Run Long, Bonk Hard

“Where is the blender? WHERE. IS. THE. FRICKING. BLENDER?!”

I’m bumbling around in the kitchen, opening and closing cabinet doors as if my life depends on it. I finally locate the blender under the counter, where it always is. I’m in a quiet rage, ravenous, clumsy and mentally deficient. I am well into a food emergency caused by too much running and not enough fuel – a bonk.

This post was going to be about point-to-point running. Today’s long run was a 31km one-way trip west from Mississauga to Burlington along Lake Ontario. It’s rare to just run out the door without intending to return where you started. But it’s more adventurous to cover new ground. After crisscrossing the same suburban crescents and cul-de-sacs all winter, I needed a change of scenery.

After coaching at the rowing club, I left the car keys with my dad and headed out into sunlight-deprived, slightly icy Saturday morning. Not much looks good on a day like this – certainly not the Suncor refinery, or the dark mansions and bare trees that line Lakeshore Road in wealthy Oakville. But my pace was steady and I felt good, right up to 100 minutes in, slightly more than half way. Then it became clear that this blog post would be about something both uglier and more interesting than my route.

I’ve hit the wall before, skiing, cycling, and running. It usually happens early in the season, when I’m cavalier about my abilities and haven’t gone really long in a while. So half a banana, plus a few spoonfuls of yogurt, plus just one gel, plus no water, plus lots of running led to a grand flameout once I crossed the Bronte Creek bridge with still an hour to go.

Bonking affects both the body and the brain. Physically, it’s as if a battery is dying. My pace slowed and I weaved a little on the sidewalk. Like a computer dimming the screen to save energy, my eyelids started to shut. I shifted to walking one minute in ten.

Your brains also get scrambled by a bonk, affecting your judgement, mood, and motivation. It didn’t occur to me that I should stop or get some sustenance at a corner store until I reached my prescribed 2h40 of running. At least I didn’t hallucinate like that one time while riding where I saw an orange Mustang convertible made out of Reese’s pieces. But I was done. At my time limit I called for a pickup even though I was less than kilometre from home. I slumped into the car seat, mumbled thanks, and didn’t bother clipping in the seat belt.

Back in the kitchen I blended a promiscuous melange of fruit, milk, yogurt, protein and carb powder, two types of jams and chia seeds. But before gulping that down, I stared deep into a jar of Bick’s Mini Crunch’ems Garlic Pickles, fishing out a dozen with my fingers. I clearly craved salt too. The eating and sleeping continued through the rest of the day.

So lesson re-learned – fill the tank beforehand, and top up as you go. The good thing about the early and emphatic crash is I get three other 30k+ runs to figure out how best to do this before tackling the marathon.

 

 

 


Hard, Memorable, Goofy – Adding Variety to Winter Training

It’s cold. It’s dark. By late January, big volume endurance training starts to get boring and repetitive for club-level athletes. Spring’s a long way off. How to keep motivated?

This weekend I organized a two-hour continuous workout for athletes of my rowing club, using the great athletic facility at the University of Toronto – Mississauga. All told, this consisted of 30 minutes of Concept 2 rowing, 30 minutes of bodyweights (jump squats, pushups, etc.), 20 minutes of spinning, 20 minutes of running, and 10 minutes each of Concept 2 skierg and athletes-choice training. This training was done in twelve different stations of 10 minutes each, done consecutively (example: erg, bodyweights, run, spin, skierg, bodyweights, free choice, erg, body weights, run, spin).

We’ve done two of these long multi-sport workouts this winter – here’s what has worked so far.

Maintain Some Familiarity: Rowers need to row. Runners need to run. Riders need to spin. Your program should include your main sport in its mix. But you can change that activity slightly. In our case, we made use of the Concept 2 sliders, which better simulate how a rowing shell moves.

P1020688

Train Together but Mix Things Up: Winter training is an ideal time to team-build. Doing hard work as a group is one way to do that. At the same time, find opportunities to combine athletes who do not normally train or compete together. During the two-hour session, participants each had their individual station itinerary, training with different people at each one.

P1020695

Include Activities Your Athletes are Bad At: endurance athletes are good at doing the same thing over and over, but don’t spend much time on agility or coordination skills outside their sport. For a bit of challenge, put in some playtime. This weekend, I had rowers do some “wall climbing” and also try to throw and catch tennis balls in a variety of ways, with humorous results.

P1020691