Sunday, March 23, 2025

VAST #2 and the week that was.....

The big event of this week was a second trip down to Shenandoah National Park in this training block.  Monday morning I was up at 3:30 and rolling with my Java at 3:50am.  I was at the trail head by 7:50am down in the Panorama parking lot.  For this iteration, I elected to do 5 repeats of the Mary's Rock climb.  In total, this took me 9 hours and 19 minutes to do the 5 ascents, which covered 18.6 miles in total plus 1,210 ascent ft (and descent ft) per repeat....so pretty big day....


Net/net I was about 4% faster in my VAST2 vs VAST1 at a slightly lower HR.  Not surprisingly, my rate of energy burn was also up about 4% at the lower metabolic cost.  Gotta love the training effect! 


 Of course, it's hard for me to really judge if this is good enough progress or not--such is the unknown nature (to me) of the 29,029 event.  That said, 4% improvement is better than none and I still have 19 weeks to Show Time.  I was a little disappointed with the last rep on this cycle but that may have been as much mental as physical--hard to grind away for 9+ hours.  Although that really isn't a good excuse because being able to put continuous time on task is what this event is all about.

For this trip I decided to tack on two more days of regular trekking (vs. 1 day for VAST #1).  The second day, I did what I call the "Cemetery Hike" past the famous Bolen Cemetery and the lesser known Dyer Family Cemetery.  Here is what that looked like:



My legs actually felt pretty good once I warmed up although I could feel the VAST effort in them.  Still a pretty solid effort on a beautiful day!






On the third day I climbed Hogsback and SugarLoaf Mountains in another solid hike:



19 hours and 42 minutes in total over the three days with 20,000+ ft of total vertical (half up and half down) across 40.8 miles.

Here is how the full week played out:

Swim: 3,000 yards (less than I wanted but with travel and fatigue, this is what I did)
Bike: 130 miles (over 4 days)
Walk/Run: 57.1 miles--this took over 24 hours to do given the terrain.  I ended up taking just Thursday off.
PT: 3 hours 50 minutes
Total Training time: 37 hours 33 minutes.

You might not find it surprising to learn I'm pretty whipped today (did a 3 hour hike with 1,000 ft of vertical today as well).  Probably need to think about backing off given my last 4 weeks have been 31:19, 31:12, 31:54 and 37:39...

Onwards and Upwards!

Oh, also last week, week 11 had the following totals:

Swim: 4,500 yards
Bike: 244 miles
Walk/Run : 33 miles
PT: 5:55
Total Training Time: 31:54

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Hadrian Wall Trek Plan

 Just to mix things up a bit.  Here is the current plan for our Hadrian's Wall Trek.  Basically we are walking across England from Newcastle to Bowness On Solway.  More on this to come but here are the details:



I'm not specifically training for this but rather training through this for the 29,029.  This is an important adventure for sure--not ignoring it, but rather I'm confident my training for 29,029 will more than prepare me for this and since HW is 10+ weeks before the 29,029, it will serve as pretty good training for the 29,029 (although obviously not so much from a vertical perspective!)

Sunday, March 9, 2025

VAST (Vertical Ascent Speed Test) #1 and Weeks 9/10 Update

 The big news is I went down to Shenandoah National Park to get some vert under the belt.  I went down early Monday (3/3) morning--was on the road by 4am and at the Panorama parking lot at Thorton's Gap about 8am.

My task for the day was to find out where my baseline vertical ascent fitness was at.  To do this, I did what I call a Vertical Ascent Speed Test (VAST).  For the first version of this in the current training block, I decided to do 4 ascents of the Panorama to Mary's Rock Trail.  This is about 1.85 miles in length with a Vertical Ascent of 1,210 feet.  This works out to about 12-13% average grade (vs. 19% for my Snow Basin 29,029 in August).  Less steep makes it a bit easier on the body at a given speed but also makes it a bit more difficult to get VAS--this might seem counter-intuitive, but consider this: 3 mph at a 5% grade will yield 792 vertical ft/hour, while 2 mph at a 10% grade will yield 1,056 vertical feet/hour.  Based on my experience in the mountains/trails, these are roughly equivalent physical efforts.  At the extremes 100mph at a 0% grade yields no vertical ascent and I probably can't walk up something thats steeper than 60% grade so in practice you have to test it out.

One of things that makes the VAST harder than what I will do in the 29,029 is that unlike the latter, I have to down climb the trail each time (no Gondola!).  This of course doubles the distance and due to eccentric contraction puts a bunch of stress on the quads that I won't face at Snow Basin.  Also, this specific trail is very rocky which puts a lot of stress on your stabilizer muscles in your ankles and hips especially.  

The other complicating factor about 3/3/25 was that it was 16 degrees when I started and when I finished the test 6 hours and 28 minutes later, it was still only 26 degrees--this created heat regulation challenges (hot up/cold down).  It also meant there was quite a bit of ice on the trail, especially on this one section that had some nasty exposure so caution was required on both the Ups and Downs over about 3/8ths of a mile mid climb.

Be that as it may, here are the results of my 4 runs of the VAST #1:

The key data point I'm looking for on this effort is the VAS--which averaged 1,417 ft hour.  That may not immediately mean anything so let's put that into the context of what my 29,029 challenge entails:

The Snow Basin 29,029 involves 13 repeats of a 2.3 mile trail that has 2,310 vertical feet/lap.  This works out to 30,030 vertical feet in total.  To successfully complete the 29,029 challenge I need to do these 13 laps in 36 hours.  Within these 36 hours are my 12 "Transitions", which is the time it takes from completing one climb and then taking the gondola down and doing the other stuff one needs to do before starting the next climb.  My research indicates that the gondola rides are about 12-15 minutes.  So my guess, is my transition times in practice will range from 20-40 minutes each.  Let's take the midpoint of 30 minutes and with 12 transitions, this means 6 hours (12 X 30 minutes) will be consumed in transitions.  This basically leaves me 30 hours to climb 30,000 vertical feet or 1,000 feet hour.

We can take this info and devise an equation that describes how long it will take me to do the event given my average VAS/lap and my average transition time (ATT) (this excludes any extended rest periods):

Total Time to complete the 29,029 = (13 X 30,000/(VAS/lap)) + (12 X ATT).  How this all works can be visualized with the following chart:



Here, I've displayed 5 isobars that correspond to ATTs of 20 minutes (red) up to 40 minutes (purple).  I've also showed the Minimum VAS required to finish in 36 hours for ATTs of 25 minutes-35 minutes (my current best guess of what I will average) and we see we need about 975 ft/hour @ a 25 min ATT and about 1,025 ft/hour @ a ATT of 35 minutes.  Again, this assumes no other rest time.

Another way to use the above equation is to see what would happen, at various ATTs if I was able to replicate the 1,417 ft/hour I achieved in my test:

The 1,417 VAS line intersects with the 25 minutes ATT isobar and indicates it would take me 26 hours--leaving 10 hours of cushion for rest and any issues that might develop.  For the ATT of 35 minutes this extends to a bit more than 28 hours--leaving 8 hours of cushion.

Now, before we declare victory, I know there is no way I could do 1,417 VAS at this point in time.  Here is a plot of my vertical vs time and my HR from one of the four ascents:


Note the nice steady slope of the green line which indicates a fairly constant VAS--which is great, this is what we are aiming to do.  However, note that for the last 20-30 minutes, or about half of the climb my HR is in the 140-150bpm range--decidedly Z3.  No way I can hold that intensity for 20+ hours of climbing, even with the 30 minutes of rest between climbs.  I'll probably more likely average low Z2--say 110-120bpm, so I have a lot of work to do!

When I repeat this test, I'll hope to see a better combination of VAS and average HR.  Also, there are a lot of things that are different between climbing 19% grade at 6,000+ altitude for a climb of 2,300 vertical at probably 80+ degrees (and riding a gondola) then what I did on this test.  So it's really hard to say how confident I should feel about this test result.

I do now I need to keep training a bunch and I'll repeat the test a few times between now and August and I'll be expecting to see my performance improve.

-----

After that first day, I then banged out a 12+ mile/2,700+ vertical/6+hour hike the next day on the Appalachian Trail:






After these two days, my ankles and hips were definitely sore--I definitely felt this effort so I took a day off but ended up completing my biggest walk/run/hike week this year.  Here are the results of the last two weeks--the one before the above and this past week including these efforts:
 
Week 9
Swim: 2,000 yards

Bike: 246 miles

Run/Walk: 38 miles

PT/Weights: 5:10

Total Training Time: 31:19

Week 10
Swim: 3,500 yards

Bike: 134 miles

Run/Walk: 48 miles

PT/Weights: 3:05

Total Training Time: 31:12

Onwards and Upwards!


Sunday, March 2, 2025

Jan/Feb--and here we go!

 Summary of Jan/Feb for 2025 vs 2024:


Swim: Well I'd like to have been at 30k for February but my right shoulder/arm problems, that started last October, were a persistent problem throughout January and February and as a result I'm 36% behind last year's swim volume--and that was relatively weak.  So not where I want to be at all.

I had originally thought of 2025 as a swim-centric year--really focusing on my open water swim races but with the advent of my 29,029-focus, my swim will have to take a back seat in 2025.  The good news is my shoulder finally seems to be under control after really resting from swimming and PT for a stretch in February (nicely coincided with our Super Bowl/Florida trip) and then modifying my PT activities seems to really have helped.

I went to see my ortho to see if a cortisone injection made sense but he ruled it out after X-raying and examining me.  It seems like my bursitis is gone for the most part and I just have some lingering tendonitis in my bicep tendon.  He gave me some prescription strength anti-inflammatory and I've been doing red-light therapy on a daily basis as well.  In any event, I think I see the light at the end of the tunnel and I did a couple of short swims at the end of February and felt much stronger (1:50/100).  I feel like I can begin to swim in earnest now and am hopeful to get into the 20-30k range for March.

Bike: I'm essentially replicating 2024 so far--my bike is in maintenance mode with a lot of Z1/low Z2 riding.  I'm confident my high end will be there when I start prepping for my Triathlons as the year progresses.

Walk/Run: this will be my prime focus out through the Snow Basin 29,029 in early August.  I'm up 25% in volume vs last year and expect that delta to even grow as we role into the Spring. Tomorrow, we are going to "Release the Kraken" and officially launch my 29,029 build--basically a 5-month focused effort to get to where I need to be to climb 30,000 vertical in 36 hours.  

Tomorrow, I'm getting up early (3:30am) and heading down to Shenandoah national to do a Vertical Ascent Speed test and then the next day I'll do a longer hike on the trails down there.  More on how this rolls tomorrow!  Very excited to flip into "Beast-Mode"!

Other/PT:  As I mentioned I backed off for a couple of weeks in February to calm my shoulder/arm down, but I still managed 14 hours in February, after a big effort in January.  I'm down 19% relative to last year but this still is a big priority and I suspect the gap to 2025 will diminish in March and April.

Training Time: I'm still pushing the big numbers (at least for a 67-year old with an artificial knee).  I'm up about 7% vs last year--which had a pretty heavy workload and through the end of February I've been averaging about 4.1 hours/day and nearly 29 hours/week.

I generally feel great and feel like I'm in a nice improving fitness groove at this point!  Onwards and Upwards!