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08:27
:07

How I learn to love; well atleast like, swimming

Posted in Tips, Swimming by Oakes Ames

18 years of triathlon had convinced me that I didn’t like swimming. Every touch of the pool wall represented an opportunity to stop and go home to me. I seized many. Maybe if I did all my running on an indoor, dimly lit, 50 yard track I wouldn’t like running either.

I’ve blown off the pool for the month of August. I don’t claim this will make me a faster swimmer, or live longer, but I sure like swimming more. I’ve gone all open water, all wetsuit, all the time - no intervals, no drills, no turns.

I’m lucky, my training partner has access to a lake and 3X a week we’ve been hitting it for 65-75 minutes. That’s an eternity for me in a pool. Check this out. That was taken on a Sunday morning about 6:50 AM and I was looking forward to swimming because it would be fun. I haven’t thought that since summer camp.
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Perhaps it’s the same type of fun Conrad gets from riding a single speed, simplicity. I enjoy it when the weather is nice because it’s a beautiful place and I enjoy it when the weather is bad because I’m encased in neoprene so it’s more comfy than biking in the rain.
Recently, I added adventure to open water swimming in the form of a few jellyfish and a lot of fog with a 2.5 miles point to point swim in Long Island sound from Stamford CT to Todd’s Point Beach in Greenwich CT. Reveille was 5 AM, car drop off at the beach was 6 AM and tide and fog made it a longgg swim. We weren’t going to take the short cut across the cove when we couldn’t see the other side. I don’t swim straight even when I can see where I’m going.

Here’s the start. We thought the fog would lift.
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And here’s the finish with our leader, 70+ year old John Cook. He’s managed to keep swimming fun.tn_CIMG1369.JPG


08:11
:07

Dave Scott & Ironman Revisited on Oahu

Posted in Athletes, Diet and Nutrition, Swimming by Rachel Ross

Ironman Revisited is happening this weekend on Oahu, combining the Waikiki Roughwater Swim, the 112-mile circle island road race, and the Honolulu Marathon as originally done in 1978. The event raises funds for the Challenged Athletes Foundation. On Sunday thirty athletes, each with their own support crew, will set out on the original journey. In conjunction with the event, six-time Ironman Hawaii Champ Dave Scott put on a two-day clinic in Waikiki. He won on Oahu in back in 1980 prior to the race’s relocation to the Big Island. Twenty athletes, including participants of Ironman Revisited, showed up to suck all the knowledge possible from the legend. Dave left no question unanswered, covering topics ranging from whey vs. soy protein to how to get abs of steel like those on Bob Babbitt. (Whey wins and Bob wasn’t giving up his secrets, or posing for pics) In 6h of clinic time my IQ quadrupled. While doing drills in the ocean, I learned that I swim all wrong. And how to fix it - here’s Dave showing us how not to swim:

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Dave shared the formula he uses to calculate calories required for recovery. Using Friday’s 18 mile run and my ~700 cal/hr burned at a 7:15/mi pace, he helped me calculate that I had spent nearly 1500 calories on the run. I had taken in 500 calories while running, leaving me with a 1000 calorie deficit upon completion. Dave recommends consuming 60% of that deficit within 45 minutes to an hour of finishing - and finishing means the minute I stop running, not after I stretch, shower, make the kids waffles.. Ideally, recovery calories should come in a 3:1 or 4:1 carb:protein ratio. Which left me with a goal of consuming 600 calories in the 45-60 minute recovery window, with 125-150 of those calories coming from protein. Now, I may swim all wrong, and apparently my run form is appalling as well, as I found out during the run drills, but if there’s one thing I’ve got down, it’s the recovery drink. Dave asked what I had after my run - and I told him the same thing I always do - a little gatorade endurance on my way down to Jamba Juice, where I order the Protein Berry Pizazz with blueberries instead of strawberries. What does Dave have to recover from a two hour workout? A Jamba Juice Protein Berry Pizazz with blueberries instead of strawberries. And he has them add a scoop of peanut butter & a carrot. I’m doing one thing right! Dave also emphasized that while 30 min is often recommended for optimal refueling for recovery, the range varies greatly from person to person, and many will gain benefits from eating up to 2-6 hours after very long or intense training.

Another scoop straight from Dave: He’s not quite ready this year, but look for him on the starting line in Kona next October. When speculating on his time, the numbers that came up would put him in the top 10-20, easy. 50-54 is in for a shock.

If you get the opportunity to attend a clinic with Dave, take it! But know that if he tells you to go underwater and hold your breath before he has you demonstrate something for the group - look out - he’s not saying nice things about you while you’re under.

Clinic attendees Stephan Reinke, me, Dave Scott, Raul Boca & Amy Bennett shortly before making the man ride around the park on Amy’s 15 year old Dave Scott bike, which she paid thousands for on ebay (or might have found at Goodwill). daveclinic.jpg Stephan is coming off a 51 minute swim at Ironman Austria and Dave didn’t like his form either - somehow that comforted me a little.


08:06
:07

NY to VT 8 mile Open Water Swim!

Posted in Racing, Race Reports, Swimming by Alex Mroszczyk Mcdonald
I had heard about a bunch of crazy people who do a swim across lake Champlain from Willsboro Point, NY to Burlington, VT, a distance of 8 miles.  Although 8 miles is a long way to swim and I knew it would be tough, this event had always peaked my interest.  However, it is not well publicized and I always heard about it after the fact…not this year.  Well, barely, I found out about it around 20hrs before the event!  Although it took a little scrambling to raise the funds and find a support crew (thank you everyone, in particular a bunch of friends from the  Green Mountain Multisport club YOU GUY RULE!!) some how I managed to pull it off.I arrived at the boat launch at ~7am, where a few more logistics were ironed out we loaded up the small fleet of boats and took off for the NY shore, with about 34 swimmers each with a support kayaker.  The wind and resulting white caps on the lake looked menacing, but I figured it wouldn’t be that bad.  About 15mins into our trip we (most of up were on a bigger yacht) got a call from the small pontoon boat, which was loaded with 17 kayaks, that they where having trouble navigating the waves.  We swung around, threw them some lines and began towing them.   After about 5min of towing a wave hit the pontoon boat just right and one of the pontoons when under and the thing literally began to sink!  Fortunately, this caused about half the kayaks to fall off and the pontoon boat began to right itself.  However, about 10 kayaks were floating away!  Myself about 3 or 4 other guys took the initiative to dive off and went kayak chasing, fun!  After about 15min, we loaded several kayaks onto the bigger boat, shortened the lines and again began heading for the NY shore, only this time with a little more caution!  We were about 20-30min behind schedule by the time everyone was in the water, with their support kayak, but no worries!  Let the swimming being!

The first hour felt pretty good, I wasn’t trying to kill myself, just survive the event.  Then the swells and chop got to me and I began feeling very sea sick.  I felt pretty bad, but I wanted to at least make it to the 5mi mark at a small island in the middle of the lake.  At that point I told myself I would stop, giving myself a slightly easier more immediate goal to work towards.  I made it to the island around 2:15 or so but them my stubborn drive got the better of me.  I told myself I had made it this far, I could continue on!  I made it only a short distance, then the vomiting began…  I had made it this far and I knew if I didn’t finish I would, be really mad at myself and have to try again next year (I said I was stubborn) and at that point I never wanted to do this again!!  Therefore I told myself I have to finish!  However, at about mi 7 I began dry heaving…of course I couldn’t stop I HAD TO FINISH!!  The last hour was probably the most miserable experience I have ever had as an athlete.  I completed the event in 4:18, not exactly what I had hoped for, but I was happy to be on dry (and stationary) land! 

I knew this swim as going to stretch my abilities and put me out of my comfort zone as an athlete, however, I think that is what keeps us improving both as athletes and people.   Reflecting on the day I wouldn’t say that I had a good time, but I was glad that I did it!  As the day progressed and my goals changed from racing, to participating, to just completing the event, I learned a little bit more about myself and about what drives me.  My fiancé had said to me before I left that morning, “you can quit and I won’t tell anyone,” to which I responded, “but I would know!”  I think that there is a little bit of pride in all of us that pushes us towards that finish line, however, for me it is more about setting a goal and not letting myself down, after all I am my toughest critic.  I think that having a “bad race” or a race that does not exactly go according to plan, although can be very frustrating, ultimately it helps us all to become better athletes both physically and mentally.

After telling this story several times, everyone keeps asking me “Why did you do that to yourself?” to which I respond “because it was there.”  I can now check this 8 mi swim off my list and NEVER DO IT AGAIN…well…at least not for awhile! J

 

Thanks!

Alex MM

www.alexmmtri.com


05:30
:07

PointZero3? Seems closer to 3.0…

Posted in Tech Talk, Swimming by Jordan Rapp

Seconds per 100 that is… The BlueSeventy PointZero3 name actually refers to the frictional coefficient of the swimskin, which is 0.03, compared to ~0.10 for something like a Speedo Fastskin, or 0.50 for human skin. But who really cares about all that? How does that number translate into a number we really care about, namely how fast we go in the pool.

In order to try to answer this question, which I’d heard rumored was as much as five seconds per 100, I headed off the pool. The suit, which works in two ways - reducing the friction over your body AND increasing your buoyancy slightly - is very comfortable, and swimming in it requires no changes to your stroke, unlike swimming in a wetsuit, where you really should change your stroke a bit to take maximal advantage of the suit. In the PZ3, you just swim, and, *hopefully*, go faster.

So I wanted to test a few things - maximal speed, cruising speed, and then consistency over a steady interval set. Maximal speed is a bit flaky, since warm-up, turn-quality, etc. plays such a large role. But I can pretty consistently bang out 31 second 100’s when swimming fast. In the PZ3? 29.5 at what I perceived to be the same exertion level. So far, so good. I also did a cruising 200 just to see how it did for steady, which I can normally nail at 2:35-2:40, and I was 2:28. Again, so far, so good.

But this was all one-off stuff. How about a workout where consistency is key? So I had a good set - 30 x 100 as 10×100 swim on 1:30, 10×100 pull-buoy only on 1:25, 10×100 pull paddles on 1:20. The swim 100’s were really good, and I was consistently 2-3 seconds faster than when I had done the workout the week before. The pulling sets were harder to compare since the pull buoy slipped down so easily on the smooth skin of the suit, so I would call those basically useless for comparison.
So, after my basically unscientific study, I have concluded that I like this swim skin an awful lot. Thanks guys… To give a reference point about this suit, a good wetsuit will save you 8-10 seconds per 100, so to have just a swim skin save you 2-3 seconds is pretty darn fast. As with all these sort of things, I’ll offer the disclaimer “your mileage may vary.” Or rather, I should say “your timeage may vary.” Of course, timeage isn’t a word, but never mind…


05:23
:07

Wetsuit Secrets of the Sponsors and Pros

Posted in Athletes, Watches & Race Equipment, What the Athletes Wear, Product Reviews, Tips, Swimming by Oakes Ames

Being an amateur on Team Timex is like being the proverbial fly on a wall; you hear a lot of stuff that’s not being said to you. Sometimes you pick up some helpful or funny pieces of information from the team sponsors and pros. By helpful/funny information I don’t mean “Our brand X is the fastest,” or “You need to swim 42 X 100’s on sub 1:07 to get faster at the IM swim”. The first isn’t kept as a secret and the second isn’t helpful…or funny to someone who swam 1:20 last October.

Take wetsuits, for example. Sure, we’ve all heard that Vaseline petroleum jelly is bad for wetsuits, but is the damage to the suit worse than the damage to your neck from a wetsuit hickey, and if so how bad is it? And how about swimming in chlorinated pools with wetsuits? How much will knowledge about my 1000-yard wetsuit aided time cost me in terms of wetsuit wear? According to blueseventy’s Ben Bigglestone both Vaseline and chlorine will degrade the stitching of your wetsuit. But if you’re a pro and get a new one every year, what the heck do you care? Apparently, neither eats away like acid so base your behavior on how long you want to keep your suit.

How about Pam non-stick cooking spray? OK, according to Ben, except that it makes you smell like “chips”. That’s across the pond talk for french fries.

But the big question everyone wants answered is, what about peeing in your wetsuit? Will this shorten wetsuit life and friendships? Ben says you can use your wetsuit like your own private port-a-potty with no worries, enough water gets in the suit during the swim that there is no harm and no one will ever know.

The Timex pros are also a great source of tips. Ever had trouble pulling the ankles and wrists of a wetsuit up high enough for a snug fit? You should, it takes time to put a suit on right. Timex pro Blake Becker said he puts his suit on starting with it inside out. I had to see it to believe it. It works.

Encourage Blake to post pictures or video of this tip. There is no way I’m posing in a Speedo for pictures on the Internet!

Next time I’ll post what I heard about the Equinox TTX from the man know as “Lance’s bitch” at Trek. It’s not on their web site!



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