Saturday, December 27, 2008

Top Ten Christmas Carols

Well, Christmas has come and gone, but Comcast still has plenty of Christmas music on channel 901 (Sounds of the Season). Yay!

Ana and I were hiking out at Castle Rock State Park today and I was thinking about my favorite carols, and came up with a top ten list. The first few are no-brainers, but it took a bit to hammer out the remaining few.

Here you go, with some youtoobz linx:

1. Blue Christmas (obv Elvis version)
2. White Christmas (obv Bing Crosby version)
3. Santa Baby (Eartha Kitt version, but there are other good ones)
4. Winter Wonderland
5. Holly Jolly Christmas (Burl Ives, baybee!)
6. (There's No Place Like) Home for the Holidays
7. Let it Snow
8. It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like Christmas
9. Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer
10. Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas

Happy New Year!

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Casa de Kitty Von Kittison AKA KITTY'S HOUSE OF DEATH

There is a cold spell here in lovely northern California, forecasted to last a few more days. So, I decided to get our porch cat, Kitty von Kittison, a little enclosure for her to sleep in. She's being hanging out on our top porch step in a little cat bed, but it doesn't have any cover.

So, I swung by Pet People of Los Gatos and picked up a nice wooded dog/cat house for the porch (by the way, Pet People is the stone cold, lead pipe lock for pet supplies in the Campbell/Los Gatos area - check em' out!).

It took a day or so, but Kitty has started hanging out in the house, especially since I put one of our inside cats' old fuzzy mats in it.

Here's a picture of her in it:



You can see some bird feathers down at the entrance . . . unfortunately I think Kitty has been using this as a little hunting base as well. I think she hangs out in there and hides and waits for bids to scuttle about on the ground, and then pounces out on them - poor little guys.


Speaking of the birds, I think they're all fattening up for the winter - the feeder has been really crowded the last couple of days, I've had to fill up the feeder several times a day (I normally fill it about twice every 3 days).

Friday, December 5, 2008

Good Read - 'In Defense of Food'

I am by no means an expert book reviewer, but I wanted to share some thoughts on and praise for this book. My mom picked it up for the plane ride home, and I went ahead and read it before she left. It's an easy read, about 200 pages (none of Ana's dense 1000 page snoozers), and it deals with the so-called 'Western Diet' and the myriad problems it and 'nutritionism' have brought along to the US.

For folks who are hip to organic/local/sustainable food, many ideas will not be new, but it's the overall presentation that makes this book. Pollan starts with a discussion of the industrialization of food and the past century's obsession with individual nutrients (i.e. cholesterol, fat, carbs) over whole foods, and the havoc that this obsession has wreaked on our waistlines/bodies. He continues by shedding some light on the rickety foundations of much of the nutrition science that things as far-reaching as FDA recommendations and food pyramids are based on.

Finally (and likely most usefully for the reader), Pollan provides some broad (but still prescriptive) recommendations on what we should be eating. It's not a step-by-step diet book, but the author provides some surprisingly actionable tips for eating in a more responsible and healthful manner.

At any rate, give it a read, it's worth your time. This book will also make a good gift (just in time for Christmas/Hannukah, etc.).

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Dipsea Dipsea Dipsea Dipsea - Quad Dipsea Race Report

Well, I made it. I finished the Quad Dipsea on Saturday. The race is a double out and back on the famous Dipsea Trail in Marin County, CA between Mill Valley and Stinson Beach. You run from the start at Old Mill Park in Mill Valley to Stinson Beach and back, and then you do it all over again. All told, it's 28.4 miles with about 9,300 feet in cumulative elevation gain, and includes somewhere in the neighborhood of 4000 stairs total, including these right at the beginning.


It really is a beautiful trail, everyone should at least hike at once (and run the quad if you're feeling up to it!). Here's the typical shot of Stinson Beach coming down a section of the trail called 'The Moors':


Here's the course's elevation profile, with some handy markers for the main landmarks along the course (note the finish is not really the finish, since this image is for the single Dipsea, which is only 7.1 miles).


It wasn't too bad, I didn't really hit a marathon-like wall, though I was out there for almost 7.5 hours. 3 days later, though, my calves and quads are still fairly sore. This was my first ultramarathon (i.e. any race longer than a marathon - 26.2 miles), so I was really happy to just finish, though my last leg was really slow. Here were my splits:


Leg 1 (Mill Valley to Stinson Beach): 1:43


Leg 2 (Stinson Beach to Mill Valley): 1:47


Leg 3 (Mill Valley to Stinson Beach): 1:55


Leg 4 (Stinson Beach to Mill Valley): 2:01



Total: 7:28:38


Preparation

I would have liked to get a few more miles on my legs before my first ultra, but I had some foot problems about a month out that limited my training. At any rate, though, I was fairly confident that I'd be able to finish, as I'd done the Silicon Valley Marathon about 5 weeks before, a training double Dipsea about 3 weeks before the race, and a 30K (about 18 miles) on the same trail system 2 weeks before the race.

Also, I had been doing a decent job at losing a few pounds, which I thought would help me during the run. On race morning, I weighed in at 194.8. As a reference, I was at 203.6 for the SF Marathon on 8/1/08, 201.6 for the Silicon Valley Marathon on 10/26/2008, and 200 even for the Stinson Beach 30K on 11/15. So, I lost a little over 5 pounds the last two weeks, which also included the holiday week.

Meal-wise preparation was the same as always, with toast and PB&J and a banana the morning of.

Gear-wise, I brought 2 hand-held water bottles and a waist pack to hold gels and other gear.

The Race


I was definitely nervous at the start, but felt pretty good overall. I saw a couple of famous runners, which was kind of cool and helped pass the time. The weather was absolutely perfect for running (about 55-60 at start). Before I knew it, the starting siren went off and we started up toward the stairs.

My initial goal was to do even splits of about 1:45-1:50 per leg with a finish around 7:00 - 7:15. As you can see with my first 2 splits, I was basically on target for the first half of the race. Unfortunately, I had a couple of issues.

First, I started feeling a little queasy about 2.5 hours into the run, so I slowed down a bit to settle my stomach. The discomfort lasted for about 45 minutes but eventually calmed down. But, that cost me a few minutes.

Then, I made a big mistake by ditching my second water bottle at the halfway point. I felt like I wouldn't need it, since there was a water fountain at Muir Woods (2 miles from Mill Valley) and a full-blown aid station at Cardiac, as well as the aid stations at the start and finish. I underestimated my fluid requirements, though, and basically spent the entire 2nd half of the race thirsty. You have to drink water when taking energy gels, which used up a lot of my water (I took a gel every 30 minutes). It got fairly bad on the last leg at about 6 hours into it when I felt my left calf cramp while going up a switchback coming out of Steep Ravine. When I felt the twinge, I decided to walk from there to Cardiac, where I could refill water and take a salt capsule. That definitely cost me some time, since I walked for about 1.5 miles straight. Oh well, that's a lesson learned for next time.

One thing about the course - everyone always talks about the Dipsea stairs as being brutal. These are the initial 3 sets of stairs (671 total) at the very beginning of the course. They are definitely tough, but I think the trail stairs coming out of Steep Ravine (about a mile from Stinson Beach on the way back to Mill Valley) are the toughest part of the race. I was dreading these steps for 3 hours after going up them the first time. Really, all the way up to cardiac on the fourth leg is pretty nasty. Here's a pic of some of the stairs I'm talking about:

Overall, I'm happy. I think without the stomach/fluid issues, I could have probably done 7:10-7:15. I am really just getting started with this long distance running thing, but I am going to shoot for under 6.5 hours next year, maybe even 6. I think with decent training, that should be doable.

Food/Drink

I like to keep track of what I eat drink during a race. Here's the shopping list:

14 Accel Gel Vanilla (100 calories each)
2 S Caps salt tablets (341 mg sodium, 21 mg potassium per tablet)
10 Nuun Orange Ginger Active Hydration tablets (added to my water bottles - 6 calories, 360 mg sodium, 100 mg potassium per tablet)
3 handfuls pretzels
3 small pieces of watermelon
1 handful Mike & Ike candy (original fruits, of course)
Roughly 220-250 ounces of fluids (water or water with Nuun)