Showing posts with label Running. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Running. Show all posts

Friday, April 17, 2020

A year ago I ran with people, this year I run away from them.

Just when this "new normal" is starting to feel a little more like "normal" I am bombarded by reminders that it is anything except that. This week the Aldi cashier told me that (I'm pretty sure) not me, but my groceries were too close to the person's groceries in front of me, our downstairs neighbours are starting to loose some patience with increased noise from my children, and I was reminded that a year ago I ran a marathon WITH other people opposed to my current swerve at all expenses running strategy.

I read the articles and some of the online chatter that say people should stop running during this time, they should become more considerate like cyclists, and they need to stop pushing walkers aside while muttering profanities and flinging sweat on others around (I can guarantee you I'm not doing this nor have I witnessed this happen). Can't we all just show a little kindness and consideration for one another and do our best while we work together? I need to keep running for my sanity, I'm just hoping I don't need to resort to 4 am to avoid death stares while I seek out the least utilized routes.

Because after all, this was the year I was hoping to run my 20th marathon with, get this, other people. Silly me, 2020 sounded like a good year to do just that. So as likely options keep getting wiped from the calendar, I'll in the meantime relive what a great weekend away in Canberra we had last year when I ran #19.


We decided Canberra would be a good place to run a marathon and for a weekend away since we had done little more than use the city as a rest stop for other trips since we first moved here. It was also touted as a flat and fast race course, and while the flat part was pretty accurate, only the first half of the course was pretty fast for me. But I'm getting old, marathons seem like a lot more effort than they used to be, and well the end time isn't quite as important as it used to be. I actually don't even remember my exact time now a year later, which says that it's really not that important to me anymore, or it was really that bad that I just wiped it from my memory.

Aside from my 42.2 km run on Sunday, Emma got to run a 1 km kids dash during my run. There was gorgeous crisp autumn air the entire weekend, actual colour changing leaves, massive wide roads with plenty of parking and orderly streets. None of these things really exist in Sydney, but do in midwest America, which is why I realized I felt so at home in Canberra. After the couple hour drive Friday evening and late arrival we enjoyed a leisurely brunch Saturday morning outside of the National Library of Australia followed by an entire afternoon of fun for the kids at Questacon.

Emma was so excited to be at the National Library!
Brunch bliss
Her choice of face paint at the marathon expo gave me a fright!
So much fun for everyone at Questacon, reminded us so much of the Magic House back in St. Louis
Charley really had no hair a year ago!




Post marathon on Sunday we gorged ourselves at the incredible Patissez (while I was sadly reminded of my inability to consume much food after a run and let my kids enjoy the bulk of the sugar-loaded milkshakes). We also tried to Aussie-educate ourselves by visiting the Parliament House (aka The Capitol of Australia). Since they were not in session we could easily meander our way around most of the inside and outside of the building and even literally "roll down" the grassy lawns. It is known both for its interesting architecture and openness to the public. No required guided tour, booked appointment time, entry fee, and relatively minimal security.


I always love my "good-looking" running shots.
Yum!
Outside of Parliament House
The marble foyer


I don't think they were impressed in the House of Representatives Chamber

On the roof reminded me of the Louvre
Beautiful views all around of Canberra from the gardens

I think my husband needed a nap after his exhausting morning of solo parenting these three
I'm not sure if rolling down the lawn is a thing to do at the US Capitol... only in Australia. 


There were so many more things we could have done with the kids in Canberra, its full of museums and history and could certainly warrant another trip in the future. However, it did feel like the most non-Australian city there could possibly be, no beach, no red dirt.

Looking back on our primary motivation for the trip to Canberra, I ran a great first half of the marathon, but would have loved to just have stopped and given up for the second half of the race. I'll give myself the excuse that I still had a baby not sleeping through the night, I had just walked a 60 km race with friends almost exactly a month earlier, so let's just say my training and prep was a little atypical. I swore off running another marathon a number of times while I was running, but now I'm sitting here anxiously wishing I could put another one on the calendar to train for. Hopefully one day, sooner rather than later, when this "new normal" becomes the "old normal," my body will still feel up for the challenge and I'll have my cheerleaders both to motivate me on race day and to keep me seeking this form of early morning me time training. And for now I'm going to keep holding out on finding some normal in 2020 and finding a way to run #20. 



Friday, December 2, 2016

Running with 80k friends, some kangaroos and a photo finish at the Opera House

It was a busy winter here prepping for three different races! And can I just say that running in the winter in Sydney is just about as perfect as can get? Sometimes a little rainy or overcast, but rarely ever too cold and definitely not too hot. I think I'll enjoy training for something again come next winter, but let's just say I'm not planning to do any long distance training the next few months here... running and the heat definitely don't mix for me.

Finally catching up on writing this, my first race was the City2Surf right here in Sydney in mid-August. It was an odd distance at 14k (just under 9 miles for my US friends) and started in the Sydney CBD (downtown) and finished at Bondi Beach. I ran with 80,000 of my "friends." Yes, you read that correctly, 80k! I think I misinformed you all in a previous blog when I said 60,000.

Just a glimpse at one of many starting corrals
Surprisingly it really didn't seem that massive. I think the largest race I've run in comparison is probably a marathon or two that were about 25,000. City2Surf did a great job of segmenting out the different waves to start over the course of over an hour.

Beautiful Bondi Beach made a pretty good finish line
It was a beautiful meandering course through some of the most scenic of the city's "eastern suburbs" before encountering it's own version of "heartbreak hill," which was certainly no joke. It mirrored Boston Marathon's own heartbreak hill in the way that it deceptively seemed to finish 3 or 4 times before turning a corner and discovering there was still more to go!

Coming from an event manager's perspective... these people were planners, glad I didn't bring my children to get lost!
And for mid-August it was surprisingly warm with picture perfect Australian blue, sunny skies. While my little team of cheerleaders didn't make it out to the mass chaos that was that side of town I still had a great time running solo and just taking the experience in!

She was upset it wasn't her own medal, but still pretty proud to think "momma won the race!"
Some last minute planning left me also booked the following weekend for a run, but this time for my first full marathon in over two years! I was excited but nervous and had thrown in this weekend trip to Mudgee, NSW (about 3.5 hours NW from Sydney) only a few weeks earlier.

Rest stop!
While I had already planned to run the mid-September Sydney full marathon way back in February as I had registered for it (in typical pregnant me fashion) the day before Morgan was born. However, in some crazy sense of training mode me I had decided I should do another full marathon as part of my training. I figured it was either run a race or run a 32-35k solo training run, and frankly the race option sounded more fun.

Mudgee was going to be a super small race (less than 100 people ran the full) so it sounded like a nice change of pace from the City2Surf. And in all ways except for one, it really was a great weekend away. The one negative - well Morgan didn't sleep but a few hours the night before the race. Tiny hotel room, first night away from home in awhile, who knows what else. But sleep is overrated of course, that's why they always say to make sure you sleep well two nights before the race and luckily I had! Nonetheless I was grouchy enough to the point when I started getting ready that I contemplated not doing it. Then I thought that was silly after our entire family drove all the way up and hurriedly ran the 800m from our hotel to the starting line.

Upon arrival the whole clan was happy to be out of the car!
It was a perfect, crisp late winter morning to start a race with a nice warm up forecasted for the day. And that it did. I enjoyed the rolling hills, vineyards and kangaroos as my scenery to an otherwise very quiet course. About 7-8 miles in I thought it wasn't going well at all while I endured a long, slow uphill and was worried the night before was taking a toll on me. But luckily just at that point there was a slight overlap in the course and I was uplifted by other runners ahead of me exchanging "well done mate" as we ran past one another. I enjoyed some fellow conversation with the rare runner I passed or passed me along the course including one that was sporting a jersey of a former client of Steve's and one whose watch had stopped and we spent an inordinate amount of time trying to convert paces between miles and kilometers so he could figure out how fast he was running.

Emma wanted to run the rest of the way with me when she saw me around mile 20

My little buddy at the finish line with me (no she didn't run the entire last 6 miles with me)
She even got announced when we crossed the finish line!
And in the end I finished far better than I anticipated. I saw my cheerleaders around mile 20 and then I knew I was in the homestretch, especially when I passed a couple vineyards handing out both wine and water to runners! It was again, picture perfect Australian weather and I even finished just one spot out of prize money (before you get too excited, really it was a small race). Steve is already suggesting booking our return trip next year...

Happy to see this face (even if she did keep me awake most of the night)!
Everyone's happy to be done!
Pretty cool when an extra medal shows up in the mail a few weeks later too!
With Mudgee complete I had one big race left on the calendar - the one that was first on my calendar to begin with. It is a rare day lately that I run a marathon in the same city in which we live, which is normally how I like it - making it a destination race and vacation all in one. However, this time I was excited to have a little less pressure in the preparation and packing of getting us somewhere new and instead just being able to sleep in my own bed the night before. I even got the VIP treatment of my personal team of supporters driving me to the start line.

Support team doing some prep work to find me on the course
I wasn't lucky enough to go three for three in the weather department though. It was overcast and rainy. At least it kept it cool. My body also didn't hold up quite as well for the third race as I had hoped. I was fighting a bad case of plantar fascitis and hadn't been feeling very well the week leading up the race. So I set out to just finish the race. And thankfully that's what I did. Far from the time I had hoped for, but I got a tour of this beautiful city on my own two feet and I even kept running the whole time. They even shut down all 8 or so lanes of traffic on the harbour bridge (which is a BIG deal) and we finished under the steps of the Opera House!

The race finished just in front of the Opera House!
It was a long, wet, slightly painful race but I could smile at the end because I was thankful that I once again had the opportunity to both start and finish the race. I guess it's time to start planning #18...

This girl knows what to do with medals!

Wet, cold, HAPPY ferry ride home.


Saturday, August 13, 2016

Running in my new city

Every run starts with one step.
Racing season is officially upon us and tomorrow morning I'll take my turn running the famous Sydney City2Surf 14k race with roughly 60,000 of my closest friends! Just as it's name states, it starts in the heart of the city (or CBD as its better known here) and finishes on the world-famous Bondi Beach. The weather forecast looks beautiful. We'll see how the weaving through fellow runners goes and how Sydney's "Heartbreak Hill" compares to Boston's.

Over the past few months I've enjoyed many a scenic run as I've gotten to know this city better via foot and trained for the upcoming races. In my opinion, there's no better way to do so and I feel blessed with a body that allows me to do so. When you get up before the sun rises and sneak glimpses of iconic landmarks and beautiful beaches you feel like you've just opened the door to a secret world. When it's still quiet and peaceful and so much to come in the day. It's these times that a city transitions from a place I live to my city. I love that feeling. Here's just a few of the views I've enjoyed along the way.

A favorite nearby place to run with beautiful views of the harbour.
View from Cremorne Reserve... low clouds in the morning over the bridge.
Bush turkeys... a common sight in the reserve, especially early in the morning. Either that or possums.
Beautiful sunrise view from Middle Head in Mosman.
Running under the Harbour Bridge in Kirribilli.
There's something special about climbing the stairs to cross this big, beautiful bridge.
Pedestrian bridge crossing.
Views from the bridge... hazy morning over the city due to controlled bush fires one day.
First rays of sunshine on the city another day.
Love this photo from above Circular Quay.
Running around the "sails."
What a great view back on these icons from the Royal Botanic Gardens.
And again the view from Mrs. Macquarie's Chair.
Back on the city from Royal Botanic Gardens.
Big naval ship at Potts Point.
Beautiful trees in Hyde Park.
Sydney Tower Eye.
St. Mary's Cathedral
Making it to Bondi at sunrise was an accomplishment well worth the early wake-up call.
I could have stayed here all day, except I still had 10 miles to run back home afterwards...
Still need to go swimming at the Bondi Iceberg Club.
The best faces to come home to after a run.