Today was the bittersweet end to Christmas camp.
Sorry it is over but glad it is over :-)
Thanks to all who played a part in the week.
It is always challenging and rewarding and sets the participants up for their goals and targets for the coming year. I do need to sit down and plan my races for 2008. Maybe tomorrow.
I finished off with an easy 7 ish miler starting at Saltzman and joining up with Ronda, Tom and Micheal.
Ronda's great picture of us toasting the end of the run and on to 2008.
We ran into a few of the Purge and Splurgers who were attempting to run all of Wildwood today. It appeared that they ended up doing an out and back since the roads out to Newberry and the end of the Wildwood were icy this morning.
Christmas Camp 2007 was not the most miles I have done in a week. But it was high and with the speed and tempo work as well as the "bulk" it did take a toll on the body: some toenails will be sacrificed :-)
It was the most miles for Trisha in a week: 71 including 6 miles the day after her first ultra!! Wahoo!!
Christmas Camp 2007
Monday Dec 24 - 7.1 miles (11.4 km)
Tuesday Dec 25 - 7.1 miles (11.4 km)
Wednesday Dec 26 - 6.6 miles (10.6 km)
Thursday Dec 27 - 15 miles (24.2 km)
Friday Dec 28 - 15 miles (24.2 km)
Saturday Dec 29 - REST
Sunday Dec 30 - 30.2 miles (48.7 km)
Monday Dec 31 - 7 miles (11.3 km)
============================
Total of 14 hours for 88 miles (141.8 km)
Great way to spend vacation :-)
Monday, December 31, 2007
Sunday, December 30, 2007
Christmas Camp: Day Seven and Trisha's first Ultra!
Trisha, my wife and first time ultra runner!!:
I'm guest blogging for Darin today, since this was really my run. I was nervous about heading out for my first 30 miler, the entire Wildwood trail in Forest Park, but the energy of our Christmas Camp group was all positive as we posed in our 'no excuses' shirts (see bottom for pictures). Stacey kindly dropped us all off at mile 30.5 and Darin and I settled into a comfortable pace at the back of the pack.
Darin was my pacer, timekeeper, photographer and keeper of all things yummy - gels, Clif blocks, fig newtons, and protein bars.
You see a lot of things in 30 miles and we were treated to two sets of decorated trail 'Christmas trees' (mile 16 and mile 6) complete with ornaments, some beautiful holly bushes loaded with red berries, gigantic parrots, rain, snow, hail and a quick round of thunder and lightning.
Besides hanging with Darin for seven hours - a big thanks to Bill and Alex for taking the kids - my run highlights included some wonderful aid stations. Thank-you to the Red Bull, corn chip fairy!
As with any race/run, the last mile was the hardest, but it was all worth it to see Ronda, Steve, Micheal and Beast waiting to cheer us in. No major injuries, just sore legs and a new appreciation for all you ultra runners. Thank-you so much to Darin and Ronda, who, even when I had doubts that I could do this, never wavered in their faith in me.
Hmmm .... do I feel a group hug coming on?
Nah, just more training - Chuckanut here we come.
Darin back doing the typing
Trisha finishing here first trail ultra...30.2 miles.
Darin was my pacer, timekeeper, photographer and keeper of all things yummy - gels, Clif blocks, fig newtons, and protein bars.
You see a lot of things in 30 miles and we were treated to two sets of decorated trail 'Christmas trees' (mile 16 and mile 6) complete with ornaments, some beautiful holly bushes loaded with red berries, gigantic parrots, rain, snow, hail and a quick round of thunder and lightning.
Besides hanging with Darin for seven hours - a big thanks to Bill and Alex for taking the kids - my run highlights included some wonderful aid stations. Thank-you to the Red Bull, corn chip fairy!
As with any race/run, the last mile was the hardest, but it was all worth it to see Ronda, Steve, Micheal and Beast waiting to cheer us in. No major injuries, just sore legs and a new appreciation for all you ultra runners. Thank-you so much to Darin and Ronda, who, even when I had doubts that I could do this, never wavered in their faith in me.
Hmmm .... do I feel a group hug coming on?
Nah, just more training - Chuckanut here we come.
Darin back doing the typing
Trisha finishing here first trail ultra...30.2 miles.
Looking strong...nothing stopped her and she kept a consistent pace to finish in 6 hours and 23 minutes (12:40 per mile pace).
My favorite quote of the day: "Plain hammer gel tastes like sweet vaseline...ugh!" :-)
The Christmas camp group at the start of the run:
My favorite quote of the day: "Plain hammer gel tastes like sweet vaseline...ugh!" :-)
The Christmas camp group at the start of the run:
Saturday, December 29, 2007
Christmas Camp: Day Six...Rest and Hagen
Trisha and I took today off from running. But we did keep things interesting and exciting with our quick trip to Bellingham...and the 13 hours of driving the trip there and back entailed.
We now have a little dog named Hagen. Leah is practically loving the little dog to death and is really excited having him to call her own. Thanks Mark, Mireille and John.
We had a great visit with Mark, Mireille, John, Carla, Kevin and Damon.
Cole has proudly progressed to level 62 of his Pokemon Fire Red game...he was hoping the drive would be even longer!
Tomorrow is the big day with Trisha's first ULTRA...30 miles of fun!
Friday, December 28, 2007
Christmas Camp: Day Five and still Alive
Day five calls for tempo work...OUCH! Steve, Tom, Ronda, Kris, Trisha, Micheal, Stacey, Dave, Trisha and myself all met up at the 53rd access to the Wildwood trail at 8:15 this morning.
We did 30 minutes of warm-up running down Wildwood and then Wild Cherry to Leif.
We continued easy from the quarter mile marker up to 1.5 miles on Leif. Then the real work began.
We all dug in and worked down to our marathon paces out to mile 3.5 on Leif. Then back to mile 1.5. I started out a little krinky but things loosened up and was able to average 6:55 for the first 4 miles.
The next 4 miles went better, hitting my groove and averaging 6:50.
The final stretch was another 3 miles. I pushed on the way out but pretty much was done when I hit the line and met back up with Trisha and Dave. About 7:20 pace.
We trudged up Alder to Wildwood with me enjoying a good bonk. Another 15 miles in the bank!
Thanks to Stacey for lending me a water bottle and gels...when will I learn :-)
Now to jump in the car to drive to Bellingham to visit relatives and friends. Should be nice and stiff after 5 hours in the car. I feel a Burgerville stop coming on!!
We did 30 minutes of warm-up running down Wildwood and then Wild Cherry to Leif.
We continued easy from the quarter mile marker up to 1.5 miles on Leif. Then the real work began.
We all dug in and worked down to our marathon paces out to mile 3.5 on Leif. Then back to mile 1.5. I started out a little krinky but things loosened up and was able to average 6:55 for the first 4 miles.
The next 4 miles went better, hitting my groove and averaging 6:50.
The final stretch was another 3 miles. I pushed on the way out but pretty much was done when I hit the line and met back up with Trisha and Dave. About 7:20 pace.
We trudged up Alder to Wildwood with me enjoying a good bonk. Another 15 miles in the bank!
Thanks to Stacey for lending me a water bottle and gels...when will I learn :-)
Now to jump in the car to drive to Bellingham to visit relatives and friends. Should be nice and stiff after 5 hours in the car. I feel a Burgerville stop coming on!!
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Christmas Camp: Day Four
For most of the time that I have lived in Portland (four and half years now!) I have been meeting up with Scott and Rick at 6 am on Thursday morning for a run. Always a great way to get those extra miles in early in the morning and catch up talking to my buddies. No reason to stop during Christmas camp and might even make me a keener :-)
This morning Scott and I ran a nice 10 miler...but we waited until 7 am and had a little more light. It was cold and wet with some sleet but what a great way to start the day. We about 6 miles on road and about 4 miles on the Fanno Creek trail. I did end up getting my brand new shoes dirty with some of the minor flooding on the trail. Scott made sure to make fun of me as I tried to tip toe around the mud / water. What can you expect from one of the guys who started the Hagg Lake Ultra race!?
Mid afternoon, Trisha got home from shopping with her mom and we headed out for a 5 mile recovery run around the neighborhood. It drizzled on us but really nothing too major.
I can't wait to feel the tempo tomorrow!
This morning Scott and I ran a nice 10 miler...but we waited until 7 am and had a little more light. It was cold and wet with some sleet but what a great way to start the day. We about 6 miles on road and about 4 miles on the Fanno Creek trail. I did end up getting my brand new shoes dirty with some of the minor flooding on the trail. Scott made sure to make fun of me as I tried to tip toe around the mud / water. What can you expect from one of the guys who started the Hagg Lake Ultra race!?
Mid afternoon, Trisha got home from shopping with her mom and we headed out for a 5 mile recovery run around the neighborhood. It drizzled on us but really nothing too major.
I can't wait to feel the tempo tomorrow!
Wednesday, December 26, 2007
Zoo Lights
With Grandma Isaak visiting we headed out to the Portland Zoo lights display.
The lights were cool but so was the weather...at least for Portland. We spent a good portion of the time huddling into some of the animal houses to warm up cold toes and fingers. No rain and with Portland under a snow advisory for tomorrow with a possible 7 inches this may be our last trip out for a day or two :-)
Leah's favorite lights were the butterflies while Cole liked the alligators.
Bonus was that our zoo membership got us in for free!
The lights were cool but so was the weather...at least for Portland. We spent a good portion of the time huddling into some of the animal houses to warm up cold toes and fingers. No rain and with Portland under a snow advisory for tomorrow with a possible 7 inches this may be our last trip out for a day or two :-)
Leah's favorite lights were the butterflies while Cole liked the alligators.
Bonus was that our zoo membership got us in for free!
Christmas Camp: Day Three
Today was the much dreaded speed work out after eating too much on Christmas day!
Great group of Christmas campers showed up all ready to rumble: Trisha, Lynn, Ronda, Micheal, Tom, Steve, Dave and myself.
Nice 30 minute warm-up out and back on Terwilliger road. Hill up, nice easy grade back to the track.
Then to the business part of the day: 10 400s on the Duniway park track.
I was quite happy to nail all 10 at 1:34 - 1:35. Heart rate would go to 165-170 during the speed and then back to 120-125 for the recovery lap. Great way to stretch out the legs and see how the back and quads were doing. Trisha posted strong 1:55 averages for her 7 400's.
Everyone looked strong and fast.
Again we were blessed with no rain for the run. Wish I would have dusted off my racing flats but was too scared to get them wet :-)
Push-ups: easy. Sit-ups: ouch.
Great group of Christmas campers showed up all ready to rumble: Trisha, Lynn, Ronda, Micheal, Tom, Steve, Dave and myself.
Nice 30 minute warm-up out and back on Terwilliger road. Hill up, nice easy grade back to the track.
Then to the business part of the day: 10 400s on the Duniway park track.
I was quite happy to nail all 10 at 1:34 - 1:35. Heart rate would go to 165-170 during the speed and then back to 120-125 for the recovery lap. Great way to stretch out the legs and see how the back and quads were doing. Trisha posted strong 1:55 averages for her 7 400's.
Everyone looked strong and fast.
Again we were blessed with no rain for the run. Wish I would have dusted off my racing flats but was too scared to get them wet :-)
Push-ups: easy. Sit-ups: ouch.
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Christmas Camp: Day Two
We had a minor Christmas miracle today in Portland: SNOW!
Trisha and I headed out for a 7 mile loop from the house after a great Christmas morning. We commented on how it appeared that our second run of Christmas camp would again be without the liquid sunshine of the Pacific northwest.
Then little white flakes started to fall. Then really large flakes. Then it was an all out blizzard...at least for Portland.
We finished with a good long hill back up to the house feeling like adventurers of the North. And, man, Trisha is getting stronger. I hardly turned around to wait on the hill and she was passing me by. Only a matter of time till I get "chicked" :-) It was a great gift to be out running with my wife on such a beautiful day.
Today was also my first run ever with a heart rate monitor. I had fun with Trisha's gift as I flat-lined a few times and I figured out the gadget. I am looking forward to training, racing and sleeping with it on :-)
Push ups and sit ups are progressing nicely but we are both having to work around the turkey and the pie! Speed tomorrow will most definitely be a relative term!
Trisha and I headed out for a 7 mile loop from the house after a great Christmas morning. We commented on how it appeared that our second run of Christmas camp would again be without the liquid sunshine of the Pacific northwest.
Then little white flakes started to fall. Then really large flakes. Then it was an all out blizzard...at least for Portland.
We finished with a good long hill back up to the house feeling like adventurers of the North. And, man, Trisha is getting stronger. I hardly turned around to wait on the hill and she was passing me by. Only a matter of time till I get "chicked" :-) It was a great gift to be out running with my wife on such a beautiful day.
Today was also my first run ever with a heart rate monitor. I had fun with Trisha's gift as I flat-lined a few times and I figured out the gadget. I am looking forward to training, racing and sleeping with it on :-)
Push ups and sit ups are progressing nicely but we are both having to work around the turkey and the pie! Speed tomorrow will most definitely be a relative term!
Monday, December 24, 2007
Christmas Camp: Day One
Every year since we have been in Portland we have been involved with a great tradition called Christmas Camp.
Ronda and Stacey organize a series of training adventures to "...meant to be a challenge where like minds come together run and celebrate".
Today Trisha and I did a nice seven miles starting out with eight other campers. The Wildwood trail and Leif were a little damp from the rain over the last week but an early Christmas gift arrived with no rain on the run and only a little mud on the shoes.
This afternoon / evening we did our required 30 pushups, 100 situps and plank exercises as we prepare to indulge in the feasting tomorrow.
We were likely the only people with sore abdominal muscles attempting to hit the high notes in the Christmas eve service tonight :-)
Merry Christmas everyone!
Ronda and Stacey organize a series of training adventures to "...meant to be a challenge where like minds come together run and celebrate".
Today Trisha and I did a nice seven miles starting out with eight other campers. The Wildwood trail and Leif were a little damp from the rain over the last week but an early Christmas gift arrived with no rain on the run and only a little mud on the shoes.
This afternoon / evening we did our required 30 pushups, 100 situps and plank exercises as we prepare to indulge in the feasting tomorrow.
We were likely the only people with sore abdominal muscles attempting to hit the high notes in the Christmas eve service tonight :-)
Merry Christmas everyone!
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Tourist run: Nob Hill, Alcatraz and the Golden Gate Bridge
I had the opportunity to do some early morning exploration of San Francisco as I was in town for the December face to face Eclipse board meeting. We were staying and meeting at the Hotel Monaco. Beautiful city.
Up and over the Nob Hill going past the Grace Cathedral church. I have to tell you that running both ways I found the constant noise from the cable cars "track" in the roads quite annoying. Possibly just because I had not had any caffeine yet :-)
I ran down to Fort Mason and then along the waterfront to as close to the Golden Gate bridge as my time allowed. I figure I was about half a mile out. I was disappointed I did not make the bridge but I was unwilling to get up any earlier and I am running slow with some unexplained soreness in my upper, inside quad muscles. The view was still inspiring.
Alcatraz was visible from the shore for most of the run along the water. It really does not look that far off shore. As well, there were several hardy (crazy?) individuals doing open water swims with no wet suits. Maybe those guys who tried to escape really did make it?
On the way back in the hills I even had a second opportunity to Find Waldo this year :-)
Time to heal and prepare for Christmas Camp!
Up and over the Nob Hill going past the Grace Cathedral church. I have to tell you that running both ways I found the constant noise from the cable cars "track" in the roads quite annoying. Possibly just because I had not had any caffeine yet :-)
I ran down to Fort Mason and then along the waterfront to as close to the Golden Gate bridge as my time allowed. I figure I was about half a mile out. I was disappointed I did not make the bridge but I was unwilling to get up any earlier and I am running slow with some unexplained soreness in my upper, inside quad muscles. The view was still inspiring.
Alcatraz was visible from the shore for most of the run along the water. It really does not look that far off shore. As well, there were several hardy (crazy?) individuals doing open water swims with no wet suits. Maybe those guys who tried to escape really did make it?
On the way back in the hills I even had a second opportunity to Find Waldo this year :-)
Time to heal and prepare for Christmas Camp!
Thursday, December 13, 2007
Eclipse DemoCamp: Portland
On Monday we had the first Portland Eclipse DemoCamp. We need to ensure it is not the last as I feel it was a great success and well worth the effort to attend and present.
The format was simple: people signed up on the wiki to attend and if interested signed up to present a demo. We had about 30 people show up to watch and present 8 demos. There was a great taco bar to fuel up so the brain was ready to digest the demos.
For whatever reason my VPN refused to work so I had to revamp my demo to be hosted entirely on my laptop. Thankfully Chris G swapped demo spots with me so I had some time to set up for the demo. So I apologize for the sketchy notes / missed demos as I was fairly focused on prepping instead of listening to the demos that came before mine :-)
Chris Goldthorpe, IBM, presented first on whats is new in Eclipse user assistance.
Scott lewis, BEA, presented the ECF shared editor. Appears to be a cool prototype and the ECF guys are working on more sophisticated locking, synchronization and transaction support for Ganymede.
Chris Elford - Intel - demo the state of the TPTP profiler. We saw the threading mode and execution statistics. The TPTP project is requesting user experience reports to get kudos as well as input on where changes are required. Dive in and give your feedback.
Phil Quitsland - Instantiations WindowTester - recorder and test code generator. Apparantly you can try it out for free.
Emerson Murphy-Hill - PhD candidate - Portland State University. Cool (wacky..his word :-) ) take on improving the Eclipse refactoring tools. Circular menu with gestures for refactoring: direction indicative of refactoring - up is pull up, down is push down. Refactoring cues view to remove the menu/wizard interaction for refactoring. Contact Emerson to try it out and make his adviser happy.
I presented on Jazz, with a focus on the process component of which I am a team member.
Don't run screaming from the room with the mention of process or governance with respect to software development. The Jazz Platform is process-neutral. Jazz itself has no built in process enforcing what is done for any particular occasion. One of the mandates of our team is to allow Jazz users to explore, define and adapt their process for use for their team and project. This is what I demonstrated with some simple examples.
Overall an excellent use of a Monday evening!
The format was simple: people signed up on the wiki to attend and if interested signed up to present a demo. We had about 30 people show up to watch and present 8 demos. There was a great taco bar to fuel up so the brain was ready to digest the demos.
For whatever reason my VPN refused to work so I had to revamp my demo to be hosted entirely on my laptop. Thankfully Chris G swapped demo spots with me so I had some time to set up for the demo. So I apologize for the sketchy notes / missed demos as I was fairly focused on prepping instead of listening to the demos that came before mine :-)
Chris Goldthorpe, IBM, presented first on whats is new in Eclipse user assistance.
Scott lewis, BEA, presented the ECF shared editor. Appears to be a cool prototype and the ECF guys are working on more sophisticated locking, synchronization and transaction support for Ganymede.
Chris Elford - Intel - demo the state of the TPTP profiler. We saw the threading mode and execution statistics. The TPTP project is requesting user experience reports to get kudos as well as input on where changes are required. Dive in and give your feedback.
Phil Quitsland - Instantiations WindowTester - recorder and test code generator. Apparantly you can try it out for free.
Emerson Murphy-Hill - PhD candidate - Portland State University. Cool (wacky..his word :-) ) take on improving the Eclipse refactoring tools. Circular menu with gestures for refactoring: direction indicative of refactoring - up is pull up, down is push down. Refactoring cues view to remove the menu/wizard interaction for refactoring. Contact Emerson to try it out and make his adviser happy.
I presented on Jazz, with a focus on the process component of which I am a team member.
Don't run screaming from the room with the mention of process or governance with respect to software development. The Jazz Platform is process-neutral. Jazz itself has no built in process enforcing what is done for any particular occasion. One of the mandates of our team is to allow Jazz users to explore, define and adapt their process for use for their team and project. This is what I demonstrated with some simple examples.
Overall an excellent use of a Monday evening!
Wednesday, December 12, 2007
EclipseCon 2008 program
After many emails, phone calls and meetings the EclipseCon 2008 program committee has set the program for the conference.
The Committer and Contributor category has as great line up with 3 tutorials, 4 long talks and 5 short talks: check it out.
As well, we are planning to get a Hackfest together for committers.
I turned down my own short talk but I really only submitted it to start discussion on the idea. I still plan to organize a "running" BOF to get out for some exercise and have some great conversations with other EclipseCon attendees. Similar to JAX jogging.
Start reading and planning so you can attend EclipseCon.
Sunday, December 9, 2007
Race Archive
A collection of all my race related links and reports.
Good to read when I need some inspiration to get out the door :-)
Race tag for this blog: here
Good to read when I need some inspiration to get out the door :-)
Race tag for this blog: here
2007 Races
- February 24th: Hagg Lake 50km
- April 7th: Vernonia Half Marathon: Report
- April 29th: Eugene Marathon: Report
- June 17 : Tigard Balloon Festival 5km: Report
- June 23-24th: Pacing Ronda at WS100: Report
- July 28th: Pacific Crest Trail 50km: Report
- August 18th: Where's Waldo 100km: Report
- September 8th: McKenzie River 50km: Report
- September 15-16th: Pacing Stacey at AC100: Report
- November 4th: Autumn Leaves 50km: Report
- February 3th: Zena Road Run 5 km (6:14 pace) : Report
- February 23th: Hagg Lake 25 km (9:39 pace) : Report
- March 8th: Champoeg 10 km (6:23 pace) : Report
- April 21th: Boston Marathon (8:48 pace) : Report
- June 20,21 : Pacing Ronda at BigHorn 100 Miler : Report
- July 4th: Foot Traffic Flat Half (6:33 pace) : Report
- July 26th: PCT 50 miler (11:40 pace) : Report
- Aug 22, 23rd: Hood To Coast Relay : Report
- Sept 6th: McKenzie River 50km (8:50 pace) : Report
- September 19th: IBM 5km (6:12 pace) : Report
- Oct 5th: Portland Marathon 5 miler (6:25 pace) : Report
- Oct 19th: Run Like Hell 5km (6:44 pace) : Report
- Nov 7th: Richard's Run For Life 5km (5:59 pace) : Report
- Nov 27th: Give n' Gobble 5km (6:08 pace) : Report
- Dec 7th: California International Marathon (7:24 pace) : Report
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Let It Snow
For the last couple of days we have been getting a light dusting of snow here in Portland, Oregon.
My son Cole has been very excited about the possibility of school cancellations...he will just have to keep hoping :-)
We were lucky enough to get out for a nice 2 hour run in the falling snow (no accumulation) this morning as a prelude to "watching" the Western States 100 lottery hosted at Dave and Lynn's. Unfortunately no one from the lottery party was lucky enough to get their name drawn this year (there was only a 16% chance). 23 people from Oregon did get in so we have lots of people to cheer for.
A number of the people from the party are resetting their sights on the Big Horn 100.
I am still strictly a "spectator" with no plans to run a 100 miler next season. I am still pondering what I will race in 2008...we shall have to see.
After the party, Trisha, the kids and I hit the Hot Pot City restaurant to meet up with Jared and Michelle for lunch. Nice price for all you can eat, good food and a fun different atmosphere. The kids loved having to mix up and cook their own food in the hot pot right at the table. Recommend it!
My son Cole has been very excited about the possibility of school cancellations...he will just have to keep hoping :-)
We were lucky enough to get out for a nice 2 hour run in the falling snow (no accumulation) this morning as a prelude to "watching" the Western States 100 lottery hosted at Dave and Lynn's. Unfortunately no one from the lottery party was lucky enough to get their name drawn this year (there was only a 16% chance). 23 people from Oregon did get in so we have lots of people to cheer for.
A number of the people from the party are resetting their sights on the Big Horn 100.
I am still strictly a "spectator" with no plans to run a 100 miler next season. I am still pondering what I will race in 2008...we shall have to see.
After the party, Trisha, the kids and I hit the Hot Pot City restaurant to meet up with Jared and Michelle for lunch. Nice price for all you can eat, good food and a fun different atmosphere. The kids loved having to mix up and cook their own food in the hot pot right at the table. Recommend it!
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