I decided today to add a new feature: when a random thought hits me, I'm going to write it down.
The first Random Thought occurred to me today as I had my daily weigh-in. I've been weighing myself each morning since I started marathon training back in December 2016 for a race in April 2017. As my training progressed, my weight took a wiggly path downwards to a place where I had lost 12 pounds (156 -> 144). Since the race, I've noticed that my weight has been slowly inching upward.
Now, I'M NOT A DOCTOR, but today I had the Random Thought that maybe my slow weight gain is due to the lack of speed work. Even though I'm still running about 30 miles per week, I have not been doing any speedwork - intervals or tempo runs - since the race. I've been just enjoying running for a while, with no training plan other than how far to run on a given day. I think the lack of intensity in my current training is driving my slow weight gain.
I'm going to do some experimenting. I'll let you know what happens.
Friday, June 23, 2017
Monday, June 19, 2017
Running With the Bull
Running With the Bull
At the beginning of June I had the opportunity to spend a
weekend in Vegan Eden, that is, Farm Sanctuary. Nestled in the beautiful Finger
Lakes Region of upstate New York, the rolling green pastures of Farm
Sanctuary’s 175-acre New York shelter are home to more than 500 rescued farm
animals. Farm Sanctuary rescues, rehabilitates, and provides lifelong care for
hundreds of animals who have been saved from stockyards, factory farms, and
slaughterhouses. Rescued residents are given the care and love they need to
recover from abuse and neglect. All of the animals enjoy nourishing food, clean
barns, and green pastures each and every day. When you visit Farm Sanctuary,
you’ll see frolicking calves who once knew only pain and suffering in veal
crates. You’ll see pigs slumbering in soft straw rather than filthy, crowded
stockyard pens. You’ll see animals experiencing joy and freedom for the first
time in their lives.
What amazes me about this experience (my second time
here) is that farm animals exhibit many of the same emotions that we humans
expect only from cats and dogs. I sat in
the barn surrounded by sheep, and they came to me wanting to be petted. While I
was paying attention to one, another forced her head under my elbow in a
demonstrated need of affection. Later on, another one climbed into my lap.
Why am I talking about this experience in a running blog,
you might ask? First of all, it’s a vegan running blog (check the name again).
Second, the most amazing experience came during an evening visit to the cow
pasture. Bear with me here, it’s worth it, I swear. When I and my group of five
other humans showed up at the pasture fence, a lively young bull named
Valentino saw us and came running over to the fence from about 100 yards away.
Valentino was rescued in 2015. He was only about a day old, one of many newborn
calves brought to New Holland Auction in Pennsylvania that day. Since he was a
male born into the dairy industry, he was destined to be sold for veal. But,
small and hobbled by leg deformities, he was considered “defective” and thus
unmarketable and would likely have been left to a slow death. He ended up
in Cornell University Hospital for Animals, where he arrived with vagus indigestion syndrome and pneumonia in addition to his leg deformities.
So, here’s a two-year-old-bull, born hobbled by deformities, running over to us at the fence. But wait, it gets better. After we said hello to Valentino, we continued our walk around the pasture. Another of my group is a runner, and to encourage him to come with us, she did an exaggerated slow-motion run. Much to our surprise, Valentino leaped a few times like a stereotypical bucking bronco and then RAN WITH HER along the fence! Was this a fluke? When we were ending our visit, I decided to try again. This time I did the exaggerated slow-motion run, and to our delight, Valentino repeated his response. He and I ran together for about twenty yards or so until we came upon a matronly cow who looked at both of us unapprovingly and then literally butted heads with Valentino. Valentino did win the race, but it wasn’t really fair - he has twice as many legs as I do.
Thus, a bond was formed on Saturday June 3 2017.
Valentino is the fourth different Family of mammals with which I have run (that
I know of), those being: human, canine, capreoline (it’s a deer, look it up!),
and now bovine. With many more to come, I hope.
Until next time,
The Plant-Based Plodder
Saturday, June 10, 2017
A Simple Progression Run
Another Bonus Post to end the week that contains National
Global Running Day. Don’t get used to it. This is also my first
training-specific post, so enjoy it.
What’s a Progression Run? That is a run where, instead of
running at a steady pace the entire time, you progressively increase your speed
at certain intervals during the run so you end up running faster at the end
than when you started. Why do a Progression Run? Without going into physiological
details, it will help your mind and body learn to run faster more comfortably.
Getting Started
You need some way of measuring your pace in real-time.
Personally, I use a gps watch which I have set to mark a lap at each half mile.
You could do this without a gps watch by running a known distance such as a
track or neighborhood loop. In this case you need to run by the feel of the
effort instead of by pace. But that’s ok.
The Plan
This is a really simple plan. Start running at a nice,
slow, comfortable pace. The first lap could count as your warmup. When you
finish your first lap, run a little faster for the next lap. It doesn’t really
matter how much faster; even a 1-second-faster pace is “faster”. I like to make
it at least 5-10 seconds faster to leave some wiggle room in case I lose
concentration and accidentally slow down. When you finish the second lap, run a
little faster than that for the next lap. Repeat. Repeat again. Run each lap a
little faster than the previous lap. Leave room at the end for a final slow
comfortable lap and then some cool-down walking. It’s important for a couple of
reasons: 1) you need to cool down after a hard run – don’t just stop running!
2) Note how much faster your “slow comfortable” pace is at the end than it was
at the beginning!
The reason I decided to post about Progression Runs today
is because I did a Progression Run yesterday.
I used half-mile laps. I was running on flat local roads
and sidewalks. Here are my lap paces, as an example:
9:16, 8:51, 8:45, 8:36, 8:30, 8:19, 8:10, 7:59, 7:25,
8:26 (then a half-lap walking at 15:53).
I haven’t done a Progression Run in a while, so my
initial slow lap was a recalibration of sorts. I started about 20 seconds slower than my marathon
pace and my fastest lap was 5 seconds slower than my 5k pace. For each successive lap, my pace increased by
25, 6, 9, 6, 11, 9, 11, and 34 seconds. Note how my ending slow comfortable
pace was 50 seconds faster than my initial slow comfortable pace! Yet it really
did feel just as slow and comfortable as my starting pace. That’s an
example of one difference that being warmed up can make!
One final note of significance is my final mile averaging
7:42. This is significant because about ten years ago, my son wanted me to help
him run a mile at a pace under 8:00 in order to earn a physical fitness award
at school. He only had a few weeks to train. I was running regularly then, he
was not. We did it (seven-fifty-something), but it was a very hard effort back
then for me to run a mile at that speed. Now, I’m ten years OLDER, and I just
ran the final mile of 4.5 at a pace faster than that. And it wasn’t a killer!
The moral of this story is that training works, even for
geezers!
Now, get out there and try a Progression Run! Let me know
how you did.
Until next time,
The Plant-Based Plodder
The Plant-Based Plodder
Wednesday, June 7, 2017
Global Running Day
Global Running Day
National Running Day
Normally I don’t post twice a week (“Normally? What is “normal”? Before this, I’ve posted exactly three times in the two-week history of this blog!) But
today is a very special day. So you get an extra post this week. Happy Global
Running Day!
Today, Wednesday June 7, 2017 is Global Running Day. Global
Running Day is a day that celebrates the sport of running. It is
held annually on the first Wednesday of June.[1] Participants
of all ages and abilities pledge to take part in some type of running activity
by submitting their names through the Global Running Day website, https://globalrunningday.org/.
This year is in fact the 2nd Annual Global Running Day. Before
2016, Global Running Day was known as National Running Day. Taking the name
change into account, 2017 is the 9th annual National/Global Running Day.
Here are some fun running facts to celebrate Global
Running Day:
DISCLAIMER: I am not a doctor! The following paragraphs simply describe my
own personal experience with asthma. You can attempt to adopt such habits if
you wish, but you do so at your own risk.
FACT #1
How many people enjoy warning you, “All that running is going to ruin your knees?” Or, maybe you have some of those sarcastic, self-righteous friends that tell you, “I want to run, but I actually like my knees.” Well, here’s a fun fact for you to tell them the next time you hear that annoying knee cliché: Running is actually GOOD for your knees! In a report published about a year ago, an eight-year study of 2,637 participants in the Osteoarthritis Initiative resulted in the opposite of what researchers expected, forcing them to conclude: “A history of leisure running is not associated with increased odds of prevalent knee pain, ROA (Radiographic evidence Of Arthritis), or SOA (Symptoms of Arthritis). In fact, for knee pain, there was a dose-dependent inverse association with runners.” This means that the people who ran more had less knee pain. Additionally, the participants who were still running had less knee pain than those who had quit running, who in turn had less pain than those who had never run. So I keep running to keep my knees healthy. (reference: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/acr.22939/abstract)
How many people enjoy warning you, “All that running is going to ruin your knees?” Or, maybe you have some of those sarcastic, self-righteous friends that tell you, “I want to run, but I actually like my knees.” Well, here’s a fun fact for you to tell them the next time you hear that annoying knee cliché: Running is actually GOOD for your knees! In a report published about a year ago, an eight-year study of 2,637 participants in the Osteoarthritis Initiative resulted in the opposite of what researchers expected, forcing them to conclude: “A history of leisure running is not associated with increased odds of prevalent knee pain, ROA (Radiographic evidence Of Arthritis), or SOA (Symptoms of Arthritis). In fact, for knee pain, there was a dose-dependent inverse association with runners.” This means that the people who ran more had less knee pain. Additionally, the participants who were still running had less knee pain than those who had quit running, who in turn had less pain than those who had never run. So I keep running to keep my knees healthy. (reference: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/acr.22939/abstract)
FACT #2
I was “that kid” in elementary school who had a note from the doctor saying I couldn’t run and play at recess because I had asthma. Sadly, the treatments they had for asthma “back in the day” were not very effective at long-term control. Science has progressed a great deal. But sometime in the last 20 years when my allergist told me that my asthma was destined to become COPD as I got older, something clicked inside me. I said to myself, “Oh, no it won’t!” That reminds me of this billboard:
I was “that kid” in elementary school who had a note from the doctor saying I couldn’t run and play at recess because I had asthma. Sadly, the treatments they had for asthma “back in the day” were not very effective at long-term control. Science has progressed a great deal. But sometime in the last 20 years when my allergist told me that my asthma was destined to become COPD as I got older, something clicked inside me. I said to myself, “Oh, no it won’t!” That reminds me of this billboard:
To make a long story short, that same allergist now tells
me that my Peak Flow Test indicates that I have the lungs of a person 10-15
years younger than I actually am. (Or five inches taller than I actually am; Peak Flow norms are
based on averages for your height and age. I'll take "younger").
So, I keep running in part to keep my lungs healthy.
FACT #3
Last story… Many years ago I went to the doctor to discuss my bloodwork. My cholesterol was close to 300, and the doctor reached for his prescription pad. I said “Wait! I want to try reducing it with diet and exercise.) At that point, my now ex-doctor literally rolled his eyes at me and told me that I had three months, but insisted it was not going to work. I was to come back in three months for a retest. Well, I went to visit My Friend the Internet and started doing some research. Then I started doing everything that was supposed to be good for lowering cholesterol, and I stopped doing everything that was supposed to be bad for cholesterol. Three months later, my number had dropped to 226. The doctor asked me “What the hell did you do?” I said “I’m not tellin’ ya” and I left, never to see him again. After a number of years as a vegan, that number is now right around the magic 200 mark. So, I keep running in part to keep my blood healthy.
BONUS FACT:
I find that stuff starts hurting when I am too sedentary. Running makes stuff stop hurting.
Last story… Many years ago I went to the doctor to discuss my bloodwork. My cholesterol was close to 300, and the doctor reached for his prescription pad. I said “Wait! I want to try reducing it with diet and exercise.) At that point, my now ex-doctor literally rolled his eyes at me and told me that I had three months, but insisted it was not going to work. I was to come back in three months for a retest. Well, I went to visit My Friend the Internet and started doing some research. Then I started doing everything that was supposed to be good for lowering cholesterol, and I stopped doing everything that was supposed to be bad for cholesterol. Three months later, my number had dropped to 226. The doctor asked me “What the hell did you do?” I said “I’m not tellin’ ya” and I left, never to see him again. After a number of years as a vegan, that number is now right around the magic 200 mark. So, I keep running in part to keep my blood healthy.
BONUS FACT:
I find that stuff starts hurting when I am too sedentary. Running makes stuff stop hurting.
So, now it's time to get away from your computer and go out
and run for Global Running Day. But first, visit https://globalrunningday.org/ and
pledge your miles. THEN go run! Then come back here and comment how many miles
you ran. If you’d like to tell us why YOU run, you can do that too.
Until next time,
The Plant-Based Plodder
Sunday, June 4, 2017
Switching to Vegan
Switching to Vegan
I love running. When I’m not running, I love to talk about
running. One problem is finding people who want to listen to me talk about
running. You would think that I would be able to talk about running with my
fellow runners, but they also want to talk about running, not listen. There’s a
saying: “How can you tell if someone has run a marathon?” The answer? “Don’t
worry, they’ll tell you.” Interestingly, the same can be said of vegans: “How
can you tell if someone is vegan?” “Don’t worry, they’ll tell you.”
Coincidence? I think not.
I am passionate about two things that people tend to get
very passionate about. I was a runner first. A long story for another day is
that I ran my first half marathon because of a broken leg (like I said, it’s a long
story.) I trained hard, and for five years, continued to bring my time down.
But that elusive 2:00:00 half-marathon barrier refused to be broken. I did make
it to 2:00:45. Yes, that’s missing my goal by 45 seconds. But to me, that is
still… missing. I wondered what else I
could do. I couldn’t possibly train any harder. That’s when I read an article
in Runner’s World magazine about Scott Jurek. That article made reference to
Scott’s memoir, Eat & Run,
published in 2012. (SEE http://www.scottjurek.com/).
Scott is a vegan ultramarathoner. That means that 26.2188
miles is not far enough for him to run at one time, he feels driven to exceed
that distance. And he is very good at it. He, too, was searching for more
performance when he switched to a vegan lifestyle. A passionate advocate for
vegetarianism, he follows a 100% plant-based diet, which he credits for his
endurance, recovery and consistent twenty year racing career. In Eat & Run, Scott opens up about his
life and career — as an elite athlete and a vegan — and inspires runners at
every level.
DISCLAIMER: I am not a nutritionist! The following
paragraphs simply describe my own personal experience with plant-based eating.
You can attempt to adopt such a diet if you wish, but you do so at your own
risk.
For me, I noticed a few changes. Maybe it’s a placebo
effect, but if it works, I’ll take it. The first thing I noticed is that about
ten pounds just fell off of me. I hadn’t changed any exercise habits yet, so I
attribute this to cutting out the meat.
I also noticed that I could run sooner after eating; as a
carnivore I had to wait at least two hours, now I could – pun intended – Eat
and Run! (Seriously, I just now thought of that pun!) I also noticed that after
a run, fewer body parts were hurting. It seems as though I now recover more
quickly and am able to run longer distances more often. On the medical side,
after a few years I eventually noticed that my hereditarily-high total
cholesterol number finally came down to that magical limit of “200”.
After five years of trying, I did smash my half-marathon PR
multiple times. The most recent smashing was a few weeks ago I set my
latest HM PR of 1:47:24 at the Delaware marathon Running Festival. That came
only three weeks after nabbing a new marathon PR of 3:57:15. I’m still looking
for that elusive BQ, though. 3:40 seems so far away. Plan B is to hang in there
until I turn 60 and my BQ time increases to 3:55.
Thanks for letting me talk about running.
Until next time,
The Plant-Based Plodder
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