21 November 2010

Sunday is my fun day

            
           "Sunday is my fun day, my 'I dont have to run' day..."

For me, the lyrics from the Bangles 1980 pop hit are only partially right-  Sunday is my fun day but that's because it is my run day. I look forward to Sunday every week - It's my day for either completing events or for doing a 'long' run or ride. Its my fun day.

I love the 'long' sessions. Yes, the weekday training sessions are good for improving my fitness and are tiring and satisfying, but its the Sunday long sessions that are fun. It's the day I find out how my endurance fitness is progressing and it's the day I'm reminded of how much I love going long.

2010 will be remembered as the year I also discovered I actually like doing 'events' on Sundays. I used to think the fun was in the training, and the events were just there to establish a fitness level. But not so. I like 'doing' events  - the anticipation, the preperation, the early morning starts in the dark, the social aspects of waiting at the start and during the event itself, the great feeling of finishing, and the after-glow of the following week and sometimes months. I've done quite a few events this year, and I've enjoyed all of them. Each one is a strong memory in my mind.

True, I've been dissappointed after each one - happy to have completed the challenge, dissappointed I wasn't competitive. Its now time to build a training plan that will make me competitive in 2011. This seems like a natural progression for the 'Improbable Dream' journey and its getting me excited. I'll tell you more later (when I work it out!!)

The last two Sundays have been 'event' days - the last for the year. A fortnight ago I rode the 'Brisbane to the Gold Coast' challenge. Despite a headwind, I rode strongly. I was happy with my riding technique- I used a high cadence, was strong up the hills, and needed only a few 'rests'. I wanted to be faster but was happy I felt strong the whole way.  Did the 100kms non stop in under four hours, an average of over 25kph which was good considering the headwind. I also haven't done much riding since Melbourne so I was happy with the results. I'm sure I will do better in my riding events next year.

Last Sunday I ran the 'Movember Mousdash' 10.5km Mt Coot-tha Challenge. I still can't run strongly up hills so I fast hiked up the hill and ran most of the rest. Finished in 1hr 16minutes which isn't too bad considering I did the 10km Bridge to Brisbane in 1hr 4min earlier in the year. Lots of people did it much faster - including people in my own age - but again  I learnt a lot, and I'm sure I will do better next year. Funny thing - I hiked past a lot of people who were supposedly 'running'. Bet they weren't happy! The other pleasing thing is the photos of the event show me running with good form - a lot different from the early  2010 photos.

For both events my average heart rate was in the 120-130 range, indicating my 'long' fitness is getting better.

These last two events have reinforced what I started to learn earlier in the year. They taught me how to compete, and they will help me to do better next time. I learnt there's a right mental attitude to approaching an event, to selecting the right pace during the event, to understanding how to address motivation, and in how to deal with the dissappointment of not doing as strong as expected. I haven't learnt how to do this, just what I need to do.

Soon, I will work out my events for next year, then train specifically for them. I will look forward to each event, and make sure I am prepared. I will look forward to my 'fun' event days in 2011.

And in the meantime, over the summer, I will enjoy my Sunday training days, my long days, my weekly 'fun days'. Yep, my 'I want to run day'.

More later, journey on

James

06 November 2010

Back in the Saddle

The  'Brisbane to the Gold Coast' Bike Ride is on tomorrow morning. Originally scheduled for the weekend before Around the Bay, it was postponed due to terrible weather. (see my blog http://improbabledream.blogspot.com/2010/10/countdown-to-melbournes-210km-bike-ride.html )

Now re-scheduled for tomorrow, it will be only the second time I've been on a bike since The Bay. Hmmm could be a problem! When I got back from Melbourne I rested for a couple of days then started run training in preperation for the Mousdash 10km Fun Run up Mt Coot-tha next Sunday. I've been training reasonably hard with quite a few interval sessions, a few long runs (including one run up Mt Coot-tha last Sunday and a run up Anzac Hill in Alice Springs yesterday) so my overall fitness should be OK but I must be seriously short of cycle fitness.

Only one thing to do. No point in worrying or regretting , I'll  just go for a cruisy cycle down the south Queensland coast and enjoy the experience of a beautiful Sunday morning with lots of like-minded fellow madmen and women. If I feel strong, I'll have a crack and if not, I'll take it easy.

I've done this ride before and I know the ride is well organised and the scenery sensational. The vibe from the other riders is good, there's always a nice feeling of fellowship and community in the air and it seems everyone is determined to get into what is a very special ride.

I'm going to do the same.

 At the moment, the weather is 'brilliant queensland spring sunshine' and everything points to a great day- good weather, scenery, organisation, company and most of all, a good attitude from me.

Actually, I think I'll go the whole hog - I will make the ride a 'smile every mile' day..... I'll 'Live Life, Laugh, Be Happy', I'll connect with others and  most of all, I'll enjoy the journey. Another day, another great experience in my journey to achieve The Improbable Dream.

Gonna be a heap of fun! Cant wait...

More late, journey on

James




Word Count - unknown

02 November 2010

A review of my 'Around the Bay' adventure

Two weeks since Around the Bay In A Day (ATBIAD) so I'd better get the day documented. I need to move on to the next part of the journey but its important to record this milestone.

So here the bottom line- ATBIAD was interesting and challenging, part scary, part embarrassing, lots of fun, and full of lessons to learn. The weather for most if it was 'poor' at best, with rain, cold and headwinds; sometimes all three at once. There was also a lot of riders involved, with large pelotons often going past at quite surprising speeds.

So the event was a lot different from what I've been used to - It was uncomfortable, challenging and at times scary but I enjoyed it, and learnt from it.

Here's what happened (Its long! sorry.) -

I met Dr BiL before 0500 at Port Melbourne and we took off at a fast pace in the cold and the dark to our starting point. Already my heart rate was up from the speed and the excitement, and I was concerned I would blow myself out too early. I knew I could easily handle the 100ks or so of the first half so I wasn't overly concerned, just anxious about the long day ahead.

The fast, fun pace continuued as we joined up with other riders, and we rode through the dark, around Brighton, Beaumaris and the other beach suburbs. Not much talking, just a good fast ride as sun came up on a cold Sunday in Melbourne.

Just after Beaumaris the first big peloton of about 30 riders went past. Dressed as they were in smart BMW uniforms it was like being passed by a very British cavalry regiment from the 1800s. Impressive, structured, uniformed, intimidating, I was just glad they didn't have lances.

Through Frankston at sunrise and all going well, our group of 4 riding strongly. We stopped at a red light just near the Frankston Pub and the change in leg position gave me a strangling cramp in my left quad. Bugger - end of the group of 4.

A little while later I caught up and passed the other three enjoying a short break halfway up a hill. I didn't want to stop halfway up a hill so I yelled out 'see you at the top' and kept going, only to find the top was the first in a series of rolling hills.

Through Mornington I continued on my own, at my normal pace confident the others would catch me in no time. It actually took them a while to catch up and it was good to be back riding on my own, at my usual pace without the  distraction of others. I realised as I rode that I can't change my nature- I actually love being on my own, and facing my own challenges. I had enjoy the fast ride over the last couple of hours however, and I realised I needed to learn to ride with others- if for no other reason than it will make me faster. OK, so one lesson well learnt- join a cycling club near my home and learn to ride in a group. Will do.

From Mornington to the scheduled ferry crossing at Sorrento I faced a series of challenges, and frankly, I stuffed up. Dr BiL let the others go on ahead and he stayed with me to provide assistance, support and company. I was embarrassed at first to have him with me as I stumbled and fumbled but eventually I realised he was genuine when he said he was happy to ride with me. I also realised my previous cycling experience with others had coloured my view, and made me think I was a burden. Dr BiL didn't see it that way, and I benefited from his fellowship and company - in many ways.

The challenges weren't too hard, just annoying - A flat tyre (which BiL fixed) and some ongoing trouble with my shoe clips casused by mud I'd picked  up when changing the tyre. I also fell over at very slow speed in a rest stop when I was distracted, which was naturally very embarrassing! Poor Dr BiL.

The rest of the day was mainly smooth sailing. BiL and I rode together for some of the way and in  procession for most of the day- me behind, naturally. We faced the challenges of wind, rain, cold and rolling hills together. In the afternoon we got a tail wind and enjoyed a flat fast ride from Geelong back to Melboune, although we also had to find our way back on course after I got us lost for a short while. Poor Dr Bil.

We also stopped for a much needed hot coffee in Geelong that pepped us both up, me in particular; a good memory that will stay with me.

Riding over the Westgate Bridge into Melbourne was a blast, and an experience I will treasure. The view was awesome going up, and the downhill was super fast. What a hoot.

The ride through Melbourne was slow and annoying, stopping at a dozen or so traffic lights. Lots of riders, not much talking but plenty of camaradarie.

Coming down the finishing shute was exciting as everyone clapped and yelled. We looked, but didn't see our wives but when they found us in the finishing yard, they were more excited than us. Nice.

And as you can imagine, the dinner that night was very satisfying, and well deserved.I think we all felt quite close.

Another good day on my journey to become an endurance athlete. A long way to go, but a start.

And a great wayto get to know my Brother in Law. Thanks Dr BiL.

More later, journey on
James





Word Count - unknown

01 November 2010

The BEST way to start the day

Have you ever noticed it's hard to have a bad day when you start with a damn good exercise session? For me there is nothing quite as good as an early morning bike ride, or an early run. Its an amazing way to start the day, its a spectacular way to see the world. and its fantastic for the soul.

No matter where I am I love the idea of seeing the sun come up while giving the body a bit of a flogging. Last week I ran around the small country town of Tara in Central Queensland on a foggy morning after rain, along the McIntrye river on the border town of Goondiwindi and through the outback town of Longreach. Good for the soul, good for getting the day under way.

After a week of travel, it was also nice to get in a really nice early run around my home town on Moreton Bay on a gorgeous spring Saturday morning. It was great. Good for the soul. Good way to start the day.

As my old mate used to say 'Wouldn't be dead for quids'. A funny saying that comes to mind whenever I get in a good, hard early exercise. It ALWAYS makes me feel great.

So my suggestion to anyone reading this....., I reckon  it really is worth it,  get out of bed and give it a go!

Enough lecturing......

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - unknown

25 October 2010

Around the Bay in A Day - Success or Failure?

The mind is a strange thing. Its taken me over a week to figure out how I feel about completing 'The Bay' and I'm still not sure I know.

On one hand I feel very disapppointed with myself. I had vision of setting a cracking pace over the whole course, and triumphantly crossing the finish line feeling like a true endurance athlete. Instead I completed the course at a slow 22kph with a couple of rest stops along the way.

I also wanted to show my family how strong I am now. This didn't happen - it seems I'm not strong yet and there is still a lot to do before I can claim to be either strong, or an endurance athlete.

On the other hand, I feel quite pleased to have finished the 210kms - my longest ride to date. I'm also pleased I did it with an endurance mindset of being persistant, patient and within my plan. I finished the day with a lot of energy, and I was nowhere near exhausted which I guess means I could have gone harder and finished with a faster average. My average heart rate for the day was 122bpm so I rode it well within my target aerobic zone.

I'm pleased about the great memories of the day, and of the pleasure of riding with Dr BiL. I found out he is patient, helpful, genuine and good company. I also disovered he is one hell of a cyclist, with the aerobic ability to maintain a high cadence for hours on end.

I learnt to ride in cold, wet and windy conditions. The wind gusts from the side were hairy, the head winds were tough, and the cold stinging rain was uncomfortable and a little scary at times. But I survived and I now have the pleasure of knowing the ride was not easy.

I enjoyed the experience of hundreds of riders getting on and off a ferry, and the joy of a chicken and salad sandwich after a few hours of hard exercise. I enjoyed the views of historic Queenscliff, the quick ride from Geelong to Little River, the awesome views and fast descent of the Westgate Bridge and the frustrating stop/start of the ride into Melbourne through endless red traffic lights.

Lastly, I enjoyed the congratulations and the fun of sharing the result with all my friends.

So the mind is a funny thing. Should I feel dissappointed I didn't live up to a vague dream, or just enjoy the pleasure of reality?

Obviously the later, especially when #10 of my Training Philosophy (see Sidebar of this blog) is to always focus on my own efforts, and not compete with what others think or do.

But the mind is a strange thing, and my mind seems to be able to find creative ways to dissappoint myself.

That, in itself, is an important lesson from the day.

More later, journey on
James


Word Count - unknown.

24 October 2010

Brothers-In-Arms...er....Legs

(Written Sunday 10th October 10- I'm still catching up on my blogging.....)


Doctor B.i.L - my Brother in Law - rang the other night with the final arrangements for ‘Around the Bay in a Day’.

It’s unusual for BiL to ring. We’ve been related by marriage for over 25 years yet a phone call to each other is rare. And to spend a whole day together is unheard of. We’ve lived in different parts of the country, had busy careers, he’s had a family to raise, and I’ve had beer to drink/ bad habits to develop. Different lives, different interests.

With his family he has visited my wife and I many times yet we’ve never really done anything together, just the two of us.

This journey, The Improbable Dream, is changing so much in my life. Months ago BiL heard of my long term dream to ride ‘The Bay’ and when he realised I’d been doing some serious training he signed us up. He then set about organising everything involved in the day, including the odd phone calls and email to keep me informed. He also occasionally checked to make sure I was on track with my training.

His efforts were both a very pleasant surprise and a delightful thing to do. I am staggered by his generous spirit. And I am so very pleased the journey is bringing us together. I’m looking forward to our day cycling together.

I think of it as ‘Brothers in Arms…er..Legs’.

I’ve got a problem though. He has organised for us to ride ‘The Bay’ with some friends of his in a standard cycling group formation. I've never ridden like this – all of my riding is solo, with no attempt EVER to slice though the wind/ share the load, peloton style. To now start riding in a group of experienced riders sounds daunting.

Bil also says they are planning on riding at a faster average than I’ve trained.

It seems I will have to learn fast group riding on the actual ride. If I had been thinking better, I would have joined the local cycling club and learnt how to group ride over the last few months. Too late now. I don’t want to let BiL down so I will just have to accept the challenge and do what has to be done.

That’s the thing with this journey. It has a constant stream of surprising twists and turns. It’s challenging but fun.

It also brings me into to contact with great people who are prepared to help me achieve my dream. And it constantly takes me out of my comfort zone.

It seems that once you set a goal and start working determinedly towards it, things happen, people join the journey, and the challenge takes on a much greater dynamic than originally expected. It becomes more fun, and more personally satisfying than originally imagined.

What a great lesson – It’s an Improbable Dream, but it is also a fascinating journey. Having the Dream, and making it come to life, makes for a better life.

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - 508

20 October 2010

2nd Goal for the year achieved

Finished Around the Bay in A Day.
Will update the blog in the next few days - Sleep and rest first :-)

More later, journey on

James



Word count - 20

10 October 2010

Countdown to Melbourne's 210km Bike Ride

Spent the day alternating between the lounge and TV, and short sessions on the spin bike. Late this afternoon, ran an easy 2.5ks over hills.

Between now and next Sunday, my plan is to exhaust my legs and lungs early in the week, then rest easy from mid week until the ride on Sunday. I'll have an easy ride on Friday to check the bike but apart from that, the legs 'get a few days off'

I know I haven't done enough, but its time to accept what's happened and get ready for this long-dreamed-about adventure.

The bike gets packed-up tomorrow ready for Wednesday's flight so its spin bike, weights and running from tomorrow until Friday.

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - unknown

So much for 'The Plan'....

'The gods laugh when you make plans'. This ancient saying seems very real this morning as I sit here inside my comfortably warm and dry lounge room with a freshly brewed coffee.

Far more comfortable than the planned event of a 100km bike ride. The annual 'Brisbane to the Gold Coast Bike Challenge' scheduled for today was cancelled late yesterday due to 'severe weather conditions' forecast for the Queensland coast.

This is good in one sense (in addition obviously to the unplanned hot coffee opportunity). The weather conditions this morning are terrible- its been raining for days so the roads are flooded, everything is soaking wet making it very slippery underfoot and the wind gusts are strong and inconsistent. It's uncomfortable and dangerous weather for riding a road bike. I wasn't keen on taking any chances with either my health or the bike with only one week to go to Melbourne so I was secretly pleased when it was called off.

But its one more hiccup in the plan for preparing for my longest ride to date. The Gold Coast ride was supposed to be the last big hit out before Melbourne giving me a chance to ride in a large group, over a longish distance, at a fast pace. No joy!

This is just one more roadblock, which feels like the story of the last few months. It's been the wettest few weeks for years so there has been a lot of weekends when road rides have been called off. It's been hard to get long hours on the road.

The plan has been off almost from the start. My overall strategy was to get aerobically fit by training and competing in half -marathons. No problems, done. I then expected to get 'bike-fit' by participating in the 10 day Queensland 'Big Bike Ride' but I had to call this off due to my wife's foot operation. There was also a long period when I lost my motivation and didn't train for ages.

So the preperation has not been as good as I'd have liked. I've put plenty of hours in on the spin bike and the weight gym since getting my mojo back, and I've ridden whenever I can, including some great rides in the country. I'm reasonably confident I'll be OK. Not as fit as I'd expected, but still should be OK.

So much for the great 'plan' though. This journey seems to be as much about adapting to what's presented, staying motivated and being mentally strong, as it is about planning and logistics.

Planning? Who's that laughing?

Oh well, might have another coffee.

More later, journey on.....

James




Word Count - unknown

30 September 2010

Love my food - and my fuel.

There's only two weeks to the big bike ride.

I obviously dont want to carrying any unnecessary kilos with me so becoming 'leaner' has been a focus for the last few weeks. And the ride will present me with an anticipated 9 hours of hard aerobics so I'm going to use a lot of energy. I'm going to need food- and a fair bit of it.

It's complicated - I need to lose weight before the ride and then eat lots during the ride. Hmmmm.

The organisers will provide some food on the day and obviously I can take some with me. But there's a limit to how much I can carry and there's a limit to how much I can eat quickly at any one time without making myself sick.

So what to do? The answer is to prepare my body to efficiently process good carbohydrates. I need to eat healthy to lose weight, I need to make sure my body is fully 'fueled' before the race (some people call this carbo-loading), and I need to make sure its able to handle sufficient 'fuel replacement' on the day.

So I'm working hard at my pre-ride daily 'fuel'. I like my food, and lots of it, so in the past this has been an issue for me. But now I've found the secret to great tasting food that's also good 'fuel'. - It loses weight, I can eat as much as I want, its very filling and very tasty, and it provides energy that's like a great big kick in the pants....

Eat raw and small, eat often. I now choose small servings of raw or unprocessed food (i.e. no more than two steps from its natural state) and eat every two hours. This includes staying away from (as much as possible) ALL things processed, including breads, snacks, soft drinks...and alcohol! I haven't given them up completely, just staying away as much as I can.

Here's what I've been eating. I've lost inches around my waist, look better and feel fantastic. And I'm not hungry. Its also incredibly delicous - really!!

Breakfast - Small bowl of bircher muesli with additional serving of mixed seeds and a handful of cranberries , mixed wtih natural yoghurt. (Absolute awesome energy and taste!!)

Morning Tea - VitaWheats with vegemite (I'm an Aussie Kid)

Lunch - 2 wholegrain wraps with fresh salads and occassionally some protein eg can of tuna. (Another HUGE kick, and lots of sensational tastes)

Afternoon Tea - Large bowl of prunes with yoghurt or more vitawheats
(get me..er....'going')

Dinner
- piece of protein (eg chicken, fish, meat - grilled) plus either a large salad or veges (boiled or roaasted).

Throughout the day (every 60-90 minutes) I have a piece of fruit (most likely a Pink Lady apple - love 'em!!!) and whenever I feel like it I have my own personal piece of naughtiness- plunger coffee with milk and sugar, or a cappaccino. I also drink water constantly throughout the day.

Its an amazing eating plan - The weight drops off, the energy levels are unbelievable, and I know I am preparing my body for the ride. I can feel it getting used to using good carbs for daily energy, and I can feel it getting rid of any crap that might still be there.

The good news is its easy to do when I'm travelling, it's eco-friendly (I choose what's in season), and its adaptable - I choose ingredients I feel like eating.

Soon I will start planning my fuel for the actual ride. In the meantime, via this smart food plan, I'll continue to prepare my body for the adventure ahead.

Gee it feels good!

More later, journey on....

James



Word Count - unknown.

26 September 2010

Getting there.....



Only three weekends to 'Around the Bay in a Day' so my training and thinking is lazer-focused on the requirements of bike riding- getting fitter and faster, going longer and getting leaner.

After a good week of mainly twice-a-day exercise sessions - including a massive weight session on Friday morning that left me a shattered mess! - this weekend has been all bike riding.

It rained yesterday so I did two very hard 60 minute spin sessions on the indoor bike. Cranked out a pleasing and challenging 60kms over the two hours with a lowish average heart rate of 126.

Today I did an easy 100km early morning ride over the usual rolling hill course for an OK average of 23.3kph. Didn't kill myself, just enjoyed a long-ish ride. Finished it off by acting like a 'real' bike rider, and had a 'life saving' coffee at a coffee shop on the coast. (see photo- my favorite 'local'... Moreton Bay and Stradbroke Island in the background )

As I write this, my legs are sore but I feel fine. I think I'll should be right for the big ride, although I am nervous.

More later, journey on....

James



Word count - 192

23 September 2010

Staying focused with three weeks to go


With my motivation back in place and with only three weeks to go until we leave for Melbourne and the 'Around the Bay in Day' bike ride, my training is back on in earnest.

Last week I had some great rides around Goondiwindi and Tara during the week (flat, fast, long country roads) and backed it up with some really nice afternoon runs. This is a nice photo I took whilst running along the McIntyre River at Goondiwindi at sunset. Scenes such as this one make it easy to get outside and exercise.

I finished the week with a very pleasing 120km bike ride on Sunday morning- I finished strongly and pulled up well, so I was happy. Finished the rolling hill course without stopping at an average of 24kph. A good 4.5 hour workout.

I'm certainly getting fitter but I'm still finding it hard to self-coach. I'm sure I've wasted some time due to some bad decisions. Still, a key part of this journey is learning and self discovery, so its a fair trade off.

Speaking of self-coaching, I recently read that its important to make sure every training session has a clearly defined outcome. I agree, but actually think I need more than this - I need every day to be specifically targeted to a defined outcome.

With that in mind, I have developed four broad outcomes for what I'm currently trying to achieve and I keep them in mind throughout the day, and during exercise. Each outcomes has a specific goals attached to it. But rather than go through each specific goal consistently, I just constantly remember and repeat -

Fitter
Faster
Longer
Leaner

Each word has a specific outcome and specific goals. Each word means something to me, and what I am trying to achieve. Its a great way for me to stay focused - both during the day, and during exercise.

More later, journey on

James



Words Count - unknown

20 September 2010

Motivation, Inspiration and Perspiration


I haven’t written a post for a while. A disappointing result in both my 3rd Half Marathon and the 10km Bridge to Brisbane left me de-motivated and thinking the whole thing was a waste of time. I ran 62:10 in the Bridge to Brissie which was actually quite an improvement on last year (74minutes) but it was less than my target and I was very unhappy with my effort. I felt like I failed and when I then had to cancel The Big Ride due to my wife’s foot operation, I lost interest in trying to be a distance athlete. So I spent a few weeks exercising only occasionally, eating way too much and drinking bucket loads of alcohol-which reminds me, thanks to everyone who helped me with a most enjoyable ‘lager frenzy’....... Deb’s effort in Charleville stands out.

The problem was that although the diversion was fun, I knew I was committed to riding the 210km Around the Bay in a Day cycle challenge in October with my Brother-in-Law (Doctor Bil) and the day of truth was fast approaching. This long ride was always going to be a huge stretch for me, and I knew I was facing severe embarrassment.

So I sat down and worked out where I was at with The Improbable Dream. I realised I really wanted to be an endurance athlete, I wanted to complete the ride in a reasonable time, I liked the feeling of being fitter than before, and I enjoyed the hours spent training. I realised I was prepared to do what was necessary.

Yep, I re-discovered my motivation.

And I realised, once again, that motivation comes from within. Other don’t motivate us, we motivate ourselves. Motivation speakers etc help us articulate our inner, perhaps undiscovered, reasons for wanting to achieve goals but at the end, they are still our own thoughts and desires. Others can’t motivate us, we do it ourselves.

Other people can inspire us though. And since finding my motivation, I’ve been inspired too. I had a great chat with David, a fabulous bloke who recently rode from the Coast to the Outback and was then generous enough to tell me about his preparation and the actual ride. And it was inspiring to hear firsthand from some-one who had already faced the challenge of a long distance ride. I’m looking forward to going for a training ride with him when I’m next back his way.

I was also inspired during a great coffee with ‘The Savage One’- a sweet-looking but no doubt sadistic personal trainer who would surely take great delight in watching me sweat in pain if I gave her a chance. Instead we had a coffee. Her interest in what I am trying to do and her many insightful questions made me remember how many aspects there are to this journey. And it inspired me to go deeper into my understanding of what’s possible.

With my motivation in place, and feeling inspired by these recent conversations I bought an indoor trainer to help me get my bike fitness to the required level. Who needs The Savage One when I have my own torture rack. End result- Perspiration. Lots of it!

So there it is; Motivation, Inspiration and Perspiration. I love it all but especially, I love being inspired. Thanks to all who inspire me!

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - 564

25 July 2010

Affirmations for August - My FAST Month

'You create your own life'.
'create' is a verb.You have to actively do something in order to get the life you want
.'

This comes from Brett, the author of the blog 'Zen and the Art of Triathlon' and I think its a great quote' . So with this powerful thought in mind, here is what I will do in August to 'create' my life.

Firstly the goals -

1. Next weekend, I will participate in my 3rd Half Marathon in 4 weeks. My goal is to achieve 2hrs 15mins again- and beat it if possible.

2. 4 weeks after that, I will attempt to run the 10km Bridge to Brisbane in 55 minutes (this time is a HUGE stretch but I will see what I can do)

3. The following two weeks will see me ride the Queensland Big Bike Ride from Yeppoon to Bundaberg (a 9 day ride- should be fun!)

4. In October (5 weeks after that) it is the 210km Around the Bay in a Day in Melbourne.

It's a very challenging program (Improbable?) and I need to get a LOT fitter, and in a hurry.

Its actually quite scary and I am not sure I can do it. I've always been slow and these goals are all about being fast.

I am going to work really hard to achieve them, to bring me closer to achieving my Improbable Dream.

I am creating my own life - but only if I get off my bum and do something.

So here's my Affirmations for August....

'August is my FAST month. Its the month I will get a lot faster in my running and my riding. I will do this by hard aerobic training, and by improving my technique.

I will focus on two things only -

1. Complete the Bridge to Brisbane in 50 minutes
2. Be riding at an average of +28kph by the time I start the Big Bike Ride.

This month I am improving my speed fitness and my technique. I push myself hard at each training session.

I commit to completing the interval training sessions without whimping out.

I am improving my running and pedalling technique, my riding position and my gearing selection.

Each workout is focused on getting faster for longer by getting both fitter and smarter.

Every day I push myself harder for longer, and I improve my running and riding technique.

I will CREATE my own outcomes.

And when I get this right, in September I will develop my long rides in preperation for the next stage of my dream.

I will celebrate my result in the Bridge To Brisbane.'


If you want to leave me a comment you can do so below....

More later, journey on.....
James




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A Head Full of Snot

I feel terrible today and it's making me anxious. Actually its p#issing me off! I want to go hard but my body is insisting I rest. Dont you hate that!!!

I spent a large part of this week in Goondiwindi and Toowoomba, and as usual when I visit my the old stomping ground of the Darling Downs - especially during ploughing and sowing time - I end up with a head full of sinus. And it makes me feel like crap. Worse - I get anxious because I cant exercise. I dont have time to be sick. Coming soon I've got the Bridge to Brisbane 10km fast run and the Around the Bay in a Day 210km Bike Ride. There's no time to waste.

Since arriving home I've tried to clear my head by exercising hard. I figured the best thing to do was to try to blast it out of my head with some hard aerobics. Over two days I ran a fast-ish 5ks, did a hard 30min spin on a stationary bike, and then fast-hiked up Mt Coot-tha to the lookout.

Instead of fixing it I seem to have made it worse. It feels strange- my body is fresh and ready to go but my head is cloggy, achey and I'm quite dopey. I hate having sinus... and I should know 'cause I've had it regularly throughout my whole life.

There's no choice - take the day off, take some anti-histamines and stop whinging. And get ready to go hard from tomorrow. It's time to be positive - I will regard today as a rest day in my personal 'Improbable' journey. And try to enjoy it.

So where are the tissues. And the TV Remote! :-)

More later, journey on.....
James



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18 July 2010

Jetty to Jetty 1/2 Fun Run - my second ever 1/2 marathon

I didn’t have a lot of expectations for my 2nd go at a ½ Marathon. After I pulled up quite well from the Gold Coast event two weeks ago, I made the late decision to enter the Jetty to Jetty 25th Anniversary ½ Marathon. But as I say, without any great expectations – just go along, build on the confidence I took from the Gold Coast, have fun and see what happened.

In the back of my mind I did hope to beat my previous time but it wasn’t critical- more of a training run than an attempt to prove anything to myself.

I finished the run in almost the exact time – 2 hours 15 minutes 9 seconds (6 seconds faster) but two good things – I stopped for a pi%s stop that took about 2 minutes and the course was a LOT hillier. So overall I feel like I did better than last time. I also achieved my goal of – having fun (heaps!!), improve my confidence (yep- see above), and go with the flow.

The whole thing was good. It was a glorious pre-dawn drive to the north side of Brisbane, and to then get ready for the run as the sun came up over Moreton Bay was just special, a rare thrill. The run itself - as the name suggests – is a run along the coast, out and back to a jetty, through a Sunday market, along the beachfront, up and over hills, around the North Moreton Bay coast.

The best bit was I ran the last 2ks with a girl from the organising runners club and she encouraged me to run hard to the line ‘Knees up, pump your arms, push hard, go James go!” It was great fun, I felt like a runner (although tired) and I learnt how to push to the end. Thanks heaps to that nice girl.

The rest of the run was like a training run- just as I’d hoped. I found a pace runner for 2:15, quickly settled into a good rhythm, and joined a good chat with a bunch of other 2:15 runners. The chat lasted for 15ks before we spread out and got home on our own time.

So... a really good chat, a beautiful early morning coastal course, lots of laughs, a comfortable running pace and a great result. That’s a good way to spend a Sunday morning - No expectations, good exercise, lots of fun, and a huge feel-good factor afterwards.

More later, journey on.......
James





Word Count - 406

05 July 2010

Gold Coast 1/2 Marathon 2010



So there I was..... Southport Queensland, a winter's Sunday morning, slightly chilly at 06.30am, standing nervously at the back of the pack, bouncing with excitement.

It was an amazing sight to be on a small hill in the middle of the Gold Coast highway just on sunrise looking at a writhing snake of humanity determinately making its way through the starting gate of the 2010 Gold Coast Half Marathon.

9000 runners taking up both sides of the highway, crowned with morning sun, all heading in the same direction, all pulling me forward. What an inspiration.

It was my first distance event and surprisingly I felt quite relaxed. I knew I had put in the training (although not enough- never enough), I knew I was determined to finish, and that ‘my time was now'. So I made a commitment to not waste this opportunity, to put in a big effort, to run hard, and most of all, to have fun!!

My goal time was 2hrs 30min so when I found the pace runner for 2:20 I decided to run with him for a while. I figured I'd stay with him until I got tired. But in the excitement of the event, with everyone around me trying so hard, I just didn’t stop running. I ran and I ran. I couldn’t believe it – I’ve never run so far before. What a buzz. What fun.

Suddenly there was only 3 kms to go and I was ahead of the pace runner. I realised I had a great chance to record an incredible time. Everything changed in my head. It put a smile on my face; as you can see in the photos, I was having a ball. I picked up the pace and ran hard to the end. I entered the chute, the crowds were cheering and clapping, I got another burst of energy and I sprinted to the finish.

2 hours 15 minutes 19 seconds. 15 minutes under my target. Wow!!!!!

And there it was –in a click of a timing machine I was a half-marathoner! I smiled with satisfaction. A great feeling. As I always say to myself - The discomfort of the run is temporary, the result is permanent. Damn right.

There were lots of fun things along the way. Towards the end I saw a sign held up by a random supporter that read ‘Your feet hurt cause you’re kicking butt’. ;-) Thank you to that person. Nice.

I saw an overweight guy jogging slowly, wearing a black t-shirt that read ‘I am NOT a virgin’. What the??? Funny!

I followed a girl for a while who was wearing the three layer of clothes; you know the bra, singlet, t-shirt look. I was thinking; ‘Gawd I’m glad I’m not female and have to wear all those clothes to stop things bouncing.’ When we hit a turnaround point I saw she was amazingly flat-chested. ‘Ooops’ I thought, ‘maybe it should be me wearing all the clothes, get my man boobs under control, stop the big buggers from bouncing.’ It was funny in my head at the time. :-)

I ran for a while with a bunch of ladies from the Hamilton Running Club from New Zealand, which was really nice - It reminded me of the great support I get from Chrissie in Hamilton and our other friends in NZ.

In the second half of the run I listened to my I-pod to the music from my 50th birthday. Thanks Therese.

The last thing I should mention is how well I did with my nutrition. Two hours before the start, at 0400 I had two pieces of fruit, a cup of coffee and a Growling Dog energy bar, and I drank 600mls of water. Along the way I grabbed cups of water from the aid stations, and then, at the turnaround point I had an energy gel. This was a great idea as it gave me a heap of energy and I’m sure it was what gave me the energy to finish with a burst. A smart thing to do.

So it was lots of fun, I learnt a lots of lesson and in the end I gained a lot of satisfaction. Best of all, for the rest of my life, I can now say I’m a half-marathoner.

I recommend it to everyone.

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - 748

04 July 2010

First goal for the year successfully completed

Today I finished my first true distance event and I'm proud to say.. I nailed it! I can now say, for the rest of my life that I am a half-marathoner. In my first event I ran the whole way, I beat my 'hoped for' time by 15 minutes and my 'expected' time by 25 minutes. It's awesome to be able to say I ran the whole way... I really am a half-marathoner now.

I ran the 21kms in 2:15:19, a LOT faster than my 'hope for' time of 2 hours 30 (see blog 8th June)and I am beside myself with excitement. I am soooo pumped.

It's an amazing feeling to train for so long and with a heap of determination and consistency, to set - and also state- a very specific goal, to put myself out there via this blog, to have a go and then, to nail it!!

It feels great. I started this journey asking 'Can a fat and unfit 50 y.o. - with a poor lifestyle and no sporting ability - turn himself into a Distance Athlete?'. At the moment it seems the answer is a resounding YES!!.....Perhaps its not such an Improbable Dream after all.

Tomorrow, when I've had a chance to rest and reflect I'll tell you about the race, and the lessons I learnt. For now though, I think I'll just enjoy the experience of finally being a successful half-marathoner. :-)

By the way, thanks for all your feedback via phone and email. If you want to leave a message on my blog, click on the 'envelope' symbol at the bottom of the post. Thanks!

More later, journey on.....
James




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24 June 2010

Child-like excitement has set in.

Only a couple of days of training to go before attempting the first organised events in my new life. The Gold Coast 1/2 Marathon is on Sunday week while this Sunday it's the 50k Brisbane to the Bay Cycle Ride.

It will be my second go at the B2B - it's a good-fun, short and sharp, rolling-hill course so I'm EXCITED.

I haven't done much bike riding lately. Most of my training recently has been focused on running, for a number of reasons. One, I changed my running style to avoid injury. I changed from heal strike to pad strike and this took some time to learn. Two, as I've detailed previously, my running fitness was low and I had to learn to 'run long' - again, this took some time. My constant recent travel has taken me away from my bike so often my only option has been to run. Lastly, I got a new bike (Thanks Aaron - I'll tell you all the story later) and its taken a while to get it set up correctly.

Anyway all this means I expected to do the ride with a low level of bike fitness. This was a good plan until I started getting really nervous earlier today. What if I cant finish? What if I undermine my own confidence regarding my fitness with only one week to the 1/2 marathon? What if..what if... what if...

End result is I decided to get off my bum and do the fast training ride I had scheduled for yesterday. I chose a flat-ish, fast circuit along the waterfront near where I live and set out to see what happens.

I did just under 40kms, quite fast and finished with plenty left in me. A few short rest periods, a lot of long fast sections, and a few 'cruisings'. At the end, a little sore in the feet (new shoes /pedals will take a while to settle into) and my legs were un-comfortably tired - it has been a few hard days for my legs so not suprising! I do tend to expect a lot from them. Overall I felt strong and quite fresh.

I achieved an average of +25kph despite a) a brisk headwind 2) tired legs and 3)the fact I'm still learning the new bike/ new gear changer/ different brakes.

I'm very very pleased. I now expect to do even better on Sunday when hopefully I'm more rested, there's less breeze and there's people around for me to draft.

Come to think of it, I'm more than pleased - I'm PUMPED! Yes, I know- Despite today's ride only being a short 40kms there were still periods when I had to slow down and rest but that's OK, no need to worry - once I start focusing on bike training I'm sure my results will improve dramatically. For now I think I'll just enjoy the good parts of today, especially....

Along the waterfront in a flat, short, protected (ie no wind) area, on a fast new bike, in the aero position on my tri bars, I very quickly got up to 47kph - thanks to my legs and my lungs. Awesome!!!!!!! Starting to scare myself. I think my fitness might be starting to exceed my riding ability haha :-)

Anyway, I guess all this means I'm as ready as I'm going to be. So now its time to test myself in some organised events.

What will happen? I dont know, but let's find out.

I'm so EXCITED!!!!. I'm like a kid again. An excited child.

Great for me, but for anyone who knows me..... Spare a thought for Shirl. Poor thing. :-)

More later, journey on.....
James




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23 June 2010

Just do it!

Great workout tonight. I was scheduled to complete a fast bike ride but it was raining heavily and I got back from Carindale late so I changed my plan and went to the gym instead.

The spin bike was busy which was kind of good because it meant I could hit my favourite - the treadmill. Cranked it up to a fast walk 8.2kph with a 3 degree incline and went hard for 60 minutes.

What a feeling. I remember, just a few months ago, when I couldn't do more than 7.2kph on a flat treadmill for 40 minutes max. In just a short time I've been able to make HUGE improvements.

So when it comes to thinking about the 1/2 Marathon, there's no point in sweating over whether I am ready or not. I just need to enjoy the fact I have improved a lot over the last few months, I should trust my training and all the hours I've put in, and then I should just enjoy the event and the challenge.

As Shirl (and some-one else) says - "Just do it!"

More later, journey on.....
James



Word Count - unknown

22 June 2010

13 days to go...

Just under two weeks to go to my first half-marathon. I'm in heavy training, working hard, I'm having a blast and I dont really know what I'm doing. What a combination.

I'm trying to 'peak' this week and then 'taper' next week. All sounded straight forward when I read it in the textbooks but now that I'm doing it I really dont know if I'm doing it right. I guess I'll find out in two weeks.

This 'experiential learning' is why I call this um, er, whatever it is, a 'journey' - I really dont know what will happen, and what it will mean. I make plans based on what I've read, I give it a go on a day-by-day/ event-by-event basis, I find out what happens and then I learn. Just like any other journey.

And I've got to say - I'm loving it. I enjoy the planning and the goal setting, I enjoy the activities, and I enjoy the way the leanings pop in to my mind, the way I learn by doing and by reflecting. Experiential learning at its best!

The lessons are ahead of me. For now, its about getting as much training in as possible before slowing down to ensure my legs are fresh for the challenge.

More later, journey on....
James

14 June 2010

Which way to go?

After a good week of hard and honest daily training and a long 10 hour drive on country roads in the last two days, I felt tired and fuzzy on Saturday morning. But I was scheduled to complete a trial, self-directed pretend '1/2 marathon' in preperation of the Gold Coast event in three weeks...... so I had no choice - I hit the road.

I finished in 2hrs 40mins which is longer than my target time, and dissappointedly I struggled to run very far (I ened up fast walking most of the way), my legs were heavy, my lungs crappy, and my mind soft. It was a hard 160 minutes.

And very dissappointing. I had hoped to be much stronger at this stage of my preperation. I assumed I would be a 'runner' by now, that I would be a well trained, awesome-type distance athlete.

So I've been down on myself - sad and dissappointed mainly, although also concerned I'm making a fool of myself.

I guess all I can do is put my head down, work hard and see what happens.

Not happy though.

More later, journey on.....

James

08 June 2010

Only 26 Days to go and still plenty to do.

On Sunday the 4th of July I am running my first half marathon. I've been working towards this since before Christmas and now its almost here. My first real endurance event! I'm excited about it and also nervous. I know I wont be fit enough to run the whole way but I'm much fitter than ever before so I will be happy enough if I complete the whole 21kms within the required 3 hours.

And I'll be absolutely thrilled if I can complete it in 2.5 hours (150 minutes.) Wish me luck.....and stay tuned.

I still have four weeks/weekend to finish my training. I want to 'peak' at the right time so I'm training twice a day most days and running/ fast walking 10kms nearly every day. When not running, I'm working on my fitness by cross-training on the road bike, the stationary bike, rower and stepper or by putting in some short, sharp weight sessions.

And just to make it harder for myself, the weekend before the race, again on a Sunday morning, I've entered the 'Brisbane to the Bay' 50km bike ride. Its a hilly and fast course so it'll not only be a good training session,it will also show me where my bike riding, and my overall aerobic fitness, is at.

And in the week between the bike ride and the 1/2 marathon I'm travelling through Far West Queensland staying in a diffent town every night and spending long days driving and working. This will present challenges for me in terms of diet and rest. I've planned it as a 'taper' week of minimal running so it should be OK. Actually, it'll also be my first ever 'taper' so I'm looking forward to learning how it's done. I am nervous about it though. Self coaching is hard.

It'll be a busy, and challenging month, I'll let you know how it goes.

More later,journey on......

James




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30 May 2010

I now believe in cliches, and a new challenge

This post is much later than I promised in my last entry but trust me, it's mainly due to telco connection/ technical issues and not really because I'm slack! Everything is now fixed (hopefully) and so I'm back to recording this journey into the unknown. I'll try not to be cynical about the potential of computer problems re-appearing.

Anyway, enough of the geek stuff, back to the journey. Amongst lots of good training sessions recently, I've been listening to some podcasts and reading books on 'mind training for the endurance athlete'. My goals still seem to be a long way off, still seem improbable. Yet not impossible! The more I read the more I realise how much I have to do and learn, but all that does it makes me more excited......

The Mind Training stuff has reinforced what I've discovered since starting the journey. Over the last few months I've learnt if I keep a positive attitude to my training, if I approach every situation as an opportunity to learn more about myself by pushing myself, if I never let my mind talk my body into giving up before it has absolutely has to, then the Impossible will become the Improbable and then the Improbable will become a reality.

Its a cliche to say 'its all in the mind', to say 'What my mind can conceive my body can achieve' and all the other well known positive affirmations. Yet I've learnt the cliches are also truisms.

As an example, recently I have been concerned with my running. For ages now I have only been able to run for a few minutes at a time. I could fastwalk for hours but only run for a short while before having to stop and walk. This was annoying me but I didn't know what to do.

The podcasts etc suggested it was all in my mind. It said to 'reframe' my mind, to believe my body could do more, and to find a new way to view it. So I decided to enjoy my running. I told myself I love the feeling of being out of breath, of the feeling of tiredness when running. I came up with a running mantra that matched my footfalls. The mantra reminded me to run using good form, to run with relaxed muscles and to love the feeling of running. I said to myself in time with my footfalls - 'Smooth...Relaxed.. I LOVE...distance....running'.

As well, whenever I thought I'd gone as far as I could, I started 'scanning' my body to learn how I was really feeling. How did my legs feel? my lungs? my feet, ankles, glutes, chest, eyes, lips, jaws, throat, shoulders, arms etc etc. I told myself to discover how I felt, and no matter what it was, to enjoy it.

Guess what.

Overnight - and on every run since- I've been able to run HEAPS longer than previously. I went from struggling to run 6 minutes without stopping to running 30 minutes, 40 minutes or more. And I could back it up with more and more running in the same session.

Today I ran/walked about 13kms in 1:21:15. - Started with a 30min run, 5 min walk, 7 min run, 5 min walk, 6 min run, 4 min walk, 11 min run, 3 min walk and finished with a strong 13 min run. Awesome.

Yes, its not as far as I want to run, but that initial overnight improvement was staggering. So yes, the cliche's really are truisms - it really is all in the mind.

Its shown me I must make the next step, I must decide to control my mind to achieve my goals. Can I do it? The answer, of course, is in the day-to-day experiences of this journey! The answer IS the journey.

Other people have done it. The great Percy Curetty, a man who redefined distance running in his 50s (among other great things) said he never believed what his mind told him, he told his mind what to think. When his mind said he was in pain, he told it to enjoy the feeling, to learn from it. By doing this he found he could do things other people said were impossible.

A good lesson to learn. So now its time to see what my body can do, its time to over-ride my mind, to learn, to really live the adventure, its time to discover myself by living the journey.

Wow! Better get going....

More later, journey on....

James




Word Count - unknown.

23 May 2010

Responding to lack of motivaton.

I've started my new job/ work contract and its made 'normal life' very busy. The excitment of getting my head into this new challenge, combined with lots of travel every week has made me a little distracted from The Improbable Dream lately.

And yes, I admit- a little demotivated as well.

But not for long! After three consecutive days of NO training this week (for lots of different reason) I woke up very early in my motel room in Roma Western Queensland Saturday morning (yesterday) absolutely disgusted with my attitude and laziness.

So I went for a pre-dawn run around the street and back lanes. In the cold, in the dark, watched by inquisitive kangaoos sitting in the middle of the roads, and uncaring cows looking at me with big round eyes. It felt good to get the blood flowing! And I was sure the wild life was urging me on and sharing my delight at simple pleasure of 'running into the day'. (There's nothing quite like a sunrise run ot get the day off to a great start.)

Later I flew back to Brisbane and did a good solid weight session in the gym in the late afternoon. A much better day than the previous few.

Two good training sessions yesterday, a hard 40 minutes on the spin bike this morning and a planned Gym Tri this afternooon will get me back into the groove. I feel like I've reconnected with my dream- and it feels good.

I'm also committed to not forgetting about this blog so I will update this log, and my training diary either tonight or tomorrow night. Guaranteed it will be done by the time I go to sleep on Monday!

I'm travelling again this week (4 days in Sydney for a conferenece) but I am determined to get good training sessions in, to keep this my dream foremost in my mind, and to keep my blog up to date.

So, as always (but this time it will be in the not tooo distant future)..... More later, and...

Journey on!

James


Word Count - unknown.

08 May 2010

No need to panic!

I've been worried all week.

Last weekend, with less than 2 months to the Gold Coast 1/2 Marathon, I decided to start pushing harder with my training. I made this decision even though I was struggling from a big bout of sinus, and this turned out to be a very dumb idea! The consequence of listening to my head instead of my body was I paid the price all week of NO TRAINING. Instead of increasing the training load I was forced to call it off completely.

The sinus attack did not go well with last weekend's 4 hard aerobic sessions and it quickly became firstly infected and then a long lasting, very heavy head and chest infection (URTI). The URTI became worse during the week with 3 long flights, 4 days in a cold and dusty arid zone and a lot of air conditioned sleeping quarters. It's been a miserable week physically and mentally. Not being able to train just made it worse.

I was also worried all week. For five days I struggled to breathe and to get through the work day, and it was clear exercise was a no-go. And this annoyed me. I was sure my fitness was slipping, and I worried I was losing my chance to complete the 1/2 marathon. I was miserable and worried. What a combination.

But good news. Today, despite still feeling the last remaining effects of the head cold I decided to go for a walk (no running!) and see how I felt. I ended up fast walking for 1 hour 48 minutes, including some small hills, and I felt great, I handled the distance and the pace easily. A little tired afterwards but in much better shape than I had expected. Later, I did a short spin session on the stationary bike, and although I struggled for breathe and energy, again it was better than I had feared.

I'll try again tomorrow (Sunday) and then figure out my plan for the week ahead. There's no time to waste BUT - as I've now learnt the hard way- I MUST listen to my body.

More later, journey on
James



Word Count- 325

01 May 2010

I love weekends!

I love weekends. It's the time when I pretend to be a 'real' athlete, a time when I push myself hard, relax hard, eat well and then reflect on the past week's activities and the journey so far. Its a time of personal challenge, reflection and reward.

With my new work arrangements now in full swing its obvious weekends will become even more special. And critical. I can see I will often be time poor during the working week so fully using my weekend time will be important to achieving my goals. I'll need to reflect on what needs to be done and what I need to do. Sounds like something to think about...... probably next weekend!!! :-)

Anyway, these rambling thoughts were prompted by the events of last weekend - it was a beauty! I woke up early on Saturday determined to complete a long run. I've done some good runs recently but with only 71 days till the Gold Coast Half Marathon it was time to benchmark my running/fitness situation. I knew I had gone too hard too early on recent road hikes (that's I call my long run/walks)so it was time to get smart and see what I could do. All the literature I've read has said to concentrate on time rather than distance; train yourself for how long the event will take you to complete then work on the distance. So my plan for the day was to run for 5 minutes, walk for 5 minutes over a two hour period. I was interested to see if I could maintain the effort over the long haul, and to see how much distance I covered. I thought it was a good achievable plan that would give me my current fitness position.

Well it was, and it did!! In 120 minutes I ran/walked 5 minutes alternate sections and covered a very pleasing 16.4kms. This is exciting. My eventual goal for the 21km 1/2 marathon is 2hrs 15min which is just over 9kph. Today I covered 75% of the distance at an average of 8.4kms (93.3% of target time) and I only ran for half the time!!!

All I need to do now is increase the time (i.e take it to 2hrs 15) then gradually increase the total amount of time I run. So there's the motivation for next weekend ; Increase the running time to 6 minutes, walk 4 then continue this small increase each weekend until I am running the whole way. (By the way, this is also the motivation during the week - do short runs of 6min run/4 min walk as preperation)

Back to last weekend- I was not tired at all when I finished the session, so I had a quick protein drink and a shower then went to my Mother-In-Laws for morning tea, alway lovely! Then as reward for all my recent good efforts, Shirl and I went clothes shopping at David Jones. I bought a pair of very smart looking moleskins, a pair of good jeans and 2 beautiful country-style shirts.

Its an awesome feeling to buy clothes that are seriously smaller than I've ever worn before e.g. medium in place of XXL!! and even better when the reflection in the mirror matches what's always been in my mind. A great reward!!!!

Still on a high and after a short rest, I went to the gym in the late afternoon for a hard 'Spin Tri'- After a long warm up on the rower I did 2 minutes flat out on the spin bike (heart rate in Zone 3, ~140bpm, Level 7, 100rpm) then a brisk 8 minutes on the treadmill (7.7kph at low Zone 2, ~125bpm.). Then repeated this for 30 minutes. Overall an average 123bpm over the half hour, not counting the 20 min easy row.

Afterwards I was exhausted, a little sick from Lactic Acid, and very very leg sore. But boy, was I proud of myself. And pleased. What a day - A brilliant two and half hours of hard exercise, and some rewards. Gotta love weekends!

On Sunday I did another hard 90 minutes of interval training similar to Saturday night. Again, tired but very pleased with myself.

Yep, I love weekends- how long to the next one??

More later, journey on
James

25 April 2010

Travelling and Fuelling

Written Monday 13th April 2010

It's hard to travel and maintain a fitness regime. In particular, its hard to eat well, or should I say, its hard for me to stay disciplined to my food plan.

I'm at the minesite for a week, and it is not a problem to eat well here. The food is abundant, fresh, healthy and designed to give the miners a balanced healthy diet. The problem for me is I am weak, I eat way tooooo much!

Take yesterday, for example. Instead of my usual muesli, fruit, yoghurt (it was available) I opted for the baked beans, mushrooms, lightly fried egg and lean bacon. No starch, all fresh, well cooked etc etc but still, what happpened to my will power??? For lunch I made a fabulous tuna and garden salad. Good, all fresh. No problems.

Then dinner... a plate of roast lamb (lean)and roast veges. Succumbed to 2 roast potatoes (what willpower???) but the rest of the plate was all veges and meat- a good combination of complex carbs and protein.

The problem was the buffet- Instead of resisting, I kept going back for more. And more. I ate way too much and felt sick afterwards. Serves me right, eh!

And to finish off, I couldn't resist a sensational slice of pavlova smothered with fresh fruit so I could pretend it was 'good' for me. (That's what's meant by a balanced diet isn't it ????)

So I cant stay here long- the food's too good to resist, and I am disgustingly weak. Oh well, seeing as I am here now,maybe just one more slice of that lamb????

More later, journey on.....
James




Word Count - 264

A New Stargate Emerges from the Fog of Tiredness

Written Sunday 18th April 2010

In a previous post I compared 'getting fit' to the TV show 'Stargate'. Today I think my personal Stargate is back and I'm about to reach another 'Gate' to pass through....

It's been a long since I've been truly fit. As I age it's really really tough to get to a higher level of fitness. It seems I have to push myself hard for ages, then push myself even further to break through to this new level. But when I do, I feel different; stronger, more aware, bigger and better. I'm in a new world, a new perception. Just like the Stargate show - Go through the 'Stargate' and explore the new reality that now presents itself.

I mention this because I've had a huge week of training, I've pushed myself hard and I feel like I'm knocking on the door of a new level of fitness.

Actually, I really just feel incredibly tired but strangely I also have more zing than usual and I feel suprisingly energised. Contrary to what you'd expect, I'm looking forward to each training session with a high level of anticipation, I have lots of energy and determination and all this despite feeling very tired. It's a strange combination of weariness and power.

It has been a great week so I'm not surprised I'm tired. Last Saturday I did an early morning 12km run/walk, including running 3 minutes and walking 2 for an hour then power walking the rest of the distance home. I was really pleased with my effort as this is more consistent running than I've done in the past. In the afternoon, went to the gym and did 2/3rds of a GymTri- 30 minutes on the rower, 15 fast minutes on the stationary bike. All up, nearly 3 hours of aerobic exercise so a big day.

On Sunday, in place of the scheduled long ride I did a short and fast 80 minutes over 32kms for an average of 24.1kph then a weight session in the afternoon.

Monday was a good 5km road run in the morning and a Gym Tri session in the afternoon; easy paced 30 minutes on rower, 15 minutes on bike, 15 minutes on stepper. Yep, another good day of exercise over 120 or so minutes, now exhausted after three big days! :-)

On Tuesday, I did a quick 30 minutes on the treadmill in morning then my first 60 minute 'Boxercise' class in the afternoon. Didn't go flat out 'cause I wanted to see how the class works. The good news is my fitness is Ok and I'll be able to go much harder at future classes. Tell you what though - its a hard workout! And it was another 90 minute day of exercise all up.

Wednesday was a day off to complete some work stuff, then Thursday back into the 5km road run in the morning, travel to a remote W.Queensland minesite in the afternoon and a 30 minutes rower/bike session after dinner at the mine's superbly appointed gym. Say 90 minutes again, all up.

On Friday, I ran the 3.5kms from the minesite to the Permanent Camp wearing a 6.5km backpack then hit the gym for a short but hard GymTri. After dinner, did another 30 minutes on the traeadmill at 7.0kms speed with a short incline, just to finish off the day. 120 minutes all up.

On Saturday, after work at the mine, I did a hard and intense 40 minute weight session. And today, to finish the week, I ran the 3.5kms back to the camp (in early afternoon desert heat!!) then did another 35 minutes on the treadmill, again at 7kph with a 3 degree inclide, a total of more than 60 minutes of intense exercise in hard weather (after a full day's work)

So I'm putting in the hours and the intensity. I'm feeling great physically and mentally and I'm sure a new level of overall strength and fitness is not far away. Bring on the Stargate I say!!!.... but better hurry,before I kill myself hahaha

More later, journey on......
James




Word Count - 615

Preparing for the Half Marathon in July

Written Sunday 11th April

There's only 84 days to the Gold Coast 1/2 Marathon so its time for me to get serious about my running. I'm back from holidays and so no more mucking around. Enough slacking James!!!! :-)

As of now, my head goes down, 'my bum goes up' and I start working consistently and determinedly towards my 2010 goals. I have to teach my body to run, or at least complete the 21kms in less than 3hours. My target is to finish in 2hours 15minutes (135 minutes). I reckon this is achievable but only if I use the my time wisely over the next 84 days.

While doing this I also need to maintain my bike fitness because I'm booked to complete the 'Around the Bay in A Day' 220km Bike Ride in October. I dont have to overly worry about this as I have a Big Bike Ride training camp scheduled for September but it needs to be in the back of my mind. I also need to continue to build my core body fitness and my overall strength to ensure I dont injure myself when training and competing.

I know I've written about this before, but its important to keep my goals and targets clearly in mind.I need improved aerobic fitness, strong running fitness, bike fitness and core strength. I need to balance my time and have strong motivation and mental strength while also not expecting too much from this old body.

Here's the training plan I will use to ensure I achieve them......

Monday- Rest morning, Gym Tri in afternoon (a 90 minutes circuit of rower, stationary bike, stepper.)
Tuesday- 5km Road Run in Morning, Boxercise or weight session in afternoon
Wednesday - 5km Road Run in Morning, Gym Tri in afternoon
Thursday- 5km Road Run, Weight session in afternoon
Friday - Day Off
Saturday - Long Hike in morning, easy aerobic session in afternoon
Sunday - Long Bike Ride in morning, weights in afternoon

Some thoughts.... This plan provides lots of opportunity for developing my aerobic and endurance capacity while also providing me with rest and variation. Its a tough schedule but answers all of the requirements. It doesn't take up a lot of time but it does deliver consistency to my life and my training.

Three points -
1. My travel schedule WILL mean I'll have to adjust the plan on a regular basis. No problems, like all plans its a guide to help me schedule my time and its subject to change.
2. The goal is to be ready for my target events, not to complete a training schedule. This means I will listen to my body and the demands of my life, and will be prepared to adjust as required.
3. It will be exciting but demanding. Any and all assistance from friends and family will be greatly appreciated and accepted.

One last comment- This plan means my weekends are going to be fantastic fun. Its when I get to spend whole days testing myself and my current fitness. It means long hikes and rides in new and current locations, and it means I can spend long hours learning to be a distance athlete. Works for me! I cant wait.

More later, jounrey on.....
James




Word Count- unknown

20 April 2010

Self Coaching is difficult- but who cares?

Written Tuesday 6th April 2010

Self coaching - A seemingly continuous choice of conflicting approaches, and I reckon, a damn hard thing to do! It seems the more I read, the more I reflect and the more I try to find the best path forward, the more the contradictions emerge.

Our family Easter holiday through NSW continues. In planning the trip I realised I would have no opportunity to bike and gym so I figured it was a great opportunity to work on my running fitness, an opportunity to go from walk/run to run/walk. But now that I’m doing it, I’m thinking; How much improvement can I really achieve in one week? What is my real ‘current’ position of running fitness against my current ‘comfortable’ position? Sometimes when I run I struggle to put together a short run and at other times it feels like I can run for miles. I just can’t really decide where I really am at.

I read recently that we should not give up when training but to push yourself further and further. But I also read that it’s important to start gradually, train gently, not do too much too soon, and to not over-train or over-strain – it’s important to give your body time to catch up to the new demands being placed on it. So my challenge, as a self-coach, is to balance these competing thoughts and to find a way to constantly improve.

In the end I think it comes down to listening to my body. Today worked well. I’m in Wagga visiting my Mum and Dad so I went for a late afternoon run/walk around Lake Albert. It was one of those days when I felt really strong and I achieved a run time of 35 minutes over the total 47 minutes of exercise. Pleasing – not great, nowhere need where I need to be for the ½ marathon in 89 days but better than before so I’m happy. It was a great run and made me yearn for the day when I can run the whole distance in total comfort. Today it seemed that goal was not too far away. So I need to work out how much I can do, do it and make sure I reach my potential.

But strangely, today these things didn’t matter. It was just great to get outside and run in a different location. I was very motivated, I felt strong and I very much appreciated the beauty of the run. It was lovely; Late afternoon, overcast with some light rain and threats of more, a little chilly for the first time this year. Perfect running conditions. The lake is full after recent rain, the threatening clouds kept other runners indoors, and the birds and other wildlife were also noticeable by their absence (no doubt also bunkering down). It all added up to running in perfect peace – quiet, comfortable, contented. Meditative, even. Very much in tune with nature, and invigorating at a much deeper level than just physically.

For me, sometimes the actual physical act of getting outside and exercising is worth it, regardless of any goals, dreams or outcomes I am trying to achieve. Sometimes it’s just great fun.

Self coaching may be confusing, it may be difficult and it may be frustrating, but sometimes I need to say - who cares, the exercise itself is simply fantastic. It’s the journey, not the destination that matters.

More later, journey on...
James




Word Count - 567

13 April 2010

Two lessons on motivation

Written Monday 5th April 2010

I got a good short run in today although it was different from what I expected ....

I’m still on Easter holidays visiting family and friends in NSW. Yesterday was Show Day which is another way of saying ‘a 6 hour walk around a country show in the city surrounded by city people trying to figure out the country, and looking to spend lots of dollars and eat an amazing array of deep fried junk food’. lol. Anyway when we got back to our host’s place we hopped into a few glasses of wine and any chance of formal exercise went out the window. Show Day became a ‘no exercise day’.

This unexpected ‘day off’ combined with Saturday’s excellent log run/hike meant I headed off to bed determined to hit the road early to maintain my fitness. I was ready for a short, fast run around the suburbs first thing in the morning. I thought about my commitment during the night and was looking forward to it – right up until it was time to get up.

Then I suddenly became tired, sore, stiff, thought about how I would disturb Shirl if I got up, didn’t want to disturb our friend’s house, maybe this afternoon would be better..... etc etc. Basically, any excuse to stay in bed.

Eventually I got myself out of bed only to discover I actually was a quite stiff and sore. I was feeling the effects of Saturday’s Long Hike and yesterday’s show activities. I hobbled out the door and started on a slow, stiff jog.

This reminded me of a story I’d seen on TV last night about a woman attempting to run around Australia. She told the reporter the first 5-10 minutes of any run is the hardest, it gets easier after that. That seemed like a good tip so I decided I’d run for 5 minutes to loosen up, then walk 15 minutes from home then turn around and run home, approximately 15 minutes. I committed to not stopping on the way home. Run, no matter how I felt.

Guess what! I did and it worked brilliantly. The first 20 minutes run/walk loosened up all the muscles and the run home was strong, really strong. I felt great and I wanted more. It seemed I could have run much further. Quite a surprise after my hard-to-get-going start.

What a strange mental journey- I went to bed looking forward to a good run, woke up not wanting to get out of bed, and finished with a really really strong run. What a great lesson about motivation.- 1) The best sessions often happen when least expected – so just get out of bed and get going, and 2) They ALWAYS happen when the head/ my thinking is set right - The lady runner’s advise changed my perspective totally.

More later, journey on
James





Word Count - 471

12 April 2010

An awesome workout around Wilberforce NSW


Country Roads of Wilberforce

Written Sat 3rd April 2010

Inspired by Dr Bil and the confirmation of Around the Bay in a Day (see previous post) today was a great day of exercise. An amazingly supportive wife and some wonderfully gracious friends meant I was in western Sydney with a whole morning off from family and holiday duties. So with visions of the challenges ahead, I went for a long run/hike. I had an absolute ball – It’s a beautiful place and a great way to spend an autumn Saturday morning.

I knew I was lucky to have the time available so I was determined to use it effectively. I pulled on the running shoes and hit the country roads around the historic town of Wilberforce. It was a beautiful clear cool morning, I had some great podcasts and plenty of music to listen to, and I was determined to train hard. I ran/hiked for 2 ¾ hour from the centre of Windsor to Wilberforce then on to Ebenezer and back to Wilberforce. It was good country but a few too many cars on the narrow country roads for comfort.

I used a fartlek style i.e. run for 2 songs, walk for one for a while then one song/run followed by one song/walk. After a while I just walked fast and enjoyed the view while still throwing in some random runs.

It felt fantastic. Tiring yet powerful. Interestingly, during the run sessions my lungs were hurting and telling me to stop but later in the day it’s the quads that were sore. I look forward to the day when my lungs no longer let me down and I can work on just strengthening my legs.

I’m really thankful for my friends and family to give me ‘the morning off’ from holiday duties. I used the time well, trained hard, enjoyed the sights and sounds and had a ball. I love this journey!

More later, journey on
James





Word Count - 312

11 April 2010

An unexpected bonus

Written Sat 3rd April 2010

My thoughtful and generous Brother-In-Law (B.I.L.) - a country doctor from Victoria nicknamed Doctor Bil (hehe get it?)- heard of my desire to complete the Melbourne ‘Around The Bay In A Day’ (ATBIAD) bike challenge on the 17th October this year. And he knew I was travelling through NSW at the critical time of registration so he rang and asked if I would like to ride it with him and his mates, and then was kind enough to go to the trouble of registering me. What a awesome gesture – I get my registration successfully handled for me, and I get to ride at least part of the day with him.

So I’m now committed; I’m booked into the 25-30 kph group, and Dr Bil expects me to achieve a +27kph average for the 220kms. This is longer and faster than I’m currently riding so I’ve got some work to do before September.

But not yet. First on my calendar is the Gold Coast Half Marathon on Sunday July 4 (a 21km run) and then the Bridge to Brisbane 10km fun run on Sunday 29th August. I’ve also got some bike training runs scheduled to help my cause, including the annual Brissie to the Bay and a 10 day Queensland Big Ride in September.

I am excited about the ATBIAD challenge but even more excited and pleased about Dr Bil involving me in his plans. He’s been my brother-in-law for many years but we’ve never really done much together so it’s good to finally do something. As an added bonus, he’s done the ride before so his guidance and advice will be welcomed. I am excited and thrilled he’s taken the initiative. Thanks Dr Bil!

Another mate has been on the blower too. My mate from Wynnum Manly, now called The Very Manly Mate is planning to run this year’s 10km Bridge-to-Brisbane in less than 50 minutes so I probably need to go along with him, just to keep him honest. This means I now also have to get myself fit enough to run this pace, consistently.

It’s great to have some very clear goals. I’m pretty sure I can achieve 10k’s in 50 minutes at the Bridge to Brisbane (average 12kph) and probably a bit slower for my first ½ marathon - I‘m aiming to run/walk the distance in 150 minutes (average 8.5kph including walking). And now I have to get myself to a long distance 27 average kph on the bike by October.

But more than goal setting, the involvement of others in my plans is a lovely unexpected bonus. The journey is a private effort with many hours spent training on my own (See Training Principles 10). So for others to suggest I be involved with their goals and share it with them is very exciting. I will still approach the goals in a private way but I will look forward to sharing the road with them. It’ll be a buzz, and make each event more memorable.

So the target for the next few month is set. First, I’ll run/walk the ½ marathon in 2hrs 15min, then run the Bridge to Brisbane in 50 mins and finally ride the ATBIAD at an average of >27kph.

I’ve got the targets, I got the plan, now it’s time to put my head down and bum up, and get into some serious base training. I can’t let down Dr Bil and The Very Manly Mate, can I.

So I’m committed and ready for the challenge. And frankly, I’m excited - this will be a challenging and interesting journey, shared and enjoyed with some great people. And its unexpected so its a real bonus to the adventure, and for me.

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - 615

Inspiration and Frustration

Written 30th March 20110

Talk about cranky. After a recent good period of sustained training (see previous blog) today I went for a bike ride and was feeling very pleased with myself. I was going pretty fast – 24-25kph average over a 40km hill circuit - and then, without any warning, on the way up the last hill a fat bloke on a bike went flying past me and shattered my good feeling. So much for going fast! To make matter worse, when I weighed myself this morning I’d put on a kilo over the last week. Yep, cranky. It felt like all my hard work was getting me nowhere.

In need of inspiration and motivation I searched the web and found a fantastic blog of a passionate female triathlete from San Diego. I recommend her site - it’s full of exceptional insights, very honest reflections and excellent writing into the life of a committed distance athlete. Rachel’s stories of her ultra runs and half ironman events – see Diary of an Amateur Triathlete - puts my challenge and my journey back into perspective. In particular I now realise I should not worry about people going past me ‘cause all of us are a long way from the life and the achievements of a distance athlete.

Her stats are staggering. Apart from everything else, her bike cruising speed of 25 MILES PER HOUR i.e. over 40kph, is staggering and sobering – She not only achieves this incredibly fast speed, she does it after a long swim and while keeping herself fresh for a long run. And she’s an amateur. Wow! These triathletes are amazing!

Now I realise I am way older than her, and not blessed with natural athlete genes so there’s no point in trying to match Rachel’s stats. It does mean I have to get serious about getting to my target of 30kph average on the bike AND I now know I have to greatly improve my endurance fitness and my overall strength. Reading Rachel’s blog has made me realise I am only at the beginning of this journey. This is both motivational for me and also sobering.

Overall, I know I very much want to achieve my goals, and to build a new life. So I must put my head down, stay focused on this year’s goals, train hard and see where it takes me.

I also need to enjoy it. Have fun James! It’s a journey and an adventure

More later, journey on
James





Word Count - 406

The Rower is an awesome workout, especially when time poor


Written Mon 29th March

It’s been an interesting week- We’ve had friends visiting from Greece with their new baby (I'm Uncle James!), I’ve had a lot of work on, and we spent four days at our niece’s place in Biloela in Central Queensland. Normally this would mean I would have missed a lot of training but not so this week. I’ve been for a run every day and on some days, twice a day. I am now running more than walking, with some fast running sections. Still too slow to reach my 5km and 10km target but I’m not due to reach these targets until the End of April and End of May respectively so all’s good- Be patient James! The fitness level is improving as planned. Yes, it’s frustrating but it’s the best this old body can do! Slow and Steady Always- see training principles #1.

Today was interesting. We left Biloela early and had a great drive back in convoy with a damsel in distress - the load kept moving on her trailer so we fixed it then followed her back to Brisbane. This meant we got back later than expected and I did not have time to complete my planned exercise session.

With only 40 or so minutes available I went to the gym and did a hard 30 minute workout on the rowing machine at maximum level (Level 20). What a surprise. This is a truly AWESOME workout, I recommend it to everyone. The rower is totally under-rated. It’s a total body workout that hammers the core, the upper body, the quads and the lungs. A fantastic aerobic workout that also pushes the Lactic Threshold.

It also occurs to me the rower is a great way to get ready for swim training later in the year- it’s a pull motion which sort of imitates half of the swim stroke (swimming is essentially a combination of pull/ push).

So there’s a heap of benefits to a hard rowing session – It builds aerobic fitness, its works the whole body, it pushes LTHR and it’s a way to build a base fitness for future swim training. I’m going to start including hard rowing into my gym sessions, and I will also keep it in mind as a good ‘default’ session when I find myself time poor.

Today’s lesson- Don’t underestimate the short, sharp full-body workout of the rowing machine. The Rower rocks! Go on- try it!

More later, journey on
James




Word Count - 398

30 March 2010

Lessons from the Great Brisbane to Mt Coot-tha Bike Ride


Sunday 21st March 2010
(Photo of riders exiting Clem 7 tunnel - not me)

There’s no doubt about it— riding hills is totally different from riding the flats. After completing today’s 80km Brisbane Mt Coot-tha Bike Challenge I have a whole new level of respect of all the Kings of the Mountain/s. I struggled through 4 hours of grinding myself uphills, then scaring myself going down. I’ve learnt hill riding is hard and it requires a different riding style, a definite mental approach and different strength and fitness.

Lance Armstrong’s ability to crush the opposition via a sustained high cadence of pedalling (for him, over 110 spins per minute) comes at a high cost to the body, and is only suitable for people with the specific DNA for the task. That’s not me. However, I know it is possible for mere mortals like me to climb hills effectively. And although I’ll never be fast uphill there is much I can do to make the hills an enjoyable challenge. I know this because today’s challenge was not fun, it was just hard- but with the right training I reckon it could be fun AND challenging.

It should have been fun. The day started at Southbank Cultural Precinct with a few thousand other riders watching the sun come up over the Brisbane River/ Brisbane City on a beautiful autumn Sunday morning in the sub-tropical capital city. A cyclone to the north had sucked all the inclement weather away and the day was clear, cool and perfect for riding.

The organisation was brilliant- event staff, police and volunteers were stationed throughout the whole route to provide an enjoyable and very safe ride and from what I saw, the event flowed beautifully.

From 6.30am onwards we were released from the starting gate in groups, in order of our riding speed. My group – the 20-25kph average riding speed- was the largest and the first few minutes were a bit hairy until we had a chance to spread out and ride at our natural pace.

After winding our way through the inner city, we turned suddenly onto a freeway and rode into and then through the newly opened Clem 7 tunnel, Australia’s longest road tunnel, under the Brisbane River. It’s a very rare occasion for the authorities to close the tunnel for cyclists so we were very lucky.

Well, kinda lucky..... If you get the chance to ride it, no doubt you will have great fun. But be aware, it’s hot and humid, it’s smelly and it’s long. There’s an awesome, fast downhill entrance into the tunnel followed by a long flat and then, inevitably, a long slow climb out. Bugger! And then there is an even longer and slower steep overpass that takes you onto a suburban highway that leads you up and over a series of rolling hills and into the entrance to Mt. Coot-tha. So the tunnel ride is a fast buzz that is paid for by multiple steep slow hard hills. Worth it! but only just :-) lol.

Mt Coot-tha is the tallest hill in the Brisbane area, with a 2.35km 9degree constant incline. I walked part of the way as my mind told me I wasn’t able to ride it. In hindsight, if I’d been more mentally resilient I probably would have made it, I was just impatient and did not have enough confidence in my ability and capacities. I will learn from this, and I’m sure I will be able to ride the whole way next time. (I’ll try again in a couple of months, just for fun). Interestingly, my hiking fitness is such that even when pushing the bike uphill I was still walking fast enough to overtake quite a few slow riders.

At the top there are a series of small rolling hills that are a surprise (more up hills damn it) and then there is a long downhill run starting at the City Lookout. With the road closed to all traffic it’s possible to ride safely fast although I rode the brakes all the way down. Again, my lack of confidence on the road bike came through- I’m sure I would have gone faster on the MTB with its wider wheels. Still I was hitting speeds of 60kph so parts were fast!

Finally I was at the bottom of Mt Coot-tha so I could relax and enjoy an easy 50km ride back to the start.

Nope. A good ride back but certainly not easy. Brisbane is built on a river (the Brisbane River) and today’s course meandered through the river suburbs, or more accurately up and down the river suburbs. It was fun having a full police and volunteer support through the streets (much safer) and it was great seeing the varying Brisbane home architecture- including awesome Queenslanders AND it was fun going through suburbs I’d only heard of. But what was not fun was the constant grind up hills for four hours. Why are the up hills so much longer than down? Why have I not trained for this?

Actually I thoroughly enjoyed the experience. Not fun, but enjoyable. Although I was slow, and walked a bit, I realised I was much fitter than last year, and my riding skills have improved immeasurably. With one ride under my belt, and a bit more specific training I will be better next year.

I’m glad I did the ride, I saw lots, experienced the Clem 7 tunnel on bike and saw a great Brisbane sunrise. I enjoyed the full ride- even Mt Coot-tha and all the other hills, and I learnt a lot about hills and my current fitness level.

So all up, a very good day out. I'm looking forward to putting the lessons I learnt into practice and doing it much better next year. I'm also looking forward to boringeveryone I know with tales of the Mt Coot=tha Challenge of 2010. Be warned! lol.

More later, journey on
James




Word Count = 942