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Saturday, June 23, 2007

20 Miles Again

Skated 20 miles in 1:30 this week (last week it took me 1:50).

What a glorious morning it was! Amazing! Cool temp of 64, absolutely clear skies, and I was totally refreshed and ready to skate when I woke up. I skated south on a new route toward River Falls that I had scouted out a few weeks back. Fresh pavement...ssmooooooth! Like I said, excellent skate this morning!

I declare my new skates to be 90% broken in - after 5 miles, they fit perfectly. I have been nursing a severe friction point on my left Achilles heal. The annoyance started out as a come and go blister but then turned into a hole big enough to fit a pencil eraser. Now the skin is callousing over and turning into knobby tissue. Thankfully there is not much pain.

To the person who helped my purchase the skates -THANK YOU! I still don't know who you are but I prayed for you this morning between mile 12 and 14. God bless you!

So I am really happy with my time today. I've been researching more about racing strategies so that I am prepared on race day. I want to keep safe. I want others around me to stay safe. I want to do the absolute best I am able to. I figure my current training will allow me to finish the marathon between 1:40 and 1:30. However, that is by my own power unassisted by drafting and pace lines. Last year I benefited greatly from drafting but I didn't get in a group until after 5 miles. This year I will be in an earlier wave group with better skaters and thus I start drafting soon. I've read that good drafting can improve time by 10 to 20 percent. If that is true, I am looking at a really good finishing time. An hour and thirty minutes looks realistic although I am not ready to declare it a new goal. Last year the winning time for the entire open class was 1:27.

3 comments:

erin said...

You could win!! That would be so exciting!
Can you explain what drafting is?

Unknown said...

Yes, I could possibly win my division so I am training for it.

Drafting or Slipstreaming is a technique in sports racing where competitors align in a close group in order to reduce the overall effect of drag or fluid resistance of the group in a slipstream. Especially when high speeds are involved, drafting can significantly reduce the average energy expenditure required to maintain a certain speed.

Source: Wikipedia

Carla said...

Um. They hang onto each other in long lines and skate FAAAAASSSSSSSSSSSSSTTTTTT!
Source: Karlipedia