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colby
06-23-2008, 03:21 PM
Hi Ladies! Thanks so much for your words of encouragement, not just this weekend, but the whole time. I didn't get a chance to check in, but I knew you ladies would be there for me. For the weekend, my husband and I stayed with a friend just north of the course, to be a little closer and so I didn't have to drive myself.

The entire experience was a little surreal. I didn't expect to chase cutoffs, but I knew I'd be relatively slow.

I waited to check-in as long as possible to avoid "are you ready? are you excited? are you are you are you?" questions at work - I didn't know they give you an armband, but now I'm glad I waited until Friday afternoon, nobody asked about my band until my friend's baby shower, where I actually told a few people from work and we talked a little about it. Check-in was a very "I'm really doing to do this" sort of moment. I took a picture of me with my band that I wanted to post for you guys, but didn't get the chance. ;) I also bought a neoprene cap just in case the water was too chilly for comfort (no booties though). I went to the Mandatory Meeting on Friday night, which helped change "gears" from work to IM mode.

For Ironman Coeur d'Alene, everything is spread across the city park, right on the lake. It's a great view, and while I've been there, rode through there, watched the fireworks there, stayed in the resort, I have a new respect for it, that's for sure.

Saturday was bike check-in and gear drop-off. I wanted to swim in the lake, too, to see if I needed to scrounge the booties or something. We packed everything into the car, since we were staying with a friend - all the bags, my food, bike, clothes, you name it... boy it takes a lot of gear to be Iron. I left everything food-wise off my bike, knowing I'd have access the next day, but did pack my swim to bike and bike to run bags and drop those off. Put on my wetsuit for a swim in the lake... bbbbrrrrr! I don't like how the Neoprene cap cuts me off from the world noise-wise, but it does help as an insulating layer. I wore my Nemo cap (http://www.headcovers.com/11286/tyr-fish-fins-junior-silicone-swim-cap/) and got a lot of attention (we took some good pictures of that, too). ;) After the swim, we took it easy for the rest of the day. Mixed up the goop, ate some pasta for dinner early and headed to bed (I was falling asleep anyway, since I spent the week trying to go to bed early).

Weather was predicting t-storms and rain overnight, and a perfect 70-some degrees and some clouds on Sunday. We didn't get a lot of sunny training days, but at least it wasn't the 85 degrees from a few days ago!

I can recall for you every 30 minutes between 2:00 AM and 4:30 AM. I slept well, but lightly. Got up, ate two bowls of cereal with bananas (same cereal I'd eaten for countless rides/runs before), and got dressed to go. They wanted people in transition by 5:45, and we were there probably right around then. Put all the food on my bike, and got marked. Put my wetsuit on and got to the beach around 6:45. Since the lake was so high, the beach was actually cut off, and people were spread for a loooooooong way. I was going to dip my toes in beforehand, and now I know to do it much earlier. Before I knew it, the starting gun went off. I held back for a few seconds to let people go in front of me, then plodded in. Wow, what an experience! So many people to run over, so many chances to get off course. I swam about as fast as I expected to, all things considered - I could have been faster, and my second lap probably was. Cold temps, crowded, adrenaline, eh. The swim is two loops. Kind of nice, kind of a bummer. Would almost be nicer if they made it a triangle or something. Water temp was officially 59.5 degrees - a few higher than they expected.

For swim to bike transition I didn't really care about time, hence my 13 minutes of stuff. The wetsuit pullers did a great job of yanking off my suit, and I grabbed my stuff to head to the tent. Everyone is super helpful. They took the stuff out of my bag, made sure I was okay, and gave it to me in a certain order. Some ladies were changing all of their clothes top to bottom, but I didn't really feel like that was necessary - I guess it might be more comfortable to put on completely dry clothes for the bike (or run). After my transition, I saw my husband with a sign that said "Go Nicole and Lucy" - he snapped a great picture of the look on my face when I spotted him. ;)

And we're off on our bikes... whew, it's a long course (duh). I did well on my nutrition, eating just about every 15 minutes. I felt good, but at the end, I was done being on my bike. The CdA bike course is hilly, I passed a lot of people uphill who had more guts than I did going downhill or more oomph on the flats. Again, the course is two loops, and I'm not really sure how I feel about it. I did feel better on recovery on the second loop, but the hills felt bigger ;) Some of them go on and on... bah! At about mile 90-100, I knew I would finish. The worst was behind me, I had finished the swim in about 1:40 and the bike in about 7 hours so I had extra time for the run that I didn't think I'd need. Lucy did great - I saw people with flats and various problems, glad that wasn't us!

Bike to run transition was fairly uneventful, but looking back, I knew something was up as soon as I sat down after the bike. My tummy felt just "okay" but not "right." I sat for a minute and they gave me a cool paper towel to wipe off my face. I did change my socks into dry ones even though I thought I would be okay. I left on my bike jersey, since it was fairly comfortable. Packed some gels in the back and headed out. Stopped for a pit stop where they put more sunblock on me while I waited in line. Now here's where we get to find out why my marathon was 7 hours... ;)

I started the run feeling okay. My plan was to run 5 minutes, walk 2, until I could run 10, walk 2, or run aid station to aid station and walk through them. The run is really relatively flat, except for one big hill at the turnaround and some minor ones inbetween. Again, two loops. After the first couple of walk 5 run 2s, I felt not quite right in the tummy. I didn't feel like I was going to get sick, but my digestive system was ready to push everything out. I hit up the porta potties at the next 3 or 4 aid stations, walking inbetween. Eventually emptied the entire contents of everything. (Sorry, I know that's TMI, but ... it happens? ;)). I was hoping to get to the point where I could run after all that stuff was out of my system, but it just didn't happen. I'd start running, feel like my stomach was cramping, and go back to walking. Those first few miles I felt like if I kept running, I would pass out and it would all be over - better to walk and finish than to push and not. Walk walk walkkkkk, walk walkk, walk. Bah! I was so frustrated, but so determined to finish. I wanted to run a 5 hour marathon, and I really think I could have - my muscles had it in them, but my gut did not.

But... I FINISHED! YES! I ran/jogged the last quarter mile and crossed that gosh darn finish line an IRON WOMAN! Hooray! :D :D :D Too bad they didn't have any size small t-shirts left though.

The spectators for this race are seriously awesome. The race is well supported, there are a TON of people, not just on the "iron team" but locals as well, that stand out there for hours and cheer people on. It's amazing the difference such support makes. There were still tons of people there to cheer on us late finishers... and I even got to "break the tape" ;)

My pictures aren't very stellar, I like the bike ones the best. My husband insisted on buying them, i guess he's a super Iron Spouse. He also bought the digitals, I guess so he could do something clever and share them with family - that should mean I can upload them for you to see, too.

Since I had such a crappy run, I signed up for next year. Yes, that sentence would only make sense if you were absolutely crazy. I plan on losing some weight (I actually gained weight training for this one, but I think I gained a lot of muscle and didn't lose enough fat), focusing more on switching up my nutrition and thoroughly testing, and including more longer bricks after my long rides to help find bugs in the system.

A guy at work signed up, too, we'll see... he can run a 3:30 marathon, but has no cycling background. I'm concerned the bike course will defeat him and he underestimates the difficulty. We'll see.

And congratulations mommelisa, I hope you had a better day than I... :)

Veronica
06-23-2008, 03:32 PM
I wondered what had happened when I saw your run time. I figured something must have been wrong. But YOU FINISHED! What determination!

V.

HillSlugger
06-23-2008, 03:54 PM
Congrats. I am in awe!

crazycanuck
06-23-2008, 04:10 PM
Great job colby!!! ANyone that does an IM or 1/2 is coolio in my books!

Treat yourself right for the next few days & smile :).

Wahine
06-23-2008, 04:13 PM
Yay Colby!!!!! You it!! I remember your Iron dream when you first mentioned it. That is so cool that now you've made it real. Congratulations.

Kimmyt
06-23-2008, 04:32 PM
Congratulations Ironwoman!

spindizzy
06-23-2008, 04:54 PM
Amazing journey, Colby. I don't know how you iron women do it! Congrats!

btchance
06-23-2008, 05:06 PM
Great job - I always love seeing how you guys do. And best of luck for next year!!

emily_in_nc
06-23-2008, 05:08 PM
Congratulations! Your accomplishment is steller, time be damned! You are an ironwoman!!!!!

HIP HIP HOORAY!!!! :D :) :p

Emily

IronSnoopy
06-23-2008, 05:36 PM
Awesome report. I love your Nemo cap, it made me laugh out loud when I clicked on the link. :D

Congratulations on finishing! That's a long day, lots of emotions, lots of time to think, but you DID IT!!!

YAY!

And then signed up again. :)

Congrats!!!

teigyr
06-24-2008, 02:09 AM
I like the Nemo cap but you must have a small head :D:D:D Wasn't it childs sizes only?

I think you did an awesome job. I can't even comprehend everything an IM entails and your persistence was inspiring. Do you have days off so you can recover?

You know...I sometimes think I would love to do one. I honestly would. Finishing would be the most awesome thing in the world. I think "swim 2.5 miles? Um...I can't even really proficiently swim .25 so that's a problem". And then "I can ride 112 miles!" onto "I'm doing a marathon in Oct so yeah, I could do that" and then I put it all together and think "yeah but &*^% I don't think I'm doing it all in the same day!!!"

You IM folk are incredible. I think you joined a very distinguished group :D

Running Mommy
06-24-2008, 05:13 AM
I'm sorry I missed the finish on IMlive.com, but I was looking for you.
SOOO happy for you! It's such a surreal thing to run down that finish chute huh?
Sorry about the tummy woes. Oh do I remember those from 07. OY!

Rest up well, and remember that IM recovery takes time. So don't push yourself to get training to quickly.
CONGRATS again!

Denise

hermitclub
06-24-2008, 05:37 AM
Colby, you are truly an inspiration!

KSH
06-24-2008, 06:02 AM
Colby... GREAT JOB!!!!!

Your race is very similar to what mine will be. So I really enjoyed reading it. Sure it's great is someone finishes in 12 hours, but that won't be me. I can relate to someone who finishes in 15-17 hours!

Sounds like you had a great swim and bike. Solid. Also sounds like the run would have been great had your tummy been OK. At least you weren't vomiting the whole way. You weren't, were you? I know my cousing vomited from mile 80-140.6 at IMAZ this year.

I think the true Iron-spirit is when you keep going, even though you want to stop... your body says "no more". You could have stopped, but you kept walking and walking. It wasn't how you envisioned your race, but you didn't let the change in plans keep you from your goal.

Great job Colby! How very exciting for you! That's cool that you signed up for IM #2 next year! :)

jobob
06-24-2008, 06:23 AM
Wow. That is amazing. :cool:

OakLeaf
06-24-2008, 07:07 AM
Way to go Colby!!!! You are IRON!

colby
06-24-2008, 05:29 PM
I like the Nemo cap but you must have a small head :D:D:D Wasn't it childs sizes only?

Actually, it's more junior/adult sized, not just kids sized (the back of the package says "junior/adult" or "child/adult" or something). The first time I put it on over my neoprene cap it was tough, but after that, it wasn't bad at all. I think it's really only a little smaller than my normal caps, which is okay, I don't have a huge noggin.


I think you did an awesome job. I can't even comprehend everything an IM entails and your persistence was inspiring. Do you have days off so you can recover?

You know...I sometimes think I would love to do one. I honestly would. Finishing would be the most awesome thing in the world. I think "swim 2.5 miles? Um...I can't even really proficiently swim .25 so that's a problem". And then "I can ride 112 miles!" onto "I'm doing a marathon in Oct so yeah, I could do that" and then I put it all together and think "yeah but &*^% I don't think I'm doing it all in the same day!!!"

I took yesterday off from work entirely, and will be taking it easy this week. I'm lucky that I don't have to travel to race, and I have a flexible work environment where they are all in awe that I even made it out alive and are telling me I should go home and rest. ;)

I have a chiro appointment and torture massage tomorrow, which will hopefully pull my hip and shoulder back into line - the other pain (quads/back) is temporary, the hip/shoulder are longer-standing injuries that I really have to work around.

I feel amazingly well - sore, but functional. I think that means my training was a success and I tempered myself well. :)

I found myself thinking the same thing about Ironman... that didn't last very long. ;) Fortunately for me, the swim doesn't scare me, and that seems to be what scares most people away. For me, it was really the bike. Yeah, I can bike 112 miles, but if I took too long, it would hose my marathon, and I didn't want to be backed so far into a corner that I couldn't finish. I'm really glad I pulled off a stronger bike than I expected - I really wasn't backed in the corner and walked "comfortable" 16 minute miles to the finish line. It all counts!

colby
06-24-2008, 05:45 PM
Colby... GREAT JOB!!!!!

Your race is very similar to what mine will be. So I really enjoyed reading it. Sure it's great is someone finishes in 12 hours, but that won't be me. I can relate to someone who finishes in 15-17 hours!

Sounds like you had a great swim and bike. Solid. Also sounds like the run would have been great had your tummy been OK. At least you weren't vomiting the whole way. You weren't, were you? I know my cousing vomited from mile 80-140.6 at IMAZ this year.

I was just about on what I expected for the swim, and ahead of my pessimistic bike guess. I felt like I had the run in me, but my stomach disagreed.

No, it wasn't vomiting... that would have sucked :( (though one guy told me he heard a pro speak and her advice was "puke and start over" :eek:). For me, it felt more like the flu. I felt stomach cramps, I had to go to the bathroom immediately if I started running (walking was the cure :p), and until my system was emptied about 4 aid stations down the line, I felt a little light headed. After that, I didn't dare put anything I'd been putting in in again, and switched to pretzels, gatorade, and water. It actually worked well, and I ran some downhills where I could.


I think the true Iron-spirit is when you keep going, even though you want to stop... your body says "no more". You could have stopped, but you kept walking and walking. It wasn't how you envisioned your race, but you didn't let the change in plans keep you from your goal.

Great job Colby! How very exciting for you! That's cool that you signed up for IM #2 next year! :)

I made the best of it. I knew I had time to walk if I had to, and I knew there would always be a next time if I wanted to do it again. Needless to say, I decided after the race that I wanted to try again.. finish before dark - shave 1-2 hours off my time. ;)

That feeling on the bike when I was coming down on my second loop, mile 100 to 110, knowing my bike time was around 7 hours and I was going to finish... that's what kept me going - I nearly cried on my bike when I knew in my heart I'd be Iron Colby by the end of the day. I conquered the bike - my biggest fear - and a mass start open water swim that I'd never done before. The marathon was the easy part - I had bought myself enough time that I could walk and make it. I guess I didn't cry at the end because I'd already matter of factly stated that I WAS going to finish. :)

Ironman days aren't all made of rainbows and butterflies. Stick with your plan, but be willing to do what's necessary to keep yourself safe if something goes wrong. The drive to finish was so much stronger than I thought it would be, and I'm glad I amazingly bought myself enough time to not put myself in a position where I had to choose between hurting myself or DNF - I still think Denise is Iron for making that call.

colby
06-24-2008, 05:52 PM
I'm sorry I missed the finish on IMlive.com, but I was looking for you.
SOOO happy for you! It's such a surreal thing to run down that finish chute huh?
Sorry about the tummy woes. Oh do I remember those from 07. OY!

Rest up well, and remember that IM recovery takes time. So don't push yourself to get training to quickly.
CONGRATS again!

Denise

Thanks for keeping an eye out for me, even if you missed it. :) Surreal is certainly the word. My husband bought the official pictures and we laughed out loud at the one they took of me after they give you your tshirt, medal, and blanket. I look like a zombie. "I'm done. Thanks. Take my picture and point me to the parking lot." Even my finish line picture says "no more please, 140.6 was enough."

I'm going to be trying to get my legs under me this week, but my next scheduled deal isn't until August, and it's just a sprint, then probably back to marathon training for November, maybe some other sprints or olympic distance stuff if I can find them. I do have a kayaking vacation 4th of July weekend, though, and that could be interesting. ;)

colby
06-25-2008, 09:20 AM
My husband put up some pictures:
http://smg.photobucket.com/albums/v186/karlp/ironman/

Kimmyt
06-25-2008, 09:53 AM
Hey colby, i LOVE the photos of the Nemo cap! It really does look like a Nemo swimmin in some of them!

Also, question re: the swim. I watched the vid, was there a lap and then you had to get out or walk between the next lap? I saw what looked like people in wetsuits getting back in the water and I'm confused...

K.

KSH
06-25-2008, 02:17 PM
Ironman days aren't all made of rainbows and butterflies. Stick with your plan, but be willing to do what's necessary to keep yourself safe if something goes wrong. The drive to finish was so much stronger than I thought it would be, and I'm glad I amazingly bought myself enough time to not put myself in a position where I had to choose between hurting myself or DNF - I still think Denise is Iron for making that call.

HA! That's the truth. No rainbows over here. Just a lot of miserable headwinds to ride in.

Health comes first.... but one has to decide if what is happening is pain or suffering. Pain = injury = stop. Suffering = discomfort = misery = suck it up buttercup and keep going.

Great pictures! The swim cap is so cool and easy to spot!

Tri Girl
06-25-2008, 04:02 PM
Yeah, Colby!!!! Congrats Ironman!!!!
I was out of town, but was thinking about you and hoping that your race went well. I'm sooooo glad to hear that everything worked out!! I'm so proud of you for finishing strong despite tummy trouble- AND for signing up for next year. You go girl!!!! :D

colby
06-25-2008, 05:08 PM
Hey colby, i LOVE the photos of the Nemo cap! It really does look like a Nemo swimmin in some of them!

Also, question re: the swim. I watched the vid, was there a lap and then you had to get out or walk between the next lap? I saw what looked like people in wetsuits getting back in the water and I'm confused...

K.

I had lots of comments about Nemo... one lady told me her niece is learning to swim and if she gets nervous she says "Just keep swimming" - the lovely aunt wanted to buy her one so she enjoys it even more. ;)

Yep yep, two loops. The course was a rectangle - you go out for about half a mile, turn a buoy, turn another buoy a little way down, then back for half a mile. Get out of the water, cross a mat, get back in, do it again.

jesvetmed
06-25-2008, 10:32 PM
Since I had such a crappy run
:(How awful! But you still kept going. Way to go -- you ROCK! Congratulations. Oh, and I do love the cap!

colby
06-26-2008, 05:07 PM
Official pictures... including Orca Colby in wetsuit (should have painted some white spots on it and wore an Orca whale swim cap).

http://www.asiorders.com/go.asp?33943949

atlrunnergirl
06-26-2008, 06:38 PM
You are so my hero!!!

kacie tri-ing
06-27-2008, 07:24 AM
I am so impressed!!! It is fantastic that you made it the whole way! I have been quietly reading along, and I think it is great! I love that you already signed up for next year! What a spirit!!

KnottedYet
06-27-2008, 05:24 PM
Yay, Colby!!!!

Tri Girl
06-28-2008, 06:06 AM
I think all your pictures are great (the professional and the ones from DH). You look GREAT- and not anything like a beached whale (although I think the same thing in my wetsuit :rolleyes:). Congrats on a great race- you should display all those pictures with great pride!!!