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Active Toby's Adventure Blog : April 2008

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Checking in

Posted by Active Toby Apr 30, 2008

The week is well underway; I've recovered properly from the weekend mileage with rest both Sunday and Monday and a bike commute yesterday. Today, I’m back to my run-commute and Friday, I’ll do the same. Saturday, I’m planning on another 30 miler in Cuyamaca State Park. We’ve had high winds, hot temperatures and low humidity since the end of last week but we’ve seen a quick change and its cooling off which will make the long run Saturday less of a drain.

The race is in 37 days and I'm still feeling good about where I'm at. It's hard to feel "confident" because 100 miles is such an unknown but I do know that I've been responsible about increasing my volume without risking overtraining or throwing off the balance in the other areas of my life.

The loss of SD triathlon club member, Dave Martin, has been on lots of people's minds this week. It's been surreal as it was such a blow to the local community but locals were out in the water all weekend with the hot temps and many have resumed their routines of open-water swimming and of course, surfing. There have been some interesting reports released from shark experts like in this interview with Marine Biologist and shark expert Jeff Graham from Scripps Institution of Oceanography. They were able to recover shark teeth from Martin’s body and measured the distance between the bit marks to determine the size of the Great White at a minimum of 15 feet.

Also, part of the Los Penasquitos Canyon that I ran in 3 weeks ago burned in a brush fire on Sunday. It's right below the Active Network headquarters and we can see the whole affected area from the office. The spring is off to quite the start!

On a more positive note, the Triathlon Club of San Diego published a little blurb about my half-Ironman race in Oceanside in the May club newsletter which I've attached. It's on page 3 and 6.

I hope you all are having a great week,
~Toby
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More Mountain Miles

Posted by Active Toby Apr 28, 2008

It was great to meet/run with new folks during the SD100 group training run on Saturday. There were 9 of us to start out, 7 of us went 20 miles and 4 of us went 28 miles. Run time was 5:34 a swift 12-minute mile pace, 20-mile split was 3:58 and 25-mile split 5:06. (Thanks for the data Jill)

I added 9 more miles after the group left for a total of 37 miles on the day. My final out and back effort was slow but steady as the trail climbed from 4000’ to 5000’ in 90 plus degree temperatures. I’m glad I pushed myself for the extra distance.
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Running in new shoes was a relief and so was taking yesterday off to rest :)

4/25: 14M Run-commute
4/26: 28+9= 37M Cuyamaca State Park
4/27 0M

Next weekend:
5/2: 14M Run-commute
5/3: 30M Cuyamaca State Park (Second Loop)
5/4: 9M Mission Trails Regional Park

April training log
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6 weeks to go!!!

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Right on pace

Posted by Active Toby Apr 21, 2008

My long training session this weekend marked the end of another 70-mile week in preparation for my first 100-mile ultra marathon. I’ve been training on the SD100 race course in Cuyamaca State Park frequently so for a scenery change, Marie and I got on the Noble Canyon trail located 45 minutes east of San Diego in Pine Valley, California. From the top-down, its one of the most popular downhill mountain biking trails in southern California so running up it is perfect for my training. The trail climbs over 11 miles to the Sunrise Highway for a vista of the Anza-Borrego Desert.

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My beautiful view

At the top of Noble Canyon, we crossed Sunrise Highway, connected to the Pacific Crest Trail and traveled south for a gorgeous stretch on the PCT with the desert in full view. Instead of looping back on the Big Laguna trail that reconnects to Noble Canyon, we opted to run on the road for a few miles back to meet the trail. The lollipop-shaped route then descended back into Pine Valley for a total of 31.5 miles.

4/18: 14M Run-commute
4/19: 31.5M Noble Canyon Trail
4/20: 9M Mission Trails Regional Park

I was strong all day, legs never got tired and training is on right track. 7 weeks until the SD100!!!
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Reality Check

Posted by Active Toby Apr 15, 2008

Friday I did the run-commute to-and-fro making sure I began Saturday on semi-fatigued legs. Plan was to run 24 with the SD100 training group and an additional 19 on my own for 43 on the day. I was stoked for a solid pace because this crew of ultra runners is legit--some are training for WS100, SD100 and AC100.

I was on the road by 6 am to Cuyamaca State Park and 49 miles into my 50-mile drive I realized I forgot my running shoes. During my long drive back to SD, I was really upset with myself for making such a careless mistake, especially since I had to run solo all day because of it.

I stopped at my house to find my shoes, drove to Peñasquitos Canyon and started running at 8:30 am. It must have been 80 degrees down in the canyon and temps continued to rise. My legs were solid, but I barely managed 26 miles because I was nauseous from the heat.

Sunday, while Marie was at tearing it up at the San Diego Mud Run, I warmed up with a few miles in Lopez Canyon and then stopped by to watch Airey race in a criterium. After that, I returned to Peñasquitos Canyon for more punishment. I was happy to get 13 more hot miles in and called it quits with 16 on the day, 70 for the week and only 10 shy of my original goal.

4/11: 14M
4/12: 26M
4/13: 16M

It was good for me to go back-to-back-to-back and its a great sign that my legs never got tired or sore. The conditions from the weekend took a lot out of me but it was a firm reminder of the challenge that I’m committed to for the next 8 weeks.

Updated Training Schedule:

4/18: 14M Run-commute
4/19: 33M Noble Canyon Trail
4/20: 9M Mission Trails Regional Park

4/25: 14M Run-commute
4/26: 26+24= 50M Cuyamaca State ParkCuyamaca State Park
4/27: 4M (Marie--La Jolla 13.1)

5/2: 14M Run-commute
5/3: TBD
5/4: 20M Lake Hodges

5/9: 14M Run-commute
5/10: 52M Peñasquitos Canyon (PCT?)
5/11: 18M Mission Trails Regional Park

5/16: 14M Run-commute
5/17: 30M Cuyamaca State Park
5/18: 20M Lake Hodges

5/23: 14M Run-commute
5/24: 24M Pacific Crest Trail
5/25: 13M Peñasquitos Canyon

5/30: 14M Run-commute
5/31: 9M
6/1: 0! (Marie--SD Rock 'n' Roll)
6/2: Memorial Day

6/5: Steve arrives
6/7: SD100
6/8: SD100

Will I get the Silver Buckle for a sub-24 hour finish?
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The Bronze buckle for a sub-31 hour finish?
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Or DNF?

Stay tuned for updates as I continue to train my body and mind for the San Diego 100 Mile Endurance Run on June 7-8.

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Dialed In

Posted by Active Toby Apr 9, 2008

The half-ironman workout last weekend and recovering to run 28 miles on Saturday was crucial--I've broke through a mental/physical barrier. I've dialed in the remaining 60 days of my training and I no longer have any lingering doubt about my abilities. My level of preparedness was more so evident when I started and finished Sunday's 8-mile recovery hill run with no soreness. Monday was a rest day and I was strong and ready for an extended cycle-commute totaling 3 hours yesterday, run-commute today, Friday and then back to the mountains Saturday for a 43-mile training run at altitude. I'm going to couple that with a 9-mile recovery run on Sunday for a grand total of 66 miles in 3 days and 80 for the week--my most ever.

Sunday night, Marie and I sat down and sketched out what weekend training distances need to look like for the next two months. I’ve included 14 miles of running each Friday so I start Saturday long runs on semi-fatigued legs. This way, I’ll be even stronger on fresh legs at the start of the SD100. The following schedule the basic weekend mileage until June.

4/11: 14M
4/12: 24+19= 43M Cuyamaca State Park
4/13: 9M Mission Trails Regional Park

4/18: 14M
4/19: 30M Pacific Crest Trail
4/20: 9M Mission Trails Regional Park

4/25: 14M
4/26: 26+24= 50M Cuyamaca State Park
4/27: 4M (Marie--La Jolla 13.1)

5/2: 14M
5/3: 33M Noble Canyon Trail
5/4: 20M Lake Hodges

5/9: 14M
5/10: 52M Peñasquitos Canyon (PCT?)
5/11: 18M Mission Trails Regional Park

5/16: 14M
5/17: 30M Cuyamaca State Park
5/18: 20M Lake Hodges

5/23: 14M
5/24: 24M Pacific Crest Trail
5/25: 13M Peñasquitos Canyon

5/30: 14M
5/31: 9M
6/1: 0! (Marie--Rock 'n' Roll Marathon)
6/2: Memorial Day

6/5: Steve arrives
6/7: SD100
6/8: SD100

Here are a couple snaps from Saturday in Cuyamaca State Park, home of the SD100:

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One Ultra Year

Posted by Active Toby Apr 1, 2008

This weekend marked the one-year anniversary of my life as an endurance athlete. Last year on this date, I ran the Lake Hodges 50K, stepping into the unknown with only an 18-mile training run under my belt. The events of the last calendar year yield a similar pattern of redefining my limits, chronicled here within this blog and embodied in my young adult life.

My journey has lead me to the summit of what I thought was previously possible only to be afforded a fleeting glimpse of higher mountain tops and greater challenges. First it was the 50K that presented the challenge, then came the 50-Mile distance that broke me until I achieved success. I'm currently preparing for a 100-mile run in June and already registered for a 140.6-mile triathlon in November. Then what..?

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"What the mind can conceive and believe, it can achieve."

To celebrate my passion for endurance, I participated in my first official triathlon, the Ford Ironman 70.3 California at Oceanside on Saturday. The race itself is a classic—season opener for the sport of triathlon. The field was stacked with Pros in both the men's and women's divisions. It was cool to hear all the hype before the race but I was there to push myself for a killer training session—all to build my body and mind for the San Diego 100 Mile Endurance Run on 6/7-6/8.

I like to set the bar high so it leaves me with more to be desired—this way, I remain motivated at all times. I projected my finish in less than 5 hours and a PR in the half marathon. I didn't reach either of these goals (haha) but I sure had a blast along the way!

The swim was nice and warm (60-degrees) in the protected Oceanside Harbor. No swell to battle, just a bunch of flailing bodies. I was surprised to see the different color swim caps (yes, mine was pink) during the swim--I must have caught up to at least two waves that started before my age group. I knew my swim was solid and projected 32-minutes which was pretty much spot-on as I was out of the water and into T1 in 33-minutes.

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The bike portion began with a mistake within the first half-mile that would cost me later on. I somehow managed to drop my electrolytes on the ground, never to be seen again.

"Punishment = Glory"

Right?

In the meantime, I enjoyed pushing myself on the bike, which remains my weakest link in the trio. I've only been riding a road bike since August and my longest ride was done in the Anza-Borrego Desert with the Triathlon Club of San Diego (TCSD). We covered 60-miles that day in 106-degree dry desert air so 56-miles through the rolling hills of Camp Pendleton seemed easy, so I pushed harder.

Towards the end of the bike, my lack of electrolytes began to creep up on me in the form of cramps in my quads so I switch to Gatorade at the aid stations. I finished the bike portion in under 3-hours, averaging 19-miles per hour. My bike dismount into T2 was greeted by a full contraction of my hamstring when lifting my leg over the top-tube of my ride--foreshadowing the first portion of my half-marathon run. My right foot was numb for at least 4 miles and my legs were heavy and the impact of each step was loud—not my typical efficient running stride. The temporary discomfort was quality punishment training

The run remained the highlight of my day. I train alone so often that I was absolutely blown away by the volunteers, fans and spectator support--it was beautiful. I was proudly wearing TCSD apparel and encouraged by familiar faces and countless supporters along the 13.1-mile run course.

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I appreciate you all joining me on this adventure--stay tuned for another year!

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Active Toby

Member since: Jun 5, 2007

A resource for adventure created to inspire. First-hand trip reports, wild stories and ideas for excursions of your own. Questions about gear and trip planning are encouraged. Feel free to offer your stories and suggestions. Active Toby

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