Coming off the week that wasn’t, with my sore semitendinosis- that is a hamstring muscle for those not anatomically acquainted, I had backed off the mileage a good deal. Was supposed to have completed 51 miles total last week but only got in 36-missing a whole speed workout and taking a little off a couple other runs just to make sure the hamstring didn’t get worse. Moral of the story, don’t try to break in a new pair of (different) shoes during your highest mileage weeks, and don’t run your recovery runs any faster just because you can!
So trying to put it all back together again after being out of town I did get my 10 in on friday, and that left sunday, where I had forgotten I had signed up for and paid for the NYRR long training run. 18miles, not the 20 that was on the schedule, but coming off the potential injury I thought, if I can make it, all will be well.
Well that was before the weather decided we needed 2 inches of rain on sunday.
When you do these long runs the objective is to maintain an even pace, to keep your heart rate where you want it, and to try out different clothing and feeding options to see what works. They are dry runs for marathon day. Did I say dry? The other possibility is that you get up race day and Noah is waving at you from the Ark saying, “I warned you….”
Worst Case Scenario. I suppose toads raining down is one possible WCS but unlikely, rain or wind or heat or cold is more likely, assuming you aren’t dealing with injury, GI issues or flu. So the rain Sunday morning was WCS #1, steady rain and wind. I decided to leave as late as possible to avoid standing around at the start, and also I decided not to drop a bag since it was going to get soaked anyway. Just show up and run. I left the ipod at home, left the gels at home, so lets just see if I can deal with Gatorade Endurance formula for 18 miles and nothing else. Not that I really like that stuff, salt and HFCS blended with a hint of artificial lime. It looks like radioactive toxic slurry and probably is. But it is what is on the course officially. You can carry your own, but I would really rather not on race day. The fuel belts, the gizmos, I would like to leave most of that behind except for the garmin. I didn’t even wear the HR monitor although I probably should have just to see where I was.
Prospect Ave. had only one other crazy person at 6am when I boarded. One other person at DeKalb. Union Square is where most of the zombies got on, and more up the East Side to 103rd Street where it was a frontloading half mile to the start. I didn’t even bother to get in my right corral, I just lined up at the end and we were off.
So it is wet. A steady soaking rain. You don’t really know what to wear, it was borderline warm enough I think to lose the jacket but it worked for the NJ marathon so I wore it, plus a zensah short sleeve shirt. It is sort of like wool in that it stays warm when wet, but it also stretches, so eventually it was hanging down like a skirt. Not a great result. I think what you want is a single layer that has some warmth when wet and also some wind stopping ability. I have not found it yet.
Periodically, you let your arms fall to get rid of tension in your shoulders. As you do, water rills down off your fingertips like a garden sculpture. You feel water being squeezed up between your toes forcefully as you run along. This for two hours and thirty nine minutes, or three loops of the park. But somehow you get it done, and this being the third “twenty” miler in the schedule it is not so bad. My splits were not fast, but I was never working that hard, even to the end. I think with the rest before hand it sort of approximates what it will be like running after the taper and with others around to support you.
There is one twenty left on the schedule next week, and the Staten Island Half after that. I also want to do a “last ten miles” which is up First Ave and down Fifth Ave into the Park to see what the hills are really like.
We are at $1490/2500 for TFK with one month to go. All you fence sitters time to donate.