4/30/2009

Atomic Man Duathlon 2009, a race report

Atomic man duathalon, 2009.

Last Sunday was the Atomic Man duathlon in nearby white rock. Just like last year I got up buttocks early and hopped on the Big Dummy loaded with road bike and gear and cruised the 9 miles down to the race start. This year I got up extra early as I had not picked up my race packet yet. I awoke to completely allergy clogged sinuses at 5:30 am and snorked and wheezed my way through some espresso, bananas and oatmeal before leaving the house at something like 6:20. 37 minutes of riding mostly downhill in the cool, yet not frigid morning got me to the race site at 7am.

I got my package, got suited up, got the bike off the dummy into the rack, warmed up a bit. I also ran into my buddy Ryan from Albuquerque. He was came up to the race with a firend of his with the sole purpose of riding the 100 miles or so back to Albuquerque in an attempt to finish a big loop that he and Chad were thwarted at a few weeks back, read the excellent tale in two parts one and two. Amusingly Ryan was caught by the race photogs, unamusingly Ryan rode off with his friends car keys and ended up having to chill out in Santa Fe to give him his keys back and he did not finish the loop again. Bummer. Next time, dude!
Ryan on his super fantastic Boulder Bicycles Randonee bike:
Ryan riding back to Albuquerque!


Anyhow, I got to the start line and joked around with the familiar faces I see once a year at this race.

Staying loose

Stretched a bit, and then we were off
Stretchy stretchy

As usual the race started with a long down hill stretch. i got a fast start and hoped to put alot of time on people around me before I fade due to no training. This usually works pretty well, but this year I have run less than 20 miles all year, so it was not too successful. Also it took at least 5 minutes of running to finally clear my sinuses from the allergies. When the run started going up, lots of people passed me. I chugged through the race, feeling not so great, and finished the first run in 12 place. Got through the transition without sitting down. cyclocrossed onto the bike and started riding.

I was pretty sore to start and got rolling slowly, but soon I settled into a rhythm and started picking off riders. It was decently windy and pretty tough going on the rolling course. Not much else to say. I tried hard, but did not have good sensations. I think I passed two people who passed me in the transition almost immediately and then picked off three more on the out bound leg, and then passed two more on the way back toward the end of the bike leg. I had been chasing two people in front of me forever, but gaining little ground, but using an extreme aeo tuck and my mass advantage i gained ground on a couple long fast downhills, while resting. Just at the end of the ride one guy passed me with full on aero kt with carbon disk everything, I thought it was a car coming up behind me it was so loud. Using maths, I think I stood in 8th overall at this point. Not too great, but better than 12.

me bike
Me on the bike

Literally in the first 1/4 mile of the first run, I passed carbon guy and then the two guys I passed on the second half of the bike passed me. And that was it. I was pushing it a bit as I did not want to loose some more placings at the end of the run like last year, but in reality, there was no one near me. My pal Gustavo finished a minute ahead of me and the next person behind me was 45 seconds. I held on for 9th overall. I did not feel too terrible on the second run, I was not particularly fast, but it was OK. I could feel that I would be really really sore, but other than that, no biggie.

me finish
Finish

Turns out I was second in the 35-40 age group, scoring me a sweet pint glass with the race log on it. With a shirt, good awards, nice raffle stuff and a running hat given to those who fill out a survey, good post race pizza and snacks, this race is pretty fun to go to.

award
Getting my rewards


Photos courtesy of Pet Pangea

After the race and awards, I saddled up the BD and spun on up the hill to home. It took me twice as long to get back, but it was an enjoyable long day. Elena made me a great sammich when I got home and then I napped for a couple hours. Perfect!

Now the stats

My splits were:

18:14 run (12th fastest) - 1:12 transition - 27:39 bike (9th fastest) - 1:01 transition - 19:48 run (17th Fastest) Total time: 1:07:52 9th place overall.

In 2008 it was:
17:30 run (10th fastest)- 1:15 transition - 26:18 bike (fifth fastest)-1:07 transition- 18:49 (10th fastest). Total time: 1:04:57 for 7th overall

in 2007 it was:
00:17:06 run (6th) 00:27:05 bike plus both transitons (7th) 00:19:21 run (7th) Total Time: 1:03:33 fifth overall.

Disturbingly, just using trends, I can predict that I will finish in 11th place in a time of 1:13:50 next year. In reality, I hope this is not the case. I think the lack of running made me suffer so badly in the first run that it carried over into the bike, harming that time. The second run was kind of silly as no one was near me after the first bit. I might have been faster with some competition, but it is not really relevant as the competition was nowhere near me, or they just did not show up...

My post race summary from 2007 was:
Maybe next year I will break an hour with a bit more running training, some lace locks for the shoes and some aerobars it should be pretty easy... unless i get old.

The post race summary last year was:
The short version of this years report was that I got old and I neglected to get lace locks or aerobars.

This year the summary is:
I successfully have continued to get older. No training is not a path to success, this year was slow enough that I cautiously predict that I can do better next year with a modicum of training. I also predict I will age again next year...I will not make any lacelock/aerobar plans.


2008 atomic man duathlon race report
2007 atomic man duathlon race report

Thanks for reading my typically long race report, As a bonus for those who still are reading, I provide a race report from 1991 inspired by a photo that my pal from HS greg R sent me via the facebook recently:
Ocean Grove Biathlon 1991, From right to left, Greg, his brother mark, and a oddly skinny version of me
1991 Ocean Grove NJ Biathlon

So the summer after my senior year of HS I did a couple of run-swim biathlons (as they were called then, none of that duathlon crap). These races were on the Jersey Shore not far from where I grew up. The first was the Belmar run-swim-run, which I recall as being a 1/2 mile dry sand run, 1/2 mile ocean swim, 1/2 mile packed sand run. It was a chaotic first run in really dry soft sand. I was an aerobic monster at the time with some pretty fast track running under my belt. I went into the water in third place, just behind the leaders, got passed by something like 50 people on the long long rough open ocean swim. I think little kids passed me. I blame the cool nike aquasox I inadvisably wore for the race. They are not so much fun to swim in. But I was pretty freaked out by having to go around the jetties in a pretty choppy ocean. I did not die, and then passed 25 people back on the 1/2 mile run. Scary scary dark ocean, I was a good swimmer, but not ready for a long open ocean swim.
For the Ocean Grove race I was a bit trepidatious, but looking forward to it as it had a 2 mile run followed by a 1/2 mile swim, and then a short 50 yards or so of beach running back to the finish line at the boardwalk. The run started in Ocean Grove, on the boardwalk and headed to Asbury Park, turned around at the convention hall and then back to ocean grove. It was pancake flat. I figured I could do the run in about 10:30. I think it took my 11:30 or 11:45, I was really disappointed in how slow I ran at the time. I would pretty much kill for 5:45 miles now.... Anyway, I went into the water in second place not too far behind first. I did the swim, concentrating on not getting freaked out by the open ocean and to keep paddling. We went around a buoy and came back. The swim was more like 1/4 mile, if that. Got passed by one guy in the water and finished third overall. I think I got a trophy that may be sitting on the dresser in my parents house in NJ.

Take a good look at that picture above. Do you see it?
Cans of gatorade! The future ain't got nothing on the past.
The end.

4/24/2009

Look Ma, I am flying


Made a quick trip to Amarillo this week and got to fly for about 15 minutes.

Hit some sights:




ate some grubs:


The rest of the photos here,
including takeoff and landing videos and lots of great aerial photos of the New Mexico and Texas

4/22/2009

Cat blanket

Osmium with the Wink256 blanket:

4/20/2009

One more day

First there was this:



And then this:


So the next day (4/18/2009) there was one more (last?) day of this:



More here

4/17/2009

Schrader Dorknuts!



Man, ain't technology grand!

4/15/2009

Fact: Nebraska has Pelicans

One of the things I learned on the trip last week is that there are pelicans in Nebraska. I learned this by seeing them. Otherwise I would have thought that I was being BS'd. They were all over the wetlands along 80 in middle Nebraska. Apparently they are just passing through, but there were sure a lot of them. Thanks to google, I learned that they probably breed in South Dakota. I also saw herds of wild turkeys on the sides of the highway, groups of more than 10 in some places.

4/13/2009

Needs Serif



I think they probably could have broken out a Serif font for this one, Colorado roadsign stylebook be damned. Photo taken, uh, one mile from Illiff.
If you geek out about stuff like this, the NYT had a nice article on road sign fontage a couple years back.

4/10/2009

Link

on.


Out and about. Blogging shall resume shortly.

4/04/2009

Good omen for the Garage Sale season

Garage sale season is a fair weather sport in these parts, but despite the high winds, subfreezing temperatures and flurries, the first few garage sales of the year happened today. The first two were useless, but the third was a treasure trove. On the first visit, we got this for 10 bucks:

click the picture to go over to an annotated photo on flickr. But yes, there are two etch-a-sketches, two viewmaster viewers and a whole bunch of books that I had as a kid. It was great. When Elena and I were going through the booty after we returned we realized there were more books that we probably wanted and the price was right and it was only two blocks away. So after a couple of breakfast burritos we walked back down there and bought 15 more books and this treasure:


this may have come with a plane as well, but it was well populated with little people and there even was one piece of luggage for the luggage cart. The rotors on the helicopter work and the radar still rotates mostly:


Now we bought all this for Aida, but she is a bit young for most of it, but she already took a liking to some of the delicious new books:


After talking with the sellers we learned they had kids born about 5 years after Elena and I, hence the similarity in what they were selling and what we had/wanted as a child. It turned out they had the very much coveted Fisher Price Barn, garage and some other sets that were not for sale waiting for grandchildren's visits. Can't win them all, but we did pretty darn well today...