Wednesday, September 9, 2009

2nd Thoughts? 2009 Tri Season Recap

I did my first Olympic tri on August 16th - the Pleasant Prairie (WI) Triathlon. My goal was 3 hours - my time 3:03. Not bad but not setting any records either. The best part about the race was my 10 year old daughter Gia did the kids tri the day before my race. She was very excited to finish in about 22 minutes - almost 10 minutes better than last year! I also did the North Shore Century- a 100 (actual 105 according to my GPS) mile ride from Evanston to Kenosha and back. Since it was about 80 miles longer than my longest ride of the year, the last 10 to 15 miles were brutal. It wasn't a race but a good time - I'd recommend it to anyone interested in biking. They have different distances from 25 to 100 miles. It's a great way to end the season. Triathlon training is pretty tough to schedule around a full time job and family. I may reconsider next year or even take up golf. We'll see....

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Play Guitar

I originally started this as thoughts on triathlon training but that is starting to get boring and tedious to read so I am now adding some other random thoughts. About a year ago, my wife was buying my 10-year old daughter Gia a guitar to start her lessons. I thought it may be fun to learn something with my daughter. Our schedules are not that compatible, she is much busier that I am, so I started lessons at about the same time at the Old Town School of Folk Music. This summer, the school offered a kid/parent class which we are really enjoying. I never had any desire or intention to learn guitar but I am thoroughly enjoying the experience and certainly appreciate music much more, especially the Beetles and Grateful Dead who I never had any use for prior to this. Surprisingly, it's also a great stress reliever and very fun. I am finding that the activities I enjoy most are ones where I learn or improve at something. Right now they are triathlon, skiing and occasionally golf or guitar. Like any other hobby, especially one you pick up later in life, you have to dedicate a fair amount of time to improve. I am giving it six months to see if it makes the cut.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Results are in. 2 years training = Same time

Unfortunately, I will not make the climb at Mt. Rainier. Fortunately, I am too busy to take the time off. The good news is that I was able to participate in the Harbor Lights Triathlon in Waukegan on the 19th of July. It was my first race of the season and the first Tri I ever raced last year. www.harborlightstriathlon.com/. My time this year was only 1 minute better than last year. Not much of an improvement for all of the training I've done but it is better than having a worse time.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Climb Rainier? Training Detour Alert

My Tri training this year is making progress though very slowly and has taken a very unexpected twist. I have now committed to climbing Mt. Rainier in Washington State this July! It's 14,411 feet which is about 600 feet higher than the last climb I did - the Grand Teton in Jackson Hole, WY. That was a beautiful, fun, two-day climb that included about 9 pitches of technical rock climbing. Mt. Rainier is more of a long hike over snow and glaciers. Should be interesting. An orthopaedic surgeon friend of mine and one of his patients has organized the trip as a fund raiser for Orthopaedic Research at Rush Hospital. One of them is climbing Everest right now! You can check out his progress at http://www.goldenexpedition.org/. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mt_Ranier. I will keep you posted on the training progress!

Sunday, February 1, 2009

Why Tri is addicting. The 2009 Tri Season

This year is my second triathlon season. I decided to get my training off to an early start but apparently the economy or the Tri-gods are conspiring against me. I started weekly swim training at my club when the pool was promptly closed for indefinite emergency repairs. Of course I could make other arrangements but I will probably just wait until it reopens. Instead I am taking a weekly running class on the track trying to improve my speed. I've found that there is a big difference from jogging, which is apparently what I used to do when I ran, and trying to run faster. The track workouts are extremely difficult but very fun and rewarding. I'd highly recommend a structured program. On the bike I typically do not start to ride until May when the weather is better. So I am trying to fit in a couple of spin classes every week. We'll see if that helps my biking this spring. Otherwise this year my goal is to do an Olympic distance race. I'll still try a few of the shorter sprint distances for training but it is time to kick it up a notch. Once ski season is over I should have enough time to train more this season and hopefully do better in the results. One thing is for sure, the training is a great relief from the current economic climate. Now is a great time to set your goals for the season or the year. But beware. Tri training is a part-time job and fairly addicting.