In the manner of
Tri-Daddy, these are my notes on
"What I would do differently, knowing what I know now".- More total training volume. Yeah. But not hugely more, if I want to keep my life in balance.
- 3 to 6 more long swims of ~2 hours steady.
- Some ocean swim practice, especially navigating during swells and choosing the easiest course with a current present. Perhaps arrive earlier on site for more swim practice.
- 3 to 6 more long bike rides of 80-120 miles.
- If asphalt starts getting badly lumpy, try riding on the white line first instead of riding on the biggest part of the bumps (caused by road traffic) for 10 miles.
- 3 or 4 runs at night in the pitch black with a headlamp, just to be ready for it.
- Approach the run leg on race day more like a standalone marathon, than just the last few miles of a long day to be survived. Have a concrete nutrition plan going in, e.g., gels at 4, 8, 12, 16 and 20 miles. (I had thought since the aid stations were so well-stocked I would be able to just take what I needed when I needed it, but that strategy didn't work so well.)
- Have a concrete strategy in place before the race for the run to deal with the psychologically difficult (for me) halfway point turnaround - like expect it to be very rough to see the finish line area, walk to Mile 14 with your special needs supplies, then run again.
- Have pre-determined personal cutoff times in writing. Like, "If you're walking, unless you're going straight to the med tent, keep going unless you hit the halfway point of the run after 8:15 PM." I always thought I would finish (unless a race official took my chip at their cutoffs) and never truly thought through how to deal with feeling like I was absolutely too exhausted to go on.
- Have a cheap windproof jacket and gloves in both the T2 bag and the special needs bag so you won't have to carry it around until it's truly needed.
- Pack along a headlamp for the run.
- Have a better understanding of my heart rate drift on very long (6-10 hour) efforts and selecting a heart rate range that I can maintain on both the run and the bike. Even though it was too dark to see my watch or heart rate monitor on the run.
What I would do the same:
- My training week-to-week was more consistent for a longer period of time than it's ever been. I'd stick with the strategy of tallying weekly totals and targeting minimum numbers in each discipline each week.
- Keep targeting body weight throughout the entire year before the race. Every pound lost is free speed.
- My nutritional and hydration strategy through the swim and bike leg worked pretty well for me.
- My pace on the bike was comfortable and sustainable under the wind conditions.
- A gel halfway through the 2-loop swim helped a lot.
- A quiet place to stay and unwind with friends away from Race Central helped keep me on an even keel.
- Complete clothing changes made me feel a lot better on the bike and run and didn't slow down my transitions too much.
- TriBikeTransport worked great for me, although my local bike shop screwed up big time by not doing the pre-shipment tuneup. At all.
- I still wouldn't buy any Ironman gear until after the race was done and the title earned.
4 comments:
I'm with you run53. I'm exhausted having just read it.
Best wishes
http://whitterer-autism.blogspot.com
Thanks for sharing what you've learned. I'll keep your lists in mind for IMFL next year.
Nancy,
Thanks for the great list. I think it is worth reading by anyone considering a IM distance event.
Great posts! I am prepping for Canada next year and will keep your lessons in mind! Thanks!
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