500km Festive Week Challenge

A week ago I clicked a button on Strava to accept a challenge – to ride 500km anywhere and everywhere around Adelaide, Australia, between the 23rd and 31st December 2011.  As if riding 500km within 8 days isn’t enough of a challenge in itself (well, most cyclists would have no problem in doing so if they had no other commitments for the week), but to be able to spend this much time riding a bike on and around Christmas is a little difficult.  The challenger must find a balance between family, friends, and bike.  A good strategy seems to be one that combines all.  So here I document my rides in completing the ‘Rapha 500km Festive Week Challenge‘.

First ride

On the first day of the challenge, I got out of bed at 5:25am to kick it off.  Morven had no idea that I was so serious about this challenge.  I figure what better way to kick off than to crack it on the head before work on Friday.  So I rode up Norton Summit Rd (rare occasion that it was not a 100% effort) whilst eating breakfast #1 (a banana, and #1 referring the first of two breakfasts for the day).

Sunrise at Norton Summit

Sunrise at Norton Summit

A koala ran across the road, coming out of a shadow as I came around a corner. He went backwards and forwards trying to decide where the quickest escape was as I probably scared him when I came around the corner with my bright lights.  He foolishly jumped onto a small 1m sappling for safety, which broke straight away, causing him to crash land back to the ground.  He then realised there was another tree an extra metre away that would support his weight.  This all happened too quickly for me to get the camera out, but here he is sitting in the comfort of a eucalypt tree.

Koala on Marble Hill Rd

Koala on Marble Hill Rd

Second ride

Also on the first day of the challenge, I hit the bike straight after work, and went to meet Gary for a ride along the coast. We stopped for a short black and enjoyed the scenery overlooking the beach.

Henley Beach with Gary

Henley Beach with Gary

After splitting up with Gary in the city, I decided to whip up Waterfall Gully Rd which is steep enough such that when I get to the top I don’t have to pedal to get back down, but flat enough to not exhaust myself to make the next 400km too painful. Being a hot day, it was also nice to be riding up a nice cool gully with the occasional shaded stretch of road. On the way up the road a small brown snake scuttled across the road in front of me. One of the reasons I like road cycling in the summer is to avoid the snakes that us Australians encounter when mountain biking. I’ve had to bunny hop a couple snakes in my time off-road, but never had to on the road bike. Unfortunately I wasn’t going fast enough up the hill to bunny hop this snake, so I swerved into the middle of the lane, and relied on the sense of sound that there were no cars coming behind me. I stopped to try and take a photo but these snakes just blend in so well, and I think it had slithered down into the creek by the time I got the camera out.

Third ride

On the second day of the challenge I met up with two of the regulars from the Saturday morning roadie crew I ride with. Normally there’s more of us. We had planned to ride out to Meadows (a beautiful town 47km away from where we were meeting which has an awesome bakery) but the forecast was for temperatures in the high 30′s, we were all a bit tired, and it was already hot and humid. So we decided to hit the coast instead, which coincidentally is ideal for me as I need to keep my legs fresh by avoiding hills. Unfortunately for my legs and the next 300-400km, Nick and Mark are cycling machines, and I suffered in a 40km/h train to Outer Harbour, and a 36km/h train back from Outer Harbour whilst smashing through good headwind. Taking this photo below was a very big risk because it meant I had to open the gap from Mark in order to take a photo, and in doing so made it very hard to catch up again and close the gap in a nice comfortable drafting position on Mark’s wheel.

40km/h train from Glenelg to Outer Harbour

40km/h train from Glenelg to Outer Harbour

I don’t know how, but Nick then convinced me to ride up the Old Freeway, which increased the elevation of the ride from only a couple hundred metres to over a kilometre.

Fourth ride

On the third day, I only had a few hours before I was supposed to be at a family Christmas Day lunch. So I went early and I went hard, averaging the same speed as the day before but without any help from sharing the wheel and (mostly) all on the flat.

Fifth ride

On the fourth day, I had big plans for clocking up another 100km so that I could wrap the challenge up on the fifth day. I met up with Gary and Candy and we planned to ride Norton Summit. My original plan was to then continue riding down and along the coast to crank up the kilometres, but my legs were quite sore and tired, and I suspected that I really wouldn’t get much training benefit by continuing to ride. So I called this a rest ride, and at least now the next two rides will be more comfortable distances. So now I’m 344km down, and only have 154km to go!

Rest ride with Gary and Candy

Rest ride with Gary and Candy

Run from Glenelg to Mt Lofty

Yesterday I did my 3rd ever marathon length run (at least that I have recorded). The other two being the 2005 melbourne marathon and my first rogaine. I had always wanted to try this run, and I thought it was about time to do it, given that I should be training for my first ever Adelaide marathon in three weeks time. I wanted to run from Glenelg jetty to Mt Lofty summit.

Morv graciously dropped me off down at Glenelg, because running from home to Glenelg to Mt Lofty and then back home again was a bit much (at this stage)! Since it was the first beautiful fine sunny day we’ve had for some time we went for a little walk on the beach which was probably a good leg stretch/warmup before running.

So I ran from the very end of the Glenelg jetty, up Anzac Highway, Greenhill Road, Glen Osmond Road, and up the old freeway along the cycling path. I stopped shortly up the cycling path to tape my toes which were blistering. I regret not taping them earlier, before they started (my toes after the run developed blood blisters, ewww)! I went up past Eagle on the Hill, at 2hrs 30mins and 22.5km. I kept running up to Crafers, and purchased another 1.2L of Powerade Isotonic at the Crafers BP. I’m probably the only person to ever have purchased Powerade from that store, that would actually have NEEDED it :) The guy at the Crafers BP still doesn’t believe I ran from the Glenelg jetty, even after I showed him the GPS map :) Click on the thumbnail to see my GPS evidence.

3rd Marathon, Glenelg Jetty to Mt Lofty Summit and then to home

I then kept running up past the Mt Lofty Botanic Gardens, to the summit, and did a couple light stretches, as I’d been running uphill for a fairly long time (3hrs 23mins), and so the hamstrings that do most of the work when you’re running uphill, that take a break when you’re running downhill, would be likely to cramp up. Sure enough they did, so I slammed down my remaining 1 litre or so of Powerade to help relax those crampy muscles. They still cramped up a bit, but I was able to negotiate a comfortable zone and running style with them, until it flattened out down on Bartril Spur Track (running down through Cleland).

I then kept running from Waterfall Gully Road, to home, but that was only 40.4km. You can’t brag about running 40.4km, because that’s not even a marathon, so how could I go out that night and brag about my run, people would know it’s below my standard. So I kept running around the block, and then the other block, and up and down the road, until my GPS said 42.00km :) THEN I had truly run a marathon. But not only was it a marathon, it was a Glenelg to Mt Lofty and down again, marathon, with an almost 1km ascent. You don’t have that 1km ascent in a normal marathon.

So this run took me 4hrs 46mins. I’m aiming for a 3hr 15min or so marathon in three weeks in Adelaide, and hopefully a sub-3hr marathon in Melbourne in October. The sub-3hr mark gains much respect in the running community. I’m pretty happy with 4hrs 46mins for this Glenelg to Mt Lofty run, because even if I ran a 2hr marathon, it’d take at least 2hrs 46mins to climb up a 1km high ladder.

In total, I consumed 3 bannanas, 2.2L of Powerad Isotonic, 4 GU Energy gels, and 3.0L of water. I could comfortably consumed a few more energy gels and a couple more litres of Powerade. Next time I will.