Monday, October 8, 2012

Leonard Family jumps around Rocky Mountain Nat’l Park

This past weekend we had VISITORS!  Lara’s parents and brother flew in Thursday night and Jeff’s parents flew in Friday from St Louis (Lara’s dad and Jeff’s dad are brothers). 

The weekend started off on a positive note; the Cardinals beat the Braves to earn the Wild Card spot in the playoffs.  Yet again, baseball season continues for St Louis fans…..joy joy happy happy.

We booked a rental up in Estes Park, CO for the weekend.  Then rental house came equipped with this yard ornament:

IMG_3126

That was the best rack I’ve seen in years.

Saturday we drove from Estes Park to Lake Granby.  The route took us through Rocky Mountain National Park.

RMNP Drive Route The drive was gorgeous and we got to see some great views from the car.

RMNP scenes from the car

We got out of the car here and there to soak in the views and to document our stop at the Continental Divide.

RMNP RegularThe highlight(s) of the day have to be our jump photos.  We could not pass up the perfect back drop to perform jump photos and managed to get every family member to join in on the fun.  I don’t think we have laughed so hard in a while.  Here are the best jump photos from each family member:

Leonards Jump RMNP

We have perfected the following jump photo poses from left to right: “The Wrangler,” “The Classic,” (right facing) “The Mario Brother,” (both left and right facing) “The Frogger,” “The Cheerleader,” “The Classic,” (left facing) and "The Frassic” (combination Classic and Frogger). 

We had so much fun with this, it’s now a Leonard family obsession (or at least I am more obsessed with jump photos)!  Seriously, these jump photos are getting out of control.   But I don’t care, it is so much fun and you come away with hilariously awesome photos.  No more posed photos for me, BORING!

We jumped on the Continental Divide (on the Atlantic Side)!ContDivide_1 ContDivide_2 IMG_3155

Then we jumped above the tree line (we love the Frogger jump)!

RMNP Above Trees 

RMNP Above Trees 2 RMNP_9 We had a great weekend with the family in the mountains.  In addition to jumping around a lot, we ate some delicious donuts (not just donuts, that was just my favorite part of eating this weekend) and did some much needed relaxing.  Hopefully the family comes back soon!

Yet another successful weekend in Colorado!

Monday, October 1, 2012

Dog Shaming

Have you seen that website where dog owners post photos of their dogs with notes of the bad things they did?  Its called www.Dog-Shaming.com Check it out for a dose of laughter.

I have caught a few Dog-Shaming-Worthy photos that I have taken over the years and thought I would share my version.

Winterized Jay

corn dog

bad elle

photo bombed.

jay and elle Quick Head Turn

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Race Reports- My First 5K & Denver RnR Half

I have done a few races over the past 2 weeks, a local 5K (the Farmers 5000) 2 weeks ago and the Denver Rock and Roll Half Marathon this past weekend.

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Two Sundays (Sept 16) ago was a day of “firsts.”  I started the day off running my “first” 5K* and then immediately headed for the mountains and did my first 14er

The morning of the race I woke up and decided I wanted to run the Farmers 5000, a local race where I live in Wheat Ridge.  So I headed to the race and signed up the day of.   I honestly had no idea what to expect: Do you warm up for a 5K? How fast should I go?  How hard do I push myself? Is there a strategy?

Basically I am a clueless 30-year-old recreational runner, not to mention I have not been training for a 5K and did 15 miles the day before for my marathon training. 

They started the race and I just started running.  I didn’t look at my watch once and just ran faster than what was comfortable.

For the first 1/4 mile, I didn’t see any women in front of me.  Weird.  Then a little high school girl passed me.  For the rest of the race I was about 5-10 seconds behind that girl.  I wanted to try to get up with her, but I doubted myself: 

  • I can’t run that fast?!?! 
  • I don’t WIN races?!? 
  • What if I pass her and then get outkicked in the final 100 meters!??
  • What if I pass the 15-year-old high school kid at the end and look like the beotch that passes the cross country kid who helped put on the 5K?!?

All of the sudden the finish line was in view and I crossed in 20:29 (6:36 pace) as the 2nd female (the female winner crossed at 20:18).  I was breathing heavily but felt like I could have gone another 5 miles at that pace.  Whoops, too much negative thinking during such a short race.   

farmers5k_1I was supposed to win a second place prize, but I had to leave right after the race to go hike the 14er.  Who knows what the prize was, maybe they will mail it to me?  (probably not going to happen as it is 2 weeks later and no prize, bummer)

Oh and my splits were TERRIBLE.  I started off too fast, then slowed down way too much (it was a hilly course with lots of turns, but still, this is bad):

5k splits

But I had a blast!  It was so much fun to RACE and only for 3.1 miles!  I know that I can improve and I think that I can break 20 minutes if I was rested and now that I have a small clue of what to expect. 

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This past Saturday (Sept 22) was the Denver Rock and Roll Half Marathon.  I didn’t have that high of expectations because my legs had been tired and sore all week from the 14er (it took more out of me than I realized).  But I was going to try for a PR.

Jeff and I headed down to the start only to confirm that the warnings we were hearing were true; parking sucked and road closures prevented you from accessing the site from the north.  Needless to say, we parked over a mile from the start, ran to the start (I guess this was our warm-up?), and instead of starting in the 1st coral, we were late and started in the 4th coral.  So for the first 4 miles we were dodging and weaving through crowds of runners who were running at a pace much slower than we wanted to be at.

The course was decent, but was crowded in the first half, had a lot of turns, and a few hills in the last 4 miles. 

Denver RnR Course I never felt particularly good, but not bad either.  I kept a decent pace, but my legs started to feel heavy at mile 9.  I ended up finishing in 1:31:29, 9 seconds slower than my PR.  I’m pretty confident that if I was running at sea level and was properly rested I could have gone under 1:30 (same thing goes for Jeff).

half splitsThe time got me 22/5342 female and 7/1080 in my age group (F 30-34).

Jeff finished about a minute ahead of me in 1:30:33 (just 10 seconds short of his PR) as 105/2821 male and 26/510 in his age group (M 30-34). 

Denver RnR

We are both about where we need to be in our marathon training and will only get faster/stronger in the next month as the temperature cools off.  Obviously we would like a be a bit faster at this point, but know what we need to do to get there.  We have been doing more fartlek and tempo runs, workouts that we both enjoy (neither of us really like the track so we stopped going).  We have been hitting 40+ miles each week and will up the mileage to close to 50 per week until taper time.  Marathon PR here we come!

Monday, September 17, 2012

Our First 14er, Mt Bierstadt!

Yesterday Lara, Jeff, and I completed our first Colorado 14er… Mt. Bierstadt at 14,060 feet!
IMG_3058 It had a Class 2 difficulty rating, so it is one of the easier 14ers and was within an hour drive of Denver in the Arapaho National Forest.  We also had perfect weather!

We drove west on I-70 to Georgetown, CO and the up to Guanella Pass where the trailhead (Trail #711) is.  It took less than an hour to get to the trail.
Mt Bierstadt Location Map
The drive to the trailhead was almost as awesome as the hike itself because the Aspen trees have changed to a vibrant yellow. 
Autumn in the mountains
We started the hike at 11,669 feet.  The hike goes through a bog and then continues up to the summit.  The first 2.5 miles were very easy and enjoyable.
Mt. Bierstadt Hike 1 Mt. Bierstadt Hike 2 Lara and I started feeling the effects of higher elevations at approximately 13,000 feet, so we started slowing down and drank water frequently.  We never felt sick, just got a bit of a headache and dizzy now and then.  Jeff was never effected by the altitude.

At approximately 13,800 feet, the terrain gets a little rugged and is covered with boulders.  It also got windy and was a little cold for Elle…. so Jeff tucked Elle into his sweatshirt like a kangaroo baby the rest of the way to the summit. 

We finally reached the summit a few hours into our hike and started photo documenting proof that we made it to 14,060 feet!
Mt. Bierstadt Summit The views were spectacular and we were so proud of ourselves!  The clueless Midwestern “hikers” made it in one piece!

We then turned around and went back down the mountain (duh).  Stopping now and then to take a few more photos.  The thought of beer waiting in our car pushed us along.  We finished the hike and immediately drank a celebratory brew.  Beers tastes that much better after a 7 mile hike and your first 14er!
Mt. Bierstadt Hike 3
And not to disappoint anyone, we also were able to get some more spectacular jump photos.  We are practically professional jump photo takers.
Mt Bierstadt JumpWe were pretty tired on our drive home, but the gorgeous yellow Aspens made it worth the drive.  I love autumn in the mountains!
Autumn in the mountains2
We are already plotting our next 14er…. which one should we do next!?

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Randomness and Happy Birthday Jeff!

While working on site at a facility full of rocket scientists and engineers, I saw this every day:
hiking rocket scientist
This man would go hiking during his break and wear this amazing outfit.  There is so much awesome going on that I had to share it with you.

One day I got an email from my boss informing me of his upcoming nuptials.  See below:
uninvitation
How awesome is this “un-invitation invitation?”  This also is an example of the type of scatter brained emails that I deal with daily from my boss.  He keeps me entertained, that is for sure.

The last post I showed you a lot of wonderful jump photos.  Jump photos are sometimes hard to capture, especially when you have more than 1 person.  Here are the other outtakes:
jump outtakes I was sore the next day from all the leaping and jumping in the sand. 

Also, and most important, today is Jeff's birthday.  HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEFF!!!!

In honor of his birthday, I would like to share the most hilariously random photo of them all.  A photo of Jeff with all his brothers, in a bath tub (Jeff is second from the left).
That is all.  Have a nice day.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Great Sand Dunes, Colorado

This weekend Jeff, Lara (Jeff’s cousin who is staying with us for a few months while she completes an internship), the dogs, and I headed about 4 hours south of Denver, Colorado to the Great Sand Dunes National Park (we left Saturday morning after Jeff and I got in a 15 miler).
GSD NP LocationThe Great Sand Dunes are the tallest dunes in North America at 750 feet and are very impressive.  They are located in the San Luis Valley surrounded by two mountain ranges; the Sangre de Cristo Mountains to the north and east and the San Juan Mountains to the West.  The views were gorgeous.IMG_2883The weather was great and we car camped in the National Park within walking distance of the dunes.  Saturday night we enjoyed some good brews, foil dinners, wine, and S’mores around the campfire.
camp1 camp2 Sunday we woke up to blue skies and immediately headed up the sand dunes.  The weather was in the upper 60s, perfect for hiking!
dunes1 IMG_2933 And of course, we took some hilariously awesome photos along the way:
dunes2 Jump photos NEVER get old. 
dunes3 Neither does running full speed down a sand dune.
dunes4It was a quick trip, but so much fun!  It was great scenery and even better company.  Jeff and I are very lucky to have Lara staying with us until the end of October, she makes these weekend adventures (or really anytime) exponentially more fun and entertaining! 

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Fighting the Running Plateau

Ever since I started running, I have constantly improved.  Every goal race was a PR and it didn’t take much additional effort to run faster.  I didn’t have to think about improving, it just happened (plus I started off really slow so it was very easy to improve).

But lately, I am seeing a change.  As I have gotten faster, it gets harder and harder to improve my pace or to obtain a new PR.  Have I reached my running plateau?  Is a 7:00 pace the best I can do for long distances?

No, I don’t think I have reached my potential (or at least I hope not!).  But my days of not requiring much additional effort to improve are over. 

My current “comfortably fast pace” is around 7:15; my “easy pace” is around a 7:45.  To run the times that I want, I will need to have my “comfortably fast pace” be around 7:00 and my “easy pace” to be around 7:30.  If I want to run these paces for long distances and continue to improve and get faster, I am really going to have to push myself and to work hard.

I don’t have a coach to write me a “get faster program,” nor do I want to lock myself into a specific program found on the internet (because lets me honest, I do what I want when I want anyway).  To keep it “simple,” I will just try to do the following each week until the NYC Marathon (Nov. 4):

  • Run more.  I need to consistently run 40+ miles a week at a minimum, ideally 50+ miles a week (right now I am running around 30 miles a week).  I can do this by adding a mile or two to each run. 
  • More speed work.  And not just 4 miles worth of speed work at the track like I have been, more like 6+ miles of 200s, 400s, 800s, and 1 mile repeats.  Hill repeats can also count as speed work, plus hills will be good to train for the bridges I’ll be running over in NYC.
  • Tempo runs at faster than a 7:00 pace, and longer tempo runs.  My 5 mile fast runs just aren’t cutting it as tempo runs for marathon training, I need to do 7+ miles at a 7:00 pace.
  • Double days a few times a week to get in that extra mileage.  Get up early, run an easy 3-5 miler and then do another workout in the evening.
  • Don’t skip the long run.  I MUST do a long run each weekend from now until my marathon. 

By posting my “plan” for the next few months, hopefully I will stick with it and beat my previous marathon time (3:17).  In addition, Jeff will be training with me and he needs to pick it up if he wants to qualify for Boston during his next marathon (St Louis RnR on Oct 23).  Hopefully we can feed off and motivate each other!!