Run 709: Unbearable 5K

Today’s run didn’t go at all as planned, but it almost didn’t happen at all, so in the end it went surprisingly well, all things considered.

First, the bug bites from Saturday (of which there were many–at least 18 on my right leg, eight on my left) were flaring up again this morning, all red and itchy as heck. So walking and running would make this even worse, probably, and for that reason I thought it might be nice to just spend the day in the bathtub instead.

But I did get changed and used cheap motivational tricks to get myself heading out.

Right around the 1 km mark of the walk, when I was traversing down the stairs into Lower Hume Park I suddenly remembered my pasties. My nipple guards. If I was doing a 10K and sweated copiously, there was a distinct possibility that both nipples would bleed like they were extras in a Saw outtake. Going back would mean adding 18+ minutes to the whole thing. I just kept heading to the lake, mulling a potential Plan B.

Potential Plan B’s:

  • Don’t run at all, just do an epic 18 km walk around the lake and back
  • Do a 5K run instead, so less overall sweating
  • Do a 10K and hope that the cooler temperatures would offset the humidity and result in less sweating

As it was, I ended up going with Plan C:

  • Do a crazy back-and-forth combo of main and side trails for a total of 5K after three different people warned me about a mother bear and two cubs “ten minutes” up the way I was heading

A man and a couple (walking in close proximity of each other) flagged me down as I set off clockwise down the Avalon Trail, where four fresh new culverts have been installed. As expected, the man warned me he had seen a mother bear and two cubs wander off the trail and into the woods about ten minutes back (roughly a km or about six minutes for me at normal running pace). He seemed somewhat confident that the bears would be gone if I continued on, but when it comes to a mother bear and the potential to see me as a threat to her cubs, then mauling me to death, I am good with giving the bears an extremely wide berth, and switched to counter-clockwise and made the call to do only 5K by looping around the side trail and out, which I did.

Because the run was relatively short, I had no issues and felt very springy, finishing with a pace of 5:57/km and a BPM of exactly 150 (it got as high as 157 on the last km as I stepped on the gas a little).

The hip didn’t actually make its presence known at all until I was walking back on the river trail, but it was no big deal. I ran a fair bit there, too, since I had energy to spare. Funny how 5K almost feels short now.

Overall, a decent, if shorter than expected, start to the week.

I look forward to the bears hibernating.

And here’s the map of my route (I have no idea why Apple uses a dark map, it looks terrible, but Apple gonna Apple). The leg on the right was my expected route, before I doubled back and did a couple loops over on the north side of the lake (oh, and so it doesn’t drive you crazy, the cut-off text says Warner Loat Park):

Stats:

Run 709
Average pace: 5:57/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (a little of every direction)
Start: 10:11 a.m.
Distance: 5.02 km
Time: 29:54
Weather: Sun with high cloud
Temp: 21-22ºC
Humidity: 67-54%
Wind: light
BPM: 150
Weight: 160.9
Total distance to date: 5202 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (310 km)

Run 708: Actual clouds! A mere 18C! Weird right foot!

The weather finally changed today, giving me a break from my least favorite combo of heat and humidity.

It was a mere 18C and cloudy, with even the very slightest bit of drizzle around the 7K mark. It was refreshing! Even with the humidity at 78%, it was still fine. In fact, I sweated very little after the first half, thanks to the cooler conditions and a nice breeze.

The hip was present for the back half of the run, but it wasn’t exactly sore, more just there. More annoying was the right foot mentioned in the title–right near the start pf the run and until some point between the second and third km, the sole was hurting in some weird way, kind of like an arthritic kind of pain when I stepped on it. It wasn’t hugely hurting or anything, just random and annoying, as I’ve never had issues with the right foot. It went away and after that was back to normal.

The body is weird.

Speaking of weird, I decided to skip the side trail since I started back of the zero marker and because the sun wasn’t going to be beating down on me. However, after having a woman with a stroller suddenly push the stroller directly into my path at the last moment (she apologized as I deked around) and a couple with a dog mildly freaked on my approach, forcing me to awkwardly run between them, I abandoned the plan and cut up the newly-resurfaced connector trail that leads to the Conifer Loop, then stuck to that. I also stayed on the Piper Mill Trail. I’ve learned my lesson in experimenting!

And speaking of experiments, two kids were on a bike midway between the 6-7K mark, careening all over the place and laughing. I told them bikes weren’t allowed on the trail as I ran by, annoyed. I could clearly see their drunken path in the dusty trail right by the sandwich board that says NO CYCLING. I hope they rode the bike into the bush, punctured both tires, fell into a giant bush of poison ivy, then had a deer pee on them. Sure, I’ve never seen deer at Burnaby Lake, but this is my fantasy, so deer it is.

As for the run, my energy level was much higher thanks to the more favorable conditions, so I finished the full 10K without issue. I did flag a bit at the 7K and 8K marks, but picked up after that to finish with a pace of 5:57/km for the last stretch and an overall pace of 6:06/km, which is perfectly cromulent (and matches my 5K-shoulda-been-10K on Wednesday).

Overall, a nice way to end the week.

Stats:

Run 708
Average pace: 6:06/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CCW)
Start: 10:36 a.m.
Distance: 10.03 km
Time: 61:18
Weather: Cloudy
Temp: 18ºC
Humidity: 78%
Wind: light
BPM: 152
Weight: 160.4
Total distance to date: 5197 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (305 km)

Walk 82: Hot hot hot

I have seemingly fallen into the habit of doing a river trail walk on non-run days. They take about 70-80 minutes and provide a nice calorie burn, plus scenery, so I’m enjoying them for now, despite the heat and humidity.

It was again very humid. And hot. I sweated a lot, even though I didn’t do much actual running.

As an experiment, I played music on the way back to see if it would make me move faster, and I think it did! The brain is funny.

But one of the songs that came up was “I Wanna Marry You” from Bruce Springsteen’s 1979 album The River, and hearing him repeatedly sing “Little girl, I wanna marry you” in that husky voice of his is pretty creepy, really.

Now imagine subbing “little boy” for every song that uses “little girl.” Creepier still!

Overall, a nice walk on a hot, sticky day. I did avoid the side of Fader Street with the Bad Dog, but it was nowhere in sight. Still, I’m not ready to be lunged at again.

Stats:

Walk 82
Average pace: 9:00/km
Location: Brunette River trail
Distance: 8.71 km
Time: 78:23
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 28-30ºC
Humidity: 49%
Wind: light
BPM: 108
Weight: 160.4 pounds
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12
Total distance to date: 605.64 km

Run 707: Horse poop detour

Today was one of those days when there just wasn’t a good time to run.

But I ran anyway, opting for an early morning start with the moderate temp/high humidity combo, since it was expected to get as high as 33C later in the afternoon.

In the end, the humidity, which started at 71% (!) defeated me and I only did 5K instead of a planned 10K, but at least I did a run. Plus, I did some decent interval running on the rest of the way around the lake.

Other than the copious sweating, the other notable part of the run was the start of culvert work along the Avalon Trail, which resulted in a detour along a horsie trail that ultimately connects to the Freeway Trail, then finally back to the main lake loop. It was longer than expected, at around 2.6 km, but it was kind of neat being on a new trail and much of the horse trail is, uh, rustic? Less groomed? And also covered in lots of horse poop. I encountered no actual horses, though. When it connected to the Freeway Trail, I thought I only had a short way to go before being able to get back on the main trail, but it went on much longer than I remembered. And this trail has no tree canopy at all, so the sun was blazing away on me the whole time (not forgetting that 71% humidity, too).

I actually posted fairly good times for the first three km, but by the fourth I could feel myself flagging and the thought of running the sixth km on the long, exposed Cottonwood Trail made me opt for the 5K. This actually worked well, since I was able to stop/start as I saw fit, making for a more pleasant finish to the lake part of the outing.

Weirdly, no dog issues today! And I saw the spitfire. She seemed to be suffering a bit from the heat/humidity combo, a bit. As we all are.

Oddly, my hip/left leg felt sore after the run, and not so much during. Not terribly or anything, but there it was as a reminder. If I could clone my right leg and copy it over to the left side, that would be spiffy. Short of that, I’ll just keep monitoring the left leg, I suppose.

The high is “only” supposed to be 24C on Friday, so a full 10K should be a lot more doable then. We’ll see.

Here’s a post-run shot of the trail around the athletic fields, showing one of the sections especially prone to flooding. You can see the fresh gravel used to level out the surface on the left (and how much was needed). The whole thing still looks unfinished to me, and would definitely still flood, so I’m hoping this is just the first part of a full resurfacing. This is also where the geese like to sit sometimes, for some reason. They were over on the shady bits of the field this morning, though.

Happy trails…until it rains (or someone runs the sprinklers).

Stats:

Run 707
Average pace: 6:06/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 9:39 a.m.
Distance: 5.02 km
Time: 30:40
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 22-24ºC
Humidity: 71%
Wind: nil to light
BPM: 154
Weight: 160.6
Total distance to date: 5187 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (295 km)

Walk 81: Brisk, with a side of lunging dog

Conditions were nearly identical today for the walk, though some high cloud helped shield the sun. I skipped sunblock and did not burn, woo.

I felt a little more spry today, though I can’t really say why, because in the morning I was utterly unenthused about doing any kind of exercise, then found myself running off/on enough to bring my average pace down to a zippy 9:00/km even.

I extended my walk to the lake, and it totally had nothing to do with having to use the port-o-potty there. Coincidentally, just before stepping into the port-o-potty, I walked past several girls and thought to myself, “I bet one of them tries the door, even though they probably saw me go in.” And then it happened, like it was one of those really bad episodes of The Twilight Zone that feature port-o-potties.

But the real capper came early, when I walked down Fader Street at the start and past The House With the Dog That Acts Like It Wants to Kill Me. After Friday’s run, this medium-large dog was being escorted on leash down the walk of its home when I trundled by on the sidewalk. Upon seeing me, it lunged, growling and showing teeth, because it is a Bad Dog with Very Bad Owners.

Today, as I was heading down the same block of Fader, I saw a guy with a hipster beard with the dog. There was more distance this time, so I slowed and watched as they crossed the street to a car. I assumed they were going for a drive, but apparently Jack Dorsey Jr. was just checking to see if it was locked or something, so they turned and came back, walking almost directly toward me. When the dog saw me, it again lunged. I did a melodramatic sprint to create more space just in case the leash played out more than expected, then stood there on the sidewalk, somewhat dumbfounded that this had happened again. Beardy guy and Bad Dog headed down Fader in the opposite direction. The guy never said anything or acknowledged me in any way. I still stood there, watching him.

He crossed the intersection and at one point glanced back to see me looking at him. He walked farther until we were about a full block apart, then turned around again, this time coming to a full stop to briefly stare back at me. I then turned and continued on my way.

Now I am contemplating calling the city to have them check out the dog (but really, to check out the dog owners, because it’s not the dog’s fault it acts like a barely-restrained killing machine). In the meantime, I’ll be avoiding that side of Fader Street when I go for runs or walks, now that I no longer feel safe strolling through my own neighborhood.

But the walk went well otherwise!

Stats:

Walk 81
Average pace: 9:00/km
Location: Brunette River trail
Distance: 9.13 km
Time: 82:13
Weather: Sunny with high cloud
Temp: 25ºC
Humidity: 51%
Wind: light
BPM: 114
Weight: 160.8 pounds
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12
Total distance to date: 596.93 km

Walk 80: A year of moving

The combo of heat/humidity was not making my socks roll up and down in delight this morning, so I decided to postpone my Monday run and do a walk on the river trail instead.

Weirdly, my pace was identical to my last walk–9:12/km. It was still warm and felt warmer due to the H-word, but it was okay otherwise.

I did stop a few times to take some photos, which may be technically cheating, but I can live with that. More significantly, when I completed my move ring on the Fitness app, it extended my move streak to 365 days–an entire year. Go me! Literally!

A moving experience (ho ho)

There may be some cloud cover tomorrow morning, so perhaps I’ll try running then. Perhaps!

Stats:

Walk 80
Average pace: 9:12/km
Location: Brunette River trail
Distance: 8.29 km
Time: 76:16
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 25ºC
Humidity: 55%
Wind: light
BPM: 103
Weight: 161.7 pounds
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12
Total distance to date: 587.80 km

Run 706: It’s not the heat, it’s the bad dog owners

Today turned out to be very similar in some ways to Monday’s run, with the pace being only a second faster (margin of error), but there were a few key differences:

  • It was cloudy. This was GOOD.
  • It was 23-24C. This was also GOOD.
  • Humidity was 68% and didn’t drop much during the run. This was BAD.
  • There was very little breeze until the last few km of the run. This was also BAD.

The lack of sun was a pleasant surprise and while it tried poking through the cloud cover around halfway through, the clouds smothered it back up, which was fine by me.

I decided to try an earlier start to at least get cooler temperatures and it worked, but unlike Monday, humidity was even higher and the first half of the run the air was especially thick. By the third km I was doubting I’d have the stamina to go beyond 5K, but I pushed past it and gave myself permission to stop whenever I needed to.

By the 6K mark I actually passed a slower runner, which is always a nice ego boost, so kept going. By the ninth km, the bottom was falling out, and my pace plunged to 6:26/km. Yuck. But at that point I’m not going to call it, so I did the opposite: I put on the “Get this over with” jets and finished the last km with a pace of 6:05/km.

I’m not actually sure why I was so slow on the ninth km. It was like my mind started wandering off task and I forgot that I was actually running.

Anyway, it was overall gross due to the H word, but I managed a decent performance, anyway. The hip started out fine and never became overly sore, so it was definitely better than on Monday’s outing, which was nice.

As to the bad dog owners, just a lot of people with their dogs off-leash today, mostly on the river trail. When I was a block from home, a woman had a dog (on leash) right at the edge of the sidewalk on Fader Street. I walked by, giving them a bit of a berth, and the dog suddenly growled and lunged at me. The woman had to restrain the dog fairly aggressively.

Tip: If your dog is trying to lunge/attack random people on the street, you are probably a terrible person and a horrible dog owner. Get your dog trained or give it to someone who gives a damn. Signed, Me! Sometimes I’m curious knowing what is going on in the mind of as person like that and other times I’m glad I don’t know.

I’m pretty sure if that dog was not on a leash that I’d be sitting in the ER right now, waiting to get a tetanus shot. I had enough of those when I was a kid, thanks!

Stats:

Run 706
Average pace: 6:09/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 9:16 a.m.
Distance: 10.02 km
Time: 61:42
Weather: Cloudy
Temp: 23-24ºC
Humidity: 63-68%
Wind: nil to light
BPM: 153
Weight: 162.1
Total distance to date: 5182 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (290 km)

Walk 78 and 79: Sweatin’ to the walking

I did a walk instead of a run yesterday and forgot to record it on this very blog. Insert screaming emoji here.

So today you get a double bill.

Conditions were similar for both yesterday and today–sunny, humid and hot. Today’s walk was brisker even though it was a little bit warmer, thanks to heading out a wee bit earlier and a more prominent breeze blowing. Plus, I just think I was feeling more energetic for whatever reason.

The last time I had a walk like this was on June 28 when it was also 31C (hot), but the humidity was only 28%. The difference between 28% and 45% humidity is palpable.

Tomorrow’s high is forecast to be a mere 29C, so I may try running as per usual for a Friday. We’ll see!

Stats, Part 1:

Walk 78
Average pace: 9:20/km
Location: Brunette River trail
Distance: 7.70 km
Time: 71:54
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 31ºC
Humidity: 42%
Wind: light
BPM: 105
Weight: 160.7 pounds
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12
Total distance to date: 572.05 km

Stats, Part 2:

Walk 79
Average pace: 9:12/km
Location: Brunette River trail
Distance: 7.46 km
Time: 68:40
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 29-32ºC
Humidity: 45%
Wind: light
BPM: 111
Weight: 160.6 pounds
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12
Total distance to date: 579.51km

Run 705: One does not simply walk into humidity

I won an award for today’s run. Hint: It wasn’t for the fattest pace ever!

Not shown: Award for sweating

Now, my pace today was 6:10/km, which is fine, but far from spectacular. It’s a full 16 seconds off last Wednesday’s pace, in fact, so how did I manage to burn a record number of calories? Well, there are a lot of factors involved–hydration level, amount of sodium I’ve ingested recently and so on. And then there’s that one persistent thing that has accompanied me on pretty much every run this summer:

HUMIDITY

Go ahead, pretend I somehow re-enabled the <BLINK> tag on the above, to get the full intended effect.

Once again, high humidity plagued my run, and I have resigned myself to facing it for the rest of the summer. I’ll probably have to wait until the cooler temperatures of fall before it no longer factors into how my runs go. Today felt like a slog, due to the combo of warm temperatures, sun and the H-word.

That said, I did manage a full 10K and the left hip started out fine, then started being a mild bother about 2K in before settling down and not particularly being an issue for the last few km. What kind of threw me was starting farther up from my usual spot today due to trail work. Every time I’d expect to hit a milestone, I would still have a ways to go, and I ended the run right at the dam, instead of well before it. It felt weird and made the whole thing feel even more slog-like.

My pace was actually pretty consistent, though. Observe:

KilometerPace per km
15:50 (zippy start)
26:13 (slow to 150 BPM)
36:13
46:12
56:12
66:12
76:04 (boost from Cottonwood Trail)
86:17 (course becomes more technical, I slow down)
96:17
106:05 (sprinting to make it all end sooner)

Also contributing to the slog-like effect today was the return of the No-wind. This is another peculiar phenomenon that has only occurred this summer. I mean, here we are two-thirds through the season, with little precipitation in the last month, and the forest fire danger is still only Moderate (one step above the lowest level, which is cleverly called Low).

Anyway, enough kvetching, here are the stats:

Run 705
Average pace: 6:10/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 9:58 a.m.
Distance: 10.02 km
Time: 61:47
Weather: Mostly sunny
Temp: 22-24ºC
Humidity: 51-59%
Wind: nil to light
BPM: 152
Weight: 161.1
Total distance to date: 5172 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (280 km)

Run 704: The internal battle

Quite often I will think about what I will write about a run while I’m still actually out running. For example, I knew that today’s entry would be titled “The internal battle” shortly before the running part ended (and when the internal battle also ended).

When I went out today, I was planning on taking it a bit easier, because I was expecting it to be warmer and still humid. In fact, the forecast this morning even specifically mentioned it would be humid:

Note to add: Feels like 16 my butt!

When I left it was 22C, but it rose to 24C by the time I got to the lake and ticked up another degree during the run. Humidity was in the mid-60s, which is gross, but if you look at the previous run, you might be thinking, “Humidity was even higher then, yet you did a lot better. Why? Has science been lying to us all this time?” And the answer is: I don’t know why, exactly!

But there seems to be some magic line where if the temperature is X and humidity is Y, then the run will be POO. Today it reached into the POO zone. I did handicap myself a bit by running counter-clockwise, which is the “harder” route–it starts out all technical and windy and doesn’t offer any nice straight stretches until you get to the Cottonwood Trail about 3 km in. Conversely, running clockwise starts you on the Avalon Trail, which is perfectly straight, save for one gentle curve. After that, the trail tends to slope gently downhill for much of the way.

So, there was that. But I started out okay. The hip was fine for the first few km, then when I could feel it, it was muted, not really a factor. But the humidity really wore on me. By the sixth km, the bottom began to fall out, with a pace of 6:22/km. After 7 km, it had fallen further to a yuck-o 6:32/km. This is where the internal battle began and while it lasted only a few moments, it went something like this:

Sensible Me: You’re not going for a personal record, you planned on taking it easier today, there’s no shame in ending the run a bit earlier than planned!

My Ego: Do you want to be a quitter? You can make up time on the Avalon Trail. If you stop now, you’ll only have done one measly 10K this week! Sure, no one will really know or care, but YOU’LL know! Keep going, hoser!

My Ego, after some more thought: You know, if your pace continues to flag, it’s going to drag down your average and look bad. Maybe cut your losses now and look better!

Yes, in my mind, my ego calls me a hoser.

The call was pretty easy to make. My pace was falling off a cliff, so I listened to both Sensible Me and Me Ego, after some more thought. To prove the hip was fine, I did run a decent amount for the remainder of the 3K around the lake and felt fine.

However, when I was trying to do the same on the river trail, I started experiencing stomach cramps and about half an hour after getting home had to make a beeline to the bathroom to attend to an urgent nature call. So the roiling of my gut may have had some impact that I was not fully aware of, too. At least that’s what My Ego is telling me!

In the end, it was not a bad effort and I think if I’d run clockwise and conditions had been better, it would have been perfectly fine. But I’m content with settling with “just okay” after Wednesday’s faboo run.

In fun resurfacing news: I was surprised and delighted to see that they have done some patching along the trail that borders the athletic fields. As I’ve noted before, the trail here is narrow and floods even when they just run the sprinklers on the fields, due to strangely poor drainage. Sometime in the last two days workers came in and did a couple of things: they filled potholes, shored up parts where the trail is a bit sunken and laid down what appears to be a preliminary section of new gravel along the eastern part that right-angles past the row of trees that you can see in your favorite map software:

I’m hoping this is all leading to a Grand Resurfacing™. I should know the next time I am on the trail. It may seem weird that I am kind of obsessed with this, but until you’ve had to choose between going through a long, deep puddle in the middle of your run route or detour into a marshy field that will have you sink into water past your ankles, you just can’t appreciate the anticipation of this being addressed after more than ten years.

Stats:

Run 704
Average pace: 6:14/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CCW)
Start: 11:30 a.m.
Distance: 7.02 km
Time: 43:44
Weather: Partly cloudy
Temp: 24-25ºC
Humidity: 54%
Wind: light to moderate
BPM: 151
Weight: 162.2
Total distance to date: 5162 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (270 km)

Run 703: Cloudy, cool and hip hip (hooray?)

Today’s run had me filled with trepidation: Would my left hip be hip (fine) or most unhip (sore)? Would I be able to run 10K or go conservative and only do 5K?

As it turned out, I turned in my best run at the lake so far this year, breaking both the six-minute mark and coming in under an hour for the first time in actual years. Woo.

It started out weird, with the Apple Watch claiming a BPM after 1 km of 97, which would be possible if I was actually a godlike supernatural being and not a guy with a sore hip. I paused the run for a few moments, which sometimes lets the watch “catch up” and the BPM leaped to 158, which seemed too high, then fell back to 149, which is my Goldilocks BPM zone. I continued on.

Three big factors in today’s performance:

  • The temperature was a relatively cool 22C and stayed there the entire time
  • The sky was mostly overcast, with only a bit of sun poking out near the start
  • An actual breeze was blowing, providing additional cooling (and occasionally resistance)

This meant I sweated a lot less than usual (in fact, on the back half of the run I was sweating very little), and I was seeing much better results while putting in the same usual effort. I let my BPM go up slightly to 152 because it didn’t feel like I was working harder. Of the 10 km, only two were above the six-minute mark and one was right on it, the rest were all under, with the first km being a rather zippy 5:36/km. I felt good. It was nice.

So, the hip. Was it sore? Yes, I could definitely feel it. But at the same time, it was clearly not affecting my pace. Was the soreness being covered up by a rush of endorphins? The proverbial runner’s high making me oblivious to the pain? Maybe a tiny bit, but mostly I don’t think so. It was clearly not as bad as Monday, so may be on the mend. We’ll see on Friday.

Other things:

  • I went Watch-only. After the three workouts (two 4K walks, the 10K run) and listening to music for about 100 minutes, the battery was down to 16%. I could probably squeeze more juice out of it by turning off always-on mode, but it is about three years old now, so I am not overly surprised it drained so much. Well, maybe a little surprised that it dipped below 20%. I basically didn’t do anything with the watch in the few hours before the run, other than wear it.
  • I skipped the sunblock, hoping it would neither be sunny, nor cloudy-but-still-sunburn-y, and it looks like I was right! Sunblock has helped a lot this summer, but it is horrible and sticky when running, and I always think I’ll rub some of it into my eyes when wiping sweat away.
  • I also forgot to protect my nipple. Ack! But it turned out that I didn’t sweat enough to cause any issues. The last km or so on the walk back I could feel the start of something (not something good), but it went away after I washed up, and my chest is happy for now.
  • Without the phone, I did not wear my SPI-belt, which I believe caused some minor abrasions on my belly after Monday’s run. My evidence is that the abrasions perfectly match where the buckle of the belt lines up when I’m wearing it. I did feel weirdly naked without the phone, even though the watch has cellular, so I can still make/take calls and messages. But it was nice to carry less junk, too.

And now, I will bask in a good result and the good feeling from it.

Stats:

Run 703
Average pace: 5:55/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 11:53 a.m.
Distance: 10.02 km
Time: 59:22
Weather: Overcast
Temp: 22ºC
Humidity: 64%
Wind: light to moderate
BPM: 152
Weight: 164.4
Total distance to date: 5155 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (263 km)

Run 702: Sweaty, sticky, with trick hip (ee)

Blargh, I say.

I did not want to run today, but I did That One Weird Trick To Make You Run–I put on my jogging clothes. Once I’m dressed to run, it’s extremely rare for me to not go out.

And so I did, around 12:30 p.m., once again rolling the dice on the higher heat of the afternoon being better than the higher humidity of the morning. But it turned out I got both, anyway. It was 29C and humidity stayed at 45% through the run, which made the stretches without shade feel very hot and awful. The timing of my first two km was slow, even though my BPM was trending above 150 and even though I turned in a nice 6:03/km on the Cottonwood Trail for the fourth km, I decided to just do 5K today. Adding to the hot ‘n humid conditions, the sore upper left thigh (let’s call it the hip for short, shall we?) at first felt like it was just reminding me it had been sore, but then it became clear it was sore.

Perhaps not as sore as last week, but sore enough to tamp down any thoughts of sprinting. I mean, given conditions, it was academic, anyway, but still. I am concerned what Wednesday is going to be like. They’re currently calling for a high of 25C (not bad!) and T-storms, which makes me think of letters raining down from the sky. So, assuming no lightning strikes, it may be a much more reasonable day weather-wise. We’ll see how it goes, with caution as my middle name.

Also, I encountered four Parks putt-putt cars on the trail, which I think is a record. And there was a guy (without helmet) riding a bike. I secretly wished him flat tires, as I do all cyclists who go to Burnaby Lake.

Stats:

Run 702
Average pace: 6:18/km
Location: Burnaby Lake (CCW)
Start: 1:25 p.m.
Distance: 5.02 km
Time: 31:42
Weather: Sunny
Temp: 29ºC
Humidity: 45%
Wind: light to moderate
BPM: 152
Weight: 164.2
Total distance to date: 5145 km
Devices: Apple Watch Series 5, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: Brooks Caldera 5 (253 km)