Saturday, 21 July 2007

Golden Geese

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, July 21, 2007 with

Trevor looking good. Trevor was helping out at the Cross Country Championships today, like me, watching. Maybe we will both be back competing by Christmas.

Geese Win Gold
The speedygeese took out a few of the Vets medals today. I will list names soon.

Although everyone was told they had to wear club uniforms, I noticed wide variations. The field didn't look very "uniform" at all. Perhaps someone can design and order geese uniforms for us to wear next time?

And isn't there a better course? Showgrounds, Yarralumla, East Basin? Melbourne Zoo? Tasmania Goose Sanctuary?

Although, again this year, perfect weather.

Friday, 20 July 2007

Icy I See

Posted by speedygeoff on Friday, July 20, 2007 with
A game
I hope you enjoyed the cow maze puzzle last week, good wasn't it?
Here is a superior version of the point-and-click escape-the-room type of game called Rental House. I like this one because the graphics and motion are good and it is challenging without being too hard.

Brass Monkey Weather at Dickson Oval.
Last night saw Amanda, Geoff & Kathy, Katie, Ken, Maria & Peter, Neil, Tony and Rod brave the bitter wind and run in a relay where we each ran 8x300m with a 200m jog. We also timed ourselves for twenty seconds to see what our natural leg speed was. I think we will have to do it for longer than that to get an accurate measure. I am encouraging the speedygeese to run at a consistent 180bpm if they can. Which they all achieved easily last night.

180bpm
Here is an online metronome if you want to check the pace of your ipod running songs.


Neil picking up the pace

Are there two Canberras?
There is a suggestion in today's Canberra Times letters column that the weather forecasts we get are meant for a different Canberra. That would explain everything, the toss of a coin would be just as accurate.

Cheers
While on the Canberra Times, what a stupid front page headline today! We are not getting "recycled sewage". Idiots! It is the sewage which is being removed from recycled water. As usual, emotive nonsense from the media. Oh, and incidentally, the dams are filling again. Yeah, right, she'll be right then.

Thursday, 19 July 2007

Fly Gosling Fly

Posted by speedygeoff on Thursday, July 19, 2007 with

New Star Sonia.


Tonight at Dickson we will be running a continuous relay, if the batons aren't too cold to hold. I wouldn't mind some global warming right now. It was nice to see the sun again, though.

Good news I have the green light to keep running.....

Wednesday, 18 July 2007

Secret #1: 180 steps per minute

Posted by speedygeoff on Wednesday, July 18, 2007 with
To a great extent you can control your stride length when you run. So if it is too long you can shorten it, if too short you can lengthen it. But just what is the optimal stride length?

Many novice runners tend to over-stride, but with practice they can shorten their natural stride length and so run faster! I will explain.

One way to discover if you are overstriding is to count your steps. My observation is that the fastest runners over middle and long distances all have a leg speed of 180 steps per minute, or slightly more. An objective for my speedygeese is to see all the runners increase their tempo until they achieve 180 steps per minute for most of their running.

If you discover that you run at considerably less than 180, you should work on reducing your stride length and increasing your tempo.

A slower tempo and longer stride length means that you are in the air longer, you hit the ground harder, the footfall is heavier, there is more shock to your legs as you land, and a deceleration effect as well.

A quick optimal tempo means you run lighter, you feel like you are skimming over the ground rather than ploughing into it, you are able to propel yourself more rapidly forward, you respond quickly to pace variations in a racing scenario, your foot is below your body sooner and stays on the ground for a shorter time. And you look good!

Strong flexible quads help too. But that's another story.

Stretch
Colin (top left) Kathy (hands up!), Amanda ("helping" Kathy) and some ring-ins, stretching


Blog
OK I have re-introduced in-line comment display, hoping the way it's done this time is better than last time I tried it (Feb 07). There were delays between the display of each post, which I think is now fixed. I will probably modify fonts, colours, header and slogan soon. I have been including more photos, those with very slow systems will let me know if loading is slow, won't you? And if you have any trouble adding a comment, let me know too.

Tuesday, 17 July 2007

Everyone Is Holding On

Posted by speedygeoff on Tuesday, July 17, 2007 with
Training last night saw Adam, Alan, Charmaine, Emma, Kathy, Katie, Ken, Maria, Neil, Peter and Sonia run a very solid session of twenty uphill sprints on a very icy evening. A few others were there - Amanda (who turned up to discover she had forgotten her shoes), Sylvia and Caroline (I didn't see what they did), Ewen and I (who passed on the sprints). And the winter flu had hit Colin and Joel at least. And Helen was skiing up in the mountains, and Ruth and CJ were luxuriating in Mykonis. So a jolly good turn out, considering. Look out Amanda, Sonia is one training session ahead of you!

My impression was that those who did the sprints are all in very good form; fancy that many training so hard when it was such a freezing day.

My song of the week.
As regular readers will know, a favourite of mine is Radiohead, so if you like your music frantic and loud, here's a way out there live version of "National Anthem". It is impossible to run slowly to music like this!


And here we have Alan finishing the Half Marathon.

Strange, that woman with the yellow top and red sleeves is in all 570 photos of the finish. Smile, Kerry!.

Monday, 16 July 2007

Aki flies

Posted by speedygeoff on Monday, July 16, 2007 with
"Men, today we die a little." - Emil Zatopek at the start of the 1956 Olympic Marathon.


Aki finishing the Canberra Half Marathon. Her best times are at Telopea Park. I ran Telopea last year and the course is a bit dodgy: my time was a lot faster than I thought I was running: the Telopea course is not accredited so is likely to be short. No such problem with Cross Country Club courses though; they are never short!

You may have noticed that Aki has been picking up form again recently, and with patience and persistence in her training, will start to challenge the rest of us. Aki is tenacious, so will be very hard to shake for those of us who run around the 20 minute mark for 5k.

Aki has a devastating final sprint too, as she demonstrated again yesterday. Although it must be said, everyone can out-sprint Flashdrake at the end of a race!

Monday Morning Monitor
My training progress
achieved last week: 42k
year total to date: 2,268k in 28 weeks
this week’s target: 66k
weight: 67kg ▼

On the road again... I am just easing into it, a few km each day. But it is mightily cold outside! This Wednesday should be fun if the forecast is correct; snow with a range of zero to 5 for the city, which makes it -3 to 2 here in Holt. Brrrr.

Sunday, 15 July 2007

Outstanding Year

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, July 15, 2007 with

"You can't climb up to the second floor without a ladder....When you set your aim too high and don't fulfill it, then your enthusiasm turns to bitterness. Try for a goal that's reasonable, and then gradually raise it." - Emil Zatopek

Saturday's Mill Creek 6k
25. Geoff Sims M55 31:12
30. Ewen Thompson M50 33:09


Richard (with the cap) completing the Canberra Half Marathon. Richard is having an outstanding year. He was the fastest "speedygoose" in the field, finishing 42nd over all.

Saturday, 14 July 2007

Article by Nic Bideau

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, July 14, 2007 with
COACHING MIDDLE AND LONG DISTANCE RUNNERS
With permission, from "Coaching Middle and Long Distance Runners: A Commentary"
Modern Athlete and Coach, Volume 44, Number 3, July 2006


INTRODUCTION
The training structure I use to coach athletes does not actually involve anything that hasn’t been used before. I would describe it as strongly influenced by the type of work used by many Australian, British and New Zealand athletes in the 60s and 70s involving running high volumes of over 160km per week with the primary focus on aerobic conditioning. This type of training yielded huge successes for amongst others, Ron Clarke, Brendan Foster and John Walker, yet for one reason or another has tended to be neglected today.

The one area where I would say we are much more advanced than athletes of that era is with recovery and the control of the workouts. Today athletes employ a host of techniques including ice baths, sports recovery drinks, regular massage and physiotherapy sessions that assist athletes to recover from bouts of hard work and allow them to maintain a more consistent high volume of good quality training for longer periods.

Hard running on the track or fast long distance runs are now more controlled to achieve very specific aims with the use of heart rate monitors and stopwatches to assist us to enforce the principles that Lydiard was teaching runners 40 years ago — to train mostly at levels of intensity that are aerobic and to limit or accurately control the amount of anaerobic activity in training.

The training is only one key element responsible for the success of, among others, our two leading Australian distance runners, Craig Mottram and Benita Johnson. But I would add that just as relevant is (a) the environment they train in, (b) the planning undertaken (including their competition program) and (c) the belief I have in them to run as well as they have. Getting fit in training is certainly critical but I have certainly seen cases where despite being incredibly fit, a lack of confidence and belief in their ability to compete well has cost an athlete in important races. The right training helps to build these elements but the structure of the training groups they exist in and the very carefully planned racing program they follow certainly enhances this confidence to take the athletes to a very high level. But that’s a whole other article. For now, I’ll stick to an explanation of the general training structure I advise athletes to carry out.

KEY ELEMENTS
• Regular long runs
• Fast distance runs at around the anaerobic threshold
• Intervals or repetition work
• Speed work
• Recovery runs
• Gym sessions

LONG RUNS
The long runs should be of 90 minutes to 2 hours duration — longer for marathon runners - and at least once per week, and in some periods twice a week. The key Lydiard principle of maintaining continuous pressure on your heart for long steady periods of aerobic activity builds a fantastic aerobic fitness base and it is aerobic fitness that is a key factor in the success of athletes in all events from 800m upwards. I’m often challenged on the importance of these long runs for 800m runners. Some athletes have even suggested to me that they are damaging, but I have no doubt they are relevant. It worked for Peter Snell. He ran 1.44.3 on a grass track off long aerobic runs. In later years much has been made of the Great British 800m and 1500m runner, Seb Coe’s speed, but Coe also possessed outstanding aerobic endurance. He demonstrated this when in 1978 the year before he first began setting world records at 800m and 1500m races, when he beat Eamon Coghlan, who was later to win a world 5000m title and Mike McLeod, who later won an Olympic 10000m medal in a 4 mile road race in Ireland. I’d be surprised if any of our current top 800m runners could get within a minute of Craig Mottram over 4 miles today; and I see our lack of success in this event as relative to a lack of aerobic endurance in the athletes doing these events. Mottram has run 1.46 for 800m in training two weeks after he won his world championships 5000m bronze medal so his regular long runs don’t appear to have greatly reduced his ability at 800m.

I prefer these long runs done in a group as that helps runners stay relaxed and enjoy them more. I also like them to run in nice scenic surroundings on soft surfaces and on hilly courses. Hills help build strength and maintain the pressure on the heart without requiring the athletes to run faster. Hills also require athletes to vary the requirements of the key working muscles whether they are going up or down. I like big challenging hills in the second half of these runs as I believe it helps an athlete develop efficient technique and rhythm running up these hills when they are already feeling fatigue. I tell athletes that the first 75 minutes of these long runs is to get them sufficiently tired so as they are in a position to really affect their fitness in the last 15 to 45 minutes when their glycogen stores are getting seriously depleted.

In any training program, the first time an athlete is able to achieve a milestone builds confidence and I’ve often seen that when an athlete completes their first 90 min run of a preparation, or their first 2 hour run. They soon notice a big step up in their aerobic fitness in the following weeks. This increased aerobic fitness needs to be constantly monitored with regular 90 min runs throughout the year. I don’t believe that these long runs necessarily leave residual fatigue in athletes’ legs harming athletes going into important races. I see many athletes run very well within a few days of a long run. Mottram ran a 90 min run seven days before setting his Australian 5000m record of 12.55.76 and Benita Johnson ran a 90 min run six days before she won the World Cross Country. Any time I look at an athlete’s diary and I see regular long runs it usually translates into consistent form. In contrast, when I see big gaps from one long run to the next recorded in an athlete’s diary it often corresponds with a gradual decline in form.

FAST DISTANCE RUNS
These runs are usually called a tempo run or an anaerobic threshold pace run. In the 60s and 70s athletes regularly ran at this level unplanned in the 2nd half of training runs just by feel and were generally uncontrolled. These days I plan them as specific sessions and often ask the athletes to use a heart rate monitor to control them. After a warm up athletes will run for 20 minutes and up to 45 minutes and even longer for marathon runners at an intensity monitored pace by heart rate. The aim is to run at a level just below the point where any increase in effort will dramatically increase the anaerobic production of energy. We determine this as a result of physiological testing to determine at what heart rate their blood lactate content has reached around 4mmol of lactic acid. For most athletes this is normally the pace an athlete could run at for a half marathon or between 85 and 90% of the pace they can currently maintain for a 5000m track race.

These runs are one of the best indicators of performance level for events in which aerobic endurance is a factor. I could probably find several athletes in Australia who would be able to run shoulder to shoulder with Mottram during an interval track workout such as 10 x 400m with 2 minutes recovery. An ignorant bystander could be no better equipped with knowledge if asked which of such a group of athletes would win a 3000m race. But line the same athletes up for a 20 minute run and ask them to run at a pace equivalent to 85% of their 5000m race pace and Mottram would finish 400m ahead of most Australian athletes and it would be clear who has the superior fitness for a 3000m race. These fast continuous distances runs were ‘bread and butter’ training for much of the year for athletes such as Ron Clarke and John Walker, although they just did them by feel or intuition.

While I prefer athletes beginning this sort of training to control the work by heart rate, experienced athletes such as Mottram or Johnson have done so much of this type of work they are now very much in touch with how it should feel, and are able to do it just on feel without the aid of technical equipment such as heart rate monitors.

INTERVAL OR REPETITION TRAINING
I prefer high volumes of work when using intervals of 6-10k or running at various speeds relevant to the athletes current fitness level for 1500m, 3000m, 5000m or 10,000m with recovery bouts as required to maintain that pace. In the first stages of a training program these are initially focused on 10,000m race pace or even slower. Closer to the main target race faster speeds are introduced at the specific pace of the event the athlete is training for. I believe that too often athletes try to run too fast in track sessions relevant to their current fitness and are too anxious to focus on their cruising speeds for 1500m or 3000m races, whereas I prefer to set the bulk of these sessions at 5000m or 10000m cruising speeds over longer distance repetitions interspersed with shorter faster work. For example, when training for an event such as the World Cross Country in March, Benita Johnson may begin the preparation in November with 8-10 x 1km on a dirt path in around 3.20 with one minute rest. This develops into 3.10 and the next step is to speed up 2 of the reps, the 5th and 7th in 3.00. This may progress to 4 x 2km reps on the track with a lap jog recovery doing the first and third rep alternating laps in 70s (current 3k race pace) and 75s (half marathon race pace), the 2nd and 4th rep all even paced at 75s per lap (10k race pace).

There are a myriad of workouts that can be designed with this philosophy. The main aim is to always be doing enough high volume to continue building aerobic endurance while introducing some faster running that relates to shorter distance race paces and still avoid flooding the athlete’s muscles with lactate during the workout. So varied are the possible combinations that rarely do the athletes repeat the same workout. I see a couple of distinct advantages in this - they don’t go home to check their diary and compare workouts from week to week or year to year — too often athletes try to compare workouts from one period to another, which I regard as impossible to do for any real gain. You can never go to the track with all other elements of your life exactly duplicated from one day to the next so you will always fail to read into the effects of other situations whether they be weather, poor sleep the night before, harder training the week before, personal problems or whatever - and being different, the workouts always provide an interesting challenge to the athletes who don’t know exactly how they will feel not having done that exact workout before.

Benita did a workout of 13 x 400m at 5k race pace (72s) with one lap float (marathon race pace relevant to current fitness (82s)) recovery between laps while winning the national 10,000m title in 31.49 shortly before she won the World Cross Country in 2004. This year in her preparation for the Commonwealth Games she ran 3000m in 9.10 beginning with laps at 10,000m race pace for the 1st km, 5000m race pace for the 2nd km and 3000m race pace for the 3rd km, jogged a lap then did 4x200m at 1500m race pace with 200m jog recovery before repeating the effort with the 2nd 3000m in 9.05. For other complex reasons relative to another dimension of coaching that I won’t go into here, Benita was not able to produce that fitness during the Commonwealth Games 10,000m yet it was exactly that fitness that she was able to call on that enabled her to place 4th in both World Cross Country races just a week after the Melbourne Games this year.

Closer to the big race, these type of workouts often mimic planned strategies due to be employed in the race whilst surrounding it with volume to ensure aerobic fitness is still maintained. Before the Melbourne 5000m Mottram ran a series of 3x1600m. The first one was done in 4.20 (basically what we felt was around 10,000m race pace for him or more specifically the slowest we could imagine the Commonwealth 5000m race being run at inside the last 2km). The 2nd rep was to practice the tactic, which we hoped could take him clear of the Kenyans in the Melbourne 5000m. His training partner England’s 5000m runner at the Games, Mo Farah ran the 1st lap in 65 secs and Mottram went to the lead running the 2nd lap faster, the 3rd lap faster again and once more increasing the pace on the last lap. He ran those laps in 59, 58 and 57 for a final 1600m time of 3.59. He then eased back to 4.20 again for the 3rd rep and finished the workout by cruising 4 x 200m at 1500m race tempo with an easy 200m jog recovery. We felt he was ready for Ben Limo and he was. But, unfortunately for us, Augustine Choge had something else.

These sessions are usually only carried out once per week. If a second session of repetition running is used it is usually hill repetitions. Athletes usually begin with 6-8 repetitions of running up hill for three minutes at around 10,000m race pace or effort. Then shorten the distance to something that can be reached in one minute running at around 3000m race pace effort. Sometimes they alternate three minute efforts with one minute faster efforts in a series of 8 repetitions. I prefer the hills to be not so steep that the athlete can’t run up them smoothly for three minutes at 10,000m race pace. The recovery taken is as long as it takes to jog back down the hill easily and feel ready to go for the next repetition. I believe these workouts are fantastic for developing power and speed as well as running efficiency.

SPEED WORK
Speed work should always be low in volume and at speeds relevant to up to 95% maximum speed (never 100%) to 3000m race pace in relation to current fitness and over short distances never more than 400m and rarely more than 150m with long periods for recovery between repetitions. All athletes I coach (even marathon runners) do 4-5 strides over 80—120m at least 3km race pace with easy jog or walk recovery after each repetition at least once a week. Mottram, being a 1500m runner as well as a 5000m runner goes to the track once a week to run even faster. Most of his training is focused on endurance but I recognise the need to maintain his ability to run fast. I regard this as specific speed work, which should not be a huge load of anaerobic work. A favoured workout would be 4 x 120m after an easy Monday evening run when he often feels good having run once for 90 minutes the day before and having done an easy 60 minutes that morning. Each repetition would involve gradually building to 95% of top speed coming off the bend and running smooth and relaxed down the straight with a minimum very easy 280m jog between repetitions. In my view, optimal speed work should (a) never involve more than 3 or 4 reps of a maximum of 15 seconds, (b) include long periods of rest in between, and (c) not be done when the athlete is very tired.

RECOVERY RUNS
These runs should generally run at a very comfortable pace — comfort is more relevant than speed here. They can be extremely slow or occasionally at a moderate pace but importantly, it is very comfortable and relaxed for the athlete. I prefer, in general, that these are around one hour in length on easy days with a second run each day of 30-35min, except on days when the main run is 90 minutes or more where just one run is completed. Marathon runners often do two runs of less than an hour but at least 40 minutes on easy recovery days due to the greater demand for recovery from longer workouts.

We’re often asked how it is effective for Mottram to do his recovery runs with Benita Johnson despite him being about to run almost two minutes faster than her for 5000m. They feel that if he races 5000m at close to 2.30 min per kilometre and Benita closer to 3 minutes per kilometre, why should her recovery runs be run a similarly slower pace? But it doesn’t actually work like that. Running at 4 minutes per kilometre is just as comfortable for Benita as it is for Craig. The key is that the pace is comfortable, and the pace is simply decided on how the athletes feel. There is often a need to tell athletes to try to run slowly on these runs, as it’s very difficult to run too slowly and quite easy to run too fast at a speed that doesn’t really challenge aerobic fitness and certainly doesn’t allow athletes to recover maximally between workouts. The key is to remember that these runs are for recovery and that there are another 2 or 3 days in the week where the focus is on building fitness.

GYM SESSIONS
The key aim for our gym sessions is to build a very strong core for the athletes. The workouts are focused very much around strength in all muscles from the legs to the neck. Female athletes usually make huge gains with this type of training because they are not as naturally strong in this area as male athletes. Often male athletes are naturally strong, and survive many years without working much on this area. So often though, injuries can be traced to poor running form, which can be related to weaknesses in the abdominal or lower back region.

I’m not going to list the type of exercises we use here as there as so many ways to improve strength in this area that virtually none of our athletes follow the same core strength routine. They all spend 30-45 minutes three to four times a week working on this aspect of their fitness. Workouts are usually done after a second recovery run of the day or in the afternoon after completing a long run in the morning.

CONCLUSION
In summarising, the key elements outlined in this article form the basis of my coaching program. Each element is important and contributes in different ways to achieving the ultimate goal of running faster.

Nic Bideau "Coaching Middle and Long Distance Runners: A Commentary" - Modern Athlete and Coach, Volume 44, Number 3, July 2006.

Craig Mottram

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, July 14, 2007 with
It must be very challenging to have the distance running hopes of a nation resting on one set of young, though broad, shoulders. But that's the situation our Aussie star Craig Mottram faces as he gears up for challenges of the next twelve months. In this article, Brad Green reports that Craig Mottram will attempt to better his bronze medal performance in the 2005 world championships in Helsinki, in the 5000m at the world championships in Japan next month, before working towards next year's Beijing Olympics.

Brad writes, "in the space of a fortnight last month, Mottram ran a personal best time on his way to winning a two-mile race in America. His performance was the fastest run on US soil and set a new Australian and Oceania record.

"Then, in his final 5000m hit-out before the worlds, Mottram left Ethiopian pair Tariku Bekele and Abreham Feleke in his wake on his way to winning the Emil Zatopek Memorial race over 5000m in the Czech Republic, beating home 14 quality African runners.

"It has ensured Mottram is one of the favourites to stand on the podium at Osaka".

Read the full article here.

Because of the continuing interest in the article by Craig Mottram's coach Nic Bideau that I published some time ago, I will republish it soon in a single post, making access easier. (See side column for links to the article)

Friday, 13 July 2007

Pleasantly fatigued

Posted by speedygeoff on Friday, July 13, 2007 with
"When I was young, I was too slow. I thought I must learn to run fast by practicing to run fast, so I ran 100 meters fast 20 times. Then I came back, slow, slow, slow. People said, 'Emil, you are crazy. You are training like a sprinter.'" - Emil Zatopek

A game - this cow maze puzzle is a good one, a bright kid will solve the levels easily. It starts easy. Level 34 took some thought! There are 42 levels, and most are easier than they look.

Thursday training report
We repeated an anaerobic session from a few weeks ago, sprints over 50m and 100m with varying distance float recoveries. It was cold! Running were Caroline, Geoff & Kathy, Ken, Neil, Peter & Maria, Rod, Roger, Tony and Yelena. It was very disappointing to discover afterwards that Joel & Yelena's home had been broken into. What a low act.

Fight Club, on TV late tonight, is supposed to be very good. I will be taping it after taping/watching the Crows flog the Saints.

The Mill Creek race is on this Saturday. I won't go, I need reliable surfaces to run on, and the creek crossing is very dodgy.

Finding my Feet
Now that I am jogging daily again, and unable to push the pace yet, I am finding that I am very pleasantly fatigued at the end of each run, not sore, not gasping for air, but with a sense that my muscles and my lungs have had a pleasant workout.

I feel better for the run!

Most training should be like that. Consistency is more important than speed. Occasional training runs should push the boundaries; but a much better idea is to do most running at 60% to 80% effort.

Try it!

Thursday, 12 July 2007

Perspective

Posted by speedygeoff on Thursday, July 12, 2007 with
Cross Country Championships
Because we are combining with ACT Athletics, there is some confusion about entry procedure. For Veterans running the 8k or the 12k, you can simply turn up and enter on the day, entry closes one hour before the race.

Event details
Saturday 21 July 2007, Weston Park:
10.30 am 3k Under 14 Girls & Boys
11.00 am 4k Under 16 Girls & Boys, Under 18 Women
11.30 am 6k Under 20 Women, Under 18 Men
12.00 noon 8k Under 20 Men, Open Women, Veteran Women, Veteran Men (Over 60)
1.00 pm 12k Open Men & Veteran Men (30-59)

Club member collapses and dies at BBQ Stakes
I was at the BBQ Stakes 6k yesterday and jogged around in just under 41 minutes. I didn't know that just behind me, John Carmody had collapsed at about the 3k mark and a group of runners were attempting to revive him. Doug Fry has a report at http://tuckerbox.blogspot.com/2007/07/bbq-stakes-runners-shattered-by-sad.html. Our thoughts go out to John's wife Julie, their relatives, and their many friends. On hand and able to help were Lloyd, John H, Kent, Rosemary, Roger, and others; spare them a thought as well, many of the runners were shaken by the experience.

Wednesday, 11 July 2007

Believe it or not

Posted by speedygeoff on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 with
Four more speedygeese with an Australian record


Charlie McCormack with her Australian relay record certificate for the W40 4 x 1500m relay. The others in her relay team were Gabe Brown, Helen Larmour, and Katie Forestier. Fly Goose Fly!

Tuesday, 10 July 2007

Green Light

Posted by speedygeoff on Tuesday, July 10, 2007 with
"If you want to win something, run 100 meters. If you want to experience something, run a marathon." - Emil Zatopek

I have the Green Light to jog or shuffle, if I am CAREFUL, this week! I did 4k last night during an hour; and 6k this morning in 50 minutes.

Ice is Nice

Song of the week: Point of Difference, Hillsong United, from "All of the Above". You can hear part of it at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s2sjmghtSCo.


Last week can only be described as indescribable. Five days at Hillsong in Sydney.

I saw it, I was there.

My favourite singer Brooke Fraser was on stage throughout the week at many of the sessions, heading up or backing the Hillsong/United band, singing songs like "Saviour King", the title track off the album that's number 6 on this week's Australian album charts, and her best song "Hosanna" from the album "All Of The Above" which is at 45 on the album charts.

I was there, I saw it.

We had a view from right next to the stage, awesome.

And as much as singers like Tim Hughes and Matt Redman, who have been at Hillsong in previous years, are brilliant, nothing prepared me for Chris Tomlin, 300% better than I imagined he would be, his music and the presentation that went with it were extraordinary.

What I week. I was there. I saw it.


Monday Night Training
We did attrition hill sprints. That is, after every hill sprint, the last person up the hill had to stand aside. It was close all night. By the time it came down to the last three, Amanda, Emma and Ken remained. Amanda finished third and the final sprint saw Ken edge out Emma, to the boos and cheers of the others. An easier night for all: next week, back to the 20 intervals again. And this Thursday we won't be doing a time trial.

Monday, 9 July 2007

Watch This Space

Posted by speedygeoff on Monday, July 09, 2007 with
“I don’t mean to spoil your day mummy, but did you know there’s a fierce storm approaching?” - My three year old grandson Jackson at the check out counter, much to his mother's and everyone else's astonishment!

My training progress
achieved last two weeks: nil
year total to date: 2,226k in 27 weeks
this week’s target: start again
weight: 68kg ▲

The Best Is Yet To Come!
I really do hope to ease back into running this week. But the hamstring is still not 100%. I will report on this morning's visit to my-favourite-medical-professional and tell you if it's green light or red light. Being cleared to do 40 or 50k of light jogging would be good. So watch this space.

And among my zillion activities, I am joining Jenny for the next ten weeks on Tuesday evenings as we conduct a "Making Marriage Better" course for young married couples. Should be enormous fun! It is a Careforce Lifekeys course, and it is most excellent!

Sunday, 8 July 2007

Denting the backlog

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, July 08, 2007 with
"Is it raining? That doesn't matter. Am I tired? That doesn't matter, either. Then willpower will be no problem." - Emil Zatopek

Jogalong 1/7/07
Helen Larmour W45 26:46 pb
Barbara Tucker W55 33:38
Emma Adams W35 26:47
Caroline Campbell W60 34:58

Gold Coast Marathon 2/7/07
Roger Pilkington 3:26.42

Gold Coast Half Marathon
Adam Robinson 1:52:41
Ewen Thompson 1:45.11 and
Bob Harlow 1:37:49.

Googong Half Marathon team
3. Annette Sugden W40 1:52:42

Edit: the above is actually the relay result, Sugden/Chatwin second. There are no labels on the CCC website to tell you that! Here then are the individual results:
Googong Half Marathon women
6. Emma Adams W35 1:51:29
7. Maria O'Reilly W50 1:52:05
18. Caroline Campbell W60 2:18:43

Googong Half Marathon men
25. Mick Horan M45 1:56:47
33. Geoff Barker M60 2:00:41
36. Alan Duus M60 2:04:30

Goorooyarroo 8k Women
10. Annette Sugden W40 37:28
15. Thea Zimpel 39:50
16. Caroline Campbell W60 45:33
17. Barbara Tucker W55 46:20
19. Margaret McSpadden W60 49:36

Goorooyarroo 8k Men
35. Ewen Thompson M50 41:22
36. Geoff Barker M60 42:07

See you at Parliament House Monday night training, come rain, rain or rain!

Saturday, 7 July 2007

7-7-7

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, July 07, 2007 with
As intriguing as numbers are
You should all realise that
A date is merely a label

Thursday, 5 July 2007

Hallelujah, run again

Posted by Ewen on Thursday, July 05, 2007 with
Speedygeoff has given me the keys to the car, so I've come up with this new version of Hallelujah...

Now I've heard there was a secret run
That Six Footers do, I've heard it's fun
But you don't really care for mountains, do you?
It goes like this
Run forth with Strewth
CJ, John and Chris
Runners all seduced by Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura

You thought you could run but needed proof
You saw her running all aloof
Her form and power almost overthrew you
She stopped you
And said you didn't care
You only ran track, it just wasn't fair
And from your lips she drew the 'Mount Majura'
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura

Steve said I've been here before
I've climbed some hills but never more
I used to run alone before I knew you
I've seen Trent's grave,
The view is vast
Running up there is no victory march
But on we forge to the summit of Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura

You say I took the name in vain
And didn't really know this game
But if I did, well really, what's it to you?
On trails I see a blaze of light
Feelings are stirred
Doesn't matter what you heard
Just climb and maybe you'll see on Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura
Mount Majura

I ran my best, it wasn't much
At Six Foot I tried hard to stay in touch
But I'm slow, and I didn't come to fool you
And even though
It all went wrong
I'll stand before that Robert Song
With nothing on my tongue but Mount Majura
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah
Hallelujah

Sunday, 1 July 2007

It pains me...

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, July 01, 2007 with
...to leave this fair city, but that is what I am doing. For a week. This city of freezing winds, bitter mornings, icy roads. And head north east to the slightly warmer city of Sydney. So until next Sunday, it's fair thee well. I leave you with this photo of me crossing the finish line in the Canberra Half Marathon, and remind you that it is always a good strategy to look relaxed, smiling, and happy as you cross the finish line of any race, because that is the time the camera is most likely to be on you. Click on the photo to enlarge it to its excruciating fullness. So until next week, farewell.



p.s. Helen in cold winds this morning ran 26:46 pb for the Jogalong, her first time under 27 minutes. On my return I will publish Jogalong results, Googong results, Gold Coast results, and anything else that happens while I am away.

Keep smiling. And just for Katie, one last exclamation mark!

Edit: Gold Coast Marathon Scott McTaggart 2:23.30 - 5th place - 1st Aussie. I thought he would do well & he did. First place was just over 2:20.

Saturday, 30 June 2007

Coach Potato

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, June 30, 2007 with
"There is a great advantage in training under unfavourable conditions. It is better to train under bad conditions, for the difference is then a tremendous relief in a race." - Emil Zatopek

I am still not running. I am getting fatter. I am turning into a coach potato. But I am catching up on my administrative backlog, and I have got as far as level five in puzzleland. I am walking around Homebush all next week. That might reverse the slide into physical fatness.

Best wishes to Scott McTaggart in the Gold Coast marathon tomorrow. Scott is running his first ever marathon and is hoping to break 2:14. Advice from Deek and from Mona included feeling like you are out for a Sunday jog initially, then starting to pick up the pace a little from the half way mark. Very sound!

The Canberra Times Fun Run is only eleven weeks away! I have just completed drawing up a training program for the fun run for one of the athletes in our training group. If anyone else would like a copy of the program, please get in touch & I will email it to you.

W55 4 x 1500m Australian relay record holders

Yet another speedygoose foursome with Australian record certificates. This time it's Jill Brown, Carol Baird and Maureen Rossiter. Missing from the photo is Kathy Sims

Friday, 29 June 2007

The Long and the Short of it

Posted by speedygeoff on Friday, June 29, 2007 with
Emil Zatopek on Interval Training - "Everyone said, 'Emil, you are a fool!' But when I first won the European Championship, they said: 'Emil, you are a genius!'"

Puzzleland
I do do like time-wasting point and click games. This one is excellent.

Why can't I run faster?
To improve dramatically over middle and long distances, short interval training is essential. But I consider that interval training ought be done on a solid base of long distance running, built up over many months and years.

Once you have that base however, you really should move down to the shorter faster running instead of forever running long, as good as that feels! Then you will see new pbs and possibly new records!

Those who join our group because they see how well we thrive on interval work, should really consider the fact that getting lots of kms under the belt is the first priority, not the intervals. Not initially, anyway. After that, look what happens!

Four SpeedyGeese who set an Australian record recently:
Colin Farlow and Rod Lynch with their M45 4 x 800m Australian Relay Record certificates. The other two runners were Amalendu Edelsten and Mick Horan

Thursday, 28 June 2007

Seventy years young.

Posted by speedygeoff on Thursday, June 28, 2007 with
We were to have a 2k time trial at Dickson tonight but continuing rain has closed all ACT Sportsgrounds. Plan B is to have the time trial next Thursday. I won't go out to Dickson tonight as I am still unable to jog and was only going there to hold the watch.

Next week I am in Sydney for both the Monday and Thursday training sessions and will get someone else to organise them for me.

Meanwhile here is another fine photo from this Month's Vetrunner magazine, which is available for download at http://www.actvac.com.au/.

W70 4x800m World Relay Record


The ACT team which broke the world record, consisting of Cory Collins, Consie Larmour, Anne Young and Alison Ide

Daylight Saving
I heard today that daylight saving will be extended next year. SA, TAS, VIC, NSW and the ACT are moving to six full months of daylight saving. This year it will commence at the end of October as usual, but in 2008 it will end on Sunday 6 April, and resume on Sunday 5 October. That is great news for our Thursday night track meets in October!

I am not sure we will even have track meets in October this year though. I heard that the Italian contractors laying the new track at Bruce, which was to have been ready in July, have gone home. Apparently the weather was unsuitable for the work and they have other contracts to fulfil. Fancy the middle of winter in Canberra not being ideal weather! I am also not sure what to do about about my plans to hold time trials at Bruce leading up to Riccione. With Bruce unavailable, the closest synthetic track is Campbelltown, Sydney! And to think people believe Australia has good sporting facilities.

Wednesday, 27 June 2007

Marking Time

Posted by speedygeoff on Wednesday, June 27, 2007 with
"What has passed is already finished with. What I find more interesting is what is still to come." - Emil Zatopek

While for some teachers in Canberra it has been Marking time, I have been marking Time: just icing the leg and waiting for the rain to stop out there. We had six degrees maximum yesterday, but that was achieved at 9am after which it dropped to four degrees for the rest of the day. It rained here and produced snow down south. The leg icing might have been a pain in the cold weather, except we have a nice warm house so it is all good. And who wants to go anywhere in these conditions, let alone run outdoors?

It is the third of our 2k time trials tomorrow. And last week I forecast a water logged track, remember? It should be fun. If the track is not closed. The rain is forecast to intensify today and tomorrow.

Report on Monday night training:
Emma, Helen, Katie, Yelena, Caroline, Kathy, GeoffB, Neil, Ewen, Joel, Adam, and Ken ran 20 hill sprints on 90 seconds - I am so sorry I missed it!

Song of the Week. Hallelujah was sung by Rufus Wainwright in the movie Shrek. The original version was by Leonard Cohen. Here is a live version by Bon Jovi. With songs like this to listen to, who cares if I am not outside, running?



Record Holders

Debbie, Maria, Helen & Kerry with their W45 4 x 1500m Australian record certificates

Tuesday, 26 June 2007

What are AST percentages?

Posted by speedygeoff on Tuesday, June 26, 2007 with
In yesterday’s ACTVAC handicap results I have included the AST% figures, and will do so in future, because they are an interesting way of comparing the times of each runner which takes their age into account.

What are AST percentages?

AST stands for “Age Standard Times”. They are calculated against the actual age of each competitor in an event.

In 1989 the World Association of Veteran Athletes (WAVA) developed the first age-graded tables in one-year age increments and they have since been updated.

The tables are composed of world class standards as a function of both age and distance. That means that for every age starting at age 8 and going to age 100 there are standards for every long distance running event, for every common track & field event, and for race walking.

Using the data in the tables it is possible to determine an age graded time (as seen in the results of the Australian Masters Championships in Hobart) and the equivalent percentage (as provided yesterday and with most ACTVAC results.)

Here’s an example of how the calculations are done for three masters men in a 10K race.



In the above example, the 64 year old man had the best performance, even though he had the slowest finishing time.

Rough “classifications” are recognised to be as follows:

100%= Approximate World Record Level
Over 90%= World Class
Over 80%= National Class
Over 70%= Regional Class

So when you see the AST% listed, you know that the higher scores are the better results. The scores give everyone a new incentive to improve their performances in a measurable way. And provide you with new rivals to challenge as you try and get a higher AST% than someone who has been ahead of you. Not to mention an extra reason to celebrate your birthday every year, not just every five years!


Are you short of energy?
Here's Katy's solution!

Monday, 25 June 2007

Beard Advantage

Posted by speedygeoff on Monday, June 25, 2007 with
"It is not gymnastics or ice skating you know." - Emil Zatopek, when asked about his tortured expression during races.

Our runners at Mount Ainslie 9.3k. Often a backmarker's course, but not so this year. Martin Butterfield with a beard advantage in the cold weather won the handicap by a mere eight minutes, from Robert Ey having a very good run.

14 Peter McDonald M50 46:12 69.5%
21 Kathy Sims W55 46:26 81.9
22 Rod Lynch M45 36:22 84.3
25 Geoff Barker M60 47:25 73.1
29 Maria O'Reilly W50 42:32 86.0
44 Amanda Walker W35 43:51 73.5
46 Richard Faulks M45 37:59 81.2
48 Colin Farlow M45 36:23 83.2
61 Mick Horan M45 40:19 76.0
64 Alan Duus M60 46:20 74.7
69 Geoff Sims M55 49:06 68.8
70 Michael Freer M75 55:54 78.1
80 Charlie McCormack W40 45:56 70.9
81 Caroline Campbell W60 52:54 81.5
83 Annette Sugden W40 46:18 70.7
86 Peter Hogan M60 52:30 65.7
94 Barbara Tucker W55 57:06 68.0
101 Tony Booth M65 53:45 70.2

Mount Ainslie 4.5k: Kevin Matthews had a return-to-form win, with George Kubitzky second

14 Ken White M50 0:18:15 81.1%
18 Gary Bowen M50 0:18:21 78.6
24 Neil Boden M55 0:20:37 73.6
29 Katie Forestier W40 0:19:08 78.1
50 Maureen Rossiter W55 0:25:47 68.1

Monday Morning Monitor
My training progress
last week's target: n/a
achieved: 19k
year total to date: 2,226k in 25 weeks
this week’s target: I still might not be able to run...
weight: 66.5kg ▼

Saturday's road running at Molonglo Reach
Women’s 10k
1. Kathy Southgate W50 38:07
11. Thea Zimpel 43:18

Men’s 10k
27. Richard Faulks M45 38:47
42. Mick Horan M45 42:09
60. Geoff Barker M60 49:47

Sunday, 24 June 2007

To out run a tiger?

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, June 24, 2007 with
"Great is the victory, but the friendship is all the greater." - Emil Zatopek

Two friends are walking in the jungle. Suddenly a tiger appears in the distance running towards them. One friend pulls a pair of Nikes out of his bag and quickly puts them on. With a surprised look, the other friend says, "you don’t really think you can out run that tiger with those?" I don’t need to out run the tiger”, his friend replies, "I just need to run faster than you”.

.. this week is at Parliament House on Monday for hill sprints - I may not get there, especially if I am told I still should not be running - and at Dickson on Thursday, where I will be timing a 2k time trial.

And this coming Sunday is the women's jogalong. I should be able to get there this month to cheer you on.

If you are running the Googong Dam Half Marathon this Saturday, best wishes. I hope the weather is great, 'cause the course sure 'aint!

Saturday, 23 June 2007

Emil Zatopek

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, June 23, 2007 with
“Why should I practise running slow? I already know how to run slow. I want to learn to run fast.” – Emil Zatopek.



The amazing Emil Zatopek - from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zatopek, Zátopek is probably best known for his amazing feat of winning three gold medals in athletics at the 1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki. He won gold in the 5km and 10km runs, but his final medal came when he decided at the last minute to compete in the marathon for the first time in his life and won. He also broke the existing Olympic record in each of the three events. His victory in the 5km came after a ferocious last lap in 57.5 seconds, during which he went from fourth place to first while Christopher Chataway, now second after being overtaken by Zátopek, tripped on the curb and fell.

Another link is http://www.runningpast.com/emil_zatopek.htm

Is it cold where you are?
No, you're dreaming. Here in Belconnen it was minus 6 to plus 7 yesterday. And I went for a run. It was sunny all day!! If not for the sun, it might have been cold.

Today in Belconnen it felt like another -6 start. It was -5.5 in Tuggeranong this morning, and Belconnen is usually 1 or 2 degrees colder.

Here is Tuggeranong Don's take of this morning's weather:


I wonder what the male runner at the back is looking for?

Torn hamstring symptoms:
See http://www.sportsinjuryclinic.net/cybertherapist/back/hamstrings/hamstringstrain.htm. I am possibly a grade 2 (two months?!) but certainly not a grade 3!

Friday, 22 June 2007

Thursday Track Training

Posted by speedygeoff on Friday, June 22, 2007 with
Who was there: Matthew Neil Colin Me GeoffB Tony Joel Ken,
and Yelena. Where were the other girls?

What we did: a partly anaerobic session. Particularly aimed to help 800m runners.
(a) 100 on 100 off x 8 (4 laps)
(b) 50 on 100 off x 8 (3 laps)
(c) 100 on 50 off x 8 (3 laps)
with a short break after each set allowing everyone to catch their breath.

It was a beautiful night. The temperature was close to zero degrees with a lovely cool breeze. Matthew forgot his beanie and gloves. He won't forget again. No one shed items of clothing; all jackets etc stayed on through the three sets of sprints.

The session achieved its objective: I think this is the first time I have set an anaerobic agenda and had everyone in serious pain at the end! So last night's pattern will be noted and used again.

Next week: is the third round of 2km time trials.

Times achieved in the first two rounds:
Colin 7:09, 7.06
Rod 7:28, 7.22
John Lamb n/a, 7.44
Ken 7.46, 7.50
Matthew 8.16, 8.11
Maria 8.32, n/a
Roger 8.47, 8.32
Amanda n/a, 8.48
Geoff S 8.49, n/a
Neil 8.52, n/a
Kathy 9.25, n/a
Tony n/a, 9.09
Adam 9.38, 9.09
Caroline 9.50, n/a
Ruth 10.30, 10.45
Margaret 10.45, n/a

Conditions have not been ideal for the first two rounds, so I am predicting a waterlogged track next week and even faster times.

Shoe collection: only just bigger than mine and Friar's put together!

Thursday, 21 June 2007

800m Time Predictor

Posted by speedygeoff on Thursday, June 21, 2007 with
It is difficult to predict 800m times, based on what you can do for other distances, with any degree of accuracy!

It is much easier to compare times across 1500m thru marathon, because these distances are predominantly endurance events.

It is also easier to compare times across 100m thru 400m, as these distances are predominantly strength events.

The 800m is a unique mix of strength, endurance (aerobic capacity), and anaerobic capacity.

The 400m is also partly anaerobic, particularly for us slower Masters athletes.

There are various Time Predictors around, and they tend to give wildly different results.

For example, take a look at http://run-down.com/statistics/calc.php, which compares various predictors. Their "average" column might be a good as any.

Even thinking about whether improvements in one distance will carry over into improvements in another distance, one must know how specific your training is.

Some training carries over. Some doesn’t. Training which improves you for one distance may have little or no affect on other distances.

As a rule then, there are three possible sets of distances one can specifically be training for at a given time.
(a) 100m to 400m
(b) 800m
(c) 1500m and above.

Even then, specific 400m training can compromise the 100/200.

And for elite senior athletes, the 1500m might be grouped with the 800m rather than grouped with longer distances, again because we are not elite senior athletes.

Our non-elite masters training group will focus on strength (hill work) and anaerobic training (interval work with short recovery) for the next six weeks.

But do check out http://run-down.com/statistics/calc.php to see what you might be capable of.

Wednesday, 20 June 2007

How I Hurt the Hammie

Posted by speedygeoff on Wednesday, June 20, 2007 with
I shouldn't have raced on Anzac Day. It was only ten days after the marathon; I had run a reasonable time the day before at the BBQ Stakes, and when I got to the relay venue, I found out that I hadn't been included in the Life Members relay team although I had let them know I was available. But then I talked my way into being given a place in the team, not without resistance despite others running more than once. I should have shut up and gone home! The run was reasonably fast, but seemingly without problems, that is until I tried to pass the baton to the next runner. She (Beryl) took off too early, perhaps thinking me to be faster than I was. I stretched forward to get the baton into her hand, and "ouch"! A twinge at the top of the left hamstring. Only after feeling a bit sore there while trying to train later did I realise there was some damage. What followed was a slow BBQ Stakes and a slower Half Marathon, and the pain has seemed worse each day. Finally I got some professional advice; yes a tear, and no mustn't run. It is still sore now, so mustn't run!

Moral: Don't race two days straight. And avoid relays at all costs!

The plan is to resume running tomorrow, even if it means breaking my runs up into small components...



A riddle
Q: What is silver and hurts when it gets in your eye?
A: An airplane!

Tuesday, 19 June 2007

LOR+RUN=WOW

Posted by speedygeoff on Tuesday, June 19, 2007 with
Someone has put my favourite song and my favourite movie together… AWESOME! And what a poignant ending.

It is Run by Snow Patrol, with clips from Lord of the Rings.

Now if only we had real broadband here in Stray-ya so it would load seamlessly... well, after it starts loading, the trick is to pause it, let it finish downloading, then play it through.

Monday Training
And the training group did some good work in snowy weather last night - hill sprints from Amanda, Sonia, Maria, Kathy, Helen, Katie, Jelena, Ewen, Gary, Mick C, Alan, Neil, Joel, Adam, Geoff B & Ken

Monday, 18 June 2007

Monday Morning Monitor

Posted by speedygeoff on Monday, June 18, 2007 with
The CANADA FUN RUN FOR CHARITY, the Fun-Run-formerly-known-as-Terry-Fox, was held yesterday morning. The top 25 runners in the 5k and 10k are timed and recorded. We were well represented in these results, although not in the 10k men with its 39:30 cut off. Well done to all who ran, I am sure there were some good times back in the field.

Female 5km
5 Katie Forestier 20.27

Female 10 km
1 Kathy Southgate 38.42
7 Emma Adams 43.07
8 Helen Larmour 43.10
14 Amanda Walker 44.36
15 Sonia Verdhofen 44.37
17 Thea Zimpel 46.41

Male 5km
20 Ken White 20.04

It appears certain people ran together, or else are very close rivals.

My training progress
last week achieved: 8k
year total to date: 2,207k in 24 weeks
this week’s target: ?
weight: 67kg ▲
I have a serious hamstring injury. Should I resume running despite the fact that the hamstring is no better? We will see. I might be able to get away with jogging each day.

After the long trip to Brisbane, we walked into our son's house where we were greeted by the daughter-in-law. "So," she begins, "how long do you want to stay for this visit?"
"However long you want us," I responded.
What!" she exclaims, "You don't even want to stay for a coffee?"


By the way Scotty, the above is totally untrue, we had a wonderful time in Brisbane and our host and hostess were just perfect. And those two little grandsons were delightful.


Do I spy Tuggeranong Don or a very close likeness (blue t-shirt, sunnies) and many other familiar faces all around... click to enlarge.


Edit: Another 10k time, Mick Horan ~40.40. You cannot miss him in the photo, four across from Don, next to someone who looks suspiciously like Helen. Isn't it amazing how you can recognise someone with just a few pixels as clues?

Sunday, 17 June 2007

Wild Life

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, June 17, 2007 with
BERLIN (Reuters) - An aggressive squirrel attacked and injured three people in a German town before a 72-year-old pensioner dispatched the rampaging animal with his crutch.
The squirrel first ran into a house in the southern town of Passau, leapt from behind on a 70-year-old woman, and sank its teeth into her hand, a local police spokesman said Thursday.
With the squirrel still hanging from her hand, the woman ran onto the street in panic, where she managed to shake it off.
The animal then entered a building site and jumped on a construction worker, injuring him on the hand and arm, before he managed to fight it off with a measuring pole.
"After that, the squirrel went into the 72-year-old man's garden and massively attacked him on the arms, hand and thigh," the spokesman said. "Then he killed it with his crutch." The spokesman said experts thought the attack may have been linked to the mating season or because the squirrel was ill.

Ewen is the caption winner for Friday's photo.
'I'd better time myself. These ultra runners are so slow at stopping the watch'

Saturday, 16 June 2007

H2Overview

Posted by speedygeoff on Saturday, June 16, 2007 with

Runners are experts on the weather. Perhaps we should volunteer to be BOM weather predictors; although forecasts like “beautiful running weather” and “run your 80k in the first three days of the week, before the cold change arrives” might nonplus the average citizen. The BOM website is excellent; but I came across the “weather channel” website when searching for dam level data, something BOM doesn’t report..

Major city dam levels have been hardly affected by the rains this week and last. Thursdays reading had
BRISBANE: 18.4%
SYDNEY: 36.9%, but I heard in the news it is now up to 39.2%
CANBERRA: 30.1%
MELBOURNE: 28.5%
HOBART: 68.2%
ADELAIDE: 65.0%
PERTH: 20.5%

See http://www.weatherchannel.com.au/Magic94scripts/mgrqispi94.dll?appname=WC&prgname=WC&Template=DamLevels for any updates.

Friday, 15 June 2007

Freezing Friday

Posted by speedygeoff on Friday, June 15, 2007 with
Thursday training
I don't know if anyone ventured out last night; it was trying to snow here; Dickson oval's elevation is close to 600m and the snow East of Canberra was down to 600m yesterday, so when the weather closed here in Holt (my home is also 600m) at 5pm, I decided not to venture out and head East to the track. In any case, I am recovering from injury, so I would have been standing/walking/freezing and not running.

A game
If you are enjoying the games, here is another: a superior series of logic puzzles. logic puzzles part one. These are click/drag/type puzzles. That is, to solve them, you need to do some clicking, some dragging, and some typing.

Synchronised starting

Click to enlarge. This photo just cries out for a humorous caption... any suggestions?

Footnote: The photo shows Carol Baird (ultra champion) and Griffin (simply a champion) seeing off two of the backmarkers in the Frylink (short distance) monthly ACTVAC handicap - John Lamb (better known as a middle distance track runner) and Katie. From one group back I managed to chase down John in that run, but couldn't quite catch Katie.

Thursday, 14 June 2007

Let There Be Floods

Posted by speedygeoff on Thursday, June 14, 2007 with
Queensland Travel Story
Sunday 3rd was the day of Half Marathon at Doomben... It was humid and warm and windy, but the locals said it was cool. Everything is relative! I hadn't run much in preparation because my hamstring/glute was too sore ... sure enough, I couldn't achieve the 4 minute k target at all, the legs just would not turn over fast enough (does anyone else have this problem?) ... at 3k in 13 mins with sweat pouring off me from the effort, the body said "enough" ... at 5k in 23 minutes I told my body to take a running jump and picked up the pace a bit again, the incentive was to stay in front of the 100 minute balloons. Which I just managed.

Monday 4th was stinking hot at lunchtime when I jogged for two hours. And the hammy was a bit sore, But hey, where did that calf pain come from?

Tuesday 5th we went out to a playground with our grandchildren, the sun disappeared and it became cloudy and cool. The word best describing this is "harbinger". No run today.

Wednesday 6th we decided to go to Australia Zoo but the heavens opened and it poured; we drove up the highway 20kph under the speed limit given the conditions. (But we noticed that, as in Canberra, Brisbane truck drivers and P platers are exempt from driving safely). The lovely scenery was not visible. At that stage the weather was confined to SE Queensland and wasn't predicted to move SW and take hold in NSW the way it did. No run.

Thursday 7th we drove to Tenterfield. A pleasant drive.... No run. and Friday 8th to Muswellbrook. Not having a radio in the car, we had no idea that storms had hit the Hunter region. On the way there, Armidale at lunch time was freezing cold; the servo attendant said it had been beautiful weather until that day. Soon after Armidale we experienced light drizzle, which continued for the rest of the afternoon. At Tamworth we had to get out of the way of police cars and ambulances tearing up the highway to an accident in the wet, presumably. When we arrived at Muswellbrook we had no trouble finding accommodation, as many of the long weekend events had been cancelled due to the weather. Yes, lots of rain, news to us. No run.

Saturday 9th we visited a Hunter winery and cheese factory, quite a few tourists actually, and locals talking of heavy damage to their properties the previous day. Afterwards the drive to Newcastle that afternoon was through flood waters the whole way - the highway was open and the towns weren't cut off yet; water was receding but there were many abandoned cars, a common sight for the next 24 hours. After we had passed through, the rivers rose and did cause many closures. (We also saw for the first time the open cut coal mines; the previous day was the announcement that despite protests another would be built). Newcastle itself was a scene of devastation - many streets closed, traffic bottlenecks towards the CBD, most places without power, only a few service stations operating, cleanup work being done everywhere. We didn't get to see the big ship washed up on Nobby's Beach - that would have been some sight, but traffic jams put paid to that idea. We called in to see some friends in Adamstown (Newcastle suburb) and then found that the motels we had planned to check out were without electricity (watching TV by candlelight would have been tricky), Our friends had the bright idea of letting us have the house across the road for the night while the occupants were away! With their knowledge of course. So we had luxury for one night of our holiday. No run.

Sunday 10th we drove to the Central Coast to visit my cousin who had just returned from his mother's funeral in Adelaide (we hadn't known about this Aunt dying until the 9th, messages were left only on our home answering machine; that's all 3 Aunts departed in close succession) - saw damage everywhere first hand again including road subsidence (five people died in a car when the highway collapsed under them; how close were we?), then headed home to find Canberra had no rain at all when these storms were happening further North-East... and the rivers were kind enough to rise and cut of roads and towns only after we had passed through the storm ravaged areas. No run.

It's good to be back. But it sure is cold here. Yesterday the minimum here in Belconnen was minus 6, the maximum plus 7. Last night it rained; snowed in some areas (Sutton, Bungendore). And yes, I have a hamstring tear; sustained in fact way back on Anzac day when I stretched too far forward trying to hand a baton on in a relay race! Monday's attempt at running was my first for a week and I won't run again until this is fixed. 'Cause, the next big event is four months away and I want to be right for it. The calf is not torn, it just went out in sympathy.

Photos. I have updated http://mooregenerations.blogspot.com/ with new photos of all the grandchildren, including the Brisbane ones of course.



I am cutting down to one cup of coffee a day. Of course, it is a LARGE cup.
You go away for a few weeks and when you return, Geelong are on top of the AFL ladder. That can't be right!

Wednesday, 13 June 2007

Recent speedygeese results

Posted by speedygeoff on Wednesday, June 13, 2007 with

Results ACTVAC Handicap Oakey Hill 7.5k
5 Charlie McCormack W40 35:27 73.6%
13 Richard Faulks M45 30:31 80.5%
15 Alan Duus M60 36:49 75.1%
17 Mick Charlton M55 40:57 64.1%
19 Helen Larmour W45 34:11 80.0%
21 Colin Farlow M45 29:33 82.1%
22 Geoff Barker M60 39:11 70.8%
36 Maria O'Reilly W50 35:09 83.5%
38 Rod Lynch M45 29:45 82.6%
40 Amanda Walker W35 35:57 71.7%
57 Peter McDonald M50 39:27 65.3%
68 Tony Booth M65 39:39 75.1%
75 Margaret McSpadden W60 45:28 70.2%
77 Cathy Newman W45 35:51 75.0%
78 Ruth Baussmann W55 44:19 69.6%
84 Michael Freer M75 46:42 74.2%
95 Annette Sugden W40 39:22 66.8%
100 Mick Horan M45 38:01 64.6%
102 Roger Pilkington M45 40:51 60.5%

Oakey Hill 3.5k
15 Ken White M50 14:33 81.4%
19 Katie Forestier W40 14:50 81.5%
22 Neil Boden M55 16:14 74.6%
37 Gary Bowen M50 15:15 76.4%

Results Pennington 12k
23. Richard Faulks M45 50:59
41. Roger Pilkington M45 57:21
51. Mick Charlton M55 66:48

Longstaff 8k – women
4. Kathy Southgate W50 32:54
Men
9. Ewen Thompson M50 41:13
11. Geoff Barker M60 41:49
19. Adam Robinson 42:39

Doomben Half Marathon - my official time was 1:38:47.1, giving me 174th in the field, or 8th M55.

Tuesday, 12 June 2007

How we trained

Posted by speedygeoff on Tuesday, June 12, 2007 with
Monday night was a relatively still night; quite cool though. Because it was a holiday, some would have run earlier in the day. Those who did train were Adam, Alan, Emma, Ewen, Geoff B, Kathy, Ken and Neil. We ran 12 intervals on the small grass oval. I seem to have badly hurt my left calf to add to my strained glute and sore foot, both also on the left leg. So it's off to the medical professionals. They have patched me up in the past.

Monday, 11 June 2007

Monday Morning Monitor

Posted by speedygeoff on Monday, June 11, 2007 with
My training progress
achieved last 3 weeks: 134k
year total to date: 2,199k in 23 weeks
this week’s target: 100k
weight: 66kg ▲

The Brisbane holiday meant that much less running was done. I will get back into a routine this week, and maybe run a slow 100k in total. The Terry Fox 10k is scheduled for Sunday. Would anyone like me to pace them? Nice and slow would be good.

Sunday, 10 June 2007

Guess where I have been?

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, June 10, 2007 with
1. We decided to return to Canberra from Brisbane via the New England Highway and tour around the Hunter Valley district.
Hunter Valley is flooded, devasted, roads closed, towns cut off, rivers rising. We arrived after the torrential rain and left before the rivers rose, but not before a number of people died.

2. Then proceed to Newcastle and visit some friends.
Newcastle is mostly without electricity, has a coal carrier washed up on the main beach, and many closed roads. We arrived after their three nights of (a) thunderstorms (b) rainfall and (c) high winds.

3. Then visit some relatives on the Central Coast.
I would say every property we saw had some damage. Mostly from uprooted trees or fallen branches.

So we were in the three main disaster areas of the state as it was happening. We are very lucky to have timed it as we did and get through! And that's not all, more will be revealed! We haven't unpacked yet; I will tell a fuller story in a couple of days. Needless to say, we are home in one piece.

Wednesday, 6 June 2007

Mooloolaba

Posted by speedygeoff on Wednesday, June 06, 2007 with
Our last full day in Brisbane. we decided to spend the day at the sunshine coast. The original plan was to go to Australia Zoo, but continual pouring rain meant an indoor venue was essential. So off to Mooloolaba and the underwater world for the day, awesome.

Tuesday, 5 June 2007

Australian Mountain Running Championships

Posted by speedygeoff on Tuesday, June 05, 2007 with
1. Training: I heard that Griffin, Emma, Helen, Alan, Adam, Kathy, Strewth, Amanda, Sonia, Katie, Ewen, Geoff B, Yelena & Joel, Neil & Ken turned up last night at PH and all but the least brave ran 15 by 40 secs on 2 minutes. I will be back next Monday!

2. Coming Event: The Australian Mountain Running Championships are on Mt Majura in Canberra on 16 June. See www.mountainrunning.coolrunning.com.au

If you are intending to run, you should get your entry in as soon as possible. You don't have to be an elite runner. The most interesting field at the moment is the M70, which will be contested by Bob Chapman, Rad Leovic, Max Scherleitner, Tony Krantzcke and Ray Bramwell, proving you are never too old.

The M60+ and W50+ do have an easier course but still have to go to the summit and back.

For the elite, this is the primary selection trial for the World Mountain Running Championship (12.6km men; 8.4kms women) on 15 September in Ovronnaz, Switzerland. See http://www.coursedes2bains.org/presentation-wt07-fr.html

The courses for the Australian Championships are exactly the same as those for the 2005 Championships when the cut off for Australian team selection was 62:40 for the men's 13.3kms; 52:15 for the women's 9kms; 46:15 for the junior men's 9kms; and 27:00 for the junior girl's 4.7kms.

If you cannot run, but are interested in helping, still needed are a few more marshalls out on the course and people who can take pics. Contact John Harding by email at john.harding@aihw.gov.au or by phone on 6248 6905.

Monday, 4 June 2007

Monday Morning.

Posted by speedygeoff on Monday, June 04, 2007 with
No "Monitor" this morning - no scales; probably a good thing. I ran 19k in over 2 hours before lunch. Not real quick, but it was a little hot.

1. The Call Centre Announcement

2. A reminder: the standard fee deadline for entries into the 2007 Gold Coast Airport Marathon and associated events is Wednesday 6 June. Entries received from Thursday 7 June onwards will attract a $20 late fee so get your entries in now and save! For all the event details and online entry please go to http:www.goldcoastmarathon.com.au.

Sunday, 3 June 2007

We better get going if we are going to stay ahead of the weather.

Posted by speedygeoff on Sunday, June 03, 2007 with
Doomben 2007: After running the first three kms at 4:20s and feeling awful, I jogged the next two at 5s wondering if I should pull out. Then I saw the 1:40 balloons catching up and decided I would at least try to stay ahead of them for as long as I could. With a combination of painful shuffles and intermittent surges I held them off to the end. Final result, a terribly slow ~98:56. Part of the motivation to at least break 1:40 was that my very comfortable Canberra Marathon halfway split this year was 1:40:00.

So that is that. Before I race again, I must repair my left leg! Or trade it in for a new one.

Saturday, 2 June 2007

Do you think you're an idiot?

Posted by Aki on Saturday, June 02, 2007 with
Here's a test to prove it:

Missing link! It works. Thanks Aki... I just proved I'm not an idiot! (Ewen)

Lots of red buttons to press here. :)

Friday, 1 June 2007

not happy

Posted by speedygeoff on Friday, June 01, 2007 with
Today in Brisbane I rear-ended a car at some lights whilst not paying attention.

Anyway the fella who was driving got out... And he was a dwarf!!!!

He said "I'm not happy"........

I said "Well which one are you then?"