Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Bloody Nipples - Autsch

Browsing through the Internet and listen to experiences of fellow runners the fissure of a nipple / jogging nipple - or to bring it to the point a bloody nipple - is a common thing which happens to quite a lot of runners. Never happened to me until today and I must confess this really sucks.

I still remember that I was reviewing pictures from the Bottroper Herbstlauf and saw a runner with a bloody shirt. I smiled in relief though I had no idea about the real extend. My pictures from today:



I usually keep an eye on using compression shirts for my longer runs. While those look kind of funny – given that my body has never experienced the torture of a gym – and come with a price tag (skins stuff), I never ever had any issue with those. I tend to use events/finisher shirts only for shorter runs. This is the rule. There are always exceptions to rules: Today I wore the Tetraeder Treppenlauf Finisher Shirt (fantastic event which is on my list for 2015 again and the T-shirt is fine – no complain here). There should be no more exceptions – ever ;)!



Beside this I had a fantastic run today, which brought me back to the start location of the Bottroper Herbstlauf and on the top of Halde Haniel




Perfect start in the day, which brought some money in for die Arche e.V via runvember and brought me close to finish the "Bring back the Boom" Strava challenge. 



Sore but happy J!

Thursday, November 13, 2014

First impressions of the Altra Olympus

I’m using quite different shoes from various brands. I’m following the trend to having more minimalistic shoes and zero-drop. Not because this is a popular trend, but because it seems to make sense.
At the same time, I acknowledge, that running frequently long distances in the urban environment, could have a negative impact on my body. Up to now there are no issues, but with increasing the mileage this could easily changes.

The first time I saw some Hooka shoes, which come with extreme cushioning, in real life I was amused. Thinking process started and yes this extra cushioning made sense to me.

So zero drop is fine, but I want to have some good cushioning for longer distances as well.
As of today I was running minimalistic shoes (Five Fingers Komodo Sport LS, Asics Lyte)  for shorter distances and form drills, while I have found a good fit into Mizuno Wave Rider for longer distances. The latter are wide enough for my Hallux valgus and provide some good level of cushioning. At the same time those are not zero drop (14mm).

Before I actually get hands on a Hooka shoe, my attention has been drawn by a different brand - altra shoes. Besides having shoes with just extreme cushioning, they also embrace zero drop and advertise a wide toe box, which should come in handy for my feed. I got exited. Then I got frustrated,  as it seemed to be impossible to obtain those shoes in Europe/Germany, without ordering them directly from the US. This got solved in the meantime. I got in touch with Altra and eventually I got hold of the list of first shops, which should be selling Altra shoes in Germany:
As Wat Läuft shop is located close to my hometown, I went there. Nice shop and I got very good sales advise. I ended up with buying the Altra Olympus, which is an extreme cushioned trail shoe.


On my first run, I needed a little while to get used to the high stack - fear of twisting my ankle- , but after a few km I already forgotten this and had no issue anymore. The cushioning is impressive and releases my legs quite a lot. Again on the first kilometers I felt a little detached from the ground, but this is no issue anymore - even not, if I'm switching between different shoes, which I do a lot.

Overall I was so convinced of the shoe, that I decided after only 60 km of running in them, to actually use them for my very first 50km run - My first - little - ultra experience. The race went well and no issues with the shoes.

While trying the shoes in the shop, I recognized that the tongue of the shoes is a little short. I feared that this would become an issue, but it hasn't so far. The tongue is locked properly once the laces are closed.

Only little drawback of the shoes so far is the grip of the soles. Perfectly sufficient for running easy path in forest, but if it gets wet, one can already experience the limits of the grip (e.g. wet wooden planks). I think this will be not sufficient for more technical trails. Looking forward to try the Altra Lone Peak 2.0, which seems to have a more aggressive sole.

To summarize - and take it with care as I only run like 140 km in this shoes: The Altra Olympus is right now my go-to shoes for long distance runs - both on easy trails and on the street. I love them and my feet even more!





Thursday, November 6, 2014

FIrst - little - ultra experience


Whoa - done!

Since a while I kept playing with the thought of running distances beyond a marathon. Definition comes in handy here  - everything beyond the 42.195 km is called ultra. Be it 50 km, in a flat landscape on a well-maintained path, or be it a 100 miles race in the mountains. I love to think in iterations - hence I've chosen the former. The latter can come later. - Or I'm just shitting my pants?;)

Beside being interested in how it would feel to run longer distances, I also have been observing that e.g. half marathon distance became a normal thing to do for me over the cause of time. I still remember the careful planning before running HM distances in the past (no party in the night before, what to eat before and on the run? what to drink? and what to do if things go wrong?). These days is drinking a sip of water and off we go. How cool would it be, to achieve a similar level of easiness for the marathon distance by making it a relatively short run? Not sure if this works - but first step is done.

Beside listening to and reading all those insane - absolutely motivating - reports from the various ultra dudes, visiting the TorTour de Ruhr earlier the year gave me a big push. Tortour de Ruhr is a private race that takes place on a cycle path - Ruhrtalradweg- next to the river Ruhr - all the way from the source to the junction into the bigger Rhine river. Just 230 km. What?! True - they also have shorter distances - down to 100km (Bambini run). I visit the TorTour de Ruhr this year by running from home to the finish line (around 30 km) - watching some of the runners arrive a the finish line and running back 20 km before actually taking the train back. Took quite some times and I made quite some breaks, but it felt fantastic.

I already had a big goal for this running year - Berlin Marathon - but I also wanted to explore longer distances. There is a short Ultra Race - 50 km distance - close to my home, the Jürgen-Liebert-Ultra which is part of the Bottroper Herbstlauf event. Easy to get there for me. Only issue is that it took place just one month after the Berlin Marathon. Would I be recovered?  Hard to say - so I delayed my registration.

Two weeks before the race I decided to register. All set. How would it be?

I picked up my BIB the day before a race so I was super relaxed on the morning. This is the first difference I noticed to the marathons I have run so far - the people are way more relaxed. Though it happened to be the 42. edition pf the event  and hence they also offered a marathon, the majority of the starters where quite relaxed. I started in the last third of the crowd - taking it easy.  Chatting people, greeting each other and loads of hugs, surrounded me . Large Community. Discussion have been so vivid, that everybody was surprised as the gun went off. No comparison to the hectic marathon folks.

I took it easy to not over-pace in the beginning. Still I was a little faster than most of the others which started just in front of me. So I slowly hopped from group to group, which is always nice. Beautiful weather and the coloured autumn forest made it a fantastic experience.

During the first lap I met my father, who made his way into the forest to cheer me - very nice and good motivation!



Around km 22 I arrived in a group in where I met Michael Kiene. He is a experienced runner and we had a very nice conversation, in which he shared his experience. Thanks! During our conversation, we increased the pace a little, but everything was still under control. At km 33 he left me and I was running the remainder of the distance alone.

Everything went fine and I could hold the pace relatively easy. During the last 10 km my brother turned up to cheer me and take some photographs - thanks!

I must confess that the last 5 km where getting a little tougher, but still easier than the Berlin marathon. My calves started firing and I was a little afraid of cramps. Next time I need to take more salt.

Finishing felt awesome and Michael congratulated me right after the finish line. Topping of the day was that I actually made the 2nd place in my age group. Nothing that I was aiming at, but well - this feels nice.

I recovered quickly from the race and looking forward to then next. Maybe Rennsteiglauf?!

Update:
Have a look on strava to see how it went...
 
 

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Berlin Marathon 2014

wow!
Two days after the race and still thrilled from the weekend. Fantastic event!

Getting there & getting settled ...
We arrived a little late on Friday evening in our hostel. The hostel we stayed -Jugengästehaus Hauptbahnhof -  is really close to Berlin Hauptbahnhof and hence to the Start- and Finish area of the Berlin Marathon. Turned out to be a perfect selection. Kids had fun and the hostel is run by nice and friendly people. Extensive breakfast buffet. Perfect.


BIB pickup
I left the family in the hostel to quickly get to Tempelhofer Flughafen in order to pick up my BIB. A little stressful to get there in time, but the aim was to have the whole Saturday for a relaxed Berlin sightseeing event. The whole train station was full of runners with the same destination. I got in touch with a couple from Nürnberg, Germany so we could head together towards the Berlin Vital Messe - located in the Tempelhofer airport.


We had some nice chat on the way, and actually I got a question answered which I had in my head for a long time. Usually the BIB pickup is surrounded by opportunities to buy new gear - including running shoes. Usually I'm in a hurry and quite focused on the race, so buying a new pair of running shoes would be the last thing, I could actually think of in this kind of situation. So would be buying a pair of running shoes at the day of/before the race? Well, the guy from Nürnburg as he had left his shoes at home;)


Tempelhofer Fluhafen is such is a great location. I was amazed of the scale of the running exhibition - I couldn't come up with any brand not being there with it own presence. Fantastic. Given the fact that I arrived 30 min before close of play, I didn't spent to much time there, but it was a fantastic, relaxed and well organized atmosphere. I think I spent less than 5 minutes to pick up my BIB.

Saturday - Berlin as a tourist
On Saturday,  I spent a relaxed day with my family. We walked to the start/finish area to see where we would to go on the race day. Already quite some runners around - scouting and having a loosening-your legs run. I missed this in favor of spending more time with my family - something which I might want to differently in future. During the day, my legs felt more and more stiff - a sign of what going to happen on the race day - more of this later.
We spent some time to visit the typical tourist locations like, Brandenburger Tor, Alexander Platz, Hackescher Markt, ...


Overall a nice trip, which we partly explored per pedes and partly with public transport.



For the first time I visited the east side gallery, which left a deep impression with me and the entire family. It was a perfect location to provide our boy with an insight, how cruel the separation of family&friends actually is and how cruel this has been enforced. I'm sad to see this momentum to fade away in favor of making money buy removing it to build new houses.
East Side Gallery - Each year is represented together with the individuals being killed a the wall per yer (represented as red flower shapes)

East Side Gallery - People floating through a gap in the wall - I watched this live on TV

Where money is to be earned, it will be earned. So monument is fading away in favor of new buildings

We finished the day early with some race preparation and final Italian lunch. Aim was to get to bed early - a challenge on its own ...

The race day
After a night of interrupted sleep (mostly my own nervousness - so no need to blame the family ;)) , I silently picked up my prepared running gear, dressed up an arrived at the breakfast buffet at 6:10.

Quite some marathon runners already have been there. For me, breakfast as such is an unusual thing and requires - specifically that early in the morning - quite some push. I started hydration/eating according plan - everything smooth. Around 7, I returned my key card and slowly walked toward the start area. Starting from the HBF I was part of a huge stream of runners heading to the race. Hydration kept going.

The weather forecast has promised a beautiful day and - hold true. This means it was pretty cold, so arriving at the start area, I located the bag deposit, but kept my stuff with me. Kept hydrating and finish food intake with on final banana. I guess around 8am the first sun rays hit the ground and it was getting warmer. So I changed cloth and deposited my bag in order to head to the starting block. All easy and without any queuing or ambiguity about where to head. Nice.


Listening to my body was less nice - still the legs felt quite stiff. Not good at the race day.
Arriving in the start block there was a nice spectacle to observe. Block E was next to the TV station podium, where they already prepared for moderation of the start. The camera was already mounted and guess what - almost all runners in the relatively empty block gathered in the area which could be covered by the camera ;)

I spent my time with some warm up and some visits to the toilets. Thinks got a little bit worse - actually I had a first, little muscle cramp before the start in one of the toilets - not what I have hoped for at race day. So I decided to carefully monitor it. I decided to stick with my plan: Aim for a 3:10 finish time, which would require a 4:30 pace in a homogenous race pace. Quite an ask, given that this was almost 10 minutes faster than my current personal best, but this is a race - not a kindergarten right ;).

The block - I was located in Block E (3:15-3:30) time filled up continuously and I was surprised how close I actually have been to the elite runners. This looked promising. On the speaker the racers have been welcomed in all possible language -including Bavarian ;). The last minutes and the start itself have been quite emotional. The large crowd, the view of the Siegessäule behind the start gate, the huge number of balloons being started on the race shot and the large crowd added to it. Unforgettable Experience.

Interestingly the start was quite fluently and there was no traffic issue. So I could take up my planned pace without any external hassle. Only my right leg was sending some low-level warning signals. Like said - to be monitored during the race. The first past 10km passed by relatively relaxed. System worked, HR and perceived stress value where quite OK. According to my watch I was even a little bit faster than planned - not quite true, but more on this later. So all good.

Well, some other signals came up more present. Hydration is good, but you need to balance this - like everything in life. So a toilet would be nice - just nice at this moment not - yet - mandatory. Half a year back, I had a bad experience with this kind of challenge. Back at the Vivawest Half Marathon, the start time has been delayed by around 40 minutes. Eventually as the gun went off, I only had one single thought in my mind - where is a toilet?! I think I hold it until like km 7 - lost quite some time on the toilet break and more importantly, lost the focus and motivation. I finished the race - actually in quite a good time, but it could have been way better if I only would have kept the focus.
Back to the current race in Berlin it was less of a problem - just before km 15, I spotted somebody leaving a toilet like 100m before I arrived. I kept my eye on it and it was still free as I arrived. So it was mine. After leaving the toilet, I run a little fast and only lost like 30s on the km. That was fine - all good.

What is amazing in the Berlin Marathon - and that might have burned my future marathon experiences - is the crowd of supporters. There are not single 100m where your are not cheered by the crowd. Awesome. Music all over the place. All different flavors - including private parties on balconies. Marvelous.

At half marathon, I had my first reality check. I already recognized that my lap alert - 1km laps - has been de-synchronized significantly from the actual km marks on the track. My math capabilities where already a little weak, but the half-marathon time displayed, didn't looked like it would totally back-up, the data provided by my watch. But still I trusted the the lap alerts of my watch.

So I kept pushing with mixed emotions. Still I felt good overall only my right leg worried me more and more. As you can digest from the diagrams below, everything went fine until around km 27. Already before the legs got more and more tight, but around there, I definitely had an issue.

From the heart rate graph above, you can see the little toilet at around km 15 quite nicely. You a also can see that the hear rate increased relatively slow over time, which corresponds with my perceived relatively low overall stress level. Everything get's a little bit more spiky after km 27. Potentially more easily to digest from the pace diagram below.

The graphs also show, that my watch had measured more distance than I actually have been running - or should have been running. This lead to the slightly better than reality paces being reported.

But back to the amazing race itself. On positive aspect of the race is the huge amount of runners. You never run alone. Though I didn't run in a fixed group - maybe I should have been running with the 3:15 group - there where always people around you, who run in a similar pace. Quite good for the moral. One minor observation on this one. I used to be able to recognize my own "Piep" while crossing the time measurement stations. Overall sound like "Piep - Piep, Piep - - Piep" in other races - at least at later stages. In Berlin it was "Piiiiiieeeeeeep" all over the place.

Another nice encounter was a paper sign hold up by some of the spectators, announcing "New World Record 2:02:57" - quite some extra push for us hobby runners as well.

The rest of the race was mainly fighting with myself, enjoying the atmosphere and not looking at my time. Around km 40/41 I spotted a collapsed guy, who already got medical support. A gently reminder not to over pace, I think. While I remember this and it obviously touched me, this was gone soon later, as made the last turn, providing me with the first view on the Brandenburger Tor. I was super happy and pushed my arms into the sky - Almost there. Body reacted immediately, at both legs the hamstring contracted. Autsch - so back in old running form and don't overdo it.

The feeling to actually pass the Brandenburger Tor and then do the final meters toward the finish line are quite hard to describe. Actually while you can not spot it on the video being taken, I got quite emotional and finally reached the finish line, totally exhausted, super happy, proud of my new PB.

The after race support was fantastic as well. I got everything I needed, the medal, food and drinks without any queuing. I spent some time on the loan in front of the Reichstag with the other runners, before I stepped out of the closed area to meet my family.


Meeting point of the family was well organized as well and it was super relaxed atmosphere. I learned from my family that they got a good spot to watch just next to the Brandenburger Tor and even saw me finishing. As a nice topping I met a former colleague of mine, who I haven't met for ages. All fine.

My take aways:
  1. I must come back to the race - it was fantastic
  2. I need to figure out how to proper loosening my legs in situation like this
  3. Hydration: I guess I need to stop earlier
  4. GPS Watch: Trust level with my current Fenix 2 is still broken. So either I need to replace it or - maybe better in any case - prepare better to be able to conclude my progress just based on the time spent.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Pre-race blues

Only 3 days left. 10 months ago the mission started as I received and email saying:
 "Take two!
Dear Stefan Christoph,

After getting an unlucky draw during the first round, we are delighted to inform you that you are one of the fortunate "second chance" winners among the 73,707 applicants and thus now have the opportunity to participate in the 41st BMW BERLIN MARATHON 2014 ? Congratulations! "
Loads of things happened in between - not just running related.
On the running side of things, Strava reports 2302 km in 159 runs. Time elapsed for this is 208h and 5 minutes. This are almost 9 entire days - spent running.
I finished a number of races during this time - including the Düsseldorf Marathon earlier this year. I could have used a boat for this. It was wet - really wet. Luckily I forgot the blisters - many, big and at nasty locations - which I took away from it - Did I forget?
And now? Feeling tired from an intense working week, Deutsche Bahn expanding my daily commute times beyond anything acceptable. Back home family is coughing, noses are dripping. I have a little scratchy throat, tired legs and some little pain here and there. Not feeling well. Will I be fit on Sunday? Will it work? Can I reach the target time I set myself? All this questions are circulating in my head ...

Luckily I did not forget that this is the pre race blues. I had this before every - OK just 3 by now and hence not statistically relevant - marathon I run. So I do know I will be good :D

So off we go and sneak in a lunch break  run - #160. Hopefully with one of my buddies, who provide such a great deal of motivation. Everything will be fine ...

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Vacation in Erzgebirge - Tellerhäuser/Oberwiesenthal

Over the turn of the year, we spent lovely days in the Erzgebirge area. We lived in a tiny village called Tellerhäuser which is close to Oberwiesenthal. Though we did not had much snow, we spent some high quality days, including our first experiences with cross country skiing
Coming from downhill skiing and snowboarding, the expectation was that this should be rather easy and boring. It isn't. First of all it is technically difficult and you need a lot of energy to keep it going. Nice alternative training. 
Due to the fact we only had a quite limited amount of snow, we couldn't really experience the touring aspect of it, where you spent the whole day exploring the nature, I can really imagine that this is good fun. I explored some of the trails during my running exercises and the area has clearly great potential. 
As a picture says more than thousand words, I add some impressions from those days:
beautiful, isn't it?


Our home for the days


Our daughter being pulled by a dear friend


Early sundowner

Typical Erzgebirge creation


Artificial Snow blown to the trees during night
As you can see: While we don't had to much snow, we had quite some nice sun shine :)