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“It isn’t the time you get, it’s the time you have getting the time you get.” — Steve King (at IMC 2010 athlete pre-race banquet)

I’ve spent a couple of days thinking about the race and reliving various parts of it with different people at a variety of times. I could talk for more than 13 hours about the less than 13 hours I spent racing and still not come close to covering everything that happened.

This was a life changing event for me without doubt. The day before the race I heard someone saying that Ironman follows you for life, that it is always a part of you, altering who you are and how you look at things. Everything forever after is coloured by the experience and the self knowledge that comes from the journey from start to finish. I nodded and smiled and thought I understood. I don’t think I did. I believe that I am starting to understand now though.

For the rest of my life I am Ironman. It took me year to prepare and a bit less than 13 hours to complete, but Ironman will remain with me for a lifetime.

Here’s the race report with links to the Garmin maps and details.

Swim – 1:18:19 — goal 1:20:00

I walked into the start area buoyant and alive and chatted with folks while putting on my wetsuit. Once the suit was on it was time to walk down to the beach and that’s when I realized just how many people there were. I stopped being an athlete on a journey and quickly became just another black suit and yellow cap amongst thousands. Literally.

I heard there were 2732 people that crossed the mat to the beach.

Thankfully I ran into Tavis before the beach and he led me like a lost puppy onto the beach and out into the water for a quick warm-up. I decided to get right in with the pack to start and Tavis and I moved away from each other a minute or so before the start. The time chatting with him and listening to advise and knowledge was well spent and helped get my mind into the zone and ready to go.

I didn’t hear the cannon or gun or buzzer or whatever signified the start, I only heard the words over the loudspeaker and hit the Garmin button. I’d seen someone else wear their Garmin 310xt under their wetsuit sleeve and I went with that, so I couldn’t see the numbers, but I could identify the correct button and that was good enough.

100m in and I was free and clear. A minute into the swim, all by myself for a moment I looked down and saw a picture perfect maple leaf on the ground a few feet below me, awesome! I’d started in the main pack just off to the left and had a clean line. Tavis recommended using the radio antennas on the peak as a sight guide and that was an excellent suggestion as it kept me bang on for the first 1600m.

I, rather mistakenly, believed that I’d gotten just a bit ahead of the pack and could just keep to my line and go hard. At 101m or so I realized how wrong I was. Like a pincer move from any historical treatise the jaws of the trap snapped shut on me and I was tossed into the middle of the mix. A kick to the head in the first 5 minutes woke me up and reminded me that this was serious shit. The only way out of the mix was to swim through it and ignore the punches, kicks and bumping.

1600m to the first turn and I was feeling strong. Used to the folks hemming me in on all sides, slowing down in front, cutting me off, swimming over my legs and impeding my stroke; I just kept going, eyes on the prize. Hitting the houseboat I looked down to see a diver underneath me watching the action. I waved but didn’t see if he waved back. This made me smile though and knowing I had to hit the turn I pulled up a bit short and stroked right.

That’s about when I slapped the girl who’d been hanging on my right shoulder for a couple of minutes square on the ass. I pulled up, she slid across my bow without looking at the corner and when I completed my stroke there was a beautiful sound of wet hand on neoprene. Of course I was in the middle of a full stroke and I’m not a small guy so her ass went underwater fast. This probably helped though because she was fully upright, seeing the corner and hugging my left shoulder for the next couple of minutes.

By the second corner things were a cluster of people again and things started to get violent. I took what I think was an elbow square to the goggle and had to pause to fix things. 100m later I had to adjust the goggle again as my eye was sore, go figure.

With 1800m or so to go in a relatively straight line (yeah right) I settled in to do a long, hard, pull. Stroke, glide, dodge, weave? I had to adjust my stroke to become a defensive block in front of my face before pulling. I wouldn’t recommend this for your fastest time ever, of course, but it sure did help cut down on the hits to the head. My arms, however, took some serious abuse. I couldn’t find a sight line for the return leg and counted on keeping just left of the apartment buildings. Conveniently the people around me had NO problem bouncing, kicking and punching me into a straight line.

Over the last 500m or so I stuck to swimming hard and sighting whenever someone around me bounced or hit me in an unanticipated manner. This worked really well since I was in a larger group actually.

Stripping off the top of my wetsuit I looked at my Garmin and realized that I was coming out of the water 1 hour and 17 minutes after the start. 3 minutes ahead of schedule and stoked I saw Julie and Steve standing thigh deep in the water cheering. I roared with excitement and then hobbled out of the water over the rocks and off to the wetsuit strippers.

I should note that this was simply my best EVER race swim. In addition, this was my very best open water swim. Why? 3.92km of swimming according to the Garmin for a 3.86km mapped route. 60m extra. That sure as hell beats what I normally do. As for speed… one word. DRAFT. The pull from having so many people all in the water going the same direction was amazing. This easily chewed minutes from my time.

T1 – 5:59 — goal 10:00

Knowing I wasn’t doing a strip tease for the swim to bike transition I just grabbed my bag and a patch of grass. One problem here was getting a shirt on over my wet skin. Thankfully there was a volunteer to help me dress and my shirt came on a LOT better than it did at UBC earlier in the season.

Next came getting Chamois Butt’r on, but hey, I’m not shy right? Nope, in what is now being called the “Sham Wow” action by my particular group I squeezed some lube into my hand and proceeded to do the butt and balls maneuver.

Lubed up and it was time to find my bike and get the hell out there. Oddly, this went well. Looking at the Garmin as I hit start for the bike I realized that I was heading out on the ride at 0825. Fully 5 minutes earlier than I anticipated!

Bike – 6:16:55 — goal 6:20:00

Drafting is illegal in Ironman races on the bike. They warn us about the penalties and consequences at every opportunity. And then you leave the swim area in a group of a few hundred.

Drafting is not only impossible to avoid it would be dangerous to try. The only option was to stay on the hoods, find position and move through the pack to get clear.

Of course, as fast as the swim was for me, I still had 1773 people ahead of me. This meant there were a LOT of people in packs for me to deal with. Out of town on Main and then left onto Skaha Lake Road. With a rider on my left and another on my right we went flying down the road moving at about 40km/h. Then I hit the dual manholes and listened the sound of one of my fuel bottles rocketing off the back of the bike. Yup, I cheaped out and didn’t buy the expensive carbon fuel bottle holders, instead sticking with the ones that I’d heard called bottle launchers. Hey, I’d only dropped a bottle once before, what’s the big deal? 50% of my liquid fuel gone in one fell swoop. That would be the big deal. OOPS.

The trip from Penticton to Osoyoos was FAST. Looking at my km splits I was averaging in the 30 – 34km/h range for much of that first leg. The wind was behind me and there was a series of packs for me to chase, defeat and drop. And that’s what I did.

At the bottom of Richter I was feeling amazing and ready for the climb. 2nd gear and starting the climb with only one glitch, I have to pee. Of course after all the threats of criminal prosecution and disqualification for peeing on the course, the line-ups for the porta-potties were horrendous. South of Oliver I was thinking about peeing, north of Osoyoos I was trying NOT to think about peeing. Finally, after the second section of the Richter climb I saw a porta-potty stop with 2 loos and only 2 people in line!

Getting my bike to the volunteer I heard someone say that if we weren’t shy, go around back. Sold! Running around behind the porta-potties and the trucks I found a spot between two cars with a girl racing steps behind me. She asked if I was also not shy, I laughed and said no, dropped my shorts and… paused while I became not shy again. She seemed to have the same problem though and only started peeing after I had which caused a bit of laughter again. When I finished up and turned around she was doing a yoga pose with her shorts around her ankles, one leg in the air in front of her in a squat and holding on to the truck bumper for balance. I laughed again and wished her well and went off to her laughter behind me.

Did I ask her for her number? No, but I thought about how I would have worded it for the next 20km or so and could not think of a way that wouldn’t have come off a bit funny. And that kept me smiling for the rollers.

Topping Richter there were spectators everywhere, cheering, yelling and hollering. It was awesome. Those are words that will come up over and over again with regards to spectators. When it was getting bad, there they were. They carried me up and over screaming my name and number as I struggled.

On a day of firsts there was another on the bike. I was passed on a downhill and I couldn’t catch him. GASP. A fellow named Kim went flying by me on the rollers and I had to push to catch him before the end of the hill. But I caught him, only to have him pass me on the crest and fly down the next side never to be seen by me again.

At first I only caught the name and thought a girl named Kim had passed me, should this have mattered? Nope, but I was still somewhat relieved when I saw that it was a guy, even though he was slight and didn’t have the fat ass and gravity excuse I use for being fast downhill. He was just good!

At various places along the bike course I saw just about everyone that I know who was in Penticton and cheering.

Sheryl, Carly, Gabrielle, Curtis and Miranda were together, taking pics and cheering loudly. Curtis was screaming his fool head off and caused me to smile repeatedly. I didn’t realize that Gabrielle was with them until I saw her sticking out a window as well and it was nice to know that they were all together, that doesn’t happen enough.

Heather, Terry, Ray and Chris were together doing the same. Climbing up Yellow Lake, Ray wanted to race, car to bike for the climb. I won. Not just because of my awesome amazingness. They were stuck in traffic. Wouldn’t have mattered on the downhill though, I flew there!

Anne-Marie and Mary kept trying to get ahead of me for cheering and pictures, but I think I caught them off guard a couple of times by getting places ahead of schedule. At one point I tried chasing their car up a small rise, didn’t work, but I did get a good climb out of it.

Julie was dragging along Steve who was in drag dressed as a hula dancer with shells for a bra. They had one other fellow with them who I either don’t know or didn’t recognize, but they were hilarious. And they were visible! Note to self, when cheering for someone, dress in a way that I get noticed by them! Lifts the spirits for sure. And weirdly, knowing that they were there and cheering for me it lifted me up even more when I saw how happy it was making others who saw them and were being cheered on by them.

The out and back was just not a big deal since I had done it before, or most of it at least. There was a stitch in my side that just didn’t go away which came up through this area, but it only hurt in the aero position and I am sure it came from my back. Wasn’t enough to slow me down though.

On the out and back I didn’t know about the detour down the one road and back along the way, but that was no crisis, just an extra climb back to the road at the end. Back along the road and out to special needs, and there was Ray eating popcorn. Dude! I totally wanted some.

I grabbed all my gear out of the special needs bag and put it in my shirt and then off I went, straight into the wind. Holy crap it was heavy.

At least until I hung a right onto the road to Yellow Lake. Then I realized that I hadn’t been going straight into the wind. I’ve heard that it was a 30km/h head wind. I don’t know if that’s accurate, or even how I would have measured it, but I can tell you that it was tough.

Into the wind heading into the false flat. And then the rain started. And then the rain turned ice cold. And then the ice cold rain turned into hail. That sorta sucked. But it wasn’t horrible really, I’ve ridden in worse for sure.

Riding along and passing folks though I could tell that some of the riders were flagging and getting brought down by the adverse conditions. So I started cheering on folks as I rode with them. There were no officials around, I don’t think they cared less if we were in a tighter pack than we could have been at that point anyway, so I pulled up along some guys and started talking about the war stories we could tell about the ride when we were done the race. Snowing, uphill in both directions! heh. I did get a couple of laughs though and when I peeled away a couple of riders followed me on the next push.

Along this stretch a funny thing happened. I started feeling sorry for the spectators. The weather was horrible! I’d pass by and they’d clang the bells while holding desperately onto their umbrellas or hats and trying to stay warm. I’ve never had that feeling before and it was sorta shocking. There I was riding in the shit, but at least I’d signed up and was voluntarily putting myself through it. They were out there showing support, very, very cool.

Yellow Lake was by far the most mentally challenging part of the ride. The climb itself isn’t horrible, but it seems flatter than it is, so it takes a lot out of your mind. When I hit the base of the big climb though there was a double row of spectators with room for us to ride between them. I could have reached out touched people on either side of me who were yelling and cheering, it was fantastic! Just like watching a bike race on TV actually, incredibly inspirational and enough to keep me moving. Dangerous as shit of course :)

Past the first group I started to see folks in cars who were stuck in traffic! The wind took care of the exhaust, thankfully, and I was going slow enough to actually converse with people. This was good because there were less spectators here and having folks hanging out their windows and cheering was a major help.

Up to the crest of the hill and there was the double line of spectators again! And again, AWESOME!

The downhill back into Penticton was fast. Very fast. And fun. Very fun. It also gave a guy named Scott (I am pretty sure that is correct) the chance to catch and pass me. He was heavier set and just flew down the mountain. What my ass was lacking in gravitational attraction though my brain was making up for in stupidity. I simply hunkered down and picked up speed, passing him near the bottom. According to the Garmin I maxed out at 76.2km/h. The bike computer had me at 77.1km/h max. I would have sworn I was in the 80s. I’ve been at 90km/h on that bike before and it didn’t feel that fast. Mind you, I was knocking off kilometers in 56 and 58 seconds, so I was holding speed for a while instead of just for a maximum burst so that likely made it seem faster. I dunno, but I sure felt like I was flying!

Into town and I could no longer be passed. I had a surge in my legs and I just pushed through to finish off roaring down Main St. All and all, a great ride, one I won’t forget soon.

T2 – 9:35 — goal 10:00

One word for this? SLOW. Coming off the bike I couldn’t believe I had a marathon ahead of me and that mental paralysis slowed me down in transition.

I dropped my bike off, promptly forgetting my Garmin which meant chasing my bike to get it back! I grabbed my bag and said hi to Donna who was volunteering in the area before heading into the change tent. I’d decided to get changed into run shorts more just to slow me down and give me a break than because I needed to.

With everything strewn on the ground in the tent in front of me I had to pause and take a break, figure out what I wanted to do. Twice I had to tell volunteers to leave my gear alone. They were just trying to help of course, and I was being grumpy and out of sorts, but I needed to be left alone for a minute to get my head wrapped around what was going on.

Finally changed I looked through the rest of the crap in my bag realizing how poorly I’d packed. What should have taken 45 seconds took almost 4 minutes. Add to that a stop in the porta-potty for a drop and my transition time, while under goal time, sucked.

Run – 4:53:52 — goal 5:00:00

The run was all about mantras for me. Anything to keep moving.

“Take the soup”
“The swim makes us hard, the bike makes us tough, but the run makes us Iron.
“I will get there if I can get there. I can get there so I WILL get there.”

That last one carried me through a LOT of kilometers of run/walk. Look ahead, pick something to run towards, run until target acquisition.

For the first 8km I ran with a lady named Sylvie who was doing her 8th Ironman (I am pretty sure I remember that correctly). She was running straight through and I was walking the water stations, but I managed to catch up to her when I took breaks. I feel that she was really trying to motivate me when I was flagging, but I knew we were going too quickly for me to maintain for the long haul, so I finally just pulled the plug and took it easy for a bit. Sylvie if you read this thank you for getting me over that first few km of no legs and no feet. I really appreciate it and only wish I’d been able to hold your pace for just a few km more.

Once you get to Skaha Lake there isn’t much of an opportunity for friends and family to spectate until OK Falls. That meant 14 or so km of relying upon myself, my fellow athletes, the volunteers and the spectators who lived in the area and were cheering from their front yards. With my name on my bib people were calling it out regularly and that helped me feel like I was staying connected and motivated.

The real support on the out stretch though came from other runners. I’d run up with someone and chat to them for a while, keeping myself motivated while talking with them. They would do the same for me (and themselves I imagine) later on as the miles started to add up. Through the flats on the way down I spent a lot of time running along side others, chatting at times and just running side by side at others. This was just like run club in that respect and exactly what I needed at the time. Not to think, just to do.

The hill set about 5km out of OK Falls changed things though. 1km up, 2km along, 2km down. Simply, this sucked. Lots.

Into the falls and the roads were lined with people. I was on track here for a 2:10 or 2:15 half marathon, well ahead of schedule. I saw a lot of folks here though and tried to look like I was moving alright when they were looking in my direction. I am sure that I failed miserably at this, of course, but I tried and sometimes that’s enough to make things real.

Special needs bag in hand I grabbed some gels, tried to eat my sandwich (hahhahah, not so much in the success department there) and grabbed the Archie comic. I stripped off my heart rate monitor which had chewed through my chest a bit and dropped it and the rest of the detritus with Heather and off I went. Walking. While reading the Archie. Of course I read and walk all the time and this was intended mostly just to be cute, but it had the desired effect as people asked about it and commented behind my back (people assume you are deaf if you are reading).

A couple of stories in and I couldn’t read anymore. It was a nice mental break, but I knew I needed to get back into the game. For 15km I didn’t get there. I struggled here with my own personal motivation most of all. I wasn’t in major pain, although I couldn’t breathe deeply well and my heart felt like it was racing a bit. But, I feel that I used those reasons to justify not going faster. If my goal had been a 4:45 marathon I am 100% sure that I would have hit that, no problems. If the goal had been a 4:35. Again, no problems. Because my goal was 5:00:00 that’s what I pushed for. When it was obvious I was going to make that I relaxed. End of motivation.

Where the runners carried me on the 14km stretch down, the volunteers carried me back. A nicer group of men, women and children you will never see. The folks who are out there helping us along really make things amazing. We all talk about respecting the volunteers and thanking them, but we need to show it sometime. If you know someone who volunteered and helped others out, give them a hug and buy them lunch or something. They deserve it.

After the turn around I ran into Jackie coming the other way. She was the first person from my group that I’d seen all day. We stopped and hugged and parted ways.

I was taking soup at every opportunity here, often only getting a few sips in before my throat rebelled. A couple of sips of Gatorade, then of water, then of soup. Every stop. I have seen many people say “Take the Soup”. Here’s my advise. Take the soup. Even if you don’t want it, take it, drink it, be thankful.

Somewhere in the upper 20s I discovered the problem with a split bag transition. No Chamois Butt’r in my run bag, so I hadn’t redone the Sham Wow bit when I changed shorts. Consequence, chaffing in the butt and balls. Hmmmm, fun fun fun.

I stopped at a rest stop and asked if they had any Vaseline and was pointed to a lovely volunteer who called herself “the lube lady” (I shit you not). I thanked her for the Vaseline and grabbed some from her fingers. She rather innocently asked if I needed help applying it. Again, I shit you not. Was she being cute, silly or flirtatious? I dunno. I smiled a bit (I think) and said that no, she probably didn’t want to do that given where I was applying it. Then I looked at her and said, but yes, I did want help.

She was flustered, I laughed a bit and went behind the truck to do a bit of lube repair and went on my way, lighter in spirit and a heck of a lot more comfortable.

Over the next few km it was just maintenance. Look for something ahead of me, try and pick a goal. Run to the spot indicated, walk until I can make a new goal. Motivation was low here. I knew I was going to meet my goals so I slowed down and didn’t worry about things.

Ray caught up to me with 9km to go until the finish looking strong. I had 10+ minutes on him at the start of the run and he’d caught me solidly. I held on to him for 1km, but decided to drop back and not worry about it. Motivation was, as stated, low. Ray worked hard to catch and pass me, he deserved the win.

Cresting on Main St, the town was all downhill and the finish line noise was coming towards me like waves off of the lake.

Left off of Main and there is Karen taking pics. I knew my time was good here so I just stopped for a hug and a chat, she pushed me on and told me to keep going.

Right down towards Lakeshore Dr and the crowd picks up my name. There are no runners within 50m of me in any direction so everyone is cheering my name and calling me on. There on the side are Miranda, Gabrielle and Carleena. I stop for a hug, kiss and chat. Gabrielle and Miranda pull and push me on and run with me down the street. Again, time is solid so I’m not worried.

Left onto Lakeshore and I’m running/walking as I need, enjoying the crowds and the sensation. Up ahead on the right is Patti with the camera so I’m quickly up in run position and she’s taking snaps. Do I look good in these? I doubt it.

Out along Lakeshore and I hit the turnaround. 1km or less to the finish line in a straight line. Part way there I see Steve in the hula skirt and clam shells, he runs with me for a minute, driving me ever onwards, congratulating me along the way.

I peel away from him and see Ray, Heather, Chris, Anne-Marie, Mary and Terry. They are cheering maddly and I’m meters away from the finish line. My legs are under me as I push into the finish.

A runner and a kid collide on the finish line and the kid goes down. I’m no more than 15 seconds from the finish and adjusting my stride to miss anyone is going to be a challenge. The runner helps the kid to their feet and everyone clears the chute as I pass the final runner in front of me and surge forward into the line. I’m there too fast for the kids to set up a tape for me to cross with, a bit of a recurring theme for me this race, ahead of target always.

Rubber down and smiling I cross the line. I would get there if I could. I could get there so I DID.

Ms Penticton gives me my finishers medal and the catchers grab me at the end, I barely even see them and only take time to politely say thank you before moving away from them and over to Sheryl and Curtis who are there at the chip removal with Quinton.

Chip off and hugs all around, off to the right of the chute are Carleena, Gabrielle and Miranda calling my name. Off I go for hugs and kisses, high fives and statements of pride and love.

Miranda looks at me and says “Dad, what’s your name?”.

In a loud voice I call out, “I am Ironman!”

Finish – 12:44:40 — goal 13:00:00

Ironman Canada Results Page

My results:

OVERALL PLACE – 1369
TOTAL TIME – 12:44:40
RACE DIVISION – M40-44 (birthday in December)
DIVISION PLACE – 243/370
TOTAL FINISHERS – 2605/2732

SWIM DIV PLACE – 286/370
SWIM OVR PLACE – 1774
SWIM TIME – 1:18:19
SWIM 100M PACE – 2:04

BIKE DIV PLACE – 221/370
BIKE OVR PLACE – 1178
BIKE TIME – 6:16:55
BIKE PACE – 17.8 mph

RUN DIV PLACE – 251/370
RUN OVR PLACE – 1518
RUN TIME – 4:53:53
RUN PACE – 11:13 / mile

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Yup, that’s an odd title since I’ve been counting down to Ironman. But today also marks an anniversary as well. 18 years ago today my daughter Gabrielle was born. Terrifies the crap out of me to think that it’s been 18 years since she came into the world, but it’s a day that I’m not likely to forget anytime in this lifetime.

In other news… yard work is NOT a replacement for time spent training. It gets something accomplished and it’s sorta like exercise and work, but it’s totally not as fun or interesting.

Turns out that yard work also gives me a headache. No more yard work today.

Just thinking about housework is also now increasing my headache. I think it’s time for some food. hmm, it’s 4pm and I haven’t eaten since breakfast.

Okay, training also forces me to eat more regularly.

— later in the day

Miranda woke up this morning and for whatever reason she smelled and then had a hankering for home made macaroni and cheese. So, who kind of a dad would I be if I didn’t make the very best mac and cheese on the planet for dinner?

Macaroni, cheese, salad dressing, margarine, garlic, Mediterranean seasoning, paprika, bacon bits, Parmesan cheese. Put these things in the right amounts, cook, stir, heat, stir, bake, eat.

In current standings:
#1 – Dad’s mac and cheese
#2 – School mac and cheese
#3 – Kraft mac and cheese

At first taste she was thrilled. Some days being a dad is easier than others :)

We decided it was movie day also and went to see the 7o’clock showing of Despicable Me in 3D. You know what, it was damned fun. The movie was great, the company of the wee girl was fantastic and my evening was solid.

Not so many more days before I will be doing Ironman. Not scared yet, but I think it’s coming.

    Nutrition

Breakfast’ish time:
- Sausage breakfast sandwich
- Donut
- Can of 7-Up (160 cal)

Dinner time:
- 2 plates of home made mac and cheese

Movie time:
- Shared large orange/sprite pop

Snack time:
- Bowl of ice cream

Snack time:
- Quaker Dip bar

Late snack time:
- Baked potato with cheese, bacon bits and salad dressing

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T- 5w 3d (38d)

Bit of a weird day today all told, but all around not so bad.

Miranda’s bus was about 45 minutes late coming in and when it arrived she wasn’t feeling well (tired and a bit sick). I brought her home instead of to the office and worked from there for the rest of the afternoon. This was rather productive though as I managed to work through an excel sheet that I’m doing for regression testing which was good.

After work I made us some bbq chicken, and as Miranda was feeling okay I brought her, a friend and Gabrielle up to Sasamat to meet Ray and go for a swim. Well, I went for a swim, the girls played on the beach. The swim itself was okay, but my stomach was in turmoil at the 500m mark and I had to find shore by the canoes, ug.

A look at my nutrition explains this, of course, crappy day for eating for me.

After the swim we all piled in the car and went out to Mission to drop Gabrielle off at her mum’s. That went well, but the trip home turned into an exercise in frustration. A flipped semi west bound on the number 1 just east of 200th. Rocking good times!

It took 50 minutes to get from 232nd to 200th. That’s normally a 5 minute drive!

Ah well, home again and time for a shower and a lot of sleep.

S

    Nutrition and Exercise

1130
- Medium bag of chips
- Sweet Marie
- Aero Bar

1500
- Cookie dough

1530
- Salami Sandwich with Cheese

1600
- 3 or 4 cookies

1745
- 1 1/2 pieces of chicken
- potatoes

1900
- 2.3km swim at Sasamat (2km swim with extra bad sighting and a bathroom stop at the canoes)

2000
- 3 or 4 cookies

2145
- 1/2 medium bag beef jerky

2345
- 2 cookies

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T- 6w 1d

Well, little miss is off to camp now and I miss her already. It would have been fun to have her out at the BBQ fund raiser today at Sandra’s and at the pool before hand. I am positive that she is having a blast though and look forward to hearing about her adventures when she returns late in the week.

I did use my free afternoon wisely though and went to the Coquitlam Aquatic Center for a 4km steady swim. Yup, 4 freaking kilometers. 4000 meters. 80 laps. 160 lengths of the pool.

Yes, I am pretty damned chuffed with myself about that actually :)

Can I do the Ironman distance? Hell yes I can. Oh, and I can do it in plus a bit in 1 hour, 21 minutes and 36 seconds. Extrapolating backwards and comparing to my recent open water race swim times and barring cluster fuckage I should be out of the water in 1:20:00 on the big day. That’s about 10 minutes shy of my “goal” so that’s just not bad at all. Hey, things can go wrong for sure, but when they go right I know what to expect :)

To be honest though, I knew I could do the Ironman distance in Osoyoos. After the 2 1km loops I could easily have hopped back in the water and pounded it out all over again. It was a fantastic feeling. And today was a great feeling as well.

After the swim I went out to Sandra’s for a fund raiser BBQ to support research into a cure for Breast Cancer. Yup, I was supporting boobies again. Or, as the t-shirts they had on sale said, I was “saving second base”.

Of course I was famished after the swim and so downed a number of calories as quickly as possible (yes, I had pop damn it, no I should not have had 4 over the course of the afternoon, but I drank liters of water also and wasn’t switching to booze). All and all a great time was had. I chatted with old friends, played pool (and lost more than I won, gasp!), ate food, donated money to a great cause and generally had fun.

Tomorrow morning is the big ride out to and from Squamish. This should actually be my longest ride ever. I’m going to celebrate that by throwing in a 10km run at the end, just to see how it feels.

S

    Nutrition and Exercise

1000
- The other half bag of the chips (big bag)

1400
- Gel

1400
- 4km steady swim with pull buoy at CCAC. (1:21:36)

1600 – 2130
- 2 Cheese burgers
- 2 Samosas
- 4 Cans of Coke
- 1 Rice Crispy Treat

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T- 6w 2d

So, another day off, and the last I’ll be able to take this week, heck, that makes 3 since the race :)

I have needed it though and feel energized to get back to doing things.

Since my long bricks are moving to Sunday, I will be able to go back to running on Saturdays with my old group out of False Creek. They are doing a clinic thing aiming towards the Thanksgiving Marathons which matches pretty well with my doing Portland.

Of course I won’t be able to run with them every week, Ironman is the priority, but I don’t see why I can’t run with them periodically and get some extra distance in. Really though, I will just enjoy running with that group, it’s been ages since I’ve seen them and while I won’t be running fast at all, I’ll still get to hang with them after the run for coffee or tea.

Injury wise I’m feeling a bit tight and stiff in the glute still, and I’ve pinched a nerve or something in my arm that’s causing it to spasm when I clench or twist. It is VERY weird and frustrating. And painful. I’ll give it a few more days before worrying about it though, unless it hurts when I swim. Then I’ll worry right away :)

Tomorrow morning Miranda goes to camp for a week. My clever excuse to relax and not train will go with her ;) I’ve enjoyed the rest this week though and as I said, I needed it. Miranda looks forward to this camping trip for months before and talks about it for months after. She will be going with two friends this year and is even more excited than normal. It’s awesome to see in her.

S

    Nutrition

— start of work

0915
- Cranberry Scone
- Apple Danish
- Cranberry cocktail (150 cal)
- Orange juice (130 cal)

1230
- Burger with cheese and fries
- 2 small candies (67 cal)

1445
- Can of Coke (160 cal) — I broke down and bought one, I was falling asleep at my desk and didn’t want a chocolate bar

1630
- Bag of chips

— end of work

1745
- 3 pieces of liquorish (130 cal)

1930
- Hot Dog
- Small bag of chips

2200
- 3 pieces of liquorish (130 cal)
- 1/2 bag (large) of chips

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T- 10w 3d

Up bright and early for bootcamp this morning and Miranda and I were out the door almost on time.

I was convinced we were going to be a few minutes late but traffic just worked for a change and we showed up before the instructor. Of course the instructor never showed up today. A mix up in schedule and a missed alarm bell or something.

Ah well.

We went home and did some Yoga from a DVD instead. Neither of us are any good at that so it was sorta comical.

After work was Miranda’s baseball and I was scorekeeping. That is the first and only baseball game I’ve actually ever watched and payed attention to for the full time. As a sport it is just as boring as I’ve always thought. Still, Miranda had a good time and the team tied in their first playoff game, 10 – 10.

Out for a swim this evening with no real plan, just to get into the water and do something. Met Quinton before I started and we shared a lane until he figured he was done. I wimped out then, did a few extra hundred meters and finished up at 1600m total.

And now, bed.

    Nutrition and Exercise

Breakfast (0600)
- Granola and 1% milk

Yoga (0700 – 0730):
- 30 minutes to a Yoga DVD

Snack (1100):
- Yogurt granola bar

Lunch (1130):
- Small NY Steak
- Mac pasta salad
- Baked potatoe
- Can of Coke

Snack (1400):
- 3 small candies (100cal)

Snack (1600):
- 2 handfuls of mixed nuts

Dinner (1800):
- Crispy snack wrap from KFC
- 1/3 Fountain rootbeer (shared Miranda’s)

Swim (2045):
- 1.6km

Snack (2115):
- Vitamin water (10cal)

Snack (2300):
- 100gm White Chocolate bar from Lindt (567cal)

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T- 11w 4d

Today’s xkcd comic both amused and terrified me in a way.

Amused me because it really is funny. Convention would dictate that you not allow your younger kids to read through the Swimsuit edition or, heaven forbid, Playboy.

But these are, of course, absolutely tame compared to things they see in pop-up ads all the time. I can’t help but wonder if we aren’t, as a society, trying to close the barn door after the horse has escaped and the barn has burned down.

I’m not advocating leaving the swimsuit issue or the latest copy of Playboy laying around in the living room for your kids to peruse, not at all. I do sorta wonder how much they’d care though if they are the types of kids that have unrestricted internet access or computers in their rooms.

Here at my place there is unrestricted internet access, but the computer is in the main living area, not somewhere private and hidden. I monitor everywhere my daughter goes online, usually casually, watching her and chatting with her about sites. Sometimes by checking browser history or logs, but rarely. I did that more often when the boys were using the computers rather than the girls. go figure ;)

Anyway, the comic made me laugh, and bugged me all at the same time.

Went out for a run tonight with the RunningRoom group. I was pretty mellow and wasn’t planning on running hard at all, particularly not since it’s a recovery week. But once I was out there for a km or so I started to pick it up a bit to catch all the folks I normally run with who were a bit ahead.

It took me a couple of km to catch them and by the time I did I was pretty tired and let them slip ahead again. After the next hill set I caught them again though and hung with them a bit until they pulled ahead a bit again. It wasn’t until I hit 10th that I pulled ahead again dragging out one of the newer guys with me. We went along together from 8th through to 20th and then he pulled ahead to make a light which I barely made behind him.

Down the hill and into the last couple of km I pulled ahead using my larger size and a bit more hill technique to pick up the speed. Once we hit the flats at the very end though he pulled ahead and I just couldn’t catch him. I ended up a couple of seconds behind him, but we both finished the 10km in sub 52. Not bad for a slow start and a hill climb up and through Moody Park.

My garmin and I are having issues though. It was happily reporting the pace and keeping the time, but it wasn’t recording distance. I’m working on it tonight but might wind up doing a system reset. ug.

    Nutrition and Exercise

— start of work

Breakfast (0930):
- Kashi breakfast bar (120cal)
- Quaker Oatmeal to go bar (160cal)

Lunch (1130):
- Chicken, onions and peppers leftover from dinner. 1 plateful.
- Can of Coke

Snack (1400):
- 1 can fruit cocktail (384cal)

Snack (1500):
- Mars bar (260cal)
- Can of Apple Juice (160cal)

Snack (1630):
- 1 cup mixed nuts
- 1 large sour candy (180cal)

— end of work

Snack (1815):
- Gel before running (100cal)

Temp Run (1830)
- 10km (-725 cal)

Dinner (2130):
- 2 salami and cheese sandwiches (1/2 mayo and mustard)
- 591ml Canada Dry

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Up and out the door with Curtis this morning to do the Sun Run. Race report in a different post, but in highlights:

- Curt kicked ass with a 43:45 time. that’s 4:02 faster than my PB for a 10km race.
- I missed my goal of a sub 50 by 29 seconds, but averaged 4:58/km according to the Garmin… gotta love dodging and weaving in the crowds to add 160m.
- This was my PB Sun Run by a few minutes, but not my PB 10km (Fall Classic, years ago).
- Both Curt and I had a great time.
- Both Curt and I ran into friends in the crowd.

We jogged from the Expo down to Main Street Skytrain station and headed on back to the house where we hung out and chatted with family.

Eventually, Sheryl the kids and I all went to the Central Park Pitch and Putt for a round of golf to celebrate Mother’s Day. Curt and I tied with 80 and Kyle played his first game ever and knocked in a 105. Everyone had a fantastic time full of smiles and laughter.

At one point I sliced a ball that I swear would have knocked Sheryl out if it hadn’t bounced off a tree and landed back in the fairway. I spent the next 5 minutes or so laughing inside about how difficult it would have been to convince the police that it was just an accident and that I didn’t meant to kill the ex with a golf swing.

Back to Sheryl’s and I made a Mother’s Day dinner and then home to a couch and nap. The nap was so absolutely required as to be silly.

Nutrition today actually wasn’t bad! Hey, that’s a nice thing to say eh?

Breakfast:
- English muffin with cheese slices

Snack (pre/post race):
- Red bull shot
- Gel
- 250ml chocolate milk
- Juice box
- Orange slice

Lunch:
- Large bowl of Granola and Yogurt
- small plate of crackers and cheese

Snack (1):
- 1.25 x Hershey’s Cookie and Cream chocolate bar

Dinner:
- Chicken wrap with cheese, onion, garlic and peppers
- BLT Caesar salad
- Glass of Coke

Snack (2):
- Small bowl of ju-jubes

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T- 17w 3d

Ah bootcamp. Normally I suck because my abs just can’t do the fun exercises that Stephanie or Ian come up with. Today I was able to suck with more muscle groups. However, all and all it wasn’t as bad as it was last week. I’m starting to see some progress.

As best I recall, the sets went something like this:

Set 1
- Front Raises
- Side Raises
- Kneeling shoulder press
- Standing row with band

Set 2
- Squat curls
- Tricep push (over head)
- Standing curls (double, rotating single, double)
- Dips

Set 3
- Plank (1:15)
- Side touches
- Caterpillar plank
- Bicycle

The actual workout was:
2x Set 1
2x Set 2
2x Set 3
1x Set 1
1x Set 2
1x Set 3

Where I sucked was in Set 3, of course. I’m doing the plank on my knees instead of toes; I can’t raise my feet for the last 25 side touches, caterpillar plank was done from knees instead of toes, bicycle was done resting on forearms not balanced on ass.

Still, I made it through all the exercises, I feel like I had a good workout and I know what to work on.

Miranda was there with me this morning and she LOVED Set 3 and proceeded to do all of the exercises better than I did. I’m going to buy her a yoga mat and beat her with it.

Into the office for a few hours and then back to home to sit on the phone and do interviews after reading through resumes. At least one potential candidate out of the list though, so we’ll see how it goes. One thing about working at home… I can tell that I don’t clean often enough. Ug.

Every time I stood up from my desk I tidied something. You know what? You can’t bloody well tell. arggggg.

Ah well, I’ll just blame it on Ironman training. I’m too exhausted after working full time and training sorta seriously to do housework as well. Yeah, that’s the ticket. heh.

After work was done (almost, a deployment wound up dragging on until almost 6 actually) a friend, Mary, popped by from her work to drop off some of her home made granola. Recently I’ve gotten fresh muffins, potato curry and now granola from Mary’s kitchen. I’m not sure what I have done to deserve such largess but whatever it is, I’m glad I did.

Nutrition sucked. Coke == bad.

Snack (0):
- Gel before bootcamp

Breakfast:
- nadda

— start of work

Snack (1):
- Mr Big
- Snickers

Lunch:
- Potato curry (thank you again Mary!) with rice
- Can of Coke

— end of work (well, working from home for the afternoon)

Snack (2) (afternoon at home working):
- 3 cans of Coke

— real end of work

Dinner:
- Multi-grain tortilla chips with cheese and salsa
- Can of Coke (like you didn’t see that coming?)

Snack (3):
- 2 Cans of Coke
- Bavarian smokie (no bun, just the meat, nummy)

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T- 18w 1d

Having taken Friday off I can’t seem to convince myself that today isn’t Sunday. I sense that tomorrow morning is going to be confusing for me when I wake up and not go to work.

I managed to double book myself, again today, planning on a run in the morning, baseball practice for M at 10, baseball game for M at 12 and a bottle drive at Miranda’s school at 12.

Conveniently I slept in and the rain fell, so the first three were all canceled. The bottle drive went well and it looked like there were a couple of hundred dollars there at the end.

The rest of the afternoon was spent in a relaxed state doing absolutely nothing other than just hanging about. Miranda and I just sat about and chatted, played with Lego and did some house work. It was almost like I wasn’t training for anything and this makes two days off this week.

This also makes two days in a row that I’ve actually cooked something, woo hoo. Miranda made the choice today and we went with something totally new. We don’t have a name for it yet, but we are leaning towards Shepard’s Tacos.

Ground beef with onions, taco seasoning and garlic
Mashed potatoes
Cheese
Taco shells

Warm the shells
Add meat/onions to the bottom of the shells (like a normal taco)
Fill with mashed potatoes and seal the top
Lay on cookie sheet and melt cheese over top

The turned out really well and Sheryl and Carly came over to help us eat them. For sure they’ll be on the kid friendly meals list in the future.

The night has ended with a trip out to Best Buy to purchase a Blu-Ray player. I can’t say I need one, but I’ve been wanting one for a while for all the movies I don’t bother to watch. The player itself was on sale and a relatively good price. The HDMI cable and surge protector? Well, in a bundle with some screen cleaner which I needed anyway they cost more than the player. Accessories, gotta love ‘em.

Nutrition needed something. More food. I wasn’t hungry, but then I didn’t really do a lot all day. On the whole I made more healthy choices today, lets’ see if it’s a fluke or not.

Breakfast:
- 3 egg omelette with cheese, sausage and onion

Snack (0):
- 2 ice cream cones with caramel center

Dinner:
- 1 Shepard’s Taco
- 1 bowl of broken taco shell pieces, ground beef, mashed potatoes and cheese
- salad
- Frozen fruit bar (mandarin orange)

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