Muddy Buddy in Richmond Virginia

by nancytoby 7/13/2008 11:29:00 AM
My muddy buddy Holly and I completed this event today in Richmond, Virginia and had TONS of fun! Really recommended for a very fun change of pace! Many fun costumes on hand plus children's event made it festive. We dressed up as the "Mud Kittens" with custom-designed shirts (courtesy of Holly) and cat-ears on our helmets.

Over ~6 miles of trails, with 2 runner/riders and one mountain bike (people leapfrogging and alternating on bike or running) we traversed:

4 obstacles:
Climbing wall
Balance beam
Ranger wall (climb over/under)
Cargo net climb/ vertical slide

Plus river crossing (~knee high water which poor Holly had to carry the bike over) and crawl-through mud pit

Trail running/biking was extraordinarily fun (it was my first-ever outing on a mountain bike) - I'm already thinking about buying a mountain bike for next year's event, naturally!

We finished near the back of our competition group (don't know exactly where yet - grouped on the basis of the sum of the participant ages) but the bike had a flat and Holly had to run the bike in for the last leg - but I'm pretty sure not many people had more fun than us!

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Worried about swimming in the Potomac?

by nancytoby 6/18/2008 12:05:00 PM

No need. They've been doing it for years. This is near the swim course, 83 years ago.

Courtesy Shorpy:  http://www.shorpy.com/node/3632?size=_original

 

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Eagleman 70.3 Brief Race Report

by nancytoby 6/10/2008 4:14:00 AM

Swim: Uneventful (1 min slower than last year - 49:37).

T1: Uneventfully slow. Took plenty of time to apply sunblock. (8:03).

Bike: Side stitch. Barf. Barf. Stomach ache. (PR bike leg finish 1.5 minutes faster than last year despite stops to barf). 3:23:22.

T2: Slow. (6:30). Went through transition just to see if I'd change my mind about stopping. Didn't change my mind.

Turned in chip.

Heat index upon returning home 90 minutes later (still with my stomach ache) was 103*F.

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Columbia 2008: Always a surprise

by nancytoby 5/22/2008 12:11:00 AM
My fourth journey through the Columbia (Maryland) Triathlon course - I went in (after 6 weeks of pneumonia and coughing) expecting it to be a horrible day and end with an ignominous DNF, and instead I had a fantastic fun time! I may not go into a lot of detail here about the race - if you're a prospective entrant for another year looking for information, you may want to look at my three previous years' reports. It started in the usual way with the 90-minute drive to Columbia, checking in at the Expo, and racking my newly lean and mean bike Buttercup (I just removed the behind-the-seat bottle rack), with new compact cranks and red accents for speed:

The terrain of the transition area is as challenging as the rest of the course, with steep entrances and exits. My rack this year was right by the swim entrance near those white tents, which meant a long slow run out with the bike up the hill in the background. This is only a fraction of the ~2200 bikes that would be there on race day.

Then dinner was a lovely gathering at the Tomato Palace again with my training buddies Jim and Dave and many of the crowd from Mid-Maryland Triathlon. Great folks!

On race day I kept telling everyone I was likely to pull out after the swim or bike and just go hang around the finish line and see my buddies cross it. That plan was firmly in my mind.

Then I unexpectedly had a great swim (I think I'm finally learning how to draft!) and saw a 33:xx time when I came out of the water. I laughed and grinned broadly and woo-hooed to the spectators all the way up the chute from the water to the bike rack. Hey, this was FUN!! 2:02 per 100 yard pace the whole way. PR swim, where the heck did THAT come from!??

OK, do the transition in a leisurely fashion, turn on the Garmin, spray on some SPF 50 sunblock in my melanoma-survivor friend Holly's honor, and give Buttercup a pat. "Here we go, girl!"

The satellite map makes the bike course look deceptively simple.

As the new course record-holder Chris Lieto said: "The bike course is nothing but ups and downs and rights and lefts. There was not even a stretch of road that was straight or flat. You are either climbing a hill, descending, or winding your way through a wooded countryside. Beautiful but challenging."

I watched my heart rate fairly closely on the bike course and tried to keep from spiking it into the Red Zone, and stay under 170, and was largely successful. I stayed seated and spun up every hill, which was made much easier with the new range of lower gears on my compact cranks.

I also ate 5 Clif Bloks, 2 Succeed salt caps, and one gel, which seemed about right finishing up with a good amount of energy.

You'll see my speed and heart rates are inversely correlated - work hard on the slow uphills, and recover on the screaming downhills. Other than those fast downhills, my heart rate stayed mostly above 150, so I was working relatively hard, though certainly not pushing it to my maximum. My top recorded speed was 36.8 mph, which is quite fast enough for me, thanks, I get too nervous at the squirrely tri-bike behavior at those speeds.

Strangely enough, I rolled into T2 and saw something like 1:45 on my watch, and was still feeling happy and elated! Hey, this is a fun day! I'm liking this! So I went through the transition again, took the time to reset my Garmin, and came out the other side at a jog feeling pretty good about life.

Between 1-2 miles of the run my training buddies Jim and Dave passed me, in succession, and I yelled and joked with them. I told Dave, "I'm having a great day!" and he waved and shouted as he ran out of sight ahead. I kept jogging along and just walked the steep uphills (of which there are several on the course) and paid attention to try to keep my heart rate below 175 for the first 4 miles. I doused myself frequently with water to try to keep myself from gaining heat, but only had a couple small cups of Gatorade and lots of water since I had forgotten my salt caps and gels back at transition. Still, that worked fine, and I retained enough energy to pick up the pace on the downhills again approaching the finish when I felt safe to start to ignore my heart rate.

I did start coughing now and then, so there are still a few reminders that I'm not completely recovered from my lung ailments, but I could still jog relatively okay.

Came over the line in my 2nd fastest Columbia time (3:45) by only a minute - all of which I spent taking my sweet time in transition. 17/25 in my age group.

And it was sweet. One of the most unexpectedly fun days I've had doing a triathlon!

I did pay the price with some increased coughing for a day or so after the event, but now it's subsided again and I'm fully back on the road to Optimum Health. Though I am still carrying around a few pounds of reminders of not being able to do my workouts for the last six weeks, but let's not stress about it. I feel good.

This gives me a benchmark time for a slightly-longer-than-Olympic distance course (41 km bike leg) on hilly terrain this year. After a full summer of training, I hope for a considerably faster time in September on the flatter Nation's Triathlon course.

Why, this one was such fun I think I may just do this triathlon thing again soon! Like, perhaps, in 3 weeks at Eaglemen half Ironman in Cambridge, Maryland! See you there!

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Hard and easy

by nancytoby 5/7/2008 9:04:00 AM

There are no hills near enough to my home (on the flat, flat, FLAT eastern shore of Maryland) to train on them while my twin pre-K daughters are in school for 2.5 hours each afternoon. So today was the next best thing on a lovely sunny day: intervals of one hard mile then one easy mile. My route today was U-shaped to a turnaround and the wind was a solid 10+ mph. The plot below is data from my beloved Garmin Forerunner 305 (which I plan to have surgically implanted in my wrist). My bike speeds (blue) varied widely even though the heart rates (red line) show a relatively consistent effort during the last five work intervals. That's six miles of hard riding to the good, and more than I would have been able to finish in a continuous effort! That's the whole foundation of interval training - let's not make it any more complicated than that!


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On the road to the Nation's Triathlon

by nancytoby 5/5/2008 11:35:00 AM

Time to start looking down the road to September 14, 2008, when I'll take the starting line of the Nation's Triathlon and setting off for the swim in the lovely waters of the Potomac River. Let's see, that's 19 weeks away. If I train hard this summer maybe I can stay out of the ranks of the hindmost stragglers and make it up to the back of the middle of the pack.

I'm a 50-year-old adult-onset triathlete. I'm overweight, and relatively slow, but I keep plugging away at them and I usually get the job done. It's fun and it's the only thing that has kept me motivated enough to work out consistently for several years. Besides, I have twin 4-year-old daughters at home, and I have to keep active in order to keep up with them! 

My first Olympic-distance triathlon was in May, 2005 at Columbia, Maryland, where I crossed the finish line 1205th out of 1227 finishers. I loved it. I was hooked. Since then I've done quite a few other triathlons, but the Olympic distance of 1500m swim, 24.8-mile bike, and 6.2-mile run has remained my favorite. Short enough that you can't sprint it, you aren't stuck in any one discipline for terribly long, short enough that you can walk relatively normally the day after, but long enough that you can still get a substantial workout and truly test yourself. 

In less than two weeks I'll be taking on that challenging course in Columbia again for the fourth consecutive year. I'm just coming back from a very nasty bout of pneumonia this spring, and my lungs are still not quite right, so I'm still in the process of figuring out how I'm going to survive those tough hills. I'm in an evolving state of mind - first thinking that I'll just drop out at the end of the swim and chalk it up to open water swim practice; progressing to thinking I might as well take the bike out for a spin and get some unaccustomed hill training and bag it after that; to thinking that if I'm going to do that much work I might as well slog around the run course and pick up my medal at the finish line.

But if there's anything I have learned in triathlon, it's that you can never predict how a race will go. You can only get yourself to the starting line in the best shape you can with the limited time we all have, and then let the day unfold as it will. In my book, the finisher who has the most fun on the course wins.

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Nancy Toby

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51-year-old mother of twin kindergarteners and Athena triathlete takes on the challenge of Olympic distances for fun, fitness, and motivation.

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    Nancy Toby
    Nancy Toby
    51-year-old mother of twin kindergarteners and Athena triathlete takes on the challenge of Olympic distances for fun, fitness, and motivation.
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    Amy Jo O Hearn
    Amy Jo O Hearn
    I am a Virginia Tech grad working at LLS and living in Arlington. Nation“s Tri will pretty much be my first (voluntary) athletic activity since getting married.
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    Jay McConville
    Jay McConville
    I am an age grouper triathlete who has run several dozen triathlons. I'm doing my first Ironman in June, and then looking forward to a PR at the Nation's!
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    Shannon Trust
    Shannon Trust
    I TRI TO END MS - I am a 36-year-old woman diagnosed with MS for 12 years. This is my first Olympic length triathlon. Wish me luck!
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    Andrew Johnston
    Andrew Johnston
    4 yr leukemia survivor/thriver doing Ironman tri's after 3 concussions while racing bicycles professionally. I put food on the table as an Exercise Kinesiologist.

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