15 days…

By , July 14, 2017 2:24 pm

… until we ride Day 7 of RAGBRAI!

The actual week long ride begins in nine days, on Sunday the 23rd. Some people doing the full week have already shipped their bikes to the start! And here I am, planning on getting a few more rides in (on the bike I’ll use at RAGBRAI) before the one day I ride, ha ha.

My bike band, wristband, and jersey came in the mail last Saturday. My team (Dad, Gina, Andrew, and me) will all be wearing this year’s jersey the day we ride. RAGBRAI is one of the few events I do and don’t feel silly for wearing this year’s “shirt”!

I’m excited to see “how bad” the hills are. And am wondering how much time, if any, I will have to spend out of the saddle (standing, not walking) to get up them.

I’m excited that Andrew is trying it for the first time, that Gina is doing it for the second, and that Dad is sticking with me for the fourth year in a row.

I’m excited that more riding has gotten rid of my weird inner elbow running tan lines (it obviously has made the shorts tan line, worse, ha)!

I’m excited that doing RAGRABI is associated with extended leave from work for me, Steven, and Gina and family. It’s going to be wonderful to spend all that time together.

FIFTEEN. MORE. DAYS!!!

Side notes:

  • Has anyone else watched the silly mockumentary on HBO, Tour de Pharmacy? It’s a mock documentary about the 1982 Tour de France, with a lot of famous actors in it. It’s so ridiculous – I laughed a lot.
  • And has anyone seen this video, The Backwards Brain Bicycle? We watched it in our work training this week. It’s about how this guy trained himself to ride a bike where turning the handlebars made the wheel go the opposite direction. Well, and about what that says about our brain and learning.

Random Thoughts Thursday 140

By , July 13, 2017 6:36 am
  • The county I live in has been pounded with rain over the last week (particularly Tuesday night) and there are lots of roads under water, and flooding in businesses and people’s homes. At least two cities (that I saw) have declared a state of local emergency. It’s horrible, and I feel so bad for the people dealing with property damage. I hope we get a break from the rain for awhile (it was supposed to rain last night AGAIN, but luckily, it didn’t!).

Rain we got at our house this week

  • Luckily, we didn’t have any issues at our house. We did get a lot of rain, and our power went out early Wednesday morning (12:30 am), but the generator kept the sump pumps running (for over twelve hours until the power came back). Steven and I both had interesting commutes, with all the flooding. The route I take to work had an intersection under water, and Steven had to completely reroute the way he normally goes (the town his warehouse is in is one of the towns that declared a state of emergency).
  • I’ve actually had stuff I wanted to write about this week, but I’ve been in training all day since Tuesday and haven’t made the time to post. I signed up for this leadership class at work and was hoping I’d learn some new skills and concepts, but so far, it’s been stuff I already know (ladder of inference, Myers Briggs, etc) and mostly activities I’ve done before (GAH, if I have to build a “tower” with my team again, my head will explode), The teacher is engaging and I like the people I am in class with, so there’s that! Maybe today is the day I will learn something new!
  • I had to turn off the screen on my Garmin app that shows how many steps I do per day and if I was reaching my “goal.” Seeing it made me kind of nuts about it, when it’s something I don’t care about. I turned it off and immediately stopped thinking about it.
  • Snow (our outdoor cat) is extremely lovey dovey and I like to spend time holding and petting him each day, but the mosquitoes have been SO horrible that I get eaten up when I go outside to see him. Snow is afraid of coming inside, but I’ve been bringing him in for little bouts so I can pet him and not get bit (by mosquitoes, ha). Last night I brought Snow in, and Steven got him all buttered petting him while he ate. After that, he was chill (for Snow) and stayed in the house for quite some time! When I opened the door to offer for him to go back outside, he didn’t bolt straight for it, but casually walked outside. Winning!

  • Who else is excited for the Game of Thrones season premiere on Sunday? I hope our HBO app doesn’t crash!!! (That’s been an issue in the past with so many people trying to stream it live – I hope they’ve figured that out.)

Link to Random Thoughts Thursday 139

Training Week 403

By , July 9, 2017 5:14 pm

Highlight of the Week: Using my bike for transportation twice this week!

Monday | July 3, 2017: 7 m run
Loc: VP Woods loop, Temp: 72°/73°, Time: 1:17:52, Pace: 11:07 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: decent, just too hot at first
Tuesday | July 4, 2017: 12.7 m ride + 12.5 m ride + 3 m run
Loc: to Antioch, Temp: 63°/64°, Time: 49:02, Pace: 15.5 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: to Zion, Temp: 69°/69°, Time: 49:02, Pace: 15.3 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Spring Bluff FP/North Point Marina, Temp: 75°/76°, Time: 31:52, Pace: 10:37 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good

Wednesday | July 5, 2017: rest
Thursday | July 6, 2017: 4 m run (incl. 3 hill repeats)
Loc: hood, Temp: 84°/84°, Time: 45:24, Pace: 11:20 avg, Difficulty: medium, Felt: too hot
Friday | July 7, 2017: teaching strength class + 1,000 m swim + 3.2 m run
Strength: Arms of Summer, Difficulty: easy, Felt: meh (about teaching a workout that isn’t mine)
Loc: Grayslake Pool, Outdoor Temp: 67°, Time: 21:42, Pace: 2:04 min/100 m, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: VP Woods, Temp: 72°/72°, Time: 35:22, Pace: 11:03 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: decent, legs tired

Saturday | July 8, 2017: 18.45 m ride + 2.4 m run + teaching fitness boxing + 18.4 m ride
Loc: home to Efit, Temp: 58°/62°, Time: 1:13:38, Pace: 15.0 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great, happy
Loc: Grayslake, Temp: 62°/62°, Time: 24:21, Pace: 10:08 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good, thirsty
Strength: Core, Pads, & Boxing, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Efit to home, Temp: 66°/68°, Time: 1:13:44, Pace: 15.0 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great

Sunday | July 9, 2017: 12 m run (incl. 10×1:00)
Loc: DPRT, Temp: 65°/76°, Time: 2:13:09, Pace: 11:06 avg, Difficulty: medium, Felt: good, just a bit hot and tired at the end

Notes:

  • I loved riding my bike this week! On Tuesday I rode to spectate some friends at a race, and on Saturday I rode to work at Efit. Part of the route to Efit went through the neighborhood we lived in for two months between our town home and current home and it reminded me how much I loved running in that hood (I lived there in the winter and never rode there).
  • I am getting pumped for RAGBRAI! The day we ride is just under three weeks from today. This year I am riding with my dad, Gina, and my brother-in-law Andrew! We all got our packets this week (wrist band, bike band, etc., and shirts we ordered)!
  • Somehow, I had forgotten how my swollen mosquito bites feel stiff and odd during hot summer runs. Blah.
  • I forgot about speedwork until Sunday so I did it during my long run. Normally I’d do 10×1:00 in the last few miles but this time I did a minute fast at the top of each mile. Kind of shows you that you can still run “fast” when your legs are getting tired (… right?).

Link to Training Week 402

Miles on the Mississippi 5K Race Recap

By , July 3, 2017 6:58 am

The Miles on the Mississippi 5K was in Guttenberg, Iowa on July 1. Race proceeds will be used to provide clean drinking water to those in need through Childcare Worldwide.

I wasn’t planning on doing a 5K this weekend, but when I saw there was going to be one in the town we spend the Independence Day holiday weekend in, and that it was only $15 to enter, I though “Eh, why not?”

The race was small – forty-four participants! I was actually impressed we had real bibs (I’ve done races in this area where they just use index cards)!

Dad and I rode our bikes there (about 3.5 miles) and I registered thirty minutes before the race start. I lined up at the front of the pack for the race. And immediately felt like half of the group took off from in front of me.

Huh. I knew there was prizes for “top runners” and basically said goodbye to the idea of placing as I watched seven or eight women run off ahead of me (ha, not that I am fast, just that with such a small field, I thought I had a chance of placing due to lack of fast runners).

I felt good though – good enough to take a goofy selfie of myself and “my competition” and send it to Dad.

I saw my mom shortly after sending that text to my dad. Quick, Kim – act like you’re running and not screwing around! (It’s not like me to take photos and text during a 5K – I obviously was not taking the race very seriously).

A lot of the first mile was in the shade on city streets, which is probably why I felt good. I passed a few women in that mile (8:22).

Then we went up a short incline to run along the dike along the Mississippi River. Ahh, beautiful views. BUT SUNNY.

I passed another woman on the dike, and a young boy (who would eventually pass me back).

I still felt good, but the sun was making me feel hot (even though it was in the mid 60s). I felt encouraged to keep running strong though, since I could see my parents and nephew ahead! Mile 2 was in 8:05.

Mile 3 was mostly back on the city streets. There was a tiny incline and then it was flat. And somewhat shaded. By that point my face was dripping in sweat (maybe I shouldn’t have put sunscreen on for my bike ride) and I was ready to be done!

The last mile had a little loop past the finish line (on an adjacent street) and when we ran by the finish, I saw my parents waiting there, and tried to keep pumping my arms to finish strong so I wouldn’t look like a complete mess in front of them! Mile 3 was 8:20 (there was no .1 at the end – I’m guessing the course was short).

I finished in 24:41 and all I could think about was water (there was one water stop at mile 1 but I didn’t want to risk being passed again if I stopped) and shade. I was completely dripping in sweat. I wasn’t out of breath or anything, but my skin felt icky.

My parents and nephew and I all went back to the gazebo where registration was and I downed a bottle of water, and used paper towels to wipe off all the sweat, and started to feel better. I asked a volunteer about the age group awards, and she said they were first place awards for 13 and under, and 14 and above. Ha – that’s a big age group! My dad told me a few women finished in front of me, so I figured I didn’t place, but we stuck around to cheer on the winners (and for me to cool down).

When they did the awards, they gave out first place first and I expected that to be it, but they also had second and third, and I was very surprised to hear my name called for third place (in the 14 and above women’s age group). What a nice surprise!

I liked this course and running in the town I have been visiting since I was a child. I saw this was the third annual race and hope to run it again!

After the awards, we picked up some donuts in town, then dad and I rode our bikes back (mom took the donuts in the car, ha). I’m grateful my dad rode with me and waited around for over an hour and a half for all this, and that my mom came out and spectated, too! I bet I wouldn’t have finished at the time I did if “no one was watching”! Ha ha ha.

Training Week 402

By , July 2, 2017 8:45 pm

Highlight of the Week: Riding with Dad!

Monday | June 26, 2017: 1,008 yd swim + 4 m run + teaching strength class
Loc: FitNation, Time: 20:59, Pace: 2:05 min/100 yd avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: hood, Temp: 66°/66°, Time: 42:34, Pace: 10:38 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Strength: plyo box, kettlebells, & boxing, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good, just getting a bit tired

Tuesday | June 27, 2017: rest
Wednesday | June 28, 2017: 7 m run
Loc: VP Woods loop, Temp: 60°/63°, Time: 1:17:10, Pace: 11:01 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Thursday | June 29, 2017: 4 m run (3.2 w/Garett, incl. 2 tempo)
Loc: VP Woods, Temp: 81°/78°, Time: 37:07, Pace: 9:16 avg, Difficulty: medium, Felt: good, hot face
Friday | June 30, 2017: teaching strength class + 800 m swim (w/Joanne) + 3 m run
Strength: plyo box, kettlebells, & boxing, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Grayslake Pool, Outdoor Temp: 66°, Time: 19:10, Pace: 2:02 min/100 m, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: hood, Temp: 76°/76°, Time: 32:45, Pace: 10:55, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good, just sweaty

Saturday | July 1, 2017: 3.63 ride (w/Dad) + Miles on the Mississippi 5K + 3.49 ride (w/Dad)
Loc: to downtown Guttenberg, Temp: 62°, Time: 18:10, Pace: 12.0 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Guttenberg, Temp: 65°, Time: 24:41, Pace: 8:14 avg, Difficulty: mostly easy, Felt: mostly good!
Loc: to Esmann Island, Temp: 65°, Time: 18:36, Pace: 11.3 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good

Sunday | July 2, 2017: 3 m run (last 1.15 w/Dad) + 13 m ride (w/Dad, incl. 2 hill repeats)
Loc: Esmann Island, Temp: 60°/62°, Time: 34:00, Pace: 11:19 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: Guttenberg, Temp: 62°/70°, Time: 1:12:32, Pace: 10.8 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good

Notes:

  • I seem to be a bit of a lazy swimmer and forget to kick my legs much when I swim. I remembered to Monday and could tell I was going faster (and that my heart rate was going up).
  • I happened to pull in to the forest preserve parking lot at the exact same time as my friend Garett on Thursday night. Garett runs 20:00 min 5Ks. Garett is fast. Garett wanted to run with me. I am counting that as a tempo run. Ha! We had a fun conversation (surprisingly I could still talk and run – sub 9:00s are fast for me now!).
  • My Chocoholic 5K 2nd place AG pin came in the mail this week!
  • The start of my Friday run was great – I saw a cyclist wearing the 2015 RAGBRAI shirt and a driver gave me a thumbs up! Then in the second half, a driver gave me NO space on the quiet country road I was on and I basically had to run in the ditch. They were driving down the middle of the road, then came right next to me. Um… GFY.
  • I ended up doing a 5K in Guttenberg, IA on Saturday! Which means… I will have something to write about later this week. Ha ha.
  • My dad and I rode our bikes to the race and back on Saturday. And on Sunday, we rode up a big hill in town (300′) twice to get some RAGBRAI hill training in. I had to go in to my lowest gears, but felt fine, so I hope the RAGBRAI hills aren’t much steeper than that one (Dad didn’t think they were).
  • Monthly recap time! In June I ran 117 miles (24 runs), cycled 119.2 miles (5 outdoor rides) and swam 7,497 yards (7 swims). My coldest run was 51°F and my warmest was 89°F. I taught 9 strength classes, and 3 fitness boxing classes.

Link to Training Week 401

Random Thoughts Thursday 139

By , June 29, 2017 6:21 am
  • Our power went out last night! Why am I excited? Because our generator kicked on right away, and we were able to keep watching Game of Thrones during the storm (and more importantly, our sump pumps keep running). The generator ran for an hour and a half, then the power came back on.
  • Khali was freaked out during the storm. She wanted Data to comfort her, but all he wanted to do was give her side-eye.

  • I’ve mentioned this before but I am going to be more specific this time (and could definitely dedicate a whole post to this rant). What is with people one-upping each other on Facebook when someone else posts an athletic achievement? I constantly see people posting a specific distance they ran/biked/swam and instead of (some, not all) commenters simply liking it or saying “good for you” they just comment with how they did more that day. Sigh. PEOPLE NEED TO KNOW YOU WORKED OUT MORE! I also see similar stuff when people post what time of day they worked out (“I worked out earlier than that,” etc.). Sigh. I guess some people don’t care about sharing what they do, until they can use it look like they are doing more than someone else? And this is (part of) why I don’t post or do much on Facebook.
  • At the same time, I also don’t get people who lie about their athletic achievements on social media. The truth is out there, and the internets will find it. Ha ha.
  • THIS IS NOT SPONSORED! Steven bought some OxiClean to work on a stain and holy schnit, this stuff is the bomb. My running hydration vest was so stinky I thought I was going to have to throw it out and get a new one, but I soaked it in OxiClean and hot water and it doesn’t smell anymore! It also got the smell out of some other items. I had tried other methods (vinegar, soaking in detergent, sports wash) and they’d never worked – I am really excited this does!

  • ALSO NOT SPONSORED. We bought a handheld vacuum to clean up cat hair and other small messes and so far I really like it! I will post the brand/model after we use it some more.
  • I send my mom and snis pics during my runs and my snister said (about the one below) “that looks like it should be a Dell desktop background.” Ha! Now I will have to try to send them more “desktop background” worthy pictures.

Link to Random Thoughts Thursday 138

Pleasant Prairie Triathlon Relay Race Report

By , June 26, 2017 6:23 am

On Sunday June 25, Alicia, Rachel, and I did the international distance Pleasant Prairie Triathlon as a relay team at/around the RecPlex in Pleasant Prairie, Wisconsin. Alicia swam 1500m, I biked 40k, and Rachel ran 10k.

I’ve been on sprint and half iron triathlon relay teams, but this was my first time doing the international distance! I’ve done most of my triathlon relays at the RecPlex/Lake Andrea in Pleasant Prairie, but this course was different/longer AND this is the first race I’ve done there since living so freaking close. It takes five minutes to get there! It used to take forty. Being so close was nice, since we did race day packet pickup and got there at 5:00 am! (Hooray for race day packet pickup – the expo (which I went to the day before for funsies) was only open from 11am-3pm on Saturday and Alicia and Rachel couldn’t make those times! And you have to pick up your relay packet as a team.)

This was Alicia and Rachel’s first time being on a relay team. Alicia has done all triathlon distances up to half iron on her own though! I love doing relay triathlon teams because you can push super hard on your leg and not have to worry about how it will affect the next one.

There were several events going on on race day – the para athlete nationals (sprint distance), the sprint and international triathlons, and a sprint duathlon. The athletes at the event were nice and friendly, but it was a serious and competitive (unlike the other race I do at this location – Iron Girl – which is all female and focused on beginner athletes and not as competitive). There was one sprint relay team, and six international relay teams. We ended up placing fifth out of the sixth!

The race started at 6:30 am with seven waves of para athletes, then the relay swimmers started at 6:45 am with the elite international racers. Whoa!

It was oddly cool for June – 51° when the race started! The water was much warmer than the air – 78°. Alicia got in to warm up and get some water in her wet suit before her wave and didn’t want to get out. Ha.

Alicia is a strong swimmer, and swimming is her favorite discipline in triathlons. She was stoked to swim 1500m, while Rachel and I were looking at how far apart the buoys were and making lots of “whoa” and “eek!” eyes to each other. Ha!

There she is! Ha.

Alicia had a decent swim. She was battling a cold and congestion and that held her back from her usual bilateral breathing, and slowed her down a bit. She said it was also the first time she panicked during an open water swim, because her breathing felt so off! But she kicked arse and finished in 39:01.

Rachel and I watched the swimmers for a bit before we got back in to the transition area to wait by the bike rack (the relayers had two whole racks for the seven teams – there was LOTS of space!). I get sooooo jacked up when I am waiting for my turn in the race and I could feel my heart rate rising! I did some breathing to try to calm myself down before I got on the bike.

Alicia came in and Rachel swapped our timing chip. I unracked my bike (and embarrassingly shook the whole rack) and took off. T1 was 0:46.

I checked the weather before I got on my bike to see where the wind would be coming from – 9mph winds from the west. Blah. A lot of the course is in to the west (see course here). And a lot of the course is open!

I got out there and headed right in to the wind. My plan was to keep my cadence as high as possible without feeling like I was tearing up my quads, use my weight as an advantage to gain speed on the downhills, go as fast as possible when heading east, and to not get exhausted headed west in the beginning (but to crank it going west at the end).

My bike rode smooth and I was happy I got it tuned up right before the race. I kept my cadence up (85 rpm average for the ride) and tried to keep my speed in the high teens (17.9 mph average for the ride). I’d feel frustrated by the wind and wonder if it was in my head – but then I’d look at the trees and see them blowing the opposite direction as me (later, every cyclist I talked to thought it was windy).

I am happy they were able to tag me in the photos – I had to put my bike sticker on the side of my helmet because it wouldn’t stay on the front! I should have put it on my left side, duh.

I drink a lot when I cycle. And I was so jacked up before the start I almost forgot to put my bottles on my bike! That would have been a disaster! I drank most of my two bottles, and took a gel at mile 10 and again at mile 20. I actually felt a hunger pain in my stomach at mile 20. Sigh. I was so hungry all day Saturday and that evening when I tried to sleep and woke up feeling crummy. I am lucky that didn’t affect my race.

I cranked and cranked and enjoyed being out there. I did a lot of positive self talk in my head to keep myself pumped up despite the frustration of the wind. There was only two spots I felt I had a tailwind – the rest it was either in my face or blowing at me from the side. But I really did have fun! And loved that I was riding on roads I normally drive on.

I came in, dismounted, and ran in to transition in my cycling shoes. Alicia swapped the timing chip from my leg to Rachel’s. My overall bike time was 1:22:58 and T2 was 0:42.

I was happy it wasn’t too hot when Rachel started her 10K – 59°. You never know what you are going to get, doing the run leg, on a relay in the summer! Although, Rachel quickly warmed up on the open course with very little shade! Her run was where I do my speedwork – the paved path around Lake Andrea. Unfortunately, about half of her run was on a hilly rocky trail. She said she was feeling great until the trail part. I’m not surprised – when I’ve run on that trail in other relays at this location, I’ve hated it! I never run on it when I go there!

Rachel rallied back when she got back on the paved path though, and finished the 10K in 56:50!

We all ran in together, and our overall time was 3:00:15!

We received our medals and hung around at the finish because I wanted to see two friends from Efit finish.

I like the medal and the half zip shirt – I’ll definitely be wearing the top in the fall!

Kim, Rich, Kim, and Kim from Efit

Waiting around, it actually felt cold when a cloud would cover the sun! The post race food was so so – some Gatorade bar, bagels, and bananas. We had the hardest time figuring out what to do with out timing chip. We walked all the way back to transition before we realized we were supposed to put it in a box by the finish. Wish someone would have told us at the finish line.

That was the only bad part of the race though. Well, maybe the rocky part of that run, and the wind. Ha. The race is well organized and fun, parking was easy, and we were able to get out before everyone finished.

We had a great time and we’ll be looking in to doing another triathlon relay… this season!


Other notes:

Alicia and Rachel stayed over Saturday night and we had a lot of fun and got a bit goofy when we were getting ready for the race:

The race was well organized, but what I have found as a triathlon relayer at every other event was true here, too – people don’t seem to know what to do with you, or if you have any special rules, or even need to be body marked. The relayers often seem like an after thought, which I get, with them being such a small population.

I was stoked there was free race photos and they had them out the evening of the race!!!!!!!

Notes on my cycling:

  • I am not very good at corners/turning! I tend to slow way down and be cautious.
  • I felt like my nose was running for the whole ride. Odd.
  • My butt got a bit sore on the bike, but I would get out of the saddle every now and then to give my legs a break on the inclines, so I readjusted then.
  • The inclines were mostly over highways or over train tracks. There was one section with rolling hills.

Training Week 401

By , June 25, 2017 9:16 pm

Highlight of the Week: Going roller skating with Efit friends/doing a triathlon relay with Rachel and Alicia!

Monday | June 19, 2017: 5 m run  + teaching strength class
Loc: hood, Temp: 61°/64°, Time: 53:37, Pace: 10:43 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: fine
Strength: plyo boxes, kettlebells, & boxing, Difficulty: easy, Felt: too sweaty

Tuesday | June 20, 2017: 4.5 m run 
Loc: VP Woods, Temp: 61°/63°, Time: 46:46, Pace: 10:23 avg, Difficulty: easy-ish, Felt: good until the sun came out
Wednesday | June 21, 2017: 5 m run (w/xaarlin)
Loc: Lakefront Trail, Temp: 63°/64°, Time: 50:45, Pace: 10:08 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great
Thursday | June 22, 2017: 4.5 m run (incl. 4×400)
Loc: Lake Andrea, Temp: 76°/76°, Time: 47:23, Pace: 10:32 avg, Difficulty: easy/medium, Felt: fine, just tired and sweaty
Friday | June 23, 2017: teaching strength class + 1,512 yd swim + 3 m run + roller skating
Strength: plyo boxes, kettlebells, and boxing, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: FitNation, Time: 33:19, Pace: 2:12 min/100 yd, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great!
Loc: VP Woods, Temp: 72°/75°, Time: 29:06, Pace: 9:42, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great

Saturday | June 24, 2017: 10 m run + 10 m ride
Loc: Kilbourne/DPRT loop, Temp: 65°/68°, Time: 1:53:03, Pace: 11:18 avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: good
Loc: to RecPlex & back, Temp: 68°/69°, Time: 39:27, Pace: 15.2 mph avg, Difficulty: easy, Felt: great

Sunday | June 25, 2017: 40K ride (Pleasant Prairie Triathlon)
Loc: Pleasant Prairie, Temp: 55°/59°, Time: 1:23:14, Pace: 17.9 mph avg, Difficulty: easy to medium, Felt: great

Notes:

  • It was lovely to run with xaarlin in the city Wednesday before work! I hope we can do it again this summer.
  • I got a pre-race massage on Thursday, then felt fantastic during my Friday swim. I am accrediting that to the massage! My shoulders have felt tight lately, and I didn’t realize how much it had been affecting my swims, until they didn’t feel that way.
  • I’ve been randomly mentioning setting up a roller skating event for the studio I teach at to my Monday night class for a long time. So I finally did it, and a lot of people came – and not just from my class! We had SO MUCH FUN. I felt comfortable on the skates right away and could’ve kept going! I’ll definitely be setting up another skating get-together.
  • Saturday’s ride (to test out my bike after having it fixed and tuned up!) was the first time I’ve ridden from our house (that we’ve lived in for sixteen months now!). The road we live off of has a high speed limit, but there wasn’t much traffic and the drivers were courteous (and once you cross the border in to Wisconsin, there is a very nice shoulder). I want to do it again!
  • Alicia, Rachel, and I had a lot of fun at our Olympic distance triathlon relay on Sunday… and I am ready to do it again! More on the race later this week!

Link to Training Week 400

Random Thoughts Thursday 138

By , June 22, 2017 6:14 am
  • Our generator was installed in May (which means now we’ll never lose power)! On Saturday, Steven planted emerald green arborvitae trees to block it from view from the front yard. We’ll let the trees grow as high as the wing wall over the next several years, then trim them to that height.

  • After the generator was installed in May, Steven built out framing to hold in the pea gravel around it and the air conditioners. It looks so nice compared to how it was before!

  • I love that our yard is filled with perennials we don’t have to think about planting each spring!

  • In early June, we hung up some maps, which makes me very happy (I love maps). I hope we hang up more of our prints this year. They make the house feel more “ours.”

  • A year ago, we were flying to Alaska for Nick and Alyssa’s wedding! We haven’t done a “big” trip since then. I am hoping we can go on a trip for our ten year anniversary this year!
  • I’m having a hard time finishing Pour Your Heart Into It: How Starbucks Built a Company One Cup at a Time. It’s too cheesy for me. Steven listened to it in one day and has already moved on to a new book! I need to decide if I am finishing it or giving up on it so I can re-join Book Club for Two.
  • My bike is fixed and I am picking it up today! I better ride it before the race Sunday!

Link to Random Thoughts Thursday 137

NeoCon 2017

By , June 19, 2017 11:22 am

A week ago today, my mom and I went to NeoCon at the Merchandise Mart in Chicago!

NeoCon stands for National Exposition of Contract Furnishings – it’s an annual three day trade show that’s free to attend if you register in advance. There’s the trade show, but also keynotes, classes, and LOTS of parties. And let’s copy straight from Wikipedia – “With over 1,000 exhibitors of contract and commercial furnishings, and 50,000 attendees, it is the largest trade show of its kind in North America.” Whoa. It’s overwhelming. A lot of these vendors have permanent showrooms (on many floors) in the Merchandise Mart, and they set up floors for outside vendors to come in, too.

As part of my job, I occasionally assist clients with furniture and finish selection, so I go to NeoCon to see the newest and greatest stuff! Which isn’t actually what my clients select, but, it’s educational for me.

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When I was in Kansas City in January, I asked my snister if she’d be going to NeoCon this year. She’s an interior designer and has gone to NeoCon the past few years – but the days we go typically don’t align (or she goes early, for vendor stuff). She didn’t know at that point, but my mom was there, and asked what NeoCon is, then expressed interest in going! My mom studied interior design for a bit in college, so she has an interest for it, but I think we also may have sold her when we mentioned all the free food and handouts. Ha!

Seriously, you don’t really need to bring food or plan to buy lunch or dinner if you hit up the right show rooms or after parties. (Note – we had to head back around 4:00 so I could teach my evening strength class. Next year, we are definitely doing to some parties.)

So. Much. Free. Food.

And so many handouts. My snister asked me to pick up stuff for her since she was going early this year (before the show opened). Here’s her haul:

I did keep three bags for myself, and that funny orange chair to put my phone in. Ha.

Mom and I visited three floors in the Merchandise Mart (out of eight or ten vendor show floors), and visited several showrooms in the building across the street. My snister designs a specific product at her job, and they have a showroom across from the Mart, and she asked me to make sure to take Mom there. Funny enough, the guy assigned to give us a tour (out of 50 or more people) works with my snis!

So, normally, NeoCon is completely overwhelming, exhausting, and not that fun. I was dreading it this year, like I always do. But I ended up having so much fun with my mom, probably because she was so excited about it, that it made me a little sad we were only doing one day of it!

I was still exhausted though. At the end of the day, we were so slap-happy and out of it on the train ride home that we laughed so hard we cried (about kale…). Then I took this photo to send my snist and this guy was totally creepin’ in on me. Ha!

I bet Mom will be back for NeoCon next year!

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