup brown rice and a handful of steamed veggies.

5:30: 2 scoops of muscle milk w/ p-nut butter mixed with water & ice

8:45pm: Kashi Go-Lean crunch w/ fresh blueberries & skim milk, Protein Shake, EFAs.

Done..... gone to bed!!!!

Dog Days Part 2....

Decided it was time to quit making excuses and start weight training again. I took today off from the bike... and lifted. I did a light circuit workout. I believe this is the best approach for me (or anyone) mid season. I do 1 set, 15 to 20 reps of each movement (30 sec. rest or less between each) then repeat for a total of two rounds. I chose the following workout and order for my level 1a workout which I'll do for 14 days before I take it up a notch.

  1. Seated Row 100 x 15 (low cable)
  1. Incline DB 50’s x 15
  1. Hammer Squat 50 x 15
  1. Triceps Dip 120 x 15 (assisted)
  1. Hamstring Curl 70 x 20 (lying)
  1. Biceps Curl 20 x 15
  1. Hyperextension 0 x max
  1. Decline Sit ups 0 x max
  1. Push ups 0 x max
  1. Squat Jumps 0 x max
I know that doing this 2x per week will help me. I just gotta fit it in. No Excuses!!

Dog days...

After a long week and lots of cycling and running... I'm definitely in a training rut. The dog-days of summer are here for sure. It's freakin hot, humid, and the air is thick and sticky. Did a hilly 40 mile ride Saturday followed by a hillier 30 miler Sunday. Got through them OK but I feel somewhat burnt-out. Maybe I'm slightly over trained. This week I'm gonna continue business as usual, but back on a more balanced schedule. Either a day off or slow recovery ride today, Tuesday; run, Wednesday; ride, Thursday; Run, Friday; Swim, Saturday; Ride, Sunday; run.


Today is also back to a cleaner diet day. I ate like 9 slices of pizza yesterday after the ride. I also had a honey-do painting project (thanks for the help Jon) in sauna-like conditions. Went through quite a few beers. Though I was sweating them out as fast as they went in. Yep... need a week of clean eating for sure. Can you say DETOX!

I want to get Bridge to Bridge over with so I can focus hard on Run/Swim for a while. Looking forward to some cooler temps and some collage football.

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

Hurt, pain, agony..... DONE!

Hurt, Pain, and Agony metric century was last Saturday. It was hurtful, painful, and agonizing. But I finished. When I got off the bike all I kept thinking about was getting back to my tri training. I had taken a week off from swimming and running to focus on my cycling for this event. I'm ready to run and swim again. I confirmed to myself that just cycling, while I love it, was beginning to bore me a little. I'm still looking forward to Bridge to Bridge and I still love cycling over running and swimming... but I'm not going to cease running and swimming this time just to try to be ready for a cycling event. I will continue to train in all 3 disciplines right up to Bridge to bridge... and if I'm not totally ready... so be it. My ultimate goal of the 1/2 Ironman in May is top priority. Especially since I'm so far behind in my running and swimming compared to the bike. So Tomorrow... I run... and swim... and get back on track!

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

I have seen the future....

.... and it is spelled: C-o-n-t-a-d-o-r! Alberto Contador from the Discovery team finally gave me one of those "jump off the couch, fist pumping, yelling" fits after he won the 14th stage of the tour in epic fashion. Dueling it out with Rasmussen throughout the last climb... be bolted around at the line to win in an Armstrongesque move. It was great to see. At the time, it was (for me) good to see Vinocourov get toasted. How any American can not pull at least for an American team rider is beyond me. That would be like pulling for a European team over the Green Bay Packers in the Super Bowl. Sure I respect many of the European riders.... I was a big Jan Ulrich fan... but I'd never pull for him over Lance or any other American cyclist or even a European rider on an American team. Call me an old fashioned patriot if you like. I'm cool with that. Turning your back on Discovery may be the trendy thing, or the "alt bike culture" poser thing to do... but I'm gonna pull for the Discovery team until they fold or until another American team forms that I like better. Don't tread on me!

Well, well, well. "Vino" got busted. Failed a drug test and now the whole Astana team is out. If I was Kloden I'd be whipping his ass as we speak. What a selfish bastard. Now Kloden is out when he had a legitimate chance of at least a podium spot. The only upside to this is we won't have to see Mr. cocky "Vino" for a while.



Saturday is Hurt, Pain, and Agony. Everyone keeps asking if I'm ready. You're never ready for that. The first 6 miles is a cat. 2 climb. It's tough because you're not even warmed up yet! You're climbing while still burning sugar and carbs. The switch to oxygen hasn't occurred yet. Makes the climb really hard. Then, at mike 50, there is another long hateful climb that ends with an 18% gradient! Brutal. It's still not as bad as Bridge to Bridge. But it's rough. Thank God I still have some training time for that. Then, one those two big rides are done... it's time to really focus on the run and swim.

Hey Jon! Look below at the last post and read about my donut!

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Workouts and donuts...


I just ate a freakin huge cream filled chocolate covered donut!!! A member brought it from this awesome donut shop where she's from. It was just sitting there staring at me... taunting me. So I put it out of its misery. It was good. Very good. I feel better now.

Saturday's in July the club is pretty dead in the afternoons. Everyone is at home chillin or doing what I would like to be... outside! Friday I ended up not riding on the spin bike and just ran 5 miles. Today (Sat) I rode outdoors 10 miles with my sons then ran a 5k. Not a bad workout. Tonight... I'm taking Nancy and the kids out for Bar-B-Q! Yeee Haaa!! Tomorrow I'm riding a hilly course. I need to be ready for the ride next week... so it'll be a week of hills leading up to Saturday.

Friday, July 20, 2007

Stuck.....!

I'm stuck indoors today and most likely tomorrow (Sat.) too. I'm running the club by myself so can't leave. I'll do a brick workout today. I'm gonna do 30 minutes on the spin bike followed by 30-minutes on the treadmill. I'll strap on my iPod to keep me from dieing of boredom. I hate indoor workouts. I put together an hour mix of some heavy stuff to keep me charged through the workout. Endorphins and hardcore music mix well :-) I might be able to get outside tomorrow since the club closes at 5pm. I need to do a brutal hilly course Sunday and suffer a little.

Everyday is a good day to SUFFER!

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Mmmm mmmm good?


The heat's been unbearable this summer. The mid ninety temps coupled with the oppressive humidity has been awful. I've been trying to up my sodium intake to combat this. An ultramarathon/cyclist friend of mine who runs a Fleet Feet store in town recommended Campbell's chicken noodle soup. The combination of the pasta, chicken, and extremely high sodium rich broth serve as a great ally against dehydration and fluid imbalances. It's worked for me. Try it an hour before a hot ride or run or after your training to put it all back.

It's been a lot of cycling lately. I've thrown in a couple short 5k runs... but I've been on the bike alot. Hurt, Pain, and Agony metric century is next Saturday. I'ts a tough ride with lots of steep climbing so I want to be ready. Then it's Bridge to Bridge in mid September which is really tough. 102 miles with the last 50 all climbing. I'll need the extra training on the bike over the next few weeks for those rides. Once those are done... I'm gonna back off the bike and really focus on the run and swim. I'll be a freakin fish this winter.

I'm down to 185lbs. now. Probably around 11-12% body fat. My goal is 178lbs. at around 8% body fat. I'm on track. It's comin off pretty quick now. I've hit a groove with my nutrition and seem to have dialed in my calories to output ratio to stay strong and still drop fat. I'm pretty darn lean at 178. I hope to be there by Aug 1st.

Happy training kids!

Monday, July 16, 2007

Selling your soul....

I'm pretty sure that this is one of the signs that the Apocalypse is near. Wal-Mart is now selling carbon fiber bikes. Now, of course the frame is a budget, Taiwanese mass-production soulless frame (then shipped to Italy in an attempt to add credibility). The components I have to admit aren't bad... but c'mon! Buying a carbon bike at Wal-Mart?!?! You are permanently selling your soul to the corporate oppressors who lead the redneck army who I'm convinced will one day take over the world and force us all to eat liver mush, watch NASCAR, and wear clothes supplied by cigarette companies while riding Wal-Mart bikes!!! I noticed that there's a disclaimer that says the bikes does not include pedals. I can see it now. Billy Bob: "No pedals?!? All these other bikes have pedals... and where is the daggone kick stand!? I need to see the Manager!" Please.... visit your "soon to be a thing of the past, endangered species" local bike shop and get properly fitted on a real bike... then support it or it'll be gone!






Today's workout is a recovery ride. The 80 miler yesterday has me a little fatigued. I'll just do an easy 17-18 mile spin today with my son Tyler. Tomorrow it's back to the run followed by some drills in the pool. Happy Monday!

Sunday, July 15, 2007

80 Miles... heart rate, heart rate, heart rate!!! BPM... BPM... BPM... thump, thump, thump...


Did one of my yearly riding traditions today. Each year I ride from my front door to the end of US 64/NC 90 where it runs into hwy. 40 in Statesville. It's just a simple out & back... but it serves as a great gauge of my endurance. It's rolling terrain with a few long annoying climbs. The kind of climbs that are not terribly steep... but steep enough and long enough to take you out of your rhythm and cause some pain on the trip back. All in all we did 80.3 miles in a about 4 and a half hours. Jon Hogan went with me. His longest ride to date. He did great. My goal today was not to exceed 161BPM and my main goal was to end with an avg. BPM of 147 or under. I fell a bit short. My max HR was 176... but that was only for a very short period while pushing it up a climb. I noticed that most of the time my HR never exceeded 167-168. My avg. for the day was 148BPM... so my overall goal was within 1 BPM... not too bad. Next week it's back up 181. I'll now begin looking for hillier courses. My endurance is basically on track (as good as it's gonna get this year) so now I'll focus on climbing since my two big organized rides this year are practically nothing but suffering climbs. It's tough lugging my 185lbs. around so I better get climbing. last year the last 2.5 miles of the Bridge to Bridge about killed me. I hope to do better this year.

Do what they say, not what I do...

I finally had a good run on Thursday. I listened to all the run coaches that I've read and decided to run slower... and by using ONLY heart rate as my guide. I disregarded pace, speed, time... and just went on heart rate. For me, staying just below my lactate threshold is a heart rate just under 161bpm. This is the point for me that my body is still utilizing oxygen (aerobic) and fat as my primary fuel sources which allows me to build greater endurance. If I go over 161bpm, then my body crosses over its lactate threshold and my body can no longer keep up with the demand for oxygen, and I begin to "switch" and burn sugar and carbohydrate in the muscle for fuel which produces blood lactate (lactic acid) and a burning sensation begins along with labored breathing and fatigue. This can only go on so long before I fizzle out and have to slow dramatically or walk. This is no good. So, my goal is to remain under my lactate threshold during runs regardless of my speed/pace. Logically, as my endurance increases, my pace will also. Once my aerobic base is properly build, then I can work on speed.

I learned a lesson from cycling that applies to my running. I noticed that when I run, I will often push my pace on downhills. I guess I'm trying to make up some time. But when a subsequent rise in the road occurs, I struggle to maintain any kind of pace. Then I thought about how I conserve energy on the bike. If I'm on a hilly course, I will often coast and rest on a downhill to lower my heart rate and prepare for the next climb. This helps me balance my energy to be able to complete longer courses and be fresh at the end. So I began to use this philosophy on my runs. It worked! I relaxed and "coasted" on the downs which helped me big-time on the rises. I often remind myself of the turtle and the hare story. Slow and steady wins the race. Now, while I don't believe that slow and steady "wins" the race, I do believe slow and steady completes the race. For a guy like me who spent a lifetime building fast-twitch muscle and is lean at 185lbs. I'll never be one of those 140lb rolling toothpicks that fly up mountains like a bird. But slow and steady for me works to finish long rides with confidence. And the total sum of the parts equals decent times and less suffering. I'm actually hanging well now with some of the "A" riders. I'll take it. Now if I can just get to where I can hang with the "C" runners and swimmers!

Today is a 77-mile endurance ride. I'm going out with two other guys. Should be fun and a good test of where my fitness is right now. Peace!

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

If only every day were bike day!

Today was bike day. I only had time for about 17-20 miles so we did our Hickory loop. Had Tyler along today so I really couldn't hammer. That's okay cause riding with Tyler (my 14 year-old son) has caused me to slow down, build some endurance and focus on mechanics. I really believe it's made be a stronger rider. To enhance workouts... I'll climb in bigger gears on do climbs 2 times to his 1 and get some repeats in. Anyway... I felt good today. I climbed the Hilton park climb (a 1 mile non-stop climb at around 17-18mph with peaks at over 19mph today (that's good for my 185lb physique.) I'm ready for our 77-mile ride Sunday... looking forward to it. Tomorrow it's back to running. Didn't make my 4:30am run this morning. Nate cancelled so I blew it off for some needed rest. Got up at 5:00 (that's good for me) and just chilled with a pot of coffee. Good stuff! I'll also hit the pool tomorrow for about 750 meters of drills (woo hoo!!) Ate well today... but I must confess... I ate a brownie at my Mom's house when I dropped the kids off. There... I feel better. I need a good run workout. I'm waiting for a breakthrough.


Man... could the tour please hit some hills?!? Some of the finish sprints have been pretty exciting... but c'mon. Let's suffer in some mountains already!

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

There will be bad days...


I ran today.... then I stopped after about 2.5 miles. Then I ran some more... then I walked a little... then I ran some more.... I was on a nice rolling green-way but is was brutally hot. It was 94 degrees, no clouds, and about 98% humidity. Walking on the black asphalt with a black baseball hat... well, it got me. I zapped. I ended up doing a miserable 4 miles in around 40-minutes. Terrible... but the heat made me a zombie out there. I've decided that I will go out tomorrow morning at 4:30 and run 5K at a good pace then do my slower run that I do with Nate on M/W/F. I can ride in this heat... I of course, can swim... but run? No. At least not now. Maybe when I have a bit more fitness. There will be bad days. Tomorrow will be better. I'll eat good today, get plenty of fluids, watch the Tour tonight, try to get some quality sleep... then hit it again tomorrow. I'm gonna do my run in the morning... then it's a lunchtime bike ride of about 21 miles. Thursday.... I'm gonna focus all my efforts on the swim. It's absolutely pouring rain right now... wish it had been an hour ago when I was running.

Monday, July 9, 2007

Rest.... and a retraction


Okay... so it's a rest day. I can't believe how hard it is to rest! I ran last night and have to say I had a bad workout. I felt like crap... ran poorly... and just could not get into a rhythm. It was so hard for me to not get out and run again today to make up for my bad performance yesterday. But I resisted... and feel pretty good. I can't wait to get back to training tomorrow and see if the day off served me well. I'll run and swim tomorrow. I plan to drive down the street to a local walking trail to run a flatter course to build some easy endurance. I'm trying to keep my heart rate below 147. We'll see... that's tough for me... especially in this heat. Then it's into the pool for an hour's worth of drill work. About 750 meters in all.

So now for my retraction. In an earlier post I was dogging the Tour De France. But when I happened to ease by a TV today that was broadcasting it.... I was sucked back in. I think it the voice of Phil Liggett. You hear that familiar British accent doing the "play-by-play" and you can't help but get the fever. It was even a boring flat stage... but I watched it like a train wreck. I immediately jumped behind the computer and logged onto my Dish Network account and upgraded to the bigger (and more expensive) package that included the Versus Network that broadcasts the Tour. Oh, well. Guess old habits die hard. What can I say... when I'm wrong... I'm wrong. Vive' Le Tour!

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Swimming, cleaning, coffee, cycling, baseball, babies...


It's been a good day. I ended up riding 22 miles with Alex. I think Alex rode 20.... I kept turning around to double climbs and pace Alex up. I do NOT say this to brag. Alex is doing great. It was his 3rd ride and he rode hard. My cycling form is good. I feel like I'm on target. Next Sunday it's a 77 mile endurance ride that I do every year to test my progress. I'm confident I'll do OK. Then it's up 181 for some more recon training for the Bridge to Bridge the following Sunday. Not to mention Hurt, Pain, and Agony at the end of the month. That's a tough one with climbs reaching 18% grade.
I had a good day in the pool. My coach (Phil) said he say very noticable improvement. We went over some stuff. .. and he added 3 new drills to work on next week. I'm also working on my breast stroke. The breast stroke is a great "fail safe" stroke if I need some rest in an open water swim. I'm beginning to feel like I belong in the water. I have a loooong way to go before I feel confident doing 1.2 miles in open water.... but I feel very confident I can get there. I am finally at the point that I look forward to pool workouts.

Never got to painting today... took too long to just clean up. Got a lot done though. It's always nice to be in a clean house. Especially when you get up at 4:30am everyday and the downstairs is your domain so you don't wake the wife and kids. My morning ritual is sacred to me. get up... eat (protein shake, whole grain cereal, vitamins, and EFAs.), then it's my coffee. I love coffee. Take anything away from me but don't take away my coffee! When I run (M/W/F) at 5am... the hot pot of coffee waiting on me gets me through the run. Then it's back home... hot cup of java... and I'm behind the computer checking news... most likely I'm on the forums at BeginnerTriathlete.com. It's a great forum with great members and good real-world advice.

In a moment we're off to the baseball game to chill with friends and coworkers. Should be nice. I'm really looking forward to getting some sleep. I've never appreciated sleep more than when I began a tri campaign. Guess that all ends when my daughter is born. Oh well... it's worth it. Peace!

777


Okay, so the date today is 7-7-07. This has to be a good day. I'm meeting Alex Bentley (a trainer at the gym) for a 17 mile ride today. This is only his third ride... so I'm keeping the distance manageable. After the ride it's off to the pool for a session with my swim coach Phil. I'm not sure I've progressed that great since we last met... I'm sure I'll get some constructive insight today. I look forward to the day I can hit the pool and just swim for an hour straight. One day!

'll pick up the kids from my parents after my swim and it's to the house for chores! I have to finish some painting and really give the place a good cleaning. We're hardly home and when we are it's eat, shower, sleep. Not much time for cleaning and other stuff. Plus with Nancy being pregnant it's pretty much just me and the kids.... which ultimately means me. Speaking of Nancy... I can feel the baby kick now. That's always cool. Only 4 more months.

Tonight I'm taking the family to a minor league baseball game. The Hickory Crawdads a AAA team affiliated with the Pittsburgh Pirates. We have a skybox (suite) for the game. We get the skybox as a perk for being the official gym of the team. They workout at my gym. It's pretty sweet. There is also fireworks after the game. That's usually pretty cool. I just need to watch my beer and pizza consumption. Especially since tomorrow we have church, house work, and I have to do a 45 min run. Training never ceases!

Friday, July 6, 2007

Tour de what? (We'll miss you Lance & Jan)


The Tour starts this weekend. It's so sad. For the first time in years I could not care less. Pro cycling is on such a sad decline. I hope it can be resurrected. Doping has killed the sport. I'll check the daily recaps.... maybe watch a mountain stage or two.... pull for Levi and the Discovery team... but that's about it. I guess I can still watch my old DVDs I have of 1999 through 2005. Always good stuff.
Summer is in full bloom. It's the week of the fourth. My training has been more relaxed this week. I had a good run on Tuesday.... a walk/run with my son Tyler on the 4th. Rode Tuesday (recovery, 9 miles) and did our airport loop on Thursday. Felt good. Freakin HOT! Also swam a quarter-mile Thursday as well. I'll focus on my drills today. I'm also doing a quick ride with Shannon and Tyler at 1:00. I'm gonna try to get a massage in today as well. My legs need it baaad.
I registered for Bridge to Bridge today as well as Hurt, Pain, and Agony. With the Ironman 70.3 just over the horizon and the possibility of IRONMAN Florida later in 08'... these rides have turned from my year's focus to training rides. My goal on both will be steady endurance pace as much as possible (yeah right). Anyway... apart from these two rides I plan to focus hard on my tri training. Definitely need more pool time. I think next week I'll begin using the aquatic center (Lenoir) pool due to the longer distance. I can go right to the pool at 6am immediately after my 5am run with Nate. It's time to get real serious about my swimming and running. A 57 mile flat bike leg right now would be easy... but the 1.2 mile swim and the half-marathon... well, not so much.
Sticking to a cleaner diet. Less starchy carbs, more veggies and fresh fruit... more protein. Plus... I'm literally amazed at how adding EFAs into my daily routine has helped my hip. I was having some serious sciatica (piriformis syndrome) in my left hip for some time. Killing me in the mornings and often during the first mile of a run. I've been preaching the use of essential fatty acids for years but have gotten out of the habit of taking them. EFSs are a natural anti-inflammatory along with have many other fantastic health benefits. After only three days of EFA supplementation... the pain is all but gone. I take three gel-caps in the morning and 3 more at night.
Happy training!

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Run...run...run


It's 6am and I'm out to run. These days (base building) I run for time goals not mileage goals. This morning kids, we'll be doing a 45 minute run focusing on form and cadence. I'm trying to maintain a stride that has me landing 21-23 foot strikes per 15 seconds. It's a foggy, cool July morning... should be good for running. Later this afternoon it's back into the pool for more drills. Swimming is beginning to get so so slightly more enjoyable now that I can actually feel like I'm not on the verge of drowning all the time.

My nutrition has been dialed in a bit. No more heavy starchy carbs except right before, during, or after a training session. I'm upping my protein to 2gms. per 2.2kg of body weight. Adding more water dense fruit and more veggies. My goal is 178lbs. I'm currently 188.

Speaking of training... if you are a triathlete, cyclist, or runner... I highly suggest invest in a Training Peaks.com account. It's the best way I've found to plan your training and keep yourself accountable.

Tomorrow is the 4th of July. Going to take Nancy and the kids to Butch's house (he's the owner of the club I run) for a pool party/ cook-out. It's gonna be burgers and hot dogs so I guess I'll have to bring a couple chicken breasts for me (boo). I'm also running again in the morning.... another 45min. Peace!

Monday, July 2, 2007

181... done.


Well we went up 181 today... I felt pretty good. I could literally feel my body switch over from anaerobic (burning carbs and glycogen) to aerobic (using oxygen, burning fat). The first 8 miles I felt like crap (on Adako Rd.)... but when the switch occurred (at the start of 181) I felt much better. I went up 181 without too much difficulty. I was slow... but felt good. All-in-all we did 45miles.

This week is the week of the fourth... I intend on focusing on run training this week. I'll run tues/wed/thur/sun this week. 320 days and counting to Ironman 70.3 Florida. If my training goes well... I may bite the bullet and register for IRONMAN Florida.... the full Iron distance. We'll see. My swimming really needs to improve.

Sunday, July 1, 2007

181...



So today Shannon, Jon Hogan, and I are climbing hwy 181. If you're not familiar with it... it's a non-stop 10 mile climb and probably the toughest section of the Bridge to Bridge course. Our total mileage today will be around 40 or so. Shannon and Jon have never rode 181... so it will be a treat for them. We are all taking part in the Bridge to Bridge Incredible Cycling Challenge this year... so it's time to start doing some reconnaissance training. bridge to bridge is a 102 mile ride with the last 50 being mostly climbing. This will serve as a great training ride for my IRONMAN. My goal is to do much better than last year. Last year I ate and hydrated wrong... pulled a hip-flexor muscle on 181... and pretty much suffered the last 40 miles to end up with a horrific time of 7 hours and 50 minutes. My goal is to finish around the 6 hr 30min mark this year.

Run, swim, ouch!!


I began my run training on May 28th. I was demoralized! I had lost all run conditioning that I had in 2005 and early 2006. I had completed a tough Duathlon in 2005 (Run, bike, run) down at Clemson, SC and my running was getting decent. I learned how quickly it could all go away. I literally had to walk/run and I felt like my heart was going to explode. I would have to work on my run training. It’s now the first of July… my runs are improving. I feel better with each run. I feel very confident that I can get up to the half-marathon distance by the end of this year easily. Just takes time. I have 321 days as of today before the gun fires in Orlando.
My first swim workout was on June 5th and I was more inept swimming than running! I know the mechanics of running… so I knew it would just take time out on the road. However, swimming was a completely different ballgame. I sank like a freakin stone… and was wiped out after only a couple laps. Back to the drawing board. I bought some books, read every article I could find, and started over. I made some slight progress, but knew if I was going to be able to swim a mile and a half in open water with a thousand other swimmers… I would have to know what the heck I was doing. I hired a coach. I literally put up a sign on the bulletin board of the health club seeking a swim coach. About a week later, a very nice member of the gym popped his head into my office and offered his assistance. His name is Phil and he swam competitively in college and swims 1500 meters daily. We started the following Saturday. Coach Phil evaluated my stroke… tore it apart, and began the task of making me a swimmer. After one hour with him, I saw noticeable improvement. He wrote down several drills that I would work on through the week. He wanted me to swim as much as possible. With each workout, I’m getting better, and better. I would guess that hiring a coach has taken months of my learning curve for swimming. If you are looking into triathlon… please take my advice… hire a coach!
Lessons learned: Just because I can ride a bike well… does not mean that it will spill over to running and swimming. I will have to work twice as hard on the swim and the run. So be it.

Let's get caught up...


So let’s get caught up on my training for 2007. First of all… I officially registered for the 2008 IRONMAN 70.3 Florida. It will be on May 18th at Walt Disney World (my kids are stoked). The 70.3 means it’s a half-IRONMAN triathlon. 1.2-mile swim, 57-mile bike, and a 13.1-mile run. Being my first triathlon I wanted to do a half distance to gain some perspective and experience before jumping into the commitment of a full IRONMAN (2.2mi swim, 112mi bike, 26.2mi run). If my 2007/2008 training goes well… then I may go ahead and register for an IRONMAN later in the year 2008. We’ll see on that.
My training for this year began late. My first bike ride of the year was on May 9th and was a puny 8.8 miles. I was totally out of conditioning. I had been recruited for a new job in the latter part of 2006 and the transition took me completely out of my aerobic training. All I did from November 06 to May 07 was lift weights and eat like crap. I put on some muscle (and fat)… but my aerobic conditioning was in the toilet. So, my training started late. So making 2007 a training year seemed like the wise thing to do. I still have 3 charity/century bike rides planned that will now serve as hard training rides.
By the end of May 07, I had nearly a month of bike training in and was, to be honest, getting bored! I had been riding since 1999 and this year I just wasn’t as inspired as years past. Though I registered for some pretty tough bike rides this year (Bridge-to-Bridge, Hurt, Pain, and Agony) something was tugging at me to do something different. I had always been intrigued with the multisport thing… but felt that my schedule and family would prevent me from being able to train properly. It occurred to me that now that I was working in a more structured job (Manager of a health club) that maybe I could do this. The club I run has a pool (though small, 20 yards), treadmills, spin bikes, etc. I could go on 15-20 mile bikes at lunchtime and my morning we’re more available now as I go to work at 8:30 now as opposed to 5:30 when I was a full-time personal trainer. I could run and swim in the early mornings. Saturday mornings I could do my long rides, runs, and brick workouts. So, I decided to go for it. I would do a tri. Luckily, my wife Nancy was supportive. I have 3 kids 14, 12, 8, and a baby on the way due in late October! So, you see family obligations will be a challenge. Luckily, I’m a morning person. I’m usually up at 4:40am. Morning training while everyone was still sleeping was going to be a given. Time to get serious. Now is the time.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

The Journey Begins...


Triathlete. For me, it’s a title that demands respect. For the athlete who embarks on the journey to become one… it can define you as a person. It’s not for outward glory, but for inner purpose. Its challenge is a life clarifying experience that will remain with you always. I expect, if I can accomplish it, I will walk around feeling a bit different than before. It’s a lonely sport most of the time. Only a month of training into it and I know this. Hours of time spent in the pool, on the bike, out on the road, and in the weight room. It requires hard work, sacrifice, and major determination. There is the inevitable time away from family, friends, and comforts enjoyed. There are the odd alterations in my schedule (I often run at 5:00am in the dark). Though I have not yet accomplished it… I can already feel it tugging at me ever so slightly. The faint feeling of butterflies in my stomach is already there. The excitement builds on the journey daily. With each swim, bike, and run I feel more purpose building inside. I know this will change me forever. I welcome that. Purpose is what keeps us living our lives with meaning. Without it, we’re walking around just killing time like the living dead. I’m not going out like that.

I became an endurance enthusiast back in the summer of 1999 when a client of mine convinced me to try road cycling. I was a bodybuilder; a 215-pound muscle-head that was looking for something different. I was also and still am a personal trainer, working in the trenches of the health and fitness community on a daily basis assisting others in their quest to improve their bodies and their fitness. Though I was strong… I was not fit. I had muscle… but no endurance. During my first ride, I hopped off the bike after only eight-miles… rolled into a roadside ditch… and threw-up. I was hooked. I gave up the 3-hour workouts in favor of light 30-minute circuits and began cycling five days per week. After several years of cycling and turning my 215lb muscle-head physique into a 180lb. cyclist, I was ready for the next step. I still loved cycling… but needed to progress further. I needed new challenges in my life. I had always respected triathletes. To me, it was the purest form of athletic expression. The ultimate physical challenge. I wondered if I could add the title of triathlete to my life-resume. I was soon turning 39 and could see the big 4-0 around the corner. Now was the time to suck it up and embark on something special. It was one thing to say I was a cyclist… it was another to say I finished an IRONMAN. I entered a ½ IRONMAN in the spring of 2008… then I will begin training for a full IRONMAN to celebrate my fortieth year alive. At the time of this posting I am married to my beautiful wife Nancy. I have 3 kids, 14, 12, and 8 years-old... and a baby girl on the way. I work 60-hours a week managing a health club... while trying to fix up a 1930's house in a small community in western North Carolina. I have a busy life... just like you. Don't use schedule or time as an excuse. I train at odd hours... on lunch breaks, and even at night. There is no lack of time... only lack of time management. You can do it.

As a 15-year veteran personal trainer it would be just like me to not only want to share this experience with others… but to bring as many along with me as possible. This blog and accompanying website will serve as my online journal of my personal journey toward becoming an IRONMAN. I’ll give you not only the day-today details of my training… but will hopefully be able to relay real-world, easy to understand training principles that will guide you toward your first triathlon. Whether it is a local sprint race or a full IRONMAN. Use my success and failures to guide you on your journey to adding Triathlete to your life resume. Let’s start training!