Sunday, July 22, 2012

Colonial Beach International Race Report

The Colonial Beach International Triathlon was held on 15 July 2012.  The weather was overcast with a chance of thunder storms and temperatures in the mid 80s at the race start.  The race includes a river swim in brackish water with currents that can be strongly affected by the tide.

The History

The set of Colonial Beach races (Sprint and Int'l) has been around for nearly 3 decades, making it one of the older races on the east coast.  The town of Colonial Beach is a quaint east coast beach town that reminds me of Cape May done Virginia style.  The venue is located within 10 miles of the birthplaces of 2 presidents - Washington and Monroe.  Westmoreland State Park is located within 15 miles.  Setupevents took over race management for the two day event in 2011.

The Race Course

Swim:

The swim is a 1500 meter river swim in the Patuxent River.  The water is brackish and tidal.  Time of day changes the direction of the current.  The swim course is a modified rectangle that parallels the shore - the second and fourth legs are with/into the current. 

Bike:

Colonial Beach International Bike Course
The Bike course is a 23 mile out and back.  Setupevents advertizes this as an international race with a 41 KM bike, but even they admitted during the pre-race meeting that the course was short.  No explanation as to why they couldn't move the turnaround a mile to get the necessary distance.  The bike course starts out flat, but quickly becomes rolling hills.  There is one very technical turn at the bottom of hill at the intersection of Tetotum Road and Windsor Drive.  The Colonial Beach bike course is a great ride.  I'd come back just for the ride.

Run:

The run is absolutely flat out and back around the perimeter of the peninsula that is the town of Colonial Beach.  It parallels the shore for nearly the entire route, but can be brutally hot in the full sunThe locals do a great job of cheering you on for the full length of the course.  It is common to see a bunch of kids using their garden hose to spray down racers.  There are even a couple of impromptu aid stations along the route.

My Race

The 2012 Colonial Beach race was a great race for me.  It is my second year at the event and I'm very happy that I decided to come back at the last minute.  I drove up the afternoon of the day before the race through a driving thunderstorm typical of July in Southeastern Virginia.  I made it to packet pick-up just in time for the pre-race meeting and grabbed dinner at the Chinese restaurant across the street.   Another racer was having dinner there at the same time.  I noticed during packet pick-up he was in my age group.  I'd be seeing him later on the race course.  After a quick bite I drove to Westmoreland State Park and camped in my truck.  I'd planned on sleeping in the bed of the truck under the stars, but that was not to be.  The rain continued through the night and I slept in the cab of the truck with my bike.

The morning of the race I woke up at 0430 to wash up, get dressed, have a banana, a cliff bar, and a bottle of Gatorade.  It was before dawn but still warm and humid.  I couldn't see the stars and as I feared the day dawned with a very threatening looking sky.  Off to the race course.  I was onsite by 0500.  I racked my bike - I was in a three rack section two rows from the bike exit.  I was on the middle rack and I took the end of my rack nearest the exit for the row.  I almost always choose this position so I can get the extra space between racks.  On this day it became a problem.  But more on that later.

After setting up transition I did a two mile run for a warm up and then headed down to the swim start for a 300m swim.  I had a nice warm-up and felt really good for the start.  The 40-44 age group was in the third wave.  The order of start was young men, young women, old men, old women, and then novices & relays.  Water temp was 82 F and the tide was going out.  First gun at 0550 - three minute intervals.  At the pre-race meeting we were told that due to the current the swim course direction had been reversed.  The 2nd leg would be with the current and the 4th leg would be against the current.  The reasoning behind this was that the deeper water has stronger current.  However, there wasn't enough separation between the second and fourth legs to matter.
Swim Track from Garmin 910XT

The first wave went off and was immediately swept down stream.  There was over a knot of current according the NoAA website for 15 July.  Based on my observations of the first two swim waves I used a radio tower that was 20 degrees to the left of proper course as my sighting mark for the first leg.  You can see from my swim track that 20 degrees wasn't enough.  I missed the first mark by 30 feet.  No problems with the current on leg two.  I swam a great 3rd leg and sighted 30 degrees off course to nail the third turn buoy.  The fourth turn buoy was a low profile yellow tube.  It was impossible to see and you can tell from swim track where I finally picked it up.  You can see my full swim metrics at the garmin connect website.  Almost 34 minutes in the water for a 1500 meter swim, nearly 5 minutes slower than my results from the Rumpass in Bumpass Int's in April.  The current was tough, but it didn't destroy me like it had in Hampton in 2011.  I was 53 out of the water for the men.

My strategy for T1 was pretty straight forward.  Run hard to the bike, get my shoes and helmet on, get out.  Adam Frager, my training partner, suggested leaving my shoe buckles just barely closed and sliding my feet in rather than have to buckle each shoe.  It worked and saved me some time.  I budgeted 1:30 in my race plan and I used 1:44 - room for improvement.  I had a momentary lapse for about 15 seconds when I got transition.  A late arrival to our rack had stuffed his bike in and put his gear in the aisle right in from of my bike.  I never saw the guy, but if i ever see him do it again, we will have words.  No excuse for that kind of behavior.  It's not the other racers fault you showed up late.

Flying Dismount
I felt strong on the bike.  I started out with a good cadence and settled in to ride.  My biking has steadily been improving due to some great work with Adam on long tempo rides.  This bike course is awesome and I was excited to be riding it again.  As usual I was passing competitors pretty regularly, but I was passed by only one other cyclist.  He and I played tag over the next 20 miles.  He was a relay rider and he was going hard.  I decided that I wasn't going to let him go and we dueled it out.  He was faster on the downhill, but I was a better climber and could hold him off on the flats.  We absolutely smoked the bike course.  He beat me into transition, but only because I slowed to pull my feet out of my shoes while still on the bike.  We had the 8th and 9th best bike rides of the day.  I came in at 59:31 officially, I didn't hit the lap button on my Garmin until I got to the rack, so my watch was a little off.

Into T2
To say I was very, very pleased with the bike would be to understate it.  It was a great ride for me.  However, I was working so hard I didn't refill my Aero bottle and went the last 5 miles with no fluids.  I also did not eat on the bike.  I broke all my rules on nutrition and hydration and I think my run suffered because of it.

I budgeted 1:00 for T2.  I used 1:26.  There was a little bit of congestion, but I just don't know where I lost the time.  I need to be faster and smoother in transition.

The run is where I excel.  I went out feeling a little hot and fatigued.  I didn't have a gel and I didn't use my sport beans.  I hit the first water stop and grabbed a water and threw some ice down my jersey.  I came through mile one at 6:43 and I just couldn't get the run rolling like I normal.  I finally pushed the pace down under 6:40 by mile 3, but that's along way off from my normal 6:20 pace.  The 40-44 numbers were getting fewer and fewer and when I saw the lead runner coming at me at mile 2.5 I new I was in a good position.  At the 3.1 mile turn around I picked out 3 guys that I new I could catch and I went after them.  I caught my fellow diner from the Chinese restaurant at mile 5.  I told him he should have had the General Tso chicken and that got a laugh.  Turned out he was the last guy in my age group that I would pass.  He took third in our Age Group, I took 2nd.

The full results are on the setupevents website.  I was 19th overall, 17th among men, and 2nd in the 40-43 age group.  My time of 2:18:05 was 29 seconds slower than my PR but over 13 minutes faster than my time at Colonial Beach in 2011.  Don't forget there was a 1 knot current on the swim (I talked to the lead swimmer, based on his time he felt like the course was 300m longer).  53rd on the swim, 9th on the bike, 15th on the run.  It was a good day!

Lessons learned:

1.  Stay focused during transition
2.  Always follow your nutrition plan
3.  Don't sweat the things you cannot change (tides)

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Old Point Tidewater Race Report

2012 Old Point Tidewater Triathlon


Heading to the Finish Line
This race is special!  It is my home course.  I live four miles from the Buckroe Beach race site.  I swim, bike and run over 2,000 miles a year in this area.  It was my second triathlon, ever, and I always, even when injured, do this race.

It was a beautiful morning with temperatures in the high 70s and a water temperature right around 74 F.  It was a wetsuit legal race, but the swim is only 1000 meters.  The time I could save using a wetsuit would be eaten up in the time it takes to get out of the wetsuit.  I did without.  I got to the race site at around 5:45 for a 7:00 a.m. start.  My training partner, Adam, was waiting on me.  He was primed and ready to go, but I had to get my stuff dropped in transition.  We ended up losing each other in the confusion of the transition area (my fault) and doing our own warm-ups, a 2.5 mile easy run followed by an easy 300 meter swim, with a couple of sprints to get a feel for the water.
1st Place 40-44 Age Group

Adam and I are both in the 40-44 age group.  I'm a little faster in the pool on the longer stuff, we're evenly matched on the bike, and I'm a faster runner  This was the first head to head race for the two of us.  But we're training partners and it really is a good natured competition.  Somebody better get something for all those early mornings in the pool and 3 hour rides!  We were the third start and went off at 0708.  It was perfect conditions.  There was no current, the water was like glass, and the wind was non-existent.  I get days like this at Buckroe maybe twice a year.  Adam and I paced each other to the first turn (about 300 meters out) and then we lost contact in the traffic around the first buoy.  It takes me a long time to relax on open water swims and I didn't feel comfortable or loose until about midway through leg two of the swim.  It was a good swim for me as you can see in the GPS data from my Garmin 910XT. Swim time was 18:26, about 1:41 per 100 yds.  The transition required us to run a quarter mile up the beach and boardwalk to the transition area.  T1 was 3:03.  If you took out 2:00 minutes for the run from the beach it would still be over a minute - needs work.  Adam beat me out of the water and through T1.  He had managed to get about one minute on me by the time I left on the Bike.  As I noted above this is one terrible bike course.  You can't build or sustain any kind of speed because of the road conditions and the turns.  The longest strait stretch is about 2 miles.  I finished the 19 miles in right around 49 minutes for a little better than 23 MPH average pace.  It was the 15th best bike ride of the day.  Adam's was better - 13th.  He picked up another 12 seconds on the bike.  I actually did T2 like I was supposed to - I pulled my feet out of my bike shoes before I got to the dismount line and all I had to do was rack my bike, grab my visor and pull on my racing flats.  T2 was 0:54 - I'll take under a minute any day.  I got 3 seconds back from Adam.  Out onto the run - an 8K.  I excel at running.  It's my thing.  A guy from my age group passed me in the first 100 meters and woke me up.  I never get passed on the run.  I put the hammer down, passed him back, and in 31:37 (6:22 pace) I was done.  The whole thing in 1 hour 43 minutes even.  I passed Adam on mile one of the run.  Here are the full results.  Kudos to Adam - he didn't miss the podium by much (4th 40-44 age group - 1:46:33) and all he's missing is the run.  I have a feeling he'll give me a challenge next year at this event.  Hopefully it will be on a new course.
A volunteer removing my timing chip.

It was a good day.  23rd overall and 1st in the 40-44 age group.  Third podium this year.  I definitely need to work on sighting.  My swim was all over the place.  The bike was strong, but there is room for improvement.  I need to get a handle on the transitions - under two minutes total is my target.  I will have the run under 6:00 min/mile pace by September!

Two notes today.

 *** NOTE 1 ***

The Auto-multisport is almost unusable on the Garmin 910XT.  If you hit lap accidentally there is no way to return to the previous activity.  The only solution is to hit stop and reset the mode and then control the mode manually.

*** NOTE 1 ***

*** NOTE 2 ***

The Garmin 910XT continues to  experience uncommanded shut downs.  On the 55 mile recovery ride the day after this race it did so again.  Garmin is aware of the problem but does not have a fix.  Their recommended solution is to restore the factory settings and load the most up-to-date operating system software.

*** NOTE 2 ***
I hope to see some of you on the course.

Friday, May 11, 2012

Triathlon Adventure

In 2009 I decided that I would become a triathlete.  Having been a lifelong distance runner, I figured this would be easy.  I bought a Mercier Aero TT time trial bike off of the the Bike's Direct web site for $700 and signed up for my first triathlon, the Patriot's Half Ironman in Williamsburg, Virginia.  I figured that if I could run my first marathon in under 3 hours (2:56 - Chicago Lasalle Bank Marathon 1999) a Half Ironman would be a snap!

Let the training begin!  I spent the summer of 2009 in Huntsville, AL.  A big shout out to Anthony Hooten, a Huntsville resident, who at age of 50 decided to he would take up the sport of Triathlon and signed up for his first - an Ironman.  He's done one Ironman a year since he started and he's been at it for nearly a decade now.  Anthony is a truly amazing guy and I won't ever be able to thank him enough for dragging me over the hills along the border of Tennessee and Alabama, all around Greenville and Pulaski.   I had never done a flip turn or ridden a bike over 20 miles.  By the end of the summer Anthony had me riding over 70 miles and I did my very first 1 mile open water swim.

Having never done a triathlon I realized that I would need some guidance.  I signed for the Endorphin Fitness Patriot's Training camp.  Michael Harlow and his team put on a great three day event one month out from the race.  He prepped us on nutrition, transition, open water swim and sighting, bike strategy, and run strategy.  The best part was actually getting to swim, bike and ride on the actual course.  If you live in or around Richmond, Virginia and you are interested in completing a triathlon, Endorphin Fitness will help you meet your goal.

Before I knew it race time was at hand.  I had my bike tuned up at my LBS - tubes and tires replaced (remember this, it will come into play later).

**Note**
  
Newbies - if you have bike maintenance done, make sure you get some miles on your bike before you race 

**Note**

I'm absolutely obsessive about my race day prep.  I pack and re-pack with a check list.  I had worked out my nutrition plan and I fell in love with Gatorade Endurance Blend, a special blend of Gatorade produced for endurance athletes. Goggles - check!  Aero bottle - check!  You get the picture .....

I arrive at the race sight 3 hours prior to the event.  My wife, Kelly, being the trooper that she is accompanied me.  It was a perfect day and I was extremely excited.  I set up my transition area, put my Garmin 305 on my bike, grabbed my cap and goggles and I was off to my start.  Then the waiting began - Novices Last!  And while we were waiting the tide started to go out and with it the current began to build (sense the dark foreshadowing).  By the time the novices entered the water the tide was at full Ebb - over a knot and a half of current with the normal river flow.  Great you say - Only if you are an experienced swimmer and the buoys stay anchored!  Into the water and the sun has just cleared the trees.  I had a tough time sighting and couldn't understand why had to keep correcting to hit the turn mark.  To say I had a rough swim would be an understatement.  I was worn out by the first turn and had 1 mile left to go.  Now the current comes into to play.  The long leg of the swim was with the current, to my left the rising sun, to my right the far shore - sighting was impossible and to make matters worse the far turn buoy had broken free and was floating down river.  Thankfully one of the lifeguards realized that the mark had broken free and yelled at us to head for shore.  In the words of Nemo - "Just Keep Swiming!"  Sighting in to the rising sun is not an easy thing and as a group we were swept nearly into the ferry dock down stream of the event.  This is my first bad experience with #Screwup Events. (We'll get to the others in later posts.)  So after 54 minutes I'm out of the water and I'm wondering what I have gotten myself into.  As you can tell from the picture I was pretty well beat and I felt like it too.

I jog the quarter mile to the transition area and I am onto my bike and looking forward to an outstanding bike course.  I ease into and head out at a nice steady 20 mph.  Bump, bump, bump ..... That's odd, I don't remember feeling that before.  Pay attention now, that thing they call a pinch flat, is about to occur.  When I had my bike serviced the week before the event I had my LBS change the tires and the tubes.  I did two short rides that week and called it good.  It wasn't!!  The tube had a wrinkle which rubbed against the inside of the tire each rotation and eventually became a blister, and with each rotation of the tire I felt a bump as the blister hit the road.  Ten miles later there I was on the side of the road changing a flat rear tire.   To say I was disappointed would be an understatement.  Another 15 minutes gone!

 It was a good bike all things considered.  Total time 3 hrs 16 minutes including 15 minutes changing a flat.  A little under 20 miles an hour in my first timed bike ride.  All those hills with Anthony sure paid off!

The run went as well as could be expected with an aggravated Achilles (read more on lateral pedal rock and chronic Achilles tendonitis later).  Two hours for a half marathon - my slowest ever - but I was done.  Total time 6:20:34.

Disappointed - Yes!  Injured - Yes!  Forever hooked on Triathlon - you bet!  My journey has just begun!