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View Full Version : Ironman Coeur d'Alene - The Report (LONG)



colby
06-28-2010, 09:37 PM
NOTE: Picture heavy, because we all love pictures!! (They are probably the same ones from my Ghost-Twitterer, but I haven't gone back and checked) And really long. But so is an Ironman. ;)

As most of you know, this was my third consecutive Ironman Coeur d'Alene. In 2008, I suffered tummy issues and hip problems, but went on to finish in around 16 hours. The water was about 56 degrees, but the weather turned out to be decent. I was a zombie afterward. In 2009, I wanted to just improve on the previous year, and had a really good time. The water was right around 60, it was windy, and the rain came in in the afternoon. I finished in 15:25. In 2010, I continued my goal of wanting to finish in the daylight (around 14:30). Mother nature had other plans.

I have had a terrible work schedule for the last 6 months. It didn't matter in the first couple of months of training, because it's all building. I would swim when I could, but not get all the swims in. I would do more than the minimum bike, and the maximum prescribed run. April rolled around and I continued with the bike and did well running, but not so much swimming. I began to notice a very different level of fitness - training for Ironman was different than last year, and completely different than the year before. I acquired an "it's just what we do" mentality. We Just Train. We Just Swim. We Just Ride. We Just Run. We Are Iron. ;) I tried not to take it for granted, but I really had a feeling I could execute on a plan and succeed even if I did not make a major improvement from last year - but I wanted to improve as much as possible, especially on the run. I wanted to run at least 20 miles, and really thought I could. Again, Mother nature.....

You check in to the (Sunday) Ironman on Thursday or Friday. I had planned on a Last Chance Wetsuit Excursion, to re-examine and talk to vendors about sizing, but I didn't actually get to that until Saturday (I knew I could wear my other suit, worst case). I just checked in and went back to work. You get strapped with a wristband that you can't take off until you're done (and you are sad to part with, disturbingly). You get a chip strap, a sling bag, your numbers, bags, and chip. Friday, I stayed clear of Ironman-land, but was sure to eat early and get to bed early.

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-band-13458_1141690158990_1729530.jpg

Saturday, I got up early, prepped all of my stuff, and bagged it up. You basically get a set of stickers and bag your stuff, generally except your nutrition, though I opted to include everything I could other than my bike bottles. Despite making a list and checking it twice like Santa, I forgot my towel. I had tested and planned on wearing my Zoot Ultra tri shorts and top with Zoot tri bra underneath (and my HRM). On top of that, I planned on wearing my She Loves Hills jersey and pirate arm warmers. I fuel with hammer gels, endurolytes (though I did not get to test them extensively so I am not right on the dosing for heat), and Accelerade on the bike, and just gels on the run (with gatorade if it's warm).

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-bags-36124_1142605581875_1729530.jpg

We went down to Ironman-land before the US v. Ghana game went into extra time, so I missed the end. ;) Had to be there by 3pm. I could have gone down earlier, but by then there's a certain amount of "6 months of training is more affected negatively at this point than positively by rash decisions" that comes into play. I dropped off Lucy and my two bags, and wished them all well.

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-lucy-34114_1142605861882_1729530.jpg

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-T1bags-35809_1142606021886_17295.jpg

After that, I asked people about wetsuits, where the extra sizing was, etc, and ended up with a 2XU size medium mid-range suit. It fits much better than my blue seventy but not as well as my Zoot Fuzion. Took a swim in it in the lake, it was windy and choppy, but not as bad as last year. I got dinner fixins (smoked salmon pesto tortellini) and went home and ate early, then went to bed around 8. I didn't actually fall asleep at 8, but I know from experience that I should at least TRY to go to bed early and sleep as much as I can. A 4:30 wake-up actually means I wake up at 3... 3:30.... 3:45.... 4.... 4:05.... :p

I ate a Luna bar and banana for breakfast round 1, and lots of water. I have trouble eating the morning of a race. I know I didn't input enough calories, but my nervous stomach always gets the best of me and I just can't put in more food than I do 5 or 6 days of 7. We headed down and missed the 5:30AM traffic cutoff, but it wasn't a huge deal. I find I'd rather not wait around for 90 minutes anyway. My husband parked the car while I dropped off my towel and bike bottles. I met up with 2 others of my Iron Crew and got body marked, and we hung out for a bit. I had another banana and more water. I had to pee, but held off for the ceremonial wetsuit adornment and water entrance. ;) At this point, we knew it would be warm - I was standing around in my tri top and comfortable, not freezing.

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-before-36944_1143283958834_17295.jpg

After that, I put on more sunblock (more on this later), my wetsuit, and the required slathering of bodyglide on the neck. I made my way down to the swim entrance. It's always so hard to find the entrance, the beach is long and narrow so you actually start far away from the buoy line unless you're uber-competitive and get down there early. There's only a couple of mats and not enough volunteers to point you the right way. That'd have to be one of my ONLY complaints.

If you've never seen an Ironman mass swim start, it's... an adventure. A cannon goes off and so do 2500 people. I usually hang back and let everyone fight over the entrance, then swim over them. The water was about 60 or so, warm, and it wasn't hardly windy. The first loop I swam over a lot of people. The second loop things always even out and you have more room. Sighting was good, until we turned into the sun, and NOBODY could see buoys - there were people holding conversations and not swimming. I just followed feet until I could see them. On the return of the first loop, despite my lack of swim training, I knew I would finish unless something went wrong. It's Just What We Do. Then I got a big cramp in my calf, which has never happened to me before. Weird? Just keep swimming, just keep swimming. You get out of the water and back in after the first loop. The wind had picked up so it was more choppy, but nowhere NEAR last year or even Saturday.

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-swim-26703_1143286038886_1729530.jpg

Saw the time - 1:38. I was surprised, I did not expect to improve here. Had I got more swim training, I think I could best 1:30 easily. On to the bike - in transition, I was a little disoriented but the volunteers were of course helpful trying to figure out what came first. They ask questions that you kind of answer and mostly set your stuff out and offer you advice like "put on your pants before your shoes." ;) Packed my gels into my jersey, did not put on arm warmers (another sign of the warmth to come). I had put on sunblock before the wetsuit and I am pretty sure someone slathered some on me here, too.

The bike course is hilly, and there are windy sections, but since I am local I train on parts of the course and in the wind very regularly. I have not trained in the heat very regularly. I know those of you from hotter climates are thinking "80s? that's pleasant!" but we've had only a few days over 70 and this is one of the first well over 80. Most of our spring/training time has been in the 50s and 60s with clouds. The sun and temperature were a surprise. It was at about mile 30 that I realised the best plan was to be conservative (I think this is the point at which I went pee, too). I went up the hills super easy at a super low heart rate (humorously low) and kept the heart rate consistent on flats. I knew what I saved here I would spend on the run, because it was so hot, and I could not afford to dehydrate early. I had a feeling from my training that this would be the case - that my cycling fitness was at a point where it was not about making the distance, but how hard I make the distance. The bike course is also 2 loops, which is cool because you get to pass through the populated near-transition area 4 times. Energizing. Then a little lonely. I passed a lot of people, which is always encouraging. Bike wranglers take your bike from you so you just head to transition, where another helpful person takes your stuff out and again teaches you how to get dressed. Some people COMPLETELY undress each time, but I am too lazy for that and just took off my extra PI shorts and changed my socks. I put on my Five Fingers and sunglasses, and had them slather me with sunblock.

So, on to the run.... this was rough. I would find out not long after this what part of my problem was, as I began to see the sunburn on my arms emerge. It was very red. You can see my first mile was on target and felt AWESOME, then I hit the sun, and switched to run/walk. I ran until I felt too hot to run, then walked. I took off my jersey at mile 4 and carried it - by then it was soaked from ice, sponges, and water that I had poured at every station. At that point, I had them slather MORE sunblock on me. This run/walk continued for about 10 miles, then the sun started to go down, and holy cow did that make a difference. I was able to run entire miles and just walk aid stations. You start your second loop at mile 14, which is the point where I was able to put my jersey back on and not feel like walking furnace woman.

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-run2-34374_1143287478922_1729530.jpg

The sun was still hot, and the sunburn was more evident, which is why my running miles got down to 12+ minute miles. Sigh.... all that running focus spent on a hot day. I was disappointed, but honestly I felt so good everywhere else that I knew in better conditions I would have ROCKED it, at least to the point where you can't really rock it, you just kind of pebble it. My feet were tired at mile 20 (always are), and at mile 23-24 the mere flexing of my quads hurt the sunburn on my legs - an awesome sensation. I pulled my pant legs up as best I could, but ended up doing a fair amount of walking at this point (as you can see). I got my stupid glowing band at mile 25. Dang! So close to finishing without the glowing band. ;)

The finish is downhill and because of the nice weather there were a LOT of people there. It was pretty awesome. I saw a couple of people from work and my Iron Crew. I actually got tears in my eyes rounding the corner - you may only experience your first Ironman once, but every single Ironman is a victory for a different reason. For me, I think this one was about turning the page permanently from the person I used to be - unhealthy, overweight, and unhappy. The first year I had it in my head it was a fluke - anyone could train for an Ironman. The second year was about proving I really could do it. This year was about proving that I was this person. I may not win, but I have the fitness, and it really is Just What We Do. It's honestly really difficult not to flash back to your running steps, your first triathlon, the years that have passed, all of the training you've done, all of the people supporting you... and it is an emotional moment. As I got closer to the finish line, I wanted to be smiling, not crying, so I sucked it up, pumped some fists and high fived everyone in the bleachers that I could. And guess what..... "Nicole Pauls of Liberty Lake, Washington.......... you are an Ironman!!!!" :D It makes me smile and tear up at the same time. They escort you through the finish chute and ask if you are okay about 20 times, you pick your t-shirt (WOMENS SIZES NOW HOORAY), get your medal, they take off your chip, take your finisher picture, and point you to the food, medical tent, and massage.

Sadly, I do not have a finish line picture yet as everyone was a little busy. ;) But here's a couple post finish-line pictures of me and my husband and his awesome sign (and my pizza plate), and my close friend's daughter who knows me as Auntie Colby. She insisted on being held as soon as she saw me, and then bit off part of each one of my chips. Privilege of being almost 2. Mile 140.7 - food and hugs.

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-sign-37403_138643292814261_10000.jpg

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-anna-26711_138642932814297_10000.jpg

I didn't take a picture of the hat and t-shirt, I'll have to do that. Here's the medal, and my unofficial medal - a very red bike sunburn on my thighs (that you can feel through my Zoot tights and my pants) and arms (which everyone cringes when they see and matches the aero position nicely).

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-medal-37295_1143296199140_172953.jpg

http://i59.photobucket.com/albums/g287/colby-digital/IM-sunburn-30462_1143289118963_1729.jpg

Finish time was 15:12. I feel really good today - I can feel where the cramp on the swim was, but no ankle/calf pain otherwise, just the expected stiffness. I enjoyed the best sleep followed by the best breakfast and the best shower ever. Went down today and got a finisher's polo shirt and got one of the bike jerseys for my Italy trip in the fall. Not to mention a couple of beer coozies for my Iron team. Recovery so far has been tights, one of those vibrating massagers, and not sitting around all day.

I will be back in 2011 (barring anything unforeseen) to avenge my daylight finish. Honestly, my stretch goal is sub-14. I am pretty confident I can shave up to 30 off the bike and 60 off the run, depending on conditions. I can probably shave another 10 off my swim, too. Yes, I know how crazy that sounds. I would settle for anything around 14:30.

salsabike
06-28-2010, 09:58 PM
Colby, that is a wonderful race report (as always). I am not a gusher. But I would like to say that I have such respect for you, and so enjoy who you are--- as much as anyone can glean from an online-only acquaintanceship, anyway. You are the Rock of Gibraltar and just so...real. Congratulations to you!

Veronica
06-29-2010, 03:38 AM
Woohoo Colby! What a day!

Yeah, 80s do sound mighty pleasant, but it's all in what you're use to.

That swim start just freaks me out. All those people... In 8 tris I have yet to get kicked or punched in the swim. But it seems like it would be inevitable with that many people.

Yay Colby! You are a fit a chick, you're an Iron Chick for goodness sake - 3 times!

Veronica

PS I hope "chick" doesn't offend... Iron Woman, sounds weird to me. :D

OakLeaf
06-29-2010, 04:00 AM
Great report, Colby, and fantastic race. You are truly Iron!

Hope that sunburn heals quick.

Tri Girl
06-29-2010, 04:40 AM
Colby- YOU ARE AN IRON-STUD!!!

I'm so impressed with anyone who does more than one IM. ;)

Great RR (as always). Loved all the pictures (I could even stand to see some more). I was looking forward to this all week. I'm glad you had a good race (you're getting better every year), and sorry about that dang sunburn. OUCH!
Next year we'll see you in the 14's. I can't wait!!


Congrats!! :D

divingbiker
06-29-2010, 05:07 AM
I loved reading this. Congratulations! And sorry about the sunburn.

sfa
06-29-2010, 05:19 AM
Wow. I'm always impressed by people who finish Ironmans (Ironmen?), but to maintain that kind of fitness and improve on it every year while also having a real life just impresses the hell out of me. Congratulations on your strong finish! I hope your sunburn doesn't peel.

Sarah

jobob
06-29-2010, 05:52 AM
Wow. That's incredible. My helmet's off to you! :cool:

roadie gal
06-29-2010, 05:58 AM
What a great race report. Congrats on the race! I can completely relate to the heat beating you down. But you did it! Yay!

Susan Otcenas
06-29-2010, 06:31 AM
Great race report Colby!!! You are so inspiring. I especially admire the mental toughness it must take to stick with it mile and after mile, even when hot, tired and sunburned. You are one tough woman!

Congratulations!!!

kacie tri-ing
06-29-2010, 06:43 AM
That was really awesome! Seriously, I was crying into my oatmeal :-)

I am probably going to read it a few more times. Heat is tough, and I am so impressed that you were STILL able to take down your time through the heat!

I love the part about "this is what we do." Sometimes I wonder why I do these things, and sometimes your answer is the best one. Because it's what we do.

Thanks for taking the time to share.

zoom-zoom
06-29-2010, 07:08 AM
If it's possible to be 100% awesome and 100% crazy, you IM folks are just that! Such an amazing accomplishment...and to have done 3...wow!

Take care of that sunburn...owie. Enjoy your well-deserved rest. You are such an inspiration!

GLC1968
06-29-2010, 08:19 AM
Colby - thank you so much for sharing such a wonderful report. I'm sitting here fighting back tears at my desk! Really, really amazing.

You are truly an inspiration. Congratulations on a job VERY well done! :)

colby
06-29-2010, 09:02 AM
Sorry for the tearjerker there, ladies, I didn't mean to do that but as you recount the day it really is a part of the journey. :o I wanted so badly to finish in the daylight, but honestly I have found sunburns and hot weather hurt me in sprint distance triathlons let alone the Ironman. ;) What I learned about myself and my training was invaluable.

In my day job, I work with a group of software engineers as their product manager, looking at the high level issues like "what do customers need (and how do we build it)" and answering day to day questions on behalf of the customer (like "should I put a big ugly button in front of their face?" "no" "is it acceptable that they have to jump through 8 hoops to get this working?" "no"). I have to stay big picture and focus on the moment at the same time. Some people seem to be wired for this, some aren't - I think a lot of us in our respective day jobs are this way (maybe not as directly). When we train or race, as when we build software, we go out with a plan. Then you adapt your plan, because inevitably you did not account for everything - and when we race we actually cannot account for everything. You can't predict the wind or the weather (accurately anyway). You can't predict flat tires. You can't predict what other people do. It is in our ability to adapt and accept the changing conditions that we dig deep and find ourselves athletes (even "athletes" as some of us have a hard time describing ourselves without air quotes), not just in the literal things like "getting faster". Every single triathlete has that ability - Ironman and super-sprint alike - to find inside themselves.

Prepare for changing conditions, expect them, even welcome them. You will see plenty of people who can't - they quit, hurt themselves (there is a guy in the hospital that stopped breathing a few times yesterday), or suffer a miserable recovery. Maybe I'm just rationalising not being fast, but honestly, I feel so much more of a victory this year NOT being fast because of all of the factors I had to consider. Yeah, I'll run the numbers, and I'll wallow a bit, it's natural.

Next year: I will try to fit more swim workouts in and adjust my schedule around earlier mornings. I will try to bike more hills/the course a couple of times before the race again. I will continue to run distance in my Five Fingers so my feet continue to adapt, and try to continue my running improvement through the marathon (4:00? 4:15?). I will try to train in varying conditions, but I can't really control that. :)

Thank you all for your kind words and support during training and even now that I raced. As I have more pictures from other people that took them I will be sure to share!!

colby
06-29-2010, 09:11 AM
For some technical details:

Glad I packed what I did. I pack light, but smart - I don't want to make a lot of decisions, but I want to be able to deal with conditions. I packed arm warmers, though I did not use them - it was a toss up, but I was already warm (though maybe arm COOLERS would have been smart :p).

Change of socks in each transition, every year I do change of socks, I love change of socks. It feels so good.

Sunglasses on the run, this is the first time I ran with sunglasses, it made a big difference to my comfort level but they are all splotchy after a while from the squeezing of sponges over my head.

On the bike I shot water into my helmet, boy did that feel good. I wore my coolmax helmet liner, which I always wear, and it does help move sweat off my head so I feel hot but not suppressed.

My heart monitor gave up on measuring heart rate so I actually had to stop it between the swim and the bike (actually after the bike already started). I used my bike computer to measure time and watch when to eat. Learn when to eat. I eat every 15 minutes starting at 30 minutes - gel, Accelerade, gel, Accelerade, repeat. Water at EVERY aid station and pee when you have to, not 3 aid stations down the road like I do, it always makes you feel more comfortable.

I don't use special needs, I still don't know what I'd put in there. I stick with a plan and execute. I could see not carrying all your nutrition and putting it there, but it seems like for the 5 minutes or so I waste in special needs picking it up, I could just suck it up and carry it. Some people use it for stuff that helps them if they are bonking on the bike or hurting on the run, but I didn't expect those problems.

My first blister-free Ironman/marathon!!!! Blisters really ruin your day. Learn to avoid them. Love your feet. HUGE difference here.

I'll put up more thoughts if I have them...

Susan Otcenas
06-29-2010, 09:25 AM
My first blister-free Ironman/marathon!!!! Blisters really ruin your day. Learn to avoid them. Love your feet. HUGE difference here.


Curious to know how you avoided them. < It's extremely rare for me to get blisters when running. But I think my feet swelled a little on the bike, and I ended up with four doozies by the end of the half marathon. > Did your feet swell at all on the bike or run? Or did you feel like your shoes fit you the same way they always do? Did you do anything different to your feet (baby powder or anything like that) as a preventative? Especially since you like me had almost no opportunity to train in heat this year, how did you deal with your feet being so much warmer than on your training runs?

Red Rock
06-29-2010, 10:28 AM
Congratulations Colby. You were awsome. I loved your write up. Since Ironman St. George, your pictures and descriptions gave an insight as to what and how you as a participant actually deal with your bags and equipment. I could not figure out how this was all done by watching as a spectator IM came through town. I did not know that you had completed three of these. That is a major accomplishment in and of itself. You go girl!

rocknrollgirl
06-29-2010, 11:21 AM
I am inspired! You are awesome.

colby
06-29-2010, 11:32 AM
Curious to know how you avoided them. < It's extremely rare for me to get blisters when running. But I think my feet swelled a little on the bike, and I ended up with four doozies by the end of the half marathon. > Did your feet swell at all on the bike or run? Or did you feel like your shoes fit you the same way they always do? Did you do anything different to your feet (baby powder or anything like that) as a preventative? Especially since you like me had almost no opportunity to train in heat this year, how did you deal with your feet being so much warmer than on your training runs?

Last year I think I escaped with only a few blisters when I was wearing regular shoes, though the weather was admittedly cooler. The first year I swear I could barely walk. For me, the injinji socks do make a big difference, as I tend to get blisters between my big toe and second toe on the pad of my foot, and underneath my big toe in the same spot. Putting fabric there rather than letting my feet rub did help. Also, I have in the past put bodyglide on my feet where my feet tend to rub - I have also had blisters in the arch of my foot and on the outside of my feet where they rub my shoes, and that has helped.

I was actually surprised to NOT have blisters wearing my Five Fingers. For as much as I love them, not all of my training runs have been blister or hot-spot free (alas, they are not miracles ;)). One of the things I have been doing after reading "Fixing Your Feet" as OakLeaf recommended was to soften the callouses that have developed on my feet by putting a nice foot lotion on them before bed and before putting on socks as often as I remember (and especially as callouses start to develop). The worst blisters I have gotten were always near callouses and tough skin, or were blisters THEN became callouses and tough skin. The week before Ironman, I did not wear any sandals or bare feet, always socks, which kept my feet from drying out.

My Five Fingers are black, and the pavement was hot. I had hoped to wear the other pair I bought which were white and I might be able to go bare foot in, but I couldn't risk breaking them in so close to Ironman. My feet did definitely swell more than they had in training, and I noticed they had already done so on the bike. I felt them increase a bit on the run at first, too. Last year it was cooler, but I felt the same thing - my feet swelled more than they usually do on the bike, and then by the time I got to the run I had to be careful about tying my shoes. I do NOT use yankz or xtenex laces on my shoes during Ironman, they are not forgiving enough for the amount my feet change - I've even had trouble during hot Olympic distance races feeling constrained.

So, I think part of it is learning to soften callouses, toe socks got me a long way, the nature of the separated toes, and some carefully placed bodyglide in T2. Also, I have had to be very careful to replace shoes when it's time in advance of Ironman, because I start to blister when shoes are over-worn (dunno how that will work with Five Fingers, we'll find out).

ETA: I do not like the hot feet feeling, which I had on at least one long run training day, too, when we had a rare hot day (basically the only other hot day until this last weekend). Running in the gravel/dirt alongside the trails during Ironman (when available) did also help me not feel so hot, but that's not always an option. Cooling off the rest of my body also helped. I think maybe a hat and being able to put a sponge inside of it might have felt good, but I don't like to wear hats when running.

There was a guy in the paper today that described that his feet were so full of blisters he could barely walk. Yikes!! I would bet his feet swelled more than he expected, too.

Veronica
06-29-2010, 04:53 PM
What kind of lotion are you putting on your feet?

I always get blisters doing a HIM. I also always lose my second to biggest toenail on my right foot- even going up a 1/2 a shoe size. Right now that toe is nail less. Fortunately it doesn't hurt - except when I do yoga. :rolleyes: (Child's pose)

Veronica

kelownagirl
06-29-2010, 04:56 PM
Wow, you did an IM in Vibrams!!!

GREAT race report - I enjoyed reading and I saw you cross the finish line too! (I was watching online at the time and Rachel pointed out you were wearing the jersey she designed.)

Thanks for sharing - love the pics.

Desert Tortoise
06-29-2010, 06:30 PM
Colby, that was fantastic! Thank you for sharing it and bringing some insight into what an ironman is about. You had me glued to the story, thinking this is so cool. And then the picture of you holding the poster with the 3 ironmans in podium. I have to admit, I teared up. I thought, here is this young woman who had to work her training around her job. Unlike pros whose job is to train, you made it work with the time you had. And 3 of them to boot, you rock!

colby
06-29-2010, 11:28 PM
What kind of lotion are you putting on your feet?

I always get blisters doing a HIM. I also always lose my second to biggest toenail on my right foot- even going up a 1/2 a shoe size. Right now that toe is nail less. Fortunately it doesn't hurt - except when I do yoga. :rolleyes: (Child's pose)

Veronica

Foot lotion - just something my mother in law bought me for Christmas in a happy feet kit (after I trashed my toenails in a marathon Thanksgiving weekend ;)) that I happened to have around... though I think I have some nice stuff that I bought earlier that I need to dig up. The stuff she got me is something called Earth Therapeutics Tea Tree Oil Foot Balm, with Aloe Vera and Chamomile. It does take a few days to work in, but if I am consistent with it (and occasionally having to dig out the file to file the callouses), it softens them nicely and they stay happy.

I have lost the second toenail a couple times - both mine have grown back so thick and weirdly shaped now that they will be hard to lose, but even in the right sized shoes I had trouble. Even now sometimes in the Five Fingers I clearly rub on the top of my second toe on my left foot and have blisters or tough skin there.

sgf726
06-30-2010, 08:56 AM
Congrats! Awesome race report - I'm inspired!

colby
06-30-2010, 02:51 PM
Pictures!

http://www.asiorders.com/view_user_event.asp?EVENTID=59941&BIB=2185

Personally my favorite is passing the guy to the right of me on the bike. Excuse me sir, coming through. Sorry to ruin your photo. ;) I also like the running picture and the top finishing picture, and of course the "finisher" background one. I will probably get 4 5x7s and put them in my Ironman frame that I bought in 2008 - I will be putting all my medals and different pictures from each year in it.

They were cheering for us in the one shot where I have my arms overhead in my wetsuit. Everyone was walking, I was jogging around people. It looks pretty funny in pictures. In a wetsuit you always think you are moving fast, but really you are waddling. :p

Tri Girl
06-30-2010, 03:41 PM
GREAT pictures, Colby!!! I actually love the one of you passing the guy on the hill. Sorry for him, but the background is stunning! What a tough hill- it's up there! ;)

Alex
07-05-2010, 09:31 PM
Thanks for the report, Colby! I had fun following you on Twitter and the Athlete Tracker on race day. You are amazing! "It's just what we do" indeed!

I have the same wetsuit you bought. I am selling mine as it does not fit. I tried some other brands and, hey, who knew? Water doesn't have to come in the neck and slosh around inside when you swim...

Sorry to hear about the sunburn. Moeben sleeves might be worth looking into. Someone in another thread suggested wetting them down and I tried that last week on a very hot run. Oooh, so very nice! I wear them all the time when I bike, if I am not wearing a long sleeved Boure SPF jersey.

colby
07-05-2010, 10:07 PM
Thanks for the report, Colby! I had fun following you on Twitter and the Athlete Tracker on race day. You are amazing! "It's just what we do" indeed!

I have the same wetsuit you bought. I am selling mine as it does not fit. I tried some other brands and, hey, who knew? Water doesn't have to come in the neck and slosh around inside when you swim...

Sorry to hear about the sunburn. Moeben sleeves might be worth looking into. Someone in another thread suggested wetting them down and I tried that last week on a very hot run. Oooh, so very nice! I wear them all the time when I bike, if I am not wearing a long sleeved Boure SPF jersey.

I am "pretty satisfied" with the fit of the 2XU, but will only wear it for cold temperature swims so that's good enough - it is definitely better than my old full sleeve suit. If someone could make a suit that fits me well, I would absolutely buy a higher end suit, but I just can't justify $500 on something that doesn't fit. I found it humorous that someone (Zoot, I think?) advertises their "16 sizes" - and 12 of them (or was it 10) are mens. Apparently women don't come in short and tall, just one size, but men need a variety. :p

I will have to try the sleeves. It looks like this weekend will be hot, and I am doing a sprint tri. I would rather not suffer, even if it is only for 3 miles. ;)

I guess since I'm here, I'll post about recovery... I don't know if it was the way I raced (conservatively), the Zoot tights (which I basically wore for 2 days straight and for evenings for 2 more days), or some combination thereof, but I actually felt pretty good most of the week. The first 2 days are definitely the worst, as you'd expect. Yesterday I rode for an hour, the first 40 minutes were awesome, the last 20 were torture. My rib cage to my hips were just locking up tight, and my shoulders started to hurt. My hips felt tight when I got ON the bike, so the ride felt really good, up to the point my body said no more cycling, thanks. I ran today, a little over 3 miles, and I started to get that same feeling creeping in but it held off. Amazingly for all my hip problems 1-2 years ago on my right, my left side is more sore than my right - probably because of the cramp I got at mile 1.2 of 140.6. I consider it that a huge victory.

All in all, I might not have had the race I wanted, but I cannot be disappointed. Some races you race, some races you learn - this one was definitely in the "learn" column.

KnottedYet
07-06-2010, 05:24 AM
COLBY! How come I only just now saw this?!?!

Congratulations! Wow, your race report made me tear up, too.

Good job! You rock!