Every Wish That We Put Into Motion.... (comments welcome!)

@avondale i soooo appreciate your experience. For reals. Yes. I have been walking the uphills. I’ve started trying to maintain my intervals up the more gentle ones, but anything with a grade over maybe 5% I’m just trying to walk at a good clip (I’m working on a “hills” playlist.)


As for messing with my intervals, I kind of do that every training plan, so it’s not really anything new there. I’m not varying them wildly though; more like 20/30 vs 30/30 vs 40-50/30.
 
This was the guideline that I read somewhere (maybe the trailrunning reddit) when I started getting more serious about hills: wear a hat with a brim (i.e., baseball cap - or imagine you're wearing one). If you can't see the top of the hill because your brim cuts it off, then it's either too long or too steep to run up it, so power walk. If you CAN see the top of the hill beneath the brim, then try to easy run up it. Obviously, this guideline depends a lot on the T+D and how tired you are, etc., but it helps you start thinking about judging when to run and when to walk.

I still keep this in mind for trying to keep my expectations reasonable.

I honestly just this past 6 months when I was training hard for a very hilly race got up to the point of being able to easy run hills of like 3 - 5%. If they are any length, the effort adds up quickly.

It's tough to take in typical advice that you read in different places about trail running because so many folks are just much faster runners and don't realize it. They are still walking steep hills (really, everyone does, even the elites), but for shallower gradients, they don't realize how difficult it is for slower runners. On a 5% grade hill, they might go from a 9 min/mile to 12 min/mile and still make good progress - but they make a big deal about how they have to go so slow (it's true for them!). But those of us that easy run at 13 min/mile then get slowed down to a brisk walk even at the smallest hills.

There's nothing WRONG with that, but it means that when you read about what others may do or suggest, you have to take it with a big grain of salt.
 
How things went: June 2-8

Already talked about last Sunday in last week's day-late wrap-up.

Monday: was my rest day

Tuesday: ended up being a rest day too. I didn't manage to get my run in during the day, and then DD had an art show for her pre-school class and DH was refereeing basketball scrimmages and it just didn't happen. Not a big deal though because I needed to push my rest day back.

Wednesday: 4mi easy. This is when I attempted to "go fast" and my body wanted to know what I was doing. Respectfully. Then I had a mammogram, got new shoes from Fleet Feet, picked up a few new chicks, dropped everything off at the house, picked DD up from school, and then went to the MS track team awards. Go me for sucking it up and doing the run in the morning.

Thursday: 4mi with 2 hills. The new shoes felt good? Different, but good? PR'ed the hill segment, which was a little surprising. Apparently doing a lot of hills makes you better at them. Shocking information, I know.

Friday: 4mi. This sucked. As discussed in a pp, my calves were not happy with me at all. Whether that is due to the new shoes, more hills than usual, trying to "go fast" 2 days prior, or something else I'm not sure. But I ended up walking all but about 2/3 of this because it's better to walk and not limp.

Saturday: It worked out that I took Tuesday off because I was trying to push Friday's rest day to Saturday to accommodate the job we had to do that day.

Ended up with sore/tired legs from standing at a table for almost 4 hours in rubber boots. Every other year or so we raise a big batch of chickens for meat and the process them ourselves. And today was processing day. When we are raising them, we basically can't go anywhere for 8 weeks, so we always try to time it out so it doesn't interfere with the sports schedules or camping trips. I am glad to be done hauling feed and water 2x a day for 50 stinky birds.

Sunday: 10mi on trail. And I woke up to an AQ alert from the wildfires in Canada. :( Not great news when you know you're going on a very long run. I reached out to a couple of people to see if they wanted to hop in with me for a loop, but everyone was out of town for something, so I sucked it up and did it alone. I figured it would take me about 2.5 hours, and I was right on with that estimation (2:29:39). I took my hydration vest (when I was looking at new ones earlier in the week I realized I had forgotten about 2 additional tightening straps, and when I loosened those my vest fits great again!) 2 stroopwaffles, and a pack of sportbeans I had stashed from one of the MW races. I also stashed on of my rundisney cooling towels since they fold up tiny and fit nicely into the smallest pocked on my vest. Oatmeal with a dollop of peanut butter and some honey for breakfast. I had made sure to drink plenty of water on Friday and Saturday, and a liquid IV on Saturday afternoon as well. I wished I had something with electrolytes in it during the run, and was happy I had the cooling towel for the 2nd half of the run when the temperature, and therefore the humidity, went up.

I was the first one on the trail that day, which meant I got to clean out all of the spider webs for ~5mi. Gross. As usual, I stopped to stretch my calves out about a mile/mile-and-a-half in, but they didn't bother me otherwise, which makes me even more suspicious of the new shoes. I set my intervals to 30/30 for this run (I've used 20/30 the last new times) and told myself that I would walk extra when my HR got over 160. This ended up working out pretty well. One thing I did discover, and I feel like it's important information for August, is that I actually needed to focus more on the flatter part of the run. I assumed that my pace would just naturally drop in the very low 14s or mid/upper 13s on the flat section of the trail but what actually happened is that my walking pace slowed down a LOT and my pace stayed in the upper14s. Since I'm hoping to get a buffer in the middle 1/3 of my race where it's flat, this was an important lesson to learn. I ended with 866ft of ascent for this run (I'm not sure if I'll find a hillier run locally unless I want to repeat significantly smaller loops) and should pass last month's total some time this week.

I walked a couple of laps around the parking lot when I was done with the run, and then it was home to get cleaned up and head to the HS track awards (2.5 hours sitting at cafeteria tables, OY!) and then 2 graduation open house parties for kids we have coached since T-ball. I wore compression socks and even commented to DH about how normal my legs felt and then adding, "Hopefully I don't regret making that comment tomorrow morning!"

I'm supposed to run 6mi on a trail again today and I'm tempted to try a new one to change things up a little bit. We will see what fits into the schedule though since I somehow still have too many things going on with the kids' schedules. If driving to a trail won't fit, then I'll just run it at home here and make sure to include a few miles of gravel road.
 
How things went: June 2-8

Already talked about last Sunday in last week's day-late wrap-up.

Monday: was my rest day

Tuesday: ended up being a rest day too. I didn't manage to get my run in during the day, and then DD had an art show for her pre-school class and DH was refereeing basketball scrimmages and it just didn't happen. Not a big deal though because I needed to push my rest day back.

Wednesday: 4mi easy. This is when I attempted to "go fast" and my body wanted to know what I was doing. Respectfully. Then I had a mammogram, got new shoes from Fleet Feet, picked up a few new chicks, dropped everything off at the house, picked DD up from school, and then went to the MS track team awards. Go me for sucking it up and doing the run in the morning.

Thursday: 4mi with 2 hills. The new shoes felt good? Different, but good? PR'ed the hill segment, which was a little surprising. Apparently doing a lot of hills makes you better at them. Shocking information, I know.

Friday: 4mi. This sucked. As discussed in a pp, my calves were not happy with me at all. Whether that is due to the new shoes, more hills than usual, trying to "go fast" 2 days prior, or something else I'm not sure. But I ended up walking all but about 2/3 of this because it's better to walk and not limp.

Saturday: It worked out that I took Tuesday off because I was trying to push Friday's rest day to Saturday to accommodate the job we had to do that day.

Ended up with sore/tired legs from standing at a table for almost 4 hours in rubber boots. Every other year or so we raise a big batch of chickens for meat and the process them ourselves. And today was processing day. When we are raising them, we basically can't go anywhere for 8 weeks, so we always try to time it out so it doesn't interfere with the sports schedules or camping trips. I am glad to be done hauling feed and water 2x a day for 50 stinky birds.

Sunday: 10mi on trail. And I woke up to an AQ alert from the wildfires in Canada. :( Not great news when you know you're going on a very long run. I reached out to a couple of people to see if they wanted to hop in with me for a loop, but everyone was out of town for something, so I sucked it up and did it alone. I figured it would take me about 2.5 hours, and I was right on with that estimation (2:29:39). I took my hydration vest (when I was looking at new ones earlier in the week I realized I had forgotten about 2 additional tightening straps, and when I loosened those my vest fits great again!) 2 stroopwaffles, and a pack of sportbeans I had stashed from one of the MW races. I also stashed on of my rundisney cooling towels since they fold up tiny and fit nicely into the smallest pocked on my vest. Oatmeal with a dollop of peanut butter and some honey for breakfast. I had made sure to drink plenty of water on Friday and Saturday, and a liquid IV on Saturday afternoon as well. I wished I had something with electrolytes in it during the run, and was happy I had the cooling towel for the 2nd half of the run when the temperature, and therefore the humidity, went up.

I was the first one on the trail that day, which meant I got to clean out all of the spider webs for ~5mi. Gross. As usual, I stopped to stretch my calves out about a mile/mile-and-a-half in, but they didn't bother me otherwise, which makes me even more suspicious of the new shoes. I set my intervals to 30/30 for this run (I've used 20/30 the last new times) and told myself that I would walk extra when my HR got over 160. This ended up working out pretty well. One thing I did discover, and I feel like it's important information for August, is that I actually needed to focus more on the flatter part of the run. I assumed that my pace would just naturally drop in the very low 14s or mid/upper 13s on the flat section of the trail but what actually happened is that my walking pace slowed down a LOT and my pace stayed in the upper14s. Since I'm hoping to get a buffer in the middle 1/3 of my race where it's flat, this was an important lesson to learn. I ended with 866ft of ascent for this run (I'm not sure if I'll find a hillier run locally unless I want to repeat significantly smaller loops) and should pass last month's total some time this week.

I walked a couple of laps around the parking lot when I was done with the run, and then it was home to get cleaned up and head to the HS track awards (2.5 hours sitting at cafeteria tables, OY!) and then 2 graduation open house parties for kids we have coached since T-ball. I wore compression socks and even commented to DH about how normal my legs felt and then adding, "Hopefully I don't regret making that comment tomorrow morning!"

I'm supposed to run 6mi on a trail again today and I'm tempted to try a new one to change things up a little bit. We will see what fits into the schedule though since I somehow still have too many things going on with the kids' schedules. If driving to a trail won't fit, then I'll just run it at home here and make sure to include a few miles of gravel road.
I hate spiders 🕷️ webs 🕸️. Sounds like a busy week but you got the runs in 👍
 

One thing I did discover, and I feel like it's important information for August, is that I actually needed to focus more on the flatter part of the run. I assumed that my pace would just naturally drop in the very low 14s or mid/upper 13s on the flat section of the trail but what actually happened is that my walking pace slowed down a LOT and my pace stayed in the upper14s. Since I'm hoping to get a buffer in the middle 1/3 of my race where it's flat, this was an important lesson to learn.
I've been working on trying to increase my walking speed because of my extremely short legs and therefore very short stride. :D I started by focusing on increasing the cadence during regular walks rather than lengthening my stride, and now my walking speed has increased by at least a few minutes per mile. (It's hard to track exactly since I usually walk outside with the dog, and on the treadmill I can set the pace.) My easy paces have gotten slightly faster even in the summer, and I find myself not slowing down as much during the walk breaks as I keep up the cadence. And no shin pain!
 
I've been working on trying to increase my walking speed because of my extremely short legs and therefore very short stride. :D I started by focusing on increasing the cadence during regular walks rather than lengthening my stride, and now my walking speed has increased by at least a few minutes per mile. (It's hard to track exactly since I usually walk outside with the dog, and on the treadmill I can set the pace.) My easy paces have gotten slightly faster even in the summer, and I find myself not slowing down as much during the walk breaks as I keep up the cadence. And no shin pain!
Right! I've done the same thing, trying to get the walking pace closer to 15min instead of the meandering 17-18min. When I'm road running it's not as much of an issue, but when I run the longer, hilly part of that trail (there's a 3.2mi very hilly loop on one side of the road, and a 1.7mi, flatter loop on the other side) I'm really thinking about powering up the hills to not lose a bunch of time. But I found that I was just kind of relaxing more on the short loop (because the flatter trail is also smoother and I'm not as concerned about tripping on thing) and then my brain went OK we don't have to keep you from falling to your death now and everything slowed down.

But also, I've indicated in yellow the "flatter" parts of this route. :rotfl2:
IMG_6460.jpeg
 
I've been working on trying to increase my walking speed because of my extremely short legs and therefore very short stride. :D I started by focusing on increasing the cadence during regular walks rather than lengthening my stride, and now my walking speed has increased by at least a few minutes per mile.

Cadence drills are a huge help. Another thing that I do once a week is a 4 mile progression walk. The concept is to walk each mile faster, starting with a "window shopping pace" and not quite getting to a race walk for the final mile. I've been doing this for quite a while (I walk with a friend once a week so I do this workout then) and it has definitely helped me increase my walking speed.
 
I don't know what I was thinking, but I completely forgot about how awful it is to try to find shorts.

Summer basketball refereeing means hours and hours in a gym that is hot. So I thought to myself, I'll just get some black shorts to wear because we aren't required to wear pants during summer scrimmages.

So I went and ordered a pair of 7in baleaf shorts off amazon. And I like everything about them except for how they fit. Then today, I just decided to try some men's shorts because I'm snagging DH's shorts for chore stuff half the time and they come in something other than a 3in inseam. Yeah. Don't like those either.

Oh that's right! Shorts are like the worst thing ever to try to fit! And now I have 5 hours of basketball to referee in 2 days and still no shorts. I'll probably end up wearing leggings or something at this rate. UGH!
 
Good week of training!

PR'ed the hill segment, which was a little surprising. Apparently doing a lot of hills makes you better at them. Shocking information, I know.
It's nice when you can actually see it start to pay off!
I was the first one on the trail that day, which meant I got to clean out all of the spider webs for ~5mi. Gross.
This is a topic that comes up occasionally in the trailrunning reddit. Folks down in the Smokies especially have the orb-weaver spiders with super big/thick webs. These runners run holding a long stick up and out ahead of them. Seriously.
I ended with 866ft of ascent for this run
This is a good amount for 10 miles. Keep it up!

And then be glad your 50k isn't one of the ones with 2 or 3 times as much elevation gain! LOL
 
I don't know what I was thinking, but I completely forgot about how awful it is to try to find shorts.

Summer basketball refereeing means hours and hours in a gym that is hot. So I thought to myself, I'll just get some black shorts to wear because we aren't required to wear pants during summer scrimmages.

So I went and ordered a pair of 7in baleaf shorts off amazon. And I like everything about them except for how they fit. Then today, I just decided to try some men's shorts because I'm snagging DH's shorts for chore stuff half the time and they come in something other than a 3in inseam. Yeah. Don't like those either.

Oh that's right! Shorts are like the worst thing ever to try to fit! And now I have 5 hours of basketball to referee in 2 days and still no shorts. I'll probably end up wearing leggings or something at this rate. UGH!
These are the bike shorts I started running in. I wore them for a long time before I invested in Janji shorts and Crowned gear. I still wear them under dresses or just around the house/for errands, and I find them very comfortable. I have an easy time finding shorts, though, and like the biker style fit, so your mileage may vary. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07HMWLC1F?ref_=ppx_hzsearch_conn_dt_b_fed_asin_title_22
 
These are the bike shorts I started running in. I wore them for a long time before I invested in Janji shorts and Crowned gear. I still wear them under dresses or just around the house/for errands, and I find them very comfortable. I have an easy time finding shorts, though, and like the biker style fit, so your mileage may vary. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07HMWLC1F?ref_=ppx_hzsearch_conn_dt_b_fed_asin_title_22
all bike shorts that I've ever worn ride up unless they have a solid non-slip silicone band on the leg. Always, always, always.
 
Do you follow Erin Azar? She does super honest (and hilarious) shorts reviews often on her channel: https://www.instagram.com/immrsspacecadet/

You may have to scroll a bit or search, but totally worth the time.
yes. I love her stuff. We definitely have different body types though. And I think I'm also having a crisis of size because I *haven't* worn shorts in so long and all the weight I gained in the last 3 years....I'm sizing up and it's not enough, and then that's a whole other thing. *sigh*
 
COMPLETELY unrelated.

I think I might have MW costume inspo finally.

Let's combine things I love! HEA fireworks and the theme of the weekend (books.)

"The story comes alive, when you look inside"

Sooooooo yeah. Down the rabbit hole I will go looking at fabrics and such trying to figure out how to make that work.



*Bonus: I've started playing Happily Ever After in the car on the way to school in the morning and DD is belting out most of the lyrics now (or at least mumbling along with similar phonemes.) I will be taking all of the Kleenex with us on our MK days in January.
 
For both the half and the full during this year's MW, I played HEA as I entered the Magic KIngdom. Right turn on Main Street and see the castle with HEA in my ears. 😭
I saved HEA and Illuminations for the Western Way stretch because I knew I'd be suffering, and if I was going to be crying, I at least wanted to cry because of Disney magic. :D
 
*Bonus: I've started playing Happily Ever After in the car on the way to school in the morning and DD is belting out most of the lyrics now (or at least mumbling along with similar phonemes.) I will be taking all of the Kleenex with us on our MK days in January.
That's much better than my kid who has started singing "Pink Pony Club." :D (It's actually adorable, but I do wonder what school will say. It's better than me singing Like a Virgin at his age, LOL.)

Also, if you want to coordinate costumes, I do not need an excuse to buy new gear. :D
 
That's much better than my kid who has started singing "Pink Pony Club." :D (It's actually adorable, but I do wonder what school will say. It's better than me singing Like a Virgin at his age, LOL.)
Yeah kids singing songs that are way above their pay grade just goes with the territory.

Also, if you want to coordinate costumes, I do not need an excuse to buy new gear. :D
I mean there’s also going as librarians. 🤔
 
I attempted to run 4mi in the new novablasts today. Key were there is attempted. My lower legs protested almost from the start. I'm used to my legs feeling heavy/achey/tired for the first mile and clearing up during the 2nd mile, but they were just progressively getting worse and worse so I pulled the plug at the end of mile 2 and as soon as I got in the house they were off my feet and I was on my incline calf-stretch blocks. UUUGH.

I can do 4 hours of trail running over the weekend in much less cushioned shoes and feel basically fine, but 2mi in a max-cushion is breaking me? Yeah that's not OK.

But also, this is why I bought locally. I will be returning these for something else (possibly tonight) in the very near future.
 





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