IN THIS ISSUE
KEEP THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE
BEST EXERCISES FOR AGING MUSCLES
TRY A PROGRESSIVE RUNNING WORKOUT
KIRG TRAINING PLANS
Routes and Photos
2018 TRAINING SCHEDULE
JOKE OF THE WEEK
GENERAL INFORMATION
WORLD XTERRA CHAMPIONSHIPS RACE REPORT
UP COMING EVENTS

Stay Tuned


 
The KENT ISLAND RUNNING GROUP now has our own website; check it out

KEEP THINGS IN
PERSPECTIVE

RonandBeau
 
 
This is the week all of us Type 'A' runners and triathlete's complete our final workout logs for the year.  We can't help doing a quick summary to see if we are close to a 'PR' in total miles- (running, biking, swimming), total hours training , or some other metric we record.
  Something I would like to pass on from my 63 years of running, and approaching 105,000 miles of running is that -
                everything is relative. 
 Keep things in perspective.  Take pride in your accomplishments - because they are YOUR accomplishment; whether they are more or less by numbers than your friends of fellow Facebook followers.

  For example, I now look at PR's in 5 year increment's, so I compare my performances against those of the past 5 years rather than those when I was a young stud.

  Age is also a poor metric for comparisons - even with your peers.  I tease a good friend, also 69 years old, but did not start running until he was in his 40's, that he has "young legs".  So if you are, say, 43, and setting PR's at every distance, every year, but did not start running until five years ago - enjoy and relish your accomplishments but be careful about comparing to anyone else, even age group peers.  Even at an age of 67, you can be a 'young stud'; or you can be the 'elder statesman' :-).  

The key is that you - just keep doing it.

   As I write this, we are in Orlando with the grandsons (14 and 10).  I run the boys around the resort grounds to 'burn energy', and wind sprints for an hour - them, not me
 
"
 
"Only those who test the distance will know how far they can go."  

 
 Fatigue is voluntary.
 
  You are an 'experiment of one'
  
 
DIFFERENT RACES, DIFFERENT CONDITIONS, DIFFERENT EVERYTHING.
 

"Only those who test the distance will know how far t
hey can go."   

THE BEST EXERCISES
FOR 
AGING MUSCLES
The toll that aging takes on a body extends all the way down to the cellular level. But the damage accrued by cells in older muscles is especially severe, because they do not regenerate easily and they become weaker as their mitochondria, which produce energy, diminish in vigor and number.

study published this month in Cell Metabolism, however, suggests that certain sorts of workouts may undo some of what the years can do to our mitochondria.

Exercise is good for people, as everyone knows. But scientists have surprisingly little understanding of its cellular impacts and how those might vary by activity and the age of the exerciser.

So researchers at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn., recently conducted an experiment on the cells of 72 healthy but sedentary men and women who were 30 or younger or older than 64. After baseline measures were established for their aerobic fitness, their blood-sugar levels and the gene activity and mitochondrial health in their muscle cells, the volunteers were randomly assigned to a particular exercise regimen.
Some of them did vigorous weight training several times a week; some did brief interval training three times a week on stationary bicycles (pedaling hard for four minutes, resting for three and then repeating that sequence three more times); some rode stationary bikes at a moderate pace for 30 minutes a few times a week and lifted weights lightly on other days. A fourth group, the control, did not exercise.

After 12 weeks, the lab tests were repeated. In general, everyone experienced improvements in fitness and an ability to regulate blood sugar.
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There were some unsurprising differences: The gains in muscle mass and strength were greater for those who exercised only with weights, while interval training had the strongest influence on endurance.

But more unexpected results were found in the biopsied muscle cells. Among the younger subjects who went through interval training, the activity levels had changed in 274 genes, compared with 170 genes for those who exercised more moderately and 74 for the weight lifters. Among the older cohort, almost 400 genes were working differently now, compared with 33 for the weight lifters and only 19 for the moderate exercisers.

Many of these affected genes, especially in the cells of the interval trainers, are believed to influence the ability of mitochondria to produce energy for muscle cells; the subjects who did the interval workouts showed increases in the number and health of their mitochondria - an impact that was particularly pronounced among the older cyclists.

It seems as if the decline in the cellular health of muscles associated with aging was "corrected" with exercise, especially if it was intense, says Dr. Sreekumaran Nair, a professor of medicine and an endocrinologist at the Mayo Clinic and the study's senior author. In fact, older people's cells responded in some ways more robustly to intense exercise than the cells of the young did - suggesting, he says, that it is never too late to benefit from exercise.

 
TRY A 'PROGRESSIVE' RUNNING
WORKOUT
FOR THE HOLIDAYS
'Tis the season! With all the holiday parties, family get-togethers, and enough feasts to add a few inches to your waistline, you might be wondering how you're supposed to get in your running workouts.

And it's understandable-most runners shut down their training efforts during December and take some time off from running to spend more time with their family.

Fortunately, there are several ways to maintain your fitness while running fewer miles. You can run less for 2 to 3 weeks during the holidays before you really start to lose much fitness. As long as you're smart about your training, you'll come back in the New Year in good shape ready to tackle your winter and spring goals.

Since we're all strapped for time, here are five workouts you can do in less than 45 minutes that still keep you in great shape.

The Progression Run
Progression runs are similar to tempo runs-but they're a little easier and allow you to get in some faster running without the added recovery time you might need from a faster tempo workout.
A "progression" is when you gradually run faster and faster over the course of a run. It's not a dramatic increase in pace-instead, you'll run about 10 to 20 seconds faster per mile than the one before it.
Let's say you're a 2-hour half marathoner with an easy running pace of 9:30 per mile. A 5-mile progression run might look like this:
  • Mile 1: 9:30
  • Mile 2: 9:20
  • Mile 3: 9:10
  • Mile 4: 8:55
  • Mile 5: 8:35
The entire run is "aerobic" (meaning you're not accumulating lactic acid in your muscles like you would in a hard interval workout) and the last mile is about your tempo pace.
Since the faster running is only for a brief period of time, it takes less time to recover from this run and the risk of a running injury is smaller. And your 5-mile run now takes less time!

.

Kent Island Running Group is planning a new race! Mark your calendar for the inaugural Solstice Stomp 5K through Cascia Vineyards, planned for June 24 at 6:30pm. This unique evening race will wind through the lush vineyard, and the amazing after party features free wine tastings and live music in a picturesque waterfront setting. To register, go to https://www.kirg.org/solsticestomp/

 
IS IT OK TO WEAR
RUN CLOTHES MORE THAN ONCE 
BEFORE WASHING?
It's RUN day, but you haven't done your laundry yet. So you dig out a gym shirt from your hamper, give it a sniff and a quick once-over, and it's good to go for round two, right?
Not exactly. Re-wearing sweaty old clothes can be a gamble, unless you're okay with breakouts and wafting an odor strong enough to knock the guy off the treadmill next to you.

Problem is, the article of clothing might look fine-and even smell fine too, to an extent-but that doesn't mean it's going to stay that way.

Here's why: The sweat our body produces is actually odorless, says Kay Obendorf, Ph.D, professor emeritus of fiber science at Cornell University. It's the oily sebum and the bacteria that your sweat picks up from your skin that can cause the stink.

The more bacteria in your sweat, the greater the odor. And your workout provides the perfect warm, moist breeding ground for the bugs, since your body temperature increases as you sweat. That means a good dose of stinky sweat to seep into your clothing. (For a workout that will leave you dripping with sweat, try The 21-Day Metashred from Men's Health.)

And that's especially true if you wear sports fabrics like spandex and polyester, which have been shown to collect the most odor-causing, micrococcus bacteria as compared to cotton, according to a study by Ghent University in Belgium.
If you don't wash your clothing right away, the bacteria can continue to multiply even after your workout-meaning your shirt gets progressively stinkier, explains Obendorf. So the shirt that may have passed the sniff test before you left the house could be a little riper when you finally take it out of your gym bag later. Plus, if you sweat again in an already-stinky shirt, well, you're just going to make it even worse.

What's more, excess dirt and dried sweat on your clothing can react with the oxygen in the air, leaving you with yellowish stains that are difficult stains to remove.
And the same factors that make your clothing stink can be bad for your skin, too.

"People put back on their workout clothing that they sweat in, and as a result, the fabric becomes a little rougher, so they get worse chafing during physical activity, says Arielle Nagler, M.D., assistant professor of dermatology at NYU Langone Health." That can lead to itchy skin rashes and skin irritation.

You might notice more breakouts, too. That's because re-wearing the clothes provides the perfect environment for acne, Dr. Nagler says. Chalk it up to the same bacterial breeding ground that makes you stink.

 
ROUTES and PHOTOS

Tom Nelson has constructed a site to show our routes and water stop locations for the long run coming up each week.  You can indicate your intention to run and see who else is planning on showing up - one more incentive for getting there. Check back to the following website later in the week for the latest info on water support:

TRUMAN ROUTES - 

http://www.runningahead.com/groups/truman/maps

 

2018 TRAINING SCHEDULE

coming soon  HERE 

  

This Weeks WORKOUTS 

 

 Tuesdays/Wednesday AHS Track is back on 'track'.

 

-   START 6:30pm   

 Our HILL and aTRACK sessions will take on a more maintenance focus.  Unless you have a GOAL Race coming up; it is important to continue doing a high intensity workout (HILL and/or TRACK) once a week.  It will make you faster for next years races.

Alternate 4 to 6 x 800 YASSO's  with 10 TRUMAN PAPA BEAR type HILL REPEATS - be sure to do these safely with plenty of light.

 

Be sure to work hard to stay consistent and steady. Always do 1 Mile EASY Cool Down. Steady - Steady - Steady - Relax

  

During the Warm up do some Knee lifts on one curve and Butt-kicks on the other curve, and jog the straight-aways. THIS is IMPORTANT. 

   

Saturday Run 

***START AT 7:00am 

 

Like keeping up with high intensity workouts, it is important to keep up with the long runs once a week.  Like track and hills will make you faster - keeping up the Long Slow runs will make you stronger.  You do not need to log 20 mile runs every week.  10 mile runs, with a bump to 15 miles every three weeks.  This will keep your BASE Building going and put you at a higher fitness level when you start the next Phase of Periodization Training.


 Remember to Record time, distance, HR, how you felt, humidity, temp for comparison later.

  

Hope to see you at the track.     

  

JOKE OF THE WEEK
YOU KNOW YOU ARE A RUNNER WHEN - 

BWAHAHA - I'M LOOKING AT
YOU:-)

PORT  A   POT  Donation
Fall/Winter Moore's Marines Long Distance Training
***
Kent Island Running CLUB
***
Peninsula Pacers Running CLUB
***
Anne Arundel County STRIDERS
 
 Week #301, 6 JAN 2018
===========================
25 YEARS OF MOORE'S MARINE'S

 

30 Years of MOORE'S MARINES 

  "It is our attitude at the beginning of a difficult task which, more than anything else, will affect It's successful outcome."    
  Resolve to make a positive attitude part of every run in 2018. 
GENERAL INFORMATION
  TRUMAN START TIME WILL BE 7:00AM

==================================== 

  
NOTE:  We are down to 3 months coverage for the TRUMAN PORT A POT -
-------------------------------------------------------------
 
THANKS:   TO Derek Ammons for donating to our TRUMAN Port A Pot.  We NEED your donation to keep it going.  
------------------------------------------------------------

BACON RIDGE NATURE TRAILS

Michael Klasmeier of Trailwerks passed on that the layout and design for the final phase of construction for Bacon Ridge is being finalized. For phase 3, as we are calling it, we will be extending the trail system to connect to Farm Rd and Bacon Ridge Rd on the north end. We'll be connecting the middle-north and western-north portions of phase 2 to the Farm Rd area and lower beaver dam ridge, respectively. We expect to add approximately 12 more miles of trails to the system, including a loop at the corner of Chesterfield and St Stephen's Church.
 
Please let us know if you would like to hike in and check out the draft trail alignment we are working on. Much of it parallels the 2010 corridor suggested by Dan (with IMBA at the time) with a few major changes. The changes reflect our desire for more sustainable trail with less excavation on some steep slopes that will require less maintenance in the long run.
 
We are hoping to have a new map for submission to MET and SRLT in the coming weeks.


-----------------------------------------------------------------
 
Note: If you have an article, link, tip, race accomplishment or milestone to pass on to the group, please let me know. Use Annapolis Trail Runners Facebook Group to share tips and questions directly with everyone in the group.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
      Tom Nelson has diligently collected GPS maps of the many routes we use from Truman.  Here is a link to his excellent Runningahead routes: 
 Click here for:  
 
EVERY RUNNER IS AN EXPERIMENT OF ONE\

 - EVERY RUN IS A NEW ADVENTURE
WORLD XTERRA CHAMPIONSHIP RACE REPORT
by Peter Tango


Hi Ron, 
 
Back from Hawaii. Enjoyed my first visit to the State. Learned a lot about the region in the process. Great food, pretty beaches, comfortable towns. A nice place to visit. 
 
Race Review - Kualoa Ranch on Oahu was a stunningly beautiful and rugged race venue for the Xterra Trail Running World Championship Half Marathon. There was plenty of energy in the air that morning with everyone getting ready for the 9AM start. Xterra asked me for an interview during warm up time which was fun. In the pre-race meeting the day before I asked the pro ladies that were on the panel what impact this course layout had on their results compared to their best half marathon times. They both replied "About 30 minutes slower". Ouch! Good, helpful perspective though. 
 
At the startline, where do you line up for a world championship with nearly 600 people? The advice was "Fast people, you know who you are, line up near the front. Slower people, you know who you are, line up behind them." I knew a few of the racers and, using the pro's equation relative to previous times I knew for those racers, I jumped in with them around row 5 from the front pack of elites.  A cannon blast to start the race about knocked us over. 
 
The course is like a masterpiece symphony. It builds in repeated crescendos to a fever pitch, and at its pinnacle, the symbols crash and send you flying on a journey to its completion.  The first quarter mile is your downhill welcome to your race on gravel road, and that's all the warm up you get before being launched into a nearly 2 mile climb of rolling uphill terrain. Easy? I caught up the ladies top pro who twisted her ankle on this stretch and pulled out. Not easy. This section quickly spreads the field before heading into "sweet single track" for most of the next two miles. Translation - single track that is going through a 15 degree side hill slope with ruts, rocks, mud and occasional patches of dark, rocky, rooted, twisty 50-100 yard stretches. Sweet! Around mile 4 you hit the only short stretch of paved road. Easy right? Wrong - it is uphill heading into the ocean breezes gusting 20-30 mph. Even at my slow pace here I managed to pass people so as best I could tell I was doing ok. The next 2 miles were rolling terrain and slightly downhill. By mile 6 I was staying relaxed and found myself under a 7 minute mile pace. Given the pro's insight, the rest of the course made me wonder just how bad it could get.  Did I mention that on the course map, mile 9 is identified as "The Death March".  Hmmmm. 
 
Turning into mile 6 was the first time I went on defense to give the course more respect for what had to be ahead. There was a short very steep stretch. I dropped my effort and walked about 80 yards. One person passed me working hard to 'run'. The man said "the back half of this course gets ugly!". "Thanks!"  And so went the next two miles, starting again to mix in more uphill sections. Even with bouts of walking I was still hitting a 7:30 average by mile 8, not losing any places at this point and feeling relatively good with 5.1 miles to go. The crescendo continued. 
 
From mile 8-9, the race got harder. And then mile 9 - with legs starting to feel the impact of the course, it was just plain steep and steeper. Along with fellow racers around me, we all walked until the incline became tolerable to run. There was a brief flat section, the sun came out, a glance to my right and the view had to be the best view on the island down the beautiful valley out to the deliciously blue ocean. We dropped down hill for a minute then, yes, you climb some more - runnable incline at least at this point, and finally you reach the peak and are directed to the right onto an immediately muddy downhill single track trail. My leg muscles are about red-lined for me at this point but there is no stopping now with about 3 miles to go. 
 
The race course profile after that Death March Mile shows a near vertical plunge as you start heading for the finish line.  It is no joke. You get about 75 yards of slight downhill after the peak of the course before you literally plunge steeply into a wet, knee deep muddy, root-filled, rock-filled dark dense jungle section of the course. It was so unusual, so different, I was disoriented for a few minutes trying to figure out how the hell to get through this quagmire. Screams echoed now and then as I could see people taking sections below me like they were on a luge course riding their dairy-airs through the mud. In spite of this chaos I was gaining on people. A blonde princess yelled "Coming through" from behind me. I pulled over, and, like a world class skier, this little blonde pony tail bounced by me at an impossible sprint while the rest of us were trying to figure out how and where to take our next step. I was in love. Then I remembered where I really was because, in the middle of it all, there were now 5 people in front of me that came to a screeching halt in the mudslide. I had my bearings finally and left that party behind as I started to dance, split, ski and skate my way through the remaining jungle stretch on legs that had almost nothing left. They claim it might be a quarter mile of this stuff. I'm betting it's closer to a half! So much for my pace at this point though!
 
I finally hit the hard pack trail again with about 1.5 miles of downhill trails to go. But as I went to hit the gas on my pace my right hamstring cramped and seized up. All I could do was crouch down to relax my muscles, and I thought my race was over. After about 15 seconds though only one person passed me coming out of that jungle section. I stood up and started walking a few steps, felt ok, then short stepped a faster pace, and within a minute I was pushing along back up to full race speed. Disaster averted, the young lady that passed me was only 30 yards ahead and helped pull me along the final stretch as we motored along in synch now. 
 
The finishing chute was on soft grass, lined with a cheering crowd and flags of all the countries of runners that were participating in the event. The back drop to the finished was the rugged valley mountains and was just beautiful. I crossed the line 40th overall in 1:49:16. That was about 27 minutes slower than my half marathon PR set 8 weeks earlier. The pro's were pretty much right about the impact of the course as a guide with my final time.  I admit that I cried seeing the results posted having this day end with a 2nd place age group finish, just 1:30 behind first place and only 1 minute ahead of 3rd place. In spite of all the challenges, it was a great day that you just had to keep going and never give up. 

Hi Ron, 
 
Back from Hawaii. Enjoyed my first visit to the State. Learned a lot about the region in the process. Great food, pretty beaches, comfortable towns. A nice place to visit. 
 
Race Review - Kualoa Ranch on Oahu was a stunningly beautiful and rugged race venue for the Xterra Trail Running World Championship Half Marathon. There was plenty of energy in the air that morning with everyone getting ready for the 9AM start. Xterra asked me for an interview during warm up time which was fun. In the pre-race meeting the day before I asked the pro ladies that were on the panel what impact this course layout had on their results compared to their best half marathon times. They both replied "About 30 minutes slower". Ouch! Good, helpful perspective though. 
 
At the startline, where do you line up for a world championship with nearly 600 people? The advice was "Fast people, you know who you are, line up near the front. Slower people, you know who you are, line up behind them." I knew a few of the racers and, using the pro's equation relative to previous times I knew for those racers, I jumped in with them around row 5 from the front pack of elites.  A cannon blast to start the race about knocked us over. 
 
The course is like a masterpiece symphony. It builds in repeated crescendos to a fever pitch, and at its pinnacle, the symbols crash and send you flying on a journey to its completion.  The first quarter mile is your downhill welcome to your race on gravel road, and that's all the warm up you get before being launched into a nearly 2 mile climb of rolling uphill terrain. Easy? I caught up the ladies top pro who twisted her ankle on this stretch and pulled out. Not easy. This section quickly spreads the field before heading into "sweet single track" for most of the next two miles. Translation - single track that is going through a 15 degree side hill slope with ruts, rocks, mud and occasional patches of dark, rocky, rooted, twisty 50-100 yard stretches. Sweet! Around mile 4 you hit the only short stretch of paved road. Easy right? Wrong - it is uphill heading into the ocean breezes gusting 20-30 mph. Even at my slow pace here I managed to pass people so as best I could tell I was doing ok. The next 2 miles were rolling terrain and slightly downhill. By mile 6 I was staying relaxed and found myself under a 7 minute mile pace. Given the pro's insight, the rest of the course made me wonder just how bad it could get.  Did I mention that on the course map, mile 9 is identified as "The Death March".  Hmmmm. 
 
Turning into mile 6 was the first time I went on defense to give the course more respect for what had to be ahead. There was a short very steep stretch. I dropped my effort and walked about 80 yards. One person passed me working hard to 'run'. The man said "the back half of this course gets ugly!". "Thanks!"  And so went the next two miles, starting again to mix in more uphill sections. Even with bouts of walking I was still hitting a 7:30 average by mile 8, not losing any places at this point and feeling relatively good with 5.1 miles to go. The crescendo continued. 
 
From mile 8-9, the race got harder. And then mile 9 - with legs starting to feel the impact of the course, it was just plain steep and steeper. Along with fellow racers around me, we all walked until the incline became tolerable to run. There was a brief flat section, the sun came out, a glance to my right and the view had to be the best view on the island down the beautiful valley out to the deliciously blue ocean. We dropped down hill for a minute then, yes, you climb some more - runnable incline at least at this point, and finally you reach the peak and are directed to the right onto an immediately muddy downhill single track trail. My leg muscles are about red-lined for me at this point but there is no stopping now with about 3 miles to go. 
 
The race course profile after that Death March Mile shows a near vertical plunge as you start heading for the finish line.  It is no joke. You get about 75 yards of slight downhill after the peak of the course before you literally plunge steeply into a wet, knee deep muddy, root-filled, rock-filled dark dense jungle section of the course. It was so unusual, so different, I was disoriented for a few minutes trying to figure out how the hell to get through this quagmire. Screams echoed now and then as I could see people taking sections below me like they were on a luge course riding their dairy-airs through the mud. In spite of this chaos I was gaining on people. A blonde princess yelled "Coming through" from behind me. I pulled over, and, like a world class skier, this little blonde pony tail bounced by me at an impossible sprint while the rest of us were trying to figure out how and where to take our next step. I was in love. Then I remembered where I really was because, in the middle of it all, there were now 5 people in front of me that came to a screeching halt in the mudslide. I had my bearings finally and left that party behind as I started to dance, split, ski and skate my way through the remaining jungle stretch on legs that had almost nothing left. They claim it might be a quarter mile of this stuff. I'm betting it's closer to a half! So much for my pace at this point though!
 
I finally hit the hard pack trail again with about 1.5 miles of downhill trails to go. But as I went to hit the gas on my pace my right hamstring cramped and seized up. All I could do was crouch down to relax my muscles, and I thought my race was over. After about 15 seconds though only one person passed me coming out of that jungle section. I stood up and started walking a few steps, felt ok, then short stepped a faster pace, and within a minute I was pushing along back up to full race speed. Disaster averted, the young lady that passed me was only 30 yards ahead and helped pull me along the final stretch as we motored along in synch now. 
 
The finishing chute was on soft grass, lined with a cheering crowd and flags of all the countries of runners that were participating in the event. The back drop to the finished was the rugged valley mountains and was just beautiful. I crossed the line 40th overall in 1:49:16. That was about 27 minutes slower than my half marathon PR set 8 weeks earlier. The pro's were pretty much right about the impact of the course as a guide with my final time.  I admit that I cried seeing the results posted having this day end with a 2nd place age group finish, just 1:30 behind first place and only 1 minute ahead of 3rd place. In spite of all the challenges, it was a great day that you just had to keep going and never give up.      
 
 
That's news from the worlds! 
Cheers, 
Peter 
 
Well DONE Peter!!

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 Stay Healthy;   

Ron

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