Going Long (again) in 2024

Lively Firecracker Run

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Location:

Garson - Sudbury,ON,Canada

Member Since:

Apr 20, 2013

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

I ran my first marathon in 1998: "The Friendly Marathon" in Massey, Ontario.  I was 32. I had never raced in a shorter event, and I trained really poorly - ended up running it in 4:00:30.  After that, I gave up running for the most part for 6 years.  I got into karate a bit more seriously, until I got my knee kicked out and had ACL surgery.  Then I became a 'fair weather runner' and started to run half marathons every so often.  As a priest, entering weekend races always meant having to book a holiday, so it just didn't happen much.  My holidays were primarily focussed on various canoe and kayak trips.

At some point, I started training more consistently, and started to think of myself as a runner.  I guess doing that in your 40's is better than never doing it at all.  I even started to wonder if I had it in me to qualify for Boston.  Well, I did.  First time didn't count, I suppose, since I didn't make the "cut".  But the second time was a charm, and on my sixth Marathon, run in Chicago in 2015, I beat my BQ by almost 6 minutes.  And now, running a BQ is routine for me, not that I have any desire to run Boston again.

Through it all, I've made tons of mistakes - and have had lots of injuries to show for it.  Hopefully, now that I'm in my late 50's, I'm a bit wiser and can use that to my advantage to continue running for a very long time.

My PRs:

5k (12 run):      Guelph, ON.     October 10, 2016   (50 yrs.)   20:10

10k (10 run):    Collingwood      October 5, 2013  (47 yrs.)  43:37

Half Marathon  (25 run): Cleveland   May 18, 2014  (48 yrs)  1:33:08

Marathon (12 run):  Ste-Jerome, QC  October 3, 2021   (55 yrs.)  3:22:10

Ultras (5 run):   

Run for the Toad 50k Trail   September 30, 2017 (51 yrs.)  5:31:23

Niagara Falls 100k   June 17, 2018 (52 yrs.)  12:26:30

That Dam Hill 24 hours   September 15-16, 2018  Completed 100 Miles in 23:20:44

Sulphur Springs 50 mile Trail   May 25, 2019  10:37:27

Haliburton Forest 100 mile Trail   September 7-8, 2019  26:46:27

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Pacing my sister in her 1st Half Marathon.

Short-Term Running Goals:

After a broken right foot in 2022 in the later stages of a marathon training cycle, then adjusting to a 1/2" heal lift in my right shoe to compensate for a leg length discrepancy, and then a left plank plate rupture in the late summer of 2023, I had to decide:  go fast or go long.  I opted for long, for this year at least.

May 2024:  Sulphur Springs 50 Mile Trail (revisiting it after 5 years)

July 2024:  Limberlost 54KM Trail

September 2024:  Haliburton 100 Mile Trail (also revisiting it after 5 years).

Everything this year is really focussed on the Haliburton 100 as my key event.  After that, and depending on how things go, I'll reevaluate.

Long-Term Running Goals:

Run until this old body of mine won't let me run any more.  I was inspired in the Spring of 2016, watching the start of the Ottawa Marathon.  Near the back of the pack was an 'old man', running with his walker.  I loved it!  I thought ... there's me in 20 years.  Maybe.  

Personal:

I am a Roman Catholic priest of 30 years, ministering in the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie.  I spent 8 years ministering in the small town of Wawa (where I helped establish the annual Blackfly Run) and 9 years in Sault Ste. Marie.  I have been in the Sudbury region now for 13 years.  Currently I Pastor 2 small Parishes:  St. John the Evangelist in Garson, and St. Bernardine of Siena in Skead, covering the area just Northeast of the city, surrounding the Sudbury Airport.

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to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 30.00 Month: 152.00 Year: 776.50
Mizuno Wave Sayonara 2 Lifetime Miles: 412.40
Brooks Cascadia 11 Lifetime Miles: 302.00
Salomon Speedcross 4 Lifetime Miles: 160.25
Brooks Launch 8 Lifetime Miles: 153.00
Asics Metaspeed Sky Lifetime Miles: 32.20
Brooks Ghost 13 Lifetime Miles: 362.50
Saucony Triumph 18 Lifetime Miles: 402.50
Ghost 13 Blue Sole Lifetime Miles: 371.00
Hoka Bondi Lifetime Miles: 485.00
Triumph 18 Treadmill Lifetime Miles: 130.50
Hoka Bondi 8 Treadmill Lifetime Miles: 140.50
Race: Lively Firecracker Run (3.107 Miles) 00:21:37
Total Distance
4.00

Yuck!  I am decidedly NOT happy with my race last night in Lively.  A full minute slower than I planned.  And I can see no real reason for it.  Not a good way to launch into my full marathon training program today.

My kilometer splits were:  4:03  (6:30/mile)     4:14  (6:48/mile)     4:26   (7:07/mile)     4:19 (6:56/mile)  and  4:25 (7:07/mile).  That gave me an average overall of 4:17/km or 6:54/mile  (was aiming for sub 4:10/km or a sub 6:45/mile).  

Like my 10k the week before, this was an evening race, beginning at 7pm.  I do NOT like evening races!  It was hot and sticky all day, and there was a stiff wind which also felt hot.  The temperature was 23 C with a humidex reading of 28 C.  That's 74 F with a humidex of 83 F.  So, similar to my 10k conditions the week before.

I ate a full meal at 3:30 pm, which was fine.  A banana 75 minutes before and a gel 45 minutes before.  I warmed up by running about a mile.  Never having run a 5k event previously, I looked up strategies on the internet and found that running the 1st mile a bit faster than overall goal pace was the way to go.  So, I did that.  However, I ended up slowing down below my goal pace after that, and I just could not push my body to go faster.

The course was uncertified ... and timing was done with a stopwatch.  Pretty low tech and informal.  My GPS watch showed the course to be fairly accurate, and showed me running 37 meters further than 5k, which is normal.  My guess is they used a GPS to mark the course.

Physically, I felt fine.  I think what did me in was the heat/humidity and the hills.  Of those, there were a fair number.  The 1st km was relatively flat, but the second featured two significant climbs and one descent.  The third km had three shorter ascents, and it was here that I really began to feel the heat and the wind.  The fourth km had one long slow ascent and one significant descent.  The final km was relatively flat until the second half, which featured a slight descent for about 200 meters, and then the same ascent over the same distance to the finish line.  I do not like uphill finishes!

The 'official' results are not posted yet, so I do not know where I placed in my division.  There were about 100 runners, give or take, and I came in around 25th, I believe.  Some of those young runners posted good times.

I do know that one woman who ran just in front of me the 1st 4 km came in at around my goal time of 20:40.  She pulled ahead in the final km and I just could not keep up with that pace.  Too bad I didn't have any kick left in me.

Oh, my little sister who did the Mayhem with me 10 days ago also ran this.  It was her first road race, and she did very well - had never run faster than a 33:00 5k, and she came in at 30:00.  I'm proud of her.  Disappointed only in that they did not give out t-shirts or finisher medals.  That would have been nice for her. 

Now, some positive:  this WAS my 1st 5k event, so it's automatically a PR.  Woo Hoo!  And, I KNOW I can beat it.  I don't know when I'll run another 5k - for sure not until after my full marathon in November - but I will beat this time for sure.  I'll just have to run in cooler temperatures.

My takeaway is I'm not trained for hot weather, and I do not run hills enough (downside of living in a flat valley).  Of course, the Hamilton Marathon is not hilly (well, at least it's mostly downhill).  Still, I'm going to run my weekly tempo sessions on a hilly course - I'll just have to drive to get to it.  And I'll keep running events of significance to me in cooler temperatures.  I guess I lucked out in Cleveland, as previous years it was quite hot there.  

I have to keep reminding myself that I am better than this time showed.  I mean, the pace at my Cleveland Half for the 1st 5k was pretty much the same as it was for this race.  I know I can do better.  And that's important for me going into my marathon training, because I need to settle on a goal pace for training.  Initially, I was going to train for a 3:25:00 finish in Hamilton, but after Cleveland decided to bump that up to a 3:20:00 finish goal.  My last 2 events, on paper, would show that the 3:25 goal is more reasonable.  However, given the conditions that I believe were responsible for slowing me down, I've decided to still aim and train for the 3:20:00 finish.  It will give me a little more wiggle room in that event if the conditions are poor.  I'll just have to be extra attentive to my body during training to make sure that I'm not pushing myself too hard by overtraining.

 

 

Mizuno Wave Elixir 8 Miles: 4.00
Weight: 164.00
Comments
From Tom K on Wed, Jul 02, 2014 at 06:43:04 from 174.58.4.250

A 5k PR! Sweet! Sounds like a good Canada Day. Don't be too bummed about being a minute off your goal time on a hot, hilly, windy, evening race. Also, racing 5k's DURING your training for your next marathon could be beneficial because 1. Racing experience, and 2. Increased tempo training.

From Theotokos on Wed, Jul 16, 2014 at 14:27:38 from 208.96.65.101

You're right - it's a PR no matter how ugly it seemed at the time. And I have room to improve it for sure.

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