Running in the Holidays
I spent the Christmas holiday down in North Carolina with family. Spending time down there in the winter months is actually pretty beneficial to my running activities as its usually 10-15 degrees warmer than in Northern Virginia this time of year. It can be tough for some, not sleeping in your usual bed, not knowing the roads/ paths, and not having your typical routes to fall back on, but it doesn't bother me. Its nice to explore a new area and get a sense of adventure, especially when you discover new trails or paths.Just after a trail run.. |
Trail map of Umstead near the south parking area. Conveniently, trail maps are placed at most major intersections you might encounter. |
Typical shot on the trail. Note the blue blaze. |
Umstead even hosts a 100 miler Ultra run, The Umstead 100, with a 50 miler accompanying it. Wouldn't mind returning for this someday. Its a 12.5 mile loop (run 8 times). While this sounds boring, it should be good for novice ultra runners, has frequent aid stations, as well as multiple points for dropping out and little chance of getting lost (you never get too far from civilization - good safety features). The 50 miler would actually be a good prep run for either the Massanutten Mountain Trails 100 or Old Dominion 100 mile run.
Talking in terms of long range goals and scheduling: this spring and summer are pretty much planned out, and I would like a little down time to do some traveling in Fall. That takes me up to Spring 2014 for a new Ultra goal. This would be a good time to do the Umstead 50 miler (in early April) as a lead in to my goal of running the Old Dominion 100 miler in early June of 2014.
Short on Time? Tempo!
Christmas Day I was a little short on time, so this is usually a good opportunity for a tempo run. My goal was a 30 minute run; this may sound easy compared to a two hour long run, but if you pace yourself correctly and push it during the intervals you end up feeling almost as tired as after a long run. Oh, and it was 60 degrees out! Pretty amazing for December 25th.
I went out looking for a 30 minute run. First 7 minutes were spent warming up gradually speeding up to about Marathon Pace. Then 5 minutes "on" (probably about 10k pace), a 3 minute rest (easy running to recover , 5 minutes "on" again, a 2 minute rest, 3 minutes "on" (starting at 10k pace and building up to 5k pace", then the remaining 5 minutes were used to cool down until I got home.
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