Friday, May 30, 2014

Tri4aHandUp partners Xterra having wetsuit sale - Speedsuit + lava pants + vortex sleeveless #Triathlon #swimming

Our great www.Tri4aHandUp.com partner, Xterra wetsuits, is having a sale!

Choose Velocity M Speedsuit + Lava Pants + Meshbag for $225
Vortex Sleeveless + Transition Backpack for $169

Sale ends June 3.

Use code "C-STPM" at checkout to get the sale price.

Check out the deals below and hit www.xterrawetsuits.com and use code "C-STPM" at checkout to get the best price!  Also remember that Xterra will donate 7 percent of all sales with the code to Tri4aHandUp charities!  We don't keep a dime!





Thanks for the support!

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

IRONMAN TEXAS 2014 RACE RECAP - 5/17/14

Sometimes you don't know where the edge is until you cross it and it's too late to come back.

After a stellar swim and an acceptable bike ride, I found myself with 9 hours to complete the 26.2 mile run to get in under 17 hours and only needing to complete the run in 6.5 hours to better my Ironman Lake Tahoe time at the 2014 Ironman Texas triathlon... but like a dumbass, I got greedy and put all my training and racing blunders of the day front and center.

It was reminiscent of Mother Nature pissing her pants-suit...


What if I had trained more focused on my bike rides?  What if I completed more of my scheduled long rides instead of cutting them short?

What if I had accounted for the time lost going from part time to full time work and dropped the stuff that truly didn't matter in the grand scheme to focus more on training properly?

What if I would have drank enough water and not as much sports drink on the bike and run start?

What if I would have not been aggressive with walking every other aid station to start the run?

What if I would have made myself throw up the crap I had in my stomach and started over with lost of water?

There are a lot of what if's for that Saturday.  What's not a what-if is the fact I turned in my 2nd DNF of my triathlon life.  Ironman Kansas 70.3 in 2011 was for mechanical reasons and Ironman Texas was for physical reasons.

At mile 13ish on the run, I was light headed, thrown up once and from my abdomen to my quads cramped up in so much pain that I can only think that maybe that's what child birth is like for women... ok maybe a 10th of that pain, but I was hurting.  I could not physically get up off the sidewalk to keep walking and ended up in an ambulance to the med tent for IV zofran for nausea and IV fluids for good old fashion dehydration.

Lets take it from the top...

After traveling Thursday and Friday the week before, and then traveling to Tulsa, OK, for a work conference from Monday to Wednesday before IMTX, I loaded up and took off right after dinner on Wednesday and pulled an all nighter to drive to Houston.  That wasn't a smart move.  I rolled in at 5am Thursday morning and used my hotel room for 6 hours before I had to check out and head to athlete check in.

It was the finest moment, but I had little choice and in retrospect I would have stopped somewhere around 11 to catch some z's before finishing the trip.  It would have kept me on a better sleep pattern, not necessarily got me more net sleep.

Meeting my Ride to Give teammates was great!

I met Melissa and Dave from Ride to Give.  Dave was racing for Xavier and Melissa was racing for Team Mallorie.  I was racing for Ironhearts and kind of picked up IMTX on a whim, which I never thought I'd ever race a spring Ironman.

We hit the practice swim on Friday, and I rode with Melissa Thursday.  It was nice to have that added camaraderie, but I was so thrown off by being in a rush to get there from work conference, travel and being tired, I didn't take full advantage of hanging with the team.  It was survival mode most of the time.

The swim was awesome.  2.4 Miles : 1:14:13

That's good for sub 2:00/100 and easily the best IM swim compared to Tahoe, besting by 12 minutes.  It was so great in fact that at the T1 tent, I could feel my fingers and it only took 11 minutes compared to 26 at Tahoe.  What can I say, it went pretty well aside from getting kicked, punched and pulled under and going a little off course.

My only issue is I much prefer the rolling start like Tahoe.  Your time starts when you pass the arch and enter the water instead of a mass water start.  I spent way too much energy trying not to get killed in the first mile and I even started behind the mass of people at the very front.

I was mildly worried that I wasn't getting enough time in the pool, but I was at least maintaining and sort of getting speedier... and with a wetsuit legal swim, it turned out great.

The bike was sufficient.  112 Miles : 6:39:41

After Lake Tahoe, I had no idea what to expect over the rolling 112 of Texas.  Luckily this was easiestly the coolest Texas race by far with highs at maybe 83... so the bike was not a suffer fest like it could have been.  I took a laid back approach, knowing I did not get in rides like I wanted in training and hoping that I was leave enough to get through the run in good shape.

I focused on electrolytes, sports drinks, nutrition and felt pretty good about how I managed that aspect.  I did have to stop 3 times for pee, bananas, back stretching and special needs bag that I'm sure cut into my time, but 6:40 compared to over 8 hours on the bike from Tahoe is hands down the best IM day ever.  Score.

I came into T2 feeling a little tired, and hammy's were screaming a little, but no serious cramping or issues to note as I headed to the changing tent.

I will say this, there was maybe a 15 mph wind on the way back, and being from Kansas I was perfectly ok with that, what sucked was the 40 miles of chip seal roads.  Talk about a momentum killer.  But hey, at 6:40 for a "realistic" IM bike course time, I'll take it.

The run... oh the run... 26.2 Miles : DNF at mile 13.75

So over 8 hours into the race coming out of the tent, I only needed a 6.5 hour marathon to beat Tahoe time and 9 hours to finish before the cutoff.  Why the hell I got so greedy to try and get under 12 or at least under 12.5 is beyond me, in retrospect.

I started walking every other aid station which was probably 1.5 miles or so.  I felt ok, and loaded a hand held water bottle with sodium/potassium mix with sports drink at the tent to take with me.  There I was sipping my drink, grabbing water and bananas at aid stations and thinking I was doing pretty good.  And, I was until I headed on the second loop.

As I passed the changing tent on loop 2, the first bought of cramps hit.  Groin and hammy's.... plenty of time to walk it off and walk the aid station.  I sipped my drink and grabbed a banana half and sports drink to try and get the sodium replaced and potassium on board.

I felt good enough to trot again and went to walk at every aid station.  That was working ok until mile 12ish and it was disaster time.  Mother Nature pissed her pants-suit.

Nausea, dizziness and dry mouth were my nemesis.  I could no longer stomach the thought of anything else going into my gullet.  So I walked.  I walked to mile 13 aid station, yarfed a little in the port-a-potty, laid on the sidewalk while a sweet gal poured cold water on my and regrouped.

I can do this.

Started walking again.

Got more light headed.

Stopped to sit on a bench to get a rock out of my shoe.

Cramps. Groin.  Both quads.

Laid on the sidewalk to stretch out.

Not letting up.

Didn't feel like responding to "are you ok" any more.

Bike riding EMT's on the scene.

"Do you need to wait it out?  Anything we can do?"

No, I can't move.

They called transport to take me to med tent.

I now have a new reason to shave body hair.  When they hook up monitors, they need bare skin, so they shave your chest anyways.  They do NOT shave your shins where they hook up others.  Word to the wise, even if you don't think it will be you, shave.  You will save yourself agony of ripping highly adhesive monitor patches off your skin and your hair with them.  I was left with a happy face shaved into my chest and missing patches of hair on my legs.

That's just one lesson I learned that day after I puked up my socks in the med tent and felt 110 percent better after IV zofran and a bad of fluids.

I also learned my sodium, potassium and electrolyte levels were good, despite the concern I was losing the fight.  My wife and I put our minds together and realized I didn't have enough plain old H2O.

READ:

http://science.howstuffworks.com/science-vs-myth/what-if/what-if-you-drink-saltwater1.htm\

Potential Effects of Drinking Saltwater (or ingesting too much sodium with sports drink / powders or pills)

Have you ever been minding your own business on an elevator when an aggressively perfumed person stepped on? What happened? Did the Lady Stetson/Drakkar Noir stay on the person? Nope, it wafted all over the elevator so that everyone could smell it. That's diffusion in action. This net transport of matter from a region of high concentration to a region of lower concentration is happening all the time.

When it comes to diffusion and saltwater though, human cells have biological membranes, which can prevent salt from freely waltzing into our cells. Although our bodies can normalize sodium and chloride concentrations to an extent, dealing with extremely high concentrations of salt in the blood is challenging. That's because a cell's membrane is semipermeable -- although sodium, chloride and other substances may not be able to easily diffuse in and out of the cell, water can. When the salt concentration is higher on the outside of our cells than on the inside, water moves from the inside to the outside of the cells to correct the imbalance. The attempt to equalize the concentrations of matter on both sides of a semipermeable membrane is called osmosis.

If you're consuming seawater, the results of osmosis are spectacularly disastrous. Remember the salinity of seawater is almost four times that of our bodily fluids. If gone unchecked, the net transfer of water from the inside of your cells to the outside will cause the cells to shrink considerably -- and shrinkage is never good.

Unless you drink a lot of freshwater, the body's regulatory mechanism in this situation is potentially fatal. With seawater, the change in sodium concentration outside our cells is the main culprit. In order to regain an isotonic state, a must for cell survival, the body attempts to eliminate the excess sodium from its extracellular fluids. It secretes urine. However, human kidneys can only produce urine that's slightly less salty than saltwater. So, in order to remove the extreme amount of sodium taken in by saltwater, we urinate more water than we actually drank. And dehydration sets in.

So, if you're guzzling seawater, you actually aren't taking in any water but are incurring a net loss, leading to depleted body fluids, muscle cramps, dry mouth, and yes, thirst.

The body tries to compensate for fluid loss by increasing the heart rate and constricting blood vessels to maintain blood pressure and flow to vital organs. You're also most likely to feel nausea, weakness and even delirium. As you become more dehydrated, the coping mechanism fails. If you still don't drink any water to reverse the effects of excess sodium, the brain and other organs receive less blood, leading to coma, organ failure and eventually death.

Of course, consuming small amounts of saltwater won't kill you. The take home message is clear, though: Salt and water are best consumed separately -- and any salt intake should be accompanied by plenty of freshwater.

So, what's the conclusion?

Do I have a chip on my shoulder for IMTX?  No.  It was my own stupidity that lead to my DNF.  My conditioning should have got me to the finish line.  I left out one simple undeniable requirement, water.

My pride and ego is hurt more than feeling the need to either quite Ironman racing or race Texas again to prove I can do it.  I've already finished Ironman Tahoe and know I can do 140.6.

What I do need to do is weed out the superfluous junk in life to focus on the important stuff in life.

Up until now I had been trying to fit it all in while going from self employed part time to full time at a company.
Family
Friends
Work
Triathlon Training
Writing
Product Reviews
House Chores

It had to give and at mile 13.75, it came to a crashing halt.

The plan has to change.  I wasn't getting it done, being stressed, frustrated and upset that everything seemed half assed.

No more.

The new focus:
Family/Friends
Work
Triathlon training and racing.

This will result in stuff like this recap being a week after the event.  I probably won't be pumping out as much writing content.  Product reviews will probably be few and far between.  The important stuff needs to get handled, I need sleep and all else can wait.

Hopefully all that look to this blog for any pertinent info will understand.  It's not going away, but it won't be nearly as consistent as before.

Safe racing everyone!

Thursday, May 22, 2014

$3 Triathlon Thursday - donate $3 at https://fundrazr.com/campaigns/6b2s7 for charity #IronmanChattanooga #triathlon #Charity

Alright people, it's time to start stepping up the fundraising efforts for Ironman Chattanooga. Starting with $3 for Triathlon Thursday! Hit my fundrazr page - https://fundrazr.com/campaigns/6b2s7 - and donate $3 for Triathlon Thursday.

Help support Ride to Give and Mended Little Hearts as I train for Ironman attempt 2 for the year. As most of you know, I faltered at Ironman Texas and have a renewed sense of focus and cutting out some of the "frivolous" stuff in life that really doesn't matter... no, that's not the wife and kids. ;) I'm spending less time on anything other than family/friends, work and training. Those come first and anything else is a distance 4th. I shorted myself for Texas and it's not going to happen again.

What that also means is I need more support on the fundraising side so I can focus more on training and less on trying to squeeze donations from people. The more you donate, the more I can set myself up for success at Chattanooga! Thanks!

Friday, May 16, 2014

Ironman Texas pre-game thoughts

So, it's here...  Ironman #2 at Texas.

And I'm sort of ready.  I wish I had more time on the bike, but it's too late now.  I do get a reprieve as of right now that the may may be westsuit legal for everyone and the temps may max out around 85 degrees.



I went on a test ride to make sure the bike made the trip ok with fellow Ride to Give'r Melissa.  She's racing Ironman Texas for Ride to Give and Team Mallorie.  Check out her Facebook page and check out what's going on.

It was great weather and rolling hills, I'm eager to get on the course without 8000 feet of climbing, above 60 degree weather, no freezing temps at swim start and exit.

But, I'm pretty sure I've done everything wrong training for this Ironman.
  • I've shorted some long rides.
  • I spent way too much time on treadmills and trainers - barf.
  • I drove through the night to get to Texas after a work conference in Oklahoma.  I crashed for a few hours before check-in Thursday.  But, lets just say I'm not going to be totally rested.
  • I have been traveling a lot for work and it's put a kink in training.
  • Stress has been on large supply.

But, I have:
  • Kept 95% of my planned runs and a lot of long runs have been outdoors.
  • Have the LA Marathon training in my endurance bucket to reley on for lack of bike training.
  • Will rest well Thursday and Friday night.
  • Devised an agressive stragidy to stay hydrated without getting a bloated gut as it will still be pretty warm on race day.

So, I feel confident in finishing barring random mechanical issues or logostics foul up on my part.  I would think as long as I play it smart, I can beat my 14:30ish time from Lake Tahoe.  I would hope so anyways... hopefully I can average more than 14mph on a rolling course.

One thing I have learned is not to focus on a time.  I'm going to finish, and I'm going to run my race the best way for myself.  Focus on the details of having everything fall into place and see what happens with the time.

Wish me luck, and oh ya, feel free to contribute to my fundraising for IM Texas at http://www.active.com/donate/kickstartyourheart/T4AHUIMTX.  I'm $715 to my $1500 goal.  Thanks to all that have contributed thus far!  Maybe donate $14.22 or $1.42 for my bib number, 1422!

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Xterra wetsuit sale on the Vector Pro Blaze wetsuit #Triathlon #wetsuits #Tri4aHandUp

Our great www.Tri4aHandUp.com partner, Xterra wetsuits, is having a sale on limited edition wetsuit coming this summer: Vector Pro Blaze. The Vector Pro Blaze is being offered for $369. These are Limited Edition with only 500 being produced, so order yours by May 20th. Use code "C-STPM" at checkout. Wetsuits will ship by August 1st, and come with a FREE Vector Pro Orange Trucker Cap!

Check out the deals below and hit www.xterrawetsuits.com and use code "C-STPM" at checkout to get the best price!




Thanks for the support!

Monday, May 12, 2014

May 2014 Kansas City Running Races

Saturday, May 17 @ 8 am
Irene B. French Community Center, Merriam, KS


This fun 5K run/walk is part of the Merriam Turkey Creek Festival. The race starts at the Irene B. French Community Center. Participants will receive finisher's medals, a dri-fit shirt, and swag bag. The event benefits the Merriam Parks, Recreation & Community Center Foundation Youth Scholarship Fund. Learn more about the event and register here.
Girls on the Run 5K           
Sunday, May 18 @ 8 am
Corporate Woods, Overland Park, KS

Participate in the Girls on the Run 5K in Corporate Woods to support Girls on the Run whose mission is to educate and prepare girls for a lifetime of self-respect and healthy living. This positive youth development program inspires third through eighth grade girls to stay true to themselves and learn to boldly pursue their dreams. Learn more about the event and register here.
 
Saturday, June 14 @ 8 am
Sporting Park, Kansas City, KS

Celebrate Father's Day at the Kevin Gray 5K! This annual event celebrates the life of Kevin Gray, former President of the Greater Kansas City Sports Commission and Foundation. Kevin was a father, husband, son and leader! The 5K course will take you past the CommunityAmerica Ballpark, Sporting Park, and the Kansas Speedway. Learn more about the event and register here.
 
Saturday, June 20 @ 11 pm
Leawood Justice Center, Leawood, KS

Come out for a fun night run and support the Special Olympics Kansas which is dedicated to empowering individuals with intellectual disabilities to become physically fit, productive and respected members of society through sports competitions, health and nutrition programs and leadership development. The race starts at 11 pm and participants will be given glow bands, Zumba fun, and treats! Learn more about the event and register here.
 
Saturday, June 21 @ 8 am
Corporate Woods, Overland Park, KS

As part of the Jazz in the Woods Festival, the Jazz in the Woods Run includes a 5K and kids' fun run. The event will run through Corporate Woods in Overland Park and your participation will help support four area children's charities - Sunflower House, Operation Breakthrough, Lee Ann Britain Infant Development Center, and Future of Hope - Overland Park South Rotary Club Foundation. Learn more about the event and register here.
 
Saturday, June 21 @ 8 am
CommunityAmerica Ballpark, Kansas City, KS

The SAF-K Spirit Race 5K is a benefit for the Student Athlete Foundation of Kansas (SAF-K), which provides athletic training and medical supervision services for high schools and community leagues and events. The run/walk starts and finishes at the CommunityAmerica Ballpark. Learn more about the event and register here.
 
Sunday, June 22 @ 7:30 am
REI, Overland Park, KS

Join us at the Heroes for Hospice 5K which benefits Kansas City Hospice and Midland Care Hospice of Topeka and Lawrence. Participate to support this cause! Participants will receive an event shirt and awards will be given to the top 3 males and females in each age group. Learn more about the event and register here.
 
Sunday, June 29 @ 8 am
Town Center Plaza, Leawood, KS

With the combined efforts of Jackson County CASA and CASA of Johnson & Wyandotte Counties, the inaugural CASA SuperHero 5K will include the 5K run/walk, kids-caped fun run, family-friendly activities, vendors, costume contests and much more! The CASA SuperHero Run will support both Kansas City-area CASA programs. Learn more about the event and register here.

Friday, May 9, 2014

Ironman Texas, getting close to 1 week til race day! Oh crap...

So Ironman Texas is coming...

And like death and taxes, it's inevitable.

There's so much going on with life in general it's been hard to focus on training for 140.6 miles, let alone a hot day in Texas.  Training has been my stress relief, but it's felt a little hit or miss as far as the whole training plan coming together for a great race day.

On one hand, the temperature have warmed up in Kansas City, allowing more time to train outdoors.  That's been great for running, but biking has been the achilles of this training cycle.  It's just a huge detriment to my schedule to get long rides in and they usually fall into being broken up over several days.  It's been more about survival with bike training.

I did have a great weekend training with Tim at the Ironman 70.3 Kansas course.  We had a little Set The Pace training weekend where we rode all 56 miles, ran some of the course and got some swimming and logistics addressed.  Tim is ready and I was happy to get a long day on the bike.




Someone was watching over me as we pulled in from our 56 mile ride and 50 yards short of the cars BAM!  My rear wheel blew out and I was done.  This was after I burned up a new tire on the trainer a few days before and not adjusting for a new tire depth and frame rubbing, and then replacing with a new tire.  Found a tiny rip in the tire after replacing the tube and having another blow out even before I got the wheel back on the bike.  3 days, two tires and 3 tubes down the tube...



I did avoid a major setback Sunday on a long run with race pace miles at the end.  After the kids went down, I headed out and towards the last mile, the left calf started twinging and by the time I was home, it was achy and painful.  After 2 days off running and stretching, it's back to normal and I'm taking it easy on the run to allow full healing for TX.  Avoided a buillet there!

I swear, training for IM TX is the prime example of how NOT to train for an IM race.  My work schedule has had me traveling a lot, both my wife and I started new jobs in Jan, the kids are in school, family emergency medical issues, stress, distractions, lack of sleep and anxiety about making my fundraising goals are the antithesis of proper training conditions.

The big red flag for me is the Texas heat.  I've proven over and over that when the heat is on, I sweat out a lot of fluid and salt.  I need to be very conciencious during the race to take in plenty of fluids and dance the line between a sloshing gut and adaquate hydration and electrolytes.  That's going to result in slower run times and a long day out there.  I'm prepared for that, but there's just a lot of wild cards for race day that I'm going to have to be ready for.

I'm excited and nervous.  I guess you could say most triathletes are always worried about adaquate training.  I'm I ready?  I know I have not spent enough time on the bike, but I'm hoping to survive the bike with enough hydration and nutrition to get through the run.

It could be worse... I could get this worked up over a haircut.



Bring it on, Texas!

Monday, May 5, 2014

www.Tri4aHandUp.com #GIVEAWAY No. 2 for 2014 Results #Triathlon #charity #PowerCrunch

The second week giveaway results for Power Crunch energy bars.


After tracking the donations, there were 4 entries from 2 people for the drawing for week 2.  Congrats to David D!  We numbered entries per person and drew from Random.org until someone hit 3 times.  Thank you all that entered!



I have your address and will send it out shortly!

Hopefully next week's raffle draws a even more interest.  ;)

 

Friday, May 2, 2014

And that's why you check your wheel stay with a new tire. Power Crunch contest last chance!

So when you replace a tire...

Make sure you adjust your rear wheel stay so if that new tire has a larger sidewall depth, you don't rub the frame, create a hot spot on the tire and ultimately destroy a tire on your trainer.


It starts out with a little thump thump thump... and when you stop to look, it's too late.  It's especially a bunk deal on a trainer since they eat of bike tires.  There was really nothing that I could do.  The tire is toast so I proceeded to finish my trainer ride.  Can't really do anything but change the tire and I didn't want to mess with it until after the ride.

So, let my misfortune be your gain.  Check tire rub on the frame with a new tire!

ALSO, don't miss out on a chance to get a box of Power Crunch!  Visit the raffle HERE and get in!