Monday, September 27, 2010
Weekend 7 - I meet the president
Week 7 - Halfway through 90 days
Sunday, September 19, 2010
Weekend 6 - Avon Pass
"Now I'm going to show you the inspiration behind the Wasatch Back route," said Steve Hill, who, like any good sports announcer who appreciates the value of silence at a big moment, then shut up and didn't say another word.
There was also the small detail that neither he nor I could breathe.
We were climbing a dirt road between Ogden Valley and Cache Valley. Our mountain bike sprockets were at 1 and 1, aka the granny gear, and they stayed there until we reached what for any number of reasons could be called the high point of the ride.
Hill got off his bike at the summit and looked around at the horizon.
Then he turned his gaze to the 13-mile stretch of rock and dirt that got us there."Amazing, isn't it?" he asked rhetorically as he gazed at spectacular mountain scenery suitable for framing anywhere in the world.
The remote road, situated only a few miles from the freeways even though it feels like a million, traverses a part of Utah largely unseen, exposing mountain views long hidden from the masses.
It's sort of like having a Renoir tucked in the back of the room, hidden behind an Andy Warhol.
For Hill, the 13 miles represents the missing link he'd long been looking for in his quest to map out the perfect Utah long-distance running relay route.
Ever since moving to Utah from Oregon, Hill had dreamed of one day interrupting his day job — he's a lawyer — long enough to replicate the famous Hood to Coast Relay he'd participated in multiple times as an avid runner in Oregon.
Hood to Coast starts at Mount Hood and ends 197 miles later at the Oregon Coast. It was started in 1982 by Bob Foote and soon became the world's most popular running relay. Every year, 1,000 12-person teams — that's 12,000 runners — enter the one-day event, and it would be many more than that if there wasn't a cap limit on the number of entrants.
Hood to Coast shows off the best of Oregon.
Hill wanted to show off the best of Utah.
For years, as he drove around the state, he tossed his idea around in his mind, trying to conjure the perfect route. But it wasn't until his wife, Tauni, lobbied for a vacation cabin in the Ogden Valley that things finally started moving in the right direction.
One day, after purchasing a lot above the town of Liberty, Hill looked to the north where the 13 miles of rock and dirt starts its ascent to the summit and asked, "Where does that road go?"
The rest is relay history.
Steve and his son, Dan, used the 13 miles of dirt to link a running route that stretches 180 miles from Logan to Park City — every bit of it on the other side of the heavily populated Wasatch Front.
They called it the Wasatch Back Relay.
The first Wasatch Back was held in 2004 with a mere 22 12-person teams — and half of those were friends and relatives of the Hills.
Six years later, not only is the Wasatch Back the biggest running event on the Utah calendar — its cap of 750 12-person teams was reached this year months ahead of the June event — but it has spawned another nine such relays around the country.But word spread fast about the amazing scenery and welcoming, less-traveled backroads.
Collectively, these events are known as the Ragnar Relays. Ragnar is reputedly a ninth-century Norse king renowned for his wild and daring adventures. When it was decided to develop other relays and model them after the Wasatch Back, Ragnar was chosen as the national brand.
The rapid growth and increasing demands of Ragnar caused Steve — who still, incidentally, has that day job — to bow out of the business side of running relays, although Dan remains president of Ragnar.
But the course that got it all started will always be Steve Hill's baby, particularly those 13 miles that glued it all together. Whenever he feels the urge, he can still climb to the top and enjoy the breathless view.
My plan Saturday was to hit the road around 7AM, thinking that would get me to the finish line of the Top of Utah Marathon in Logan around 1030AM. That's when I expected Kristin Barras, one of our trainers, to finish the marathon. Warm weather was forecast but it was cold when I took off, closer to 730 than the 7AM departure I planned. It took me longer than expected to ride from our house to the gate, nearly a half hour. I started up the dirt road apprehensively, fearing that I wouldn't have the stamina to ride to the top without walking, that I would slip and fall due to the loose dusty surface of the road, and that if I couldn't make it to the top without walking I would miss Kristin's finish.
I needn't have worried. I powered to the top, getting off my bike but once to let a truck pass. Otherwise the climb went quickly and relatively easily. Even the descent went faster than expected. I gained confidence the further I rode and eventually let go of the brakes and cruised off the mountain as fast as I could go. I reached the Paradise at 930AM, one and a half hours from the gate, just about exactly half the time it took me in June. I came down the rode whooping and hollering, totally stoked that I conquered the climb. The autumn beauty of the hills matched my joyous mood as I achieved a personal best, something I doubted I could do.
Once in Cache Valley I rode furiously to reach the finish before 1030AM. I was on the way to making it easily when my rear tire went flat. I had been riding along the marathon route, doing a slalom between the orange barriers separating runners from traffic. As I came around one of the orange barriers my tire slipped and I heard a runner gasp. I suddenly realized I had a puncture in my tire. There was no way to make it to Logan on time.
I called Tauni to see if she could pick me up. She was a good three miles from our car, and was waiting with Annie Hedberg to meet Trish and Tasha Bell to run with them to the finish. She wasn't anxious to come get me, and in fact it would have taken her nearly as long to walk to the car and drive to meet me as it would take me to walk into Logan. Fortunately, I had planned to meet a contractor, Bruce Anderson, to talk about our plan for a house in Tanzania. I called him. He picked me up about two miles from the center of Logan, dropped my bike off with Mark Wimmer for repair at Wimmer's Bike Shop, and took me on a tour of his manufacturing plant. Bruce was interesting and very knowledgeable of the technologies being used for third world housing - another one of those amazing people I keep meeting these days. He eventually dropped me off at the finish a short time before Tauni, Annie, Trish and Tasha arrived.
My daughter Nina has been training for the St. George Marathon and had wanted me to join her. After the race Tauni told me I have to go with Nina. This, despite her initial reluctance for me to go. After a couple hours at the finish, she remembered what a big deal these events are. As I told Bruce, being around the finish of a marathon is a bigger thrill than any college football game could be.
I didn't find Kristin, but connected with her by text. She finished in 3:23, a great time but even more remarkable for her not having previously run farther than 13 miles. Before the race I told her I thought she could do under 3:25 based on what I observed of her level of fitness and her recent 1:32 half marathon. The only unknown was her lack of long runs. She proved she is not only a great athlete but very tough.
It was a day of triumph. We are all athletes. We need only train and enter the arena to unlock our potential.
Week 6 - Mari gets engaged and Marci appears
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Weekend 5
Thursday, September 9, 2010
Week 5
Monday, September 6, 2010
Weekend 4
Thursday, September 2, 2010
Week 4
My official workouts this week ended a couple days early. It is Thursday afternoon and Tauni and I currently are on an airplane en route to Memphis. Tomorrow we ride the train they call the City of New Orleans to New Orleans for Wil Colom’s 60th birthday celebration. I have met Wil’s daughter and his wife, Dorothy, as well as his nephew, Carl. I also know a few of his friends, including, of course, Parky, and Derrick and Leticia Johnson. I hope to see New Orleans lawyer Maury Herman on Saturday. Otherwise, I have no idea what to expect, other than perhaps assorted members of the Colom family and of the 100 Black Men of Columbus, Mississippi.
Workouts Monday and Tuesday were tough. Monday was a long, painful lower body workout, and Tuesday and intense series of anaerobic exercises. I flew Tuesday morning to Denver, met that afternoon with my client, Bob Dunlap, and then wandered the 16th Street Mall in the evening. I have never seen Denver’s downtown area as anything but a rather sterile series of high-rise office buildings, but 16th Street does have a bit of historic charm, though I wouldn’t go so far as to call it lively.
I stayed at Denver’s downtown Marriott, which turned out to have an excellent fitness center equipped with dumbbells and weight machines. I took the 90-Day training plan for Wednesday with me, which called for a series of bicep, tricep and shoulder exercises. Shortly after I started working out, a guy about 6’6”, bearing an uncanny resemblance to Gaston, walked in. Veins popped from his biceps, which were roughly the diameter of my thighs, only vastly firmer. It was mildly amusing for me to struggle to do curls with 15 pound dumbbells while Gaston did the same exercise with dumbbells the weight of anvils. My consolation was that he appeared spent after maybe 7 reps, while I struggled through my standard 20 reps and 10 minis. After trashing my arms and shoulders I completed a series of ab exercises.
Following my workout I dressed quickly and headed to the office of Dunlap’s Denver lawyer, Flip Rouse, Esq., who cheerfully greeted me on my arrival. He was nattily attired in a pin striped dress shirt and well-pressed cargo pants, which I took to be a uniquely Colorado twist on business casual. I had to haul two briefcases full of documents, as well as my suitcase, to Flip’s office. I felt so generally weak, and my back so sore, from that week’s workouts that even carrying my smaller briefcase any distance pushed me close to level 10. I didn’t see this as a good sign, but not necessarily a bad one either. I figured I would feel better, but wasn’t sure when. I could only hope that my strained back and other fatigued muscles would come around before Thursday’s workout and, if not then, by the beginning of next week.
Dragging my briefcase around the airport following Dunlap’s deposition didn’t make me optimistic that I would feel better very soon. I arrived home too tired to do much of anything besides cook myself a bowl of oatmeal, and plop myself into the easy chair in my office to watch the DVD of the old 70s movie “Robin and Marian” on my iMac. Sean Connery seemed amused in his Robin Hood role, Richard Harris completely over-the-top and ridiculous as Richard the Lionhearted, and Audrey Hepburn luminous as Marian. About 45 minutes into the movie I recalled that I needed to pick up a prescription before the pharmacy closed. As I headed out the door Tauni asked how I liked the movie. I replied, “They don’t make them like that anymore,” to which we both immediately added, “Fortunately.”
Upon my return from the pharmacy, after I fidgeted through another half hour or so of the movie, my brother Tracy called to give me his take on BYU going independent. He had already written a lengthy comment on the subject on our family website, so he mostly repeated himself. Tracy is brilliant, and I thought his arguments sound, but he has a need to repeat himself and seek reassurance, which I was happy to provide. I like the thought of BYU playing basketball with the Catholics and the good Christians at Pepperdine. Seems like a nice cultural fit. And there is symmetry to BYU beginning a rivalry with Gonzaga, alma mater of Utah Jazz great John Stockton. Also, for BYU’s emerging women’s soccer team, playing against national powers Portland and Santa Clara can only provide a boost. As for football, if the goal is exposure, the ESPN deal assures that. The money doesn’t hurt either. As for the ethics of dumping the MWC, the MWC hasn’t done much for the Cougs lately, and in this supposedly capitalist country chasing a better opportunity seems the quintessentially American.
All of which brings me to this morning. I was expecting a painful and difficult workout, but instead I felt great and managed to work hard without aid of back or knee brace. Part of the recovery was simply the result of a good night’s rest. And perhaps part was a benefit of taking Aleve. The unknown was how much Prednizone, a corticosteroid, contributed to my rapid recovery. A few weeks ago my dermatologist prescribed Prednizone for a rash, and after a day or two of the recommended dosage not only did the rash but also painful canker sores go away. The second week of the program the canker sores recurred. I took 10 mg before bedtime and in the morning not only my mouth but also my back felt better. I attributed the back improvement to sleeping with a brace, but Tauni immediately concluded that the Prednizone had done the trick. It apparently having helped once, I took 10 mg last night and this morning my back was much improved and I otherwise felt strong and lively. I worked out on a stationary bike and elliptical this morning, both of which I am used to doing, but still the sudden absence of bad pain was a surprise. Not only was my back improved but my knee felt better following today’s workout than it has at any time since I injured it seven years ago.
I don’t know whether the Prednizone made the difference. If it did, it is easy to understand why world-class athletes have succumbed to the steroid temptation. The hardest part of training is dealing with injuries and fatigue. Assuming steroids aid recovery, athletes can train harder and become more fit. I have friends who played college football during the steroid era. Pills were freely disseminated ito players in the 70s and 80s. Back then players were incredulous that use of steroids could even be an issue because steroids were such a normal part of their training regimen. I have no intention of seriously juicing up, but I certainly appreciate the relief that my small dose seems to have provided.
There have been two themes to our coaching this week. First, we need to step up our nutrition, and specifically to eat more alkaline and less acidic foods, ideally in a ratio of 80/20. My new friend Ryan Peterson explained that cancer cells simply cannot survive in an alkaline environment. Certainly countries whose diets are high on alkaline foods have lower cancer rates than those whose diets are more acidic, such as, e.g, the US. During the first four weeks of the program my diet has trended toward more alkaline foods and the benefits have been obvious.
Second, we are encouraged to transform our view of who we are. For me, this process is well underway. In the year or so before I began the program, I had concluded with dismay the aging process was both accelerating and irreversible. My joints seemed to be breaking down and my weight steadily increasing. At the Ragnar Wasatch Back I decided to take steps to reverse the trend, first by improving my diet, and second by enrolling in the program. I have lost nearly 20 pounds since the Wasatch Back, more than half since I began the program. My knees and hips feel better, and, to my surprise, I have discovered that I can still jump and run fast. I feel a good 10 years younger, and again see myself as an athlete. In addition, I have been calmer, more confident and more at peace than I can remember. I am eager to start the day, and find it easy to get up early. My goal of running the Ragnar Tennessee seems increasingly possible, something I had thought I could never do. It has even been easy to overcome what I thought were my addictions, Coke Zero and sugar. I have mostly eliminated sugar from my diet (it is an ingredient in so many foods that eliminating it completely is, well, nearly impossible). I have cut out Coke completely. My concept of self and what I can do has changed.
May the transformation continue.