We departed Tucson in a panic late Friday afternoon, despirately trying to get out of town before the monsoons hit town. The plan was to drive as far as possible and grab a hotel to reduce the drive on Saturday to Lubbock. As we set out, things look like it would rain and possibly storm. And we THOUGHT we may avoid the storm, but things just got worse the farther east we headed. Just as the sun was setting, we got to experience our first dust storm. It was very strange. Kind of like fog, but very windy and dark.
After excaping the dust clouds, the sky lite up with lightning and thunder. The sky was BLACK and nasty looking, but the rain never really came. It rained a little, but never too hard.
We drove until 1 AM before trying to find a hotel in Rosewell of all places. To our surprize the place was packed with UFO watchers, and after checking all the respectable places in town, we ended up staying at the Econo Lodge - a rather shady place to say the least. I'm just happy I didn't catch anything staying there.
The next day we drove on to Lubbock without incident. The road is dead straight and boring, soo when I thought I saw spiders all over the road, I wasn't sure if I was over tired and seeing things, or sleeping at the wheel. After talking to a coworker after the race that grew up in this area of Texas, she assured me I wasn't imagining things.
The city of Lubbock is pretty cute, and Texas Tech University campus rocks. It is soo classy. The downtown by the university was a little lacking, but overall it was pretty cool. We spent most of the day hanging out in the hotel room getting ready for the race, cleaning our bikes and watching the weather forcast online and on TV between constantly looking outside. When we went to bed, we were still very uncertain what the next day would bring.
When we awoke at 4 AM, the sky was angry, with the occational flash of lightning. I was certain the race would be cancelled, but we ventured to the race site anyway. Following the stream of cars, we arrived very early to get try and get a good parking spot. The walk in was a little scary as we had to trek about a mile into the park in pitch darkness to get to the transition area. Smart orgainized me forgot my helmet and I had the pleasure of trying to run back to the car against traffic in the dark to get it. so much for a calm relaxed warm up.
The race ended up starting a little late because of parking issues and disorgainization on the part to the race orgainizers. To say the start was disorgainized was being generous. There was no one calling the waves or getting them lined up, no one getting athletes to cross the timing mat, making sure everyone was in the right wave (i'm sure if you were willing to risk it, you could easily get a 4 min head start going in the wave ahead of your own, without anyone knowing)... but most disappointing for such an important race was the lack of even a starting line. People just kept edging further forward into the water, and then running along the shore line as the water levels were low, and no markers forcing you to swim out and around the corner. I opted to stay to the far left and not run the corner and hope that avoiding the crowds would pay off with less wasted energy. that and I can no longer mix it up like i used to since almost drowning in Hawaii 2 years ago - i get paniced very easy and would rather take a slightly longer line than get caught in a large group.
Monday, June 30, 2008
Buffalo Springs Lake Triathlon
Posted by Powerbar Junkie at 9:29 PM 0 comments
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Trilife and Relationships
And when your partners success ultimately surpasses you, and they are constantly surrounded by both athletes with BIG money or professional athlete good looks your really F#$KED.
Posted by Powerbar Junkie at 9:24 PM 0 comments
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Summer Heaven no BS !!
Posted by Powerbar Junkie at 6:56 PM 1 comments
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Deuces Wild !!
Well I just got back from the Deuces Wild 1/2 IM in Show Low AZ, and it was totally not what I was expecting.
The drive there was absolutely amazing. What should have been an easy 3 hour drive, ended up taking a good 5 hours after stopping a dozen times to take pictures and to take in the views. It was exactly as I imagined AZ would look when I moved here. I kept waiting to see the roadrunner come burning up the road in a cloud of smoke, and Wye Lee Cyotte chasing wearing a pair of rocket skates !! The pics really don't do it justice.
The race venue itself was surprisingly very similar to Muskoka or Peterborough. I really never imagined pine forests in Arizona, but what did I know. We arrived late friday afternoon, registered and checked out the venue. It really was amazing - with the exception of the lake. Although it looked pleasent and inviting, it was anything but. At a balmy 58 degrees, it was colder than Tempe Town lake at IM AZ !!! Needless to say, a prerace swim was out of the question.
After hanging around for a few hours, checking out the sponsor tent, talking with the Skins and Kuota reps, and after Chris had ripped off the local middle school kids for dinner, we headed back to our luxury hotel. Lucky for us, the inside was better than the outside - or the bar attached to it. Seedy would be a minor understatement.
We awoke early on Saturday to pack the truck, and drive to the race site. To say it was cold, is a minor understatement. Even worse, was that neither of us brought enough clothing, and as a result we froze out A$$ off. Lucky for us there wasn't a cloud in the sky and things warmed up quickly. The lake however didn't warm at all.
The mens swim went off at 6:30 am, and was soo cold I began to panic and hyperventilate the instant my face hit the water. I had to really concentrate on relaxing as I was sure I was going to have to DNF if I could calm myself down soon. I managed to get things under control for most of the swim, but had several minor episodes during the swim when I hit cold(er) spots. Needless to say, my time was a little slower than I would have liked, but i had survived, and that was most important. My feet however were completely frozen by the end and had real issues running into transition. Not to mention trying to get my wetsuit off.
The bike started with problems right from the get go. After getting up to speed, I tried to shift into my big chain ring, and nothing. I tried several times before having to get off and switch it over manually. Once rolling though, things went really smooth. I began picking off people one right after another, until the half way point, at which point I was all alone. Not really sure where I was in the race, and with no one to chase, and no one chasing me I found myself getting into a solid pace, but definately not pushing as hard as I should have. I also ended up missing 2 turns weaving my way through the neighbourhood surrounding the conservation area.
Having seen the leaders already on the run course coming into transition, I tried to rush things and ended up leaving T2 the wrong way and had to back track. Not to self - check the course out before the race !!! I began the run as quick as possible affraid I had lost too much time with all my stupid mistakes. I was trying as hard as possible to suck up the pain of my blisters on both feet I got on my last run 2 days before the race. Can anything else go wrong ?!?! Once I hit the turn around at mile 10 and I realized no one was near me - infront or behind - I decided to coast in to the finish. I crossed the line in 4:43:?? in 3rd place overall.
Overall I was happy with my race. It was a solid effort, and much better than I ever expected. And I'm glad the bike section of the race is largest, otherwise Christine who ripped up the course finishing first in the womens race would probably have beat me !!!
Next time I will have to prepare a little better, and iron out the little mistakes if I want to do better in Texas next month.
Posted by Powerbar Junkie at 9:59 PM 0 comments