After a fair to good night's sleep, I headed out to Barrington for my ride. Surprisingly, the weather was PERFECT! When I started out, it was maybe 60 degrees, and then the sun warmed things up just enough. If I had to guess, there was a high in the mid-60s. I felt really strong going out and was ready to take my first solo 50+ miler.
When you train for long distance triathlon, you are usually with fellow teammates for long rides- mostly for safety in unfamiliar territory and also to hold yourself accountable. An obvious plus is that your friends are there along the ride to break up the monotony. A less obvious minus is that you often get grouped by speed. This is great if you are on the fence of the next level up and they pace you (or you draft off them!); however, it's easy to lose sight of the skills you're out there to work on. Long distance riding requires a completely different skill set compared to renting a beach cruiser on the lakefront for a few hours. You train your cadence, speed, HR, shifting, and estimated power if possible. You must even train your nutrition. Sometimes these skills get lost in the shuffle if you're just riding to keep up with the person in front of you. It's an inefficient way to train if you don't ever take a long ride on your own. I learned this today.
I love riding with Lindsey and Mark, but in order to keep their pace sometimes I wind up wildly hammering away, mistiming my shifting and avoiding my aerobars because all I can think about is riding as fast as possible for 3 hours. Today was completely different. I started out strong and wanted to finally finish strong after 50+ miles. Even though I know all the training I did this year should technically allow me to feel confident at this intensity, I never really had the opportunity to say, "YEAH! This was the greatest 56 mile training ride for Ironman 70.3 EVER!!" I was ABOUT to say that on July 6th, and did up until mile 31 when I crashed training on the course in Michigan, but I never got to finish it and know "for sure" that I could ride strong on hills for 56 miles. But I knew I could. It's not that I haven't had good 56 mile rides, I have...But in Chicago on a flat course. Let me just put it this way- up to this point today, I registered for Madison based on my confidence only that I am "that close" to mastering the 56-mile distance with hills. If I could feel confident at that level, then doubling it for a 112-mile ride in Madison would be possible. Gratefully, today was that day. I finally felt like the second half of July 6th came through for me- being able to have a great strong first 30 miles and also having a great strong rest of the ride through the end at 51 miles. I rode steady and strong anticipating 95% of my shifting on the hills. I paid close attention to my cadence the entire ride and felt the benefit of pacing in my muscles. I watched my nutrition and paced with 2 shot blocks at 25, a small Larabar at 30 and plenty of fluids to take me through the 3:25.53. I hadn't even planned the notorious 12% grade climb on Blackhawk Trail for today's ride but I was feeling so good that I added it on a longer loop- twice-without the "kill me now" feeling. I mentally prepared for it and timed not only my cadence but also my shifting much better since I was just worrying about myself.
I learned a lot today. When I woke up and saw the sun instead of rain, I was reminded what a good idea it is to go to bed thinking, "I'm doing this ride tomorrow rain or shine" because then at least I won't toss and turn losing sleep wondering if it's going to rain. I not only woke up pretty rested, I was ecsatic the sun was out! Second, I learned to pace myself on a 56-mile long ride with wind and hills. Paced my cadence, speed, nutrition, HR, and mental endurance. Third, I learned that even though a solo ride is good to check yourself once every few weeks, it's much more fun to be with your teammates!
Below is the revised ride I created thanks to a great training day.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Barrington Loop Bike Route
Map My Ride is an awesome website that allows cyclists to map and save their rides. It calculates distance and elevation to tailor your training, which is crucial to targeting your scheduled workouts. The interactive mapping system is a little tricky, and I'm still learning how to use it, but it's worth the extra time to get the route, study the maps, and train to specific elevations. I have a headache the size of Blackhawk Trail right now from re-routing this bad boy 10 times, but basically it's a looped ride. After the initial trek to the intersection of River Road and IL-62 (Algonquin Rd), I'm going back east to Haeger's Bend and the Spring Creek-Ridge/N. River/Plumtree/Haeger's loop a few times. Total distance will be approximately 50 miles. I think it might be cold and even rainy but I'm hitting it regardless. This will also be the first time I ride solo on a long ride, which is a little scary. It shouldn't be too bad because I know the route (3rd time out here now) and there are a lot of cyclists and runners training this area. Fingers crossed!
Thursday, September 24, 2009
Step 1: Create A Blog!
As a health care worker, computers are not my forte! I don't know what took more courage- registering for Madison or creating a blog. In my world, the two are on equal grounds. Thanks to a great old friend, Jess Perlazza (who happens to be one of the first little girls I babysat for at least 20 years ago and is now an amazing young woman teaching English to children in South Korea), the blog has begun! Thanks to innumberable training friends, overwhelming support from family, and a desire to push the envelope throughout life, registering for Ironman Wisconsin 2010 was official on Monday, September 14, 2009!
People write blogs for many reasons, I suppose. I created The Road To Madison 2010 for selfish reasons. It's inevitable that the going's gonna get tough somewhere along this 140.6 mile journey and I'll need something to inspire me. On average, my training weeks will log 8-14 hours depending on the period. The goal will be to complete a 2.4 mile swim, 112 mile bike, and 26.2 mile run on September 12, 2010 feeling like I've been given a gift from God. My time is TBD and will likely be a secret only I will keep. Reading back through my entries will hopefully allow me to appreciate the highs AND lows of training. Just as I tell my patients to avoid doing a "progress check" day-to-day, I hope to only need these checks every once in a while. Sometimes our steps forward are small ones and we don't see the progress at first. But when you step back and compare where you've been week-to-week or month-to-month, you see the bigger picture. We all move too fast through life, and as most of my closest friends and family members know...my memory is the first to check out. I know this journey will be one of the most rewarding experiences of my entire life and I don't want to ever forget it. I hope technology doesn't move as fast as we all do so 30 years from now I will still be able to read back and remember this amazing experience!
People write blogs for many reasons, I suppose. I created The Road To Madison 2010 for selfish reasons. It's inevitable that the going's gonna get tough somewhere along this 140.6 mile journey and I'll need something to inspire me. On average, my training weeks will log 8-14 hours depending on the period. The goal will be to complete a 2.4 mile swim, 112 mile bike, and 26.2 mile run on September 12, 2010 feeling like I've been given a gift from God. My time is TBD and will likely be a secret only I will keep. Reading back through my entries will hopefully allow me to appreciate the highs AND lows of training. Just as I tell my patients to avoid doing a "progress check" day-to-day, I hope to only need these checks every once in a while. Sometimes our steps forward are small ones and we don't see the progress at first. But when you step back and compare where you've been week-to-week or month-to-month, you see the bigger picture. We all move too fast through life, and as most of my closest friends and family members know...my memory is the first to check out. I know this journey will be one of the most rewarding experiences of my entire life and I don't want to ever forget it. I hope technology doesn't move as fast as we all do so 30 years from now I will still be able to read back and remember this amazing experience!
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
