The crowded track and the happy trail

Full house in the Bethpage lot

Today’s run (Bethpage bike trail): 4.6 miles
Yesterday’s run (track): 3.6 miles

I’m very much enjoying my Thanksgiving break that feels a lot like a mini-vacation. I’m happy to have one more day off before returning to the office. We’ve kept busy this week but I’ve done my best to avoid anything resembling a mall or store. If on-line Black Friday sales are legitimate, there are a few running related things I’d like to get. But to do that, I would need to make an effort to look at a bunch of websites to find what I want. Why does this have to be so hard??

I ran in my neighborhood on both Wednesday and Thursday and that was pleasant, but I felt the need to do something different on Friday. Running laps at the high school seemed to fit that definition so I headed over to the track. A second cup of coffee delayed my getting outside and I got to the school a little later than planned. Luck seemed to be with me, because it appeared as though I had the place to myself. Just one other car in the lot and its owner was nowhere in sight.

The empty track didn’t surprise me. I figured most people would have either slept in or headed out to the stores. I made my way to my starting point and noticed a stream of athletically suited people gathering along the opposite end of the oval. I took off counterclockwise and, as I approached the crowd, I saw that it was the Syosset girls cross country team getting ready to take over the track. “Oh good,” I thought, “Now I get to be humiliated by 30 teenage girls who will pass me like I’m walking.”

It didn’t actually turn out that way. We managed to coexist perfectly. The runners ran together in a clockwise direction and left an open lane for me. I considered running some repeats but due to the crowded lanes, I elected to stick with laps. Running a flat route with little wind, I averaged a few seconds faster than usual.

Yesterday’s scenic route

This morning felt colder than what was reported by the news. I resisted the temptation to bundle up and wore shorts with a long sleeve shirt. I went over to Bethpage with no particular workout or direction in mind. When I got to the park there were a lot of cars making their way toward the lot which was almost full by the time I parked. A big soccer tournament was going on and I saw a lot of runners standing around in groups. There may have been a cross country meet taking place closer to the woods.

I decided to run north beyond Haypath Road and back. There were many people on the trail and I wondered if some organized event was happening. Every runner I encountered gave me a wave or a hello, as did lots of walkers. It was a happy time for people on the trail.

Today’s more scenic route

I went as far as Old Bethpage Road and turned around. I ran well and while the hills looked big today, they didn’t feel as challenging as usual. My cadence was slightly better than average, so I was a little surprised that my data showed middling performance. That didn’t matter a bit to me, because the run felt solid and it was great to be out among the trees, accompanied by nice people.

I can’t believe I have yet another day before I have to go back to work. I’m looking forward to doing my fifth run in as many days. So far my Thanksgiving to New Year’s streak is 4 days, but it’s likely to stop there. I’ll see how I feel on Monday morning when I wake up many hours before sunrise.

Back to the track, two years later

Run fast, repeat

Today’s run (track): 1 mile warm-up, 1 mile intervals, 1 mile cool down (total 3.1 miles)

Unlike most weekend mornings, I woke up knowing exactly what my workout would be. I knew it had been some time since I did speed work, but it wasn’t until I looked at Garmin Connect that I realized I hadn’t run a full set of intervals since June 15, 2014. I’ve been noticeably improving my performance over the past few weeks and I figured doing repeats would be a good way to end a great week of running.

It was cool but humid when I started this morning. I did a mile warm-up at 9:53 and followed that with 10 x 110 and 4 x 125 meter sprints, separated by 30 second rest periods. I’d read that rest time for short intervals should be three times the run duration, but I was impatient. Surprisingly, my speed remained pretty consistent from start to finish, and even improved a little by the end. The other surprise was that my heart rate stayed at around 77% max while running. I would have expected it to spike a lot higher.

After I finished my speed work, I thought my cool down would feel easy. That was not the case, although it started feeling easier by lap two. I ran the last mile at 10:27 which was faster than it felt. I’d averaged 6:32 for the interval mile.

I was fortunate to be home for three days last week and got in six total workouts. I always perform better when I run with greater frequency. I’m concerned that I’ll fall back to three to four workouts a week. In any case, I’m hoping I’ll be able to hold the gains I’ve made this week.

Around the track without a buzz

Hey, you, get offa my track!

Today’s run (track): 4.1 miles

I did my best to get out early today and I made it to the track by 6:30 AM. The sun was still low in the sky and the temperature (73°) and humidity (69%) made for decent running weather. As I made my way down the drive toward the track, I looked over and  saw there was a runner making his way around. I was disappointed because I really hoped to have the place to myself. I’m not a misanthrope, and I love to run with my friends, but I do enjoy the solitude of the empty track. Oh well.

I started out easy, but I didn’t feel the energy I’ve come to expect since reducing my sugar intake. I worried that the lift I’ve been getting was a short term gain, and that my body has since adapted to the change. I did feel stronger as I ran, but still had some residual fatigue. I got through my intended laps without a problem, but stopped short of finishing the workout with a set of intervals.

Could this be less obvious?

When I got home, I grabbed a K cup from the same box I’d used for my morning coffee. I noticed that I’d mistakenly made decaf. So this morning’s track run was done with neither carb loading nor caffeine. Knowing that made me feel better about my run. Especially at the end, when I poured it on for the last 200 meters and had plenty left in the tank.

I suppose I could also consider reducing my caffeine intake at some point, but I’ve read that caffeine is actually health positive in moderate doses. I’ll stick with managing complex carbs and sugar for now.

At the track with Frank and the usual suspects

Frank (in red), stair climber guy (background)

Today’s run (track): 4 miles – 3.25 @ pace + 8 x 300m

Happy 4th of July. It’s sunny and a little warm for my taste, but the mid-afternoon humidity was surprisingly low. That wasn’t the case this morning when I went to the track. I’d hoped to avoid sun, heat and people by getting there before 7:00 AM (fail, fail, fail & fail), but I stalled so long I didn’t start running until almost 8:30. Conditions seemed ideal at first but I soon noticed the moisture in the air. It didn’t hold me back. In fact I ran my fastest during my fourth mile.

I wanted to run four miles in honor of Independence Day and did my first three the usual way, switching direction from counter-clockwise to clockwise after the second mile. There weren’t too many others at the track this morning. It was the usual walkers and run-walkers, along with a guy who was running up and down the stands and another who was running 200’s with long breaks in between sprints.

Periodic sprinter guy in yellow behind run walker

After I’d covered 13 laps, I decided to run intervals for the last 3/4 mile. I haven’t downloaded the Garmin to see how I did performance-wise, but it wasn’t a bad effort. I always notice some speed improvement during periods when I can string together four or more consecutive runs. I’ve also revisited the idea of reducing sugar and simple carbs due to a book I’m reading that clearly explains why it makes sense to do that (versus just counting calories or reducing fat). The author did warn that performance sometimes gets worse before it gets better. I’m not worried because my current performance couldn’t get much worse.

When I finished my run, I noticed a guy in a walker going back and forth along the bottom row of the stands. I asked him if he was getting in his workout and he said he was, although he wished there wasn’t so much sun. I told him that he should go over to Bethpage, because the bike trail is generally shaded until mid morning. He told me that his name was Frank and he was a former professional soccer player. His team was the German-Hungarian Soccer Club and he played in the Cosmopolitan Soccer League in the ’60’s.

Frank is 76 and he’s had lots of knee surgeries due to all the stress he put on himself when he was playing. It was really nice to talk to him and I wished I had more time to chat. Frank mentioned that he had a great orthopedic surgeon who said he can get him off the walker. He’s considering doing that, but concerned about the risk. Either way, he doesn’t seem like the type of person who’d let this problem keep him from getting his workouts done.

Unfrozen and back on track

You’re pushing it Garmin

Today’s run (track): 3.4 miles
Yesterday’s run (street): 3.2 miles

It’s almost the end of the school year and there’s a lot going on. My daughter is graduating from high school on Wednesday and it also happens to be her birthday. With that conflict, we decided to celebrate her birthday today. Due to those plans, I had to get out early for my run. Even with that, I was pressed for time and decided to run laps at the high school.

Last night, after I’d downloaded Friday’s run from my Garmin, the watch froze and it wouldn’t respond, no matter which buttons I pushed. I tried to shock it back by hooking it up to the USB and then the wall charger. Neither attempt worked, so I left it for the morning. I figured I could run with a stop watch if the Garmin failed to respond.

When I got up, the Garmin was still frozen and I began to entertain the idea of replacing my six year old FR210 with a newer model. Things are starting to break on it and I noticed one side of the wrist band is beginning to separate. Before giving up on it, I looked online and found a video that showed how to unfreeze my watch. It worked.

The track was almost empty when I got there. Just me and a guy who spent a lot of time stretching while I circled the track. I was eventually joined by another runner who circled the track much faster than I did. I was prepared to count the number of times I got lapped but the guy quit after a couple of times around.

Lapping it up

The stretching guy eventually made his way onto the track. He was wearing one of those elevation training masks and started doing intervals. Or should I say, one interval. I ran four more laps before he did his next one. By then I was finished with my workout.

We had a great birthday celebration and I managed to get in a lot of Fitbit steps throughout the day. Tomorrow is Father’s Day and I’m going to try to get out early again to maximize celebration time.

Track run and a come from behind story

Lapping up the miles

Today’s run (track): 5.3 miles

It was helpful to have today’s workout already planned so I didn’t waste time determining where I’d go and what gear to wear. As expected, there was light rain falling when I got up. I decided to give it until 8:00 AM to go out, hoping that the wet weather would soon move off. By 8:15, the rain had turned to a light mist and I headed over to the high school track.

Although the temperature showed 54°, I felt chilly in my short sleeve shirt and shorts. I’d taken along the running raincoat that I bought to replace my dog-mangled jacket and wore it for the first two laps. Even with an unventilated top, I stayed fairly comfortable, but I was starting to sweat. The rain had completely stopped at that point, so I ditched the coat.

At the time I arrived, there was only one other person on the track. This was neither a walker nor runner. It was a pied piper with a rolling speaker that was blasting out an energizing mix of music. As I ran by this man, I saw a group of high school aged girls gathering around him at the top of the oval. I realized he was the track coach and practice was about to start.

It’s always tricky to do a track run when a practice is going on. I did my best to stay out of their way, keeping to the outside lanes as much as I could. I like to alternate running direction every six laps and, the first time I ran clockwise, I saw the girls practicing 200’s. While they took a cool down lap, I noticed the distribution of runners. There were a few at the front, a larger group in the middle and a couple of others running ten feet behind the middle group. Further behind was a final runner and she didn’t look very happy. I felt badly for her.

When I came around on my next lap, I saw the coach lining everyone up to do an all-out 400. Two runners quickly broke away, leaving the rest of the pack behind. I was surprised to see the straggler from the cool-down moving up to the front. She pulled ahead and it was like watching the Preakness again. This girl ended up finishing well ahead of the others and I was happy for her.

I lost count of my laps, but had 5.3 miles on my Garmin by the time I finished. I felt almost as strong at the end as I did at the start, making for three good runs this weekend. Not only that, I hit 15K steps both yesterday and today. I probably should start using a heart rate monitor again to help me differentiate between real and perceived effort. It may help me push harder if I see that I’m training in a lower zone than I realized.

Running eight days running

Crowded lanes

Today’s run (street): 3.6 miles
Yesterday’s run (track): 3.5 miles
Thursday’s run (street): 3.2 miles
Wednesday’s run (street): 3.4 miles

Today is the eighth day of my vacation and I’ve run every day since it started. I’ve covered 28 miles since last Saturday, including today’s 3.6. The last time that I covered over 25 miles in one week was during my training for the 2014 Brooklyn Half. On top of my running miles, I’ve also managed to fit in a couple of hikes, the second one happening yesterday. I’ll credit my new Fitbit for motivating me to move more.

I planned to do at least one run at Bethpage this week, but I ended up staying local, except for when I ran at the track. I’ve purposely kept my run distances in the three mile range because I knew I’d be accumulating mileage through the break. Saturday to Friday’s total was 40% higher than what I’d typically run within seven days. I’ve heard that training volume really shouldn’t increase by more than 10% in a given week.

Wednesday and Thursday were neighborhood runs and the streets have been quiet because it’s school vacation. I’ve seen a couple of news articles this week touting the idea that ten minutes of high intensity exercise is as beneficial as a moderate 45 minute run. That may be true but I prefer running. I’m not ready to trade that for Tabata-like workouts. Still, I have been incorporating more anaerobic effort into every run I’ve done this week.

Oval by Garmin

There was a lot going on when I arrived at the track on Friday. The Syosset baseball team was practicing on the adjacent field and they were blasting country music from a big speaker. I was concerned that it might disrupt my peaceful run. The music itself was weirdly anachronistic for suburban Long Island but somehow it worked. There were a few track teams taking up the inside lanes while I ran, but we managed to peacefully co-exist.

Later in the day, my son and I went to Trailview State Park for a hike. Trailview has a hiking trail and another that’s supposedly reserved for biking. On our way back we followed the bike trail and found it much more interesting. It wound around in different directions and seemed to go on forever. Just at the point where I thought it was taking us farther away from our starting point, the trail head came into sight. It was a nice second workout of the day and helped me get to almost 14K steps on Friday.

I considered taking a rest day today but we have plans for an end-of-vacation breakfast tomorrow. If I’m going to run on Sunday I’ll need to do it early. Knowing that, I decided to get out again today to keep the streak going. I ran okay and covered some streets I haven’t run in months. I wasn’t under time pressure and thought about adding a few extra miles, but I didn’t want to tempt fate and invite injury. My sciatica returned earlier in the week, this time it was on my right side. I was concerned that my herniated disc had been re-aggravated, but I’ve been pain free over the last three runs.

I’m happy to have the Fitbit and I’m curious to see how much distance I actually travel during a typical work day. I’ll find out next week. My work calendar will be even worse than usual because I had the audacity to take a week off and that means lots of catch up meetings starting Monday. I’m hoping that all the walking I do in between meetings will add up to more than 10K daily steps.

Running in circles while my friends ran at Bethpage

I forgot to mention the invisible airplane on the track

Today’s run (track): 4.1 miles

Due to a science fair scheduling conflict, I needed to run extra early this morning. That was fine, as I’m trying to go back to early day running. The downside was that I missed SIORs run-palooza at Bethpage this morning. This was another Life Time Run Club adventure and today’s group included both TPP and KWL. Long before they all went out, I was at the Syosset HS track getting in 16 laps. The Runsketeers had a great time and I’m very jealous.

I always hope that the track will be empty when I arrive, but there’s usually someone there before me. That was case today. It was mostly walkers, but there were a couple of guys running intervals and one person run/walking wearing a pair of big studio headphones. I tuned everyone out for the most part rather than construct back stories of every person on the track like I usually do. I just wanted to get through the workout and stay on schedule.

I’m going to need to go out early again tomorrow. I’d like to do at least five miles so I’ll probably run somewhere outside my neighborhood. I can’t go too far or too long, because I need to be ready for yet another science fair. But no such problems next weekend. After Monday, science fair season will be over.

Me and the Tartan track personnas

Counter clockwise and counter-counter clockwise

Today’s run (track): 4.1 miles
Yesterday’s run (street); 3.4 miles
Friday’s run (treadmill): 3.1 miles

It was a busy week and I didn’t manage to get a workout in before Friday. My Friday schedule was jammed with meetings from 9:00 to 5:30, so I needed to get my run done fairly early. I worked from home on that day and was lucky that I didn’t have to do my long commute in falling snow. But outside conditions were slippery, making the treadmill my only option for running.

No surprise to anyone, I found Friday’s run almost unbearable and was determined to get outdoors the next day. The snow on the roads had melted, but conditions were still pretty rough. The local news station showed  a temperature of 30°, so I dressed for moderate cold. It was sunny when I stepped outside and I was concerned that I’d overdressed. A few minutes later I was wishing for another layer.

Saturday frozen face syndrome
Feels like freezing

The moment I turned the first corner on my run, I was hit with a blast of numbingly cold air that gave me an instant sinus headache. I quickly thought through my intended route to determine whether I should change streets to minimize the wind. By the time I’d reached my first mile, I’d heated up enough to manage through the cold. It was a low performance run overall, but I managed to get through my miles and I didn’t get bit once.

I usually reserve my longest run of the week for Sunday, but this morning I had a serious motivation problem. None of my favorite venues seemed appealing (Neighborhood: ho hum, Bethpage: too many hills, Stillwell: too many mountain bikers) and I wasn’t going near the treadmill again. My wife suggested the track and I couldn’t find an argument against that. So off I went.

Although running around the track can be viewed as monotonous, I find it much much more pleasant than the treadmill. At least the track provides sensory stimulation through forward movement. On top of that, I always encounter a different cast of characters as I circle the Tartan track. By the end, I’ve usually monitored their workouts and made up names for each of them.

This morning, it was just me and walking man, a big middle aged guy who was wearing air buds but no hat or gloves. Walking man and I were soon joined by high school running girl who eventually lapped me. But while high school girl had speed, I had endurance, and I noticed her slowing down and eventually talking walk breaks. So I won. Walking man started running, slower than me if that is actually possible. A young guy also joined us, running his laps pretty fast.

I did my first two miles going in the traditional counter-clockwise direction and then did two more clockwise, allowing me to see the faces of the other runners. Most importantly, running that way prevented the humiliation of being lapped by young running man and a young running couple who came by a little later. I did manage to lap the walking-to-running man and a bunch of miscellaneous walkers who’d also come by.

I did a little more than 16 laps and focused on my shortened stride which I’d hoped would enable a higher cadence. It did not, and the end result was an unprintably slow pace. That is, except for the last lap where I said “screw it” and ran about a 9:15. That was when I lapped walking-to-running man.

So, this week it’s been three very different runs with the common theme of low performance. I don’t really care about that, but I sometimes feel guilty for not going out with the, “All you need is all you got” attitude that I had a couple of years ago. I’m really going to try for four workouts this week and may even stretch it to five if my schedule isn’t as insane as last week’s.

Making strides on the track

Part one of today’s workout

Today’s run (track): 4 miles plus 4 x 200s

My legs exploded off the line, firing my fast twitch muscles and propelling me 200 meters at breakneck speed. That was the experience I was hoping for, but not quite my reality. My plan this morning was to do some speed work so I headed over to the high school to run measured intervals. I did get in some repeats, but most of my workout was track mileage.

When I arrived at the school I was excited to see that I had the place to myself. I decided to take advantage of the clear lanes and do a two mile warm-up before switching to strides. The flat track helped my performance and provided me a half minute per mile improvement over yesterday’s pace. I wore my new buff around my neck and pulled it over my head when I encountered strong winds.

The track doesn’t provide a lot of visual stimulation, but I liked watching the bright sun coming up over the horizon while I made my way around. I decided to keep running after I’d covered my first two miles and ended up doing a full four before moving over to speed work.

I only ended up doing 4 x 200s with 30 second recoveries, averaging 59 seconds per repeat. Not exactly explosive speed, but I haven’t done anaerobic training in a long time. Still, it worked out to 8:00 per mile, a pace I haven’t seen for months. If I could sustain that speed for more than 200 meters, I’d be pretty happy. The answer is clearly more intervals, more often,