All posts by teleskees

FRIDAY 3RD, APRIL 2015

 

“Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it.”
– Goethe

 

The Quad Rock is getting closer and training is coming along slowly. Too slow for my likes but what are you going to do about it? Now that I am a few years over the age of 50 I find that recovery takes a lot longer than when I was younger. Doing heavy workouts day after day can take a toll when you are 25 to say the least but when you are 53 it can be a recipe for injury. Last year was an OK year but could have been better. I did remain injury free until about the middle of August, but then I suffered an insult to my left knee. I believe it was due to over training and not enough rest. This year I am trying to train a lot smarter.

Last year’s late season injury started after a successful run at the Silver Rush 50 in Leadville. There I had improved my time by one and half hours in the 50 mile distance. For me that was huge. Riding on the euphoria from this race, I was really looking forward to another successful run at the Run Rabbit Run in September at Steamboat Spring. I took about 10 days off after the Silver Rush and was feeling pretty good when I started back training. This was around the first of August. After the personnel best at the Silver Rush, I really wanted to nail the RRR. So I had it in my mind that more training equals better performance and maybe that might have been true when I was 25. The reality was that I needed to train smarter, not harder.

While finishing a great trail run behind Fort Collins, I decided to push the last few miles a little harder than usual. And it was that decision coupled with a lot of running the weeks before that started the cascade. After the run my left knee hurt a little but nothing too painful. That should have been the first warning sign to back off. But did I listen to my body, nope, told myself that I needed to run the next day and besides the weather was beautiful. That next morning my knee was still hurting, so I told myself that I would still get out and run – but just make it an easy one. I told myself the same thing the next day and the next. Just do an easy run when what I really needed was rest for a few days. Not only did I not listen to the continued soreness in my knee, I was not getting a lot of sleep – telling myself that I would make it up later. The interesting thing was the knee soreness never really got any worse it just persisted – until about a week later. Well you can probably fill in the rest of the story. Sad to say but it took a good month and a half for it to heal.

So when I started training this year I wanted to do it smarter and just by chance one morning my wife told me about a new book that had just come out, called “FAST AFTER 50” by Joe Friel. Joe used to write an exercise column for the Fort Collins Coloradoan years ago when we first moved to Colorado and being an enthusiastic reader of the column back then – I immediately looked it up on Amazon. Man am I glad that I did. Since his early days in Fort Collins Joe has written and coauthored several books on training and nutrition for the endurance athlete. This new book shows that experience and the research that has taken place in the last 20 years on the older athlete. I am now into my second reading of the book and that is saying a lot. I cannot recommend this book enough. Especially if you are over the age of 50. I would even go as far as to say if you are over 30 then this book can help you. It is for all endurance athletes. Easy to read and easy to apply the principles in training.

Funny – I am not a religious man or even what you would consider a spiritual one but sometimes the “Universe” moves in strange ways. I wasn’t even looking for a new book on training, especially one for the older athlete – denial has always been one of my go to defenses against getting older. I just figured I would look through some of my older books and magazines on running, and see what I could learn and relearn about proper training. But there it was – the door opened – and just what I needed was offered up by the “Universe.” Crazy! I will keep everyone updated with how the training is going over the next several months. This year’s races are: Quad Rock in May, the Leadville 100 in August and the Run Rabbit Run September. Depending on how my training is going and how I feel I might add the Silver Rush 50 in July. But that might just be wishful thinking…. My mother had a saying when she was in her elder years: “Old age is not for Sissies” and she was right.

Well that is all for me this week. The pictures are from running the last few days. The top one is in the Running Deer Open Space looking west towards Long’s Peak, the second one is the Pelican Marsh Open Space and the third one with the Mule Deer is off of the Poudre River trail – all in the city limits of Fort Collins. Hope to see you out there!!

FRIDAY 27TH, MARCH 2015

 

ONLY THOSE WHO RISK GOING TO FAR CAN POSSIBLY FIND OUT HOW FAR THEY CAN GO.
– T.S. Eliot

 

 

Why do I run Ultras? That is a good question to ask. I mean why spend hours upon hours in training, so you can run 50 to 100 miles in a single race. To be so sore the next day that you sometimes need help just getting around. What is that about? Really? Have I gone crazy? Hmmm. I came late, so to speak to the Ultra Running scene. But from about age 25 I have always had the idea to do one but never had the time. Thinking back, it might have been related to age and a single button that changed it all. The big 5-0 transformed me – there are things that you tell yourself you will get around to, but getting around to them might not ever come if you wait too long.

When I hit the half century mark I was working at a Management Job in Health Care – it was not good for me. Very long hours in a position that has been likened to: “Trying to Herd Cats.” In the process of doing this job I gained 30 pounds in two years. The eye opener came one morning when I went to button an extra-large shirt and it did not fit. I am not a large man – 5’5″. So to be wearing an extra-large shirt in the first place should have been a warning sign. But we have a tendency to rationalize things. Luckily it was that one single button, midway between the abdomen and chest that got me to pay attention. So that was it – no more “feeling like a dog chasing its tail.” Made a plan to quit the management job, revaluated priorities, decided I was going to do an Ultra. Just that simple? Of course it is never just that simple but that can wait for another story.

My first Ultra was the Run Rabbit Run at Steamboat Springs in September 2013 – the 50 miler. I was 51 years old and scared to death. I had read several books on running Ultras, surfed the web for information, and subscribed to Ultra Running Magazine. AND I had trained. But the mind wanders into dark corners. I was nervous enough that I did not sleep the night before, almost talked myself out of showing up. The only way I got myself to the starting line was taking it one small step at a time: Just get dressed, make and drink some coffee, eat a muffin, just get in the car, drive, etc…. I eventually made the start. I was actually early.

Because it is September the 50 mile race starts in the dark. And if you are slow enough like me, it finishes in the dark. The day before the event – the race director Fred Abramowitz had a pre-race briefing. The one thing he said that stuck in my mind was “For you first timers, at about the 30 mile mark you are going to look down at your running shoes, which may be covered in vomit, and say to yourself why the hell am I doing this? That is the moment you must not quit. If you can get through this point you will make it.” This point or moment came for me at the Rabbit Ears turn around. I so wanted to quit. I had just run 25 miles and the realization that I had another 25 to go made me nauseated. But I remembered Fred’s words and continued – believe it or not – in a few miles things actually got better.

By the time I got to the top of the ski hill (Mt. Werner) it was dark and I was exhausted but there was only about 7.5 miles to go and all of it downhill – about 3000 feet of downhill. At this naive point I felt that I could finish this. That it was actually going to be a reality. That was until I started running downhill. In the back of my mind I remembered someone telling me that the downhill parts in the last stages of an Ultra can be the hardest. They were not kidding. Wow – I would run a little ways, walk a little ways, and run a little ways. There was pain in this descent, intense pain, but not pain like an injury. It could be more described as a “powerful soreness.” A soreness that you have to experience because words fail to describe it. When that finish line came into view, I became what can only be described as jubilant, euphoric, enraptured, and ecstatic. I have never felt this way with any other activity, except well, maybe a cardinal one? In Ultra’s there is a boundary you cross that you do not realize is there. When you successfully cross it your world changes. I wanted to dance, to sing, to shout out to the world that I did this and I am invincible! I felt on top of the world, nothing else mattered! Civilization could end tomorrow and I did not care. After that experience I was hooked on doing Ultras.

Of course, all of this only lasted for about 30 minutes and then I needed my daughter’s help to get back to the car and for her to drive me back to the motel. The picture below shows me at the end of the race in 2013. I was second to last in finishing and it did not matter. I had crossed the boundary!

Well, that is about all for this week – hope to see you out there!!

 

 

 

 

FRIDAY 20TH, MARCH 2015

 

“WHAT LIES BEHIND US AND WHAT LIES BEFORE US ARE TINY MATTERS COMPARED TO WHAT LIES WITHIN US.”
– Ralph Waldo Emerson

 

My youngest daughter has been on Spring Break this week and we have been doing a little downhill skiing. On Monday we were up at A-Basin. Beautiful spring conditions, temperatures between 30 to 40 degrees, mild wind and brilliant sunshine. The resort was a little crowded but not too bad. The lower lift line was only about a 5 to 10 minute wait at the most, the upper lift was 5 minutes or less. Really could not have asked for more – well I guess you could have asked for a powder day. But, oh well you cannot have everything. The other nice thing about this type of spring skiing is that you do not need to be up at the crack of dawn to get first chair, you can sleep in a little bit. And actually getting there early can be detrimental due to the freeze / thaw cycle that occurs. In the AM the ski slopes are usually icy and as hard as concrete. But wait a few hours and they have softened up to a hard butter like consistency. Perfect for making beautiful sweeping turns. The picture above is at the top. The elevation at this point is about 13,000 feet. On Monday when this picture was taken, there was no wind for several hours and temps in the 30s. Hard to believe. In Fort Collins this same day, the temp was close to 80.

March in Colorado can always be a little unpredictable on the Front Range. One day you can have snow and temps below 30 degrees and the next day it can be sunny and 70 out. It can make life a little interesting at times. Fortunately that has not been the case this week. The Front Range has seen mild temperatures, cold in the morning (30s) and warm in the afternoon (60 to 80 degrees). Add in a little sun, clouds and some much needed rain and you have beautiful running weather. So when we were not out skiing, it was back to training for the Quad Rock in May. It was nice to not have to use the running tights or a jacket this week. The picture above is part of a trail run right behind Fort Collins in the start of the foothills. There is an initial elevation change of about 500 feet. You run up one hog-back and down the other side to Horsetooth Reservoir and along a trail that goes down to the East side of the lake. There are multiple trails in the area and you can make this a 5 to 20 mile plus run if you want. I am looking North to Northwest in the above picture. In the one below I am in the same position but look East out over Fort Collins. These pictures were taken yesterday on Thursday – the temperature was about 60 degrees, with clouds and sun in the area. And strangely enough – no wind. Simply just beautiful. I feel very fortunate to have this resource right in my backyard.

Well that is it for me this week. HAPPY VERNAL EQUINOX!! And have a great weekend – hope to see you out there!!

 

 

 

 

 

FRIDAY 13TH, MARCH 2015

CORPORATISM – the control of a country, state or organization by large corporate groups.

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I know now that I have been living in a bubble. A bubble that has been created by the merging of the government and the corporate world. I now live in the time of “Corporatism.” Until recently I never stopped to think about what it means to be part of a corporation. Working on the “patient side of health care” for the last 30 years my focus was very narrowed – when the work day was done so to speak – it came down to only one thing: Did we do the best that we could to take care of the patient. Nothing else really mattered. When hospitals changed from one corporation to another the only difference I saw was who signed my check. Yes I was living in the bubble.

Now whether you think it is the best thing since sliced cheese or put it in the same category as Ebola – like it or not – Obama Care as it has been coined, did one thing for a lot of us narrow minded, patient centered professionals – it woke us up! I had to ask myself: Universal Health Care for all? Why would this be a problem in the USA? We are one of the richest countries on earth. Surely we would be able to figure this out? Hmmmm!? So I started to read about corporations, how they started, why we have them, the good points and the bad points, and one interesting idea that related corporations and the public to Biology. The idea is that you can look at corporations and society as a symbiotic relationship. This I could understand. Besides working in health care I have a Bachelor’s degree in Wildlife Biology – where I learned all about mutualistic relationships in the animal kingdom. The disturbing part that become readily apparent is that these relationships are not endpoints. The environment changes, animal populations change, corporations change, societies change, people change – all this leads to instability in the relationship. One party becomes parasitic and this is where the problem starts. It is the same in the corporate world and society as it is in the animal kingdom. This idea is nothing new. The back and forth of corporate power and public welfare has been going on since the first corporation was formed. It is just in the last 20 years with the downsizing of government and concurrent deregulation of corporate laws that we have more of a parasitic corporate structure.

Every president and politician that has warned about, spoken out against, and voted for legislation limiting the power and influence of corporations has faced a backlash of negative criticism. President Obama is not the first and will not be the last. In my humble opinion, the best thing that we could do would be to strengthen the laws that restrict corporate power and influence. Are corporations bad – yes and no? Are corporations good – yes and no? It all depends on where you are at in the parasite (corporation)/host (society) pendulum.

Well I think this is enough for now. I encourage that you do your own reading on corporations to learn more. See ya out there!!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

FRIDAY 6TH, MARCH 2015

“When one has been angry for a very long time, one gets used to it. And it becomes comfortable, like.…like old leather. And finally….becomes so familiar that one can’t even remember feeling any other way.” – From Captain Jean-Luc Picard (Episode – The Wounded)

I am an artist. Be it a struggling artist, but still an artist. It has taken me a really long time to make that statement about myself. Funny – I believe that I knew I was an artist since the age of about 5 or 6. But as the old saying goes: “The seed has to be planted on fertile ground for it to grow.” It has taken a long time for the seed to finally find that fertile ground.

A significant family member who was influential in raising me had a very serious anxiety disorder. In her struggle to cope with life and all of its vicissitudes she became very controlling. If there was something that you wanted to do but she did not feel that it was “Kosher” then by god you were not going to do it – under threat of corporal punishment. My childhood in Texas, the Wichita Falls area, spanned the years from 1962 to 1980 and real men and boys at that time did not do “Art” in the traditional sense – this is what I was led to believe. I was threatened with beatings, called names like sissy and queer and made to feel abnormal if I asked for art supplies or talked about art. The usual commit was: “Why do you want to do that are you queer, that’s for sissies, it’s not for you and besides you’re not good enough.” These are some the fondest memories of my mother. I can talk about this now because she is dead. She passed away due to cancer the day after Thanksgiving 2013. It was an incredible relief. I felt as if a controlling, dominating, dictating force had finally been lifted from my life. It was a good thing.

The ART seed did find some fertile ground in the late 1990s and is still growing. Kind of a stunted bush at the moment. Because of my childhood, the art that I do has a tendency to drift toward “irreverence.” It will not be me painting the pastoral nature scene unless there is “something” seriously wrong with it. It would need a sword wielding Barbarian or female warrior holding the head of some recently vanquished enemy. Yes – irreverence, disrespect, derision, mockery, sarcasm, fear, anxiety, etc…. That is what moves me to paint, to draw, to sculpt, to make art.

I learned two things in my art classes. The first one is that: “Nothing is sacred.” The second thing is that: “In Art – it’s all been done before so stealing is OK, original ideas are very, very rare. So steal it and just make it yours.” The paintings that I am showing here are “bad boy” characters from TV animation – Mo and Side Show Bob from the Simpsons and Stewie from Family guy. I have also include one of my first dragon paintings.

So that is it for me this week – training is still going good for the Quad Rock 50. Lots of snow in the mountains of Colorado this last week. Should be good spring skiing.

Friday 27th, February 2015

 

“YOU’RE BETTER THAN YOU THINK YOU ARE – YOU CAN DO MORE THAN YOU THINK YOU CAN.” – Ken Chlouber (Founder of the Leadville Trail 100)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Yea!! I finished the 2015 Birkie as a classical skier!! It took me about 7 hours to get it done but I finished. The Classical course was 55 kilometers or about 34 miles with somewhere between 3000 to 4000 feet of vertical. In the above picture I am standing at the highest point on the trail, which is about 1700 feet at this point. Not the mountainous hills of Colorado, but don’t let that fool ya – there is a lot of climbing. You could not have asked for better weather. It was a cold day but not unbearably so. The starting temperature was about 10 degrees and it climbed up to about 15 during the course of the race. Throughout the day there were clouds, sun and even a little extra snow at times, but the wind was nonexistent!! That was truly the best part – no wind. I was a little worried earlier in the week when temperatures on Thursday morning were down in the minus 20 degree range and below. When it gets to that point I have to ask myself – “Why am I doing this!?”

There were skiers from around the world at the race and of every ability level, from the Olympic Athlete to the recreational skier like myself. My favorites were the men and women that were 70 years old and older doing the race. These racers were my inspiration to keep going when things got a little tough. Pretty amazing to see these guys moving along the trail. I hope that I am still able to do something of this magnitude when I am that age.

In order to get the full spirit of the Birkie I believe a little history is important. The race is named after the Norwegian Birkebeinerrennet, a cross country ski event in Norway which commemorates an important historical incident in Norwegian history. In 1206 a group of Birkebeiner party soldiers, who fought for Sverre Sigurdsson and his descendants in the Norwegian civil war, smuggled the illegitimate son of Norway’s King Hakon Sverresson from Lillehammer to safety in Trondheim. This event took place in 1206. For Norwegians, the survival of the child Hakon (he was named after his father) led eventually to the end of civil war in Norway. Hakon succeeded to the Norwegian throne in 1218. His reign lasted for a successful 40 plus years and is considered to have been Norway’s golden age. The painting below honors this historical event and is called “Skiing Birchlegs Crossing the Mountain with the Royal Child.” It was painted in 1868 by Norwegian painter – Knud Bergslien.

The commemorative Birkebeinerrennet ski event in Norway has been held since 1932. In the Norwegian event, skiers still carry packs symbolizing the weight of an 18 month old child.

The American Birkie was started by Wisconsin promoter Tony Wise in February of 1973. The race is held every February and now attracts about 10,000 skiers each year.

Well that is about it for me this week. Time to get some Alpine Skiing in before the snow melts and to continue training for the Quad Rock 50 in May. But before I go I would like to give a huge THANK YOU to all the volunteers that helped to insure the success of the 2015 American Birkebeiner. They are without a doubt the unsung heroes in an event of this magnitude.

 

THURSDAY 19th, FEBRUARY 2015

 

Ashland, Wisconsin image image

I am writing from Ashland, Wisconsin this evening. Trying to get my mind in gear to do the 42 Annual American Birkebeiner this coming Saturday! I am hoping for a little warmer temperatures and no wind. Today’s high in Hayward was about 6 degrees fahrenheit, but there was no wind and it was not too bad. So if race day conditions are about the same, things should be good. Right? But what if it is windy or snowing? What then? Do I still race? Or go home?

Of course we all have the tendency to want to control things. Especially things that are not in our control – like the weather. This perceived lack of control takes us out of our comfort zone. Then what happens? We start to put restrictions, limits, provisos on what we can and cannot do. I think about how many times I have used the weather as a reason for not going or doing something because it took me out of my comfort zone.

I was remind of this today from a Zen Quote of the Week called:

NO EDGES, NO BOUNDARIES
We are free, every one of us. We are born free, and the bondage, restrictions, and limits that we find in our life are self-created. The edges we perceive have been placed there by the way we use our minds. There are fundamentally no edges, no boundaries. But this practice has nothing to do with believing. We don’t have Zen believers. It also has nothing to do with understanding. Understanding implies a separation between the knower and the thing that the knower knows.
It has to do with direct and intimate experience itself. Your experience. Not Shakyamuni Buddha’s, not mine – yours. Only you can make yourself free. No one can do it for you. The only one with the power to do it is you yourself. “Only a Buddha can realize a Buddha” – and it is nowhere to be found other than on top of the seat that you’re sitting on. This was excerpted from “Mountain Record of Zen Talks” by John Daido Loori – page 78.

I believe that this quote is right on target. We put the boundaries on ourselves – we create our own restrictions – how many times have we suffered horrible catastrophes – almost all of which have not come true. If you build that wall in your mind – it is just as real as the wall built in the physical world.

Well that is enough for this week – if you are interested in more Zen quotes check out: Zen Quotes @ Shambhala publications.

Wednesday 11th, February 2015

“WE CAN BECOME GREATER THAN WHAT WE EVER

EXPECTED OF OURSELVES WHEN WE OVER COME

THOSE FAILURES BOTH HANDED TO US AND THOSE

FAILURES ACCOMPLISHED BY OUR OWN HAND”

By Steve Timko

After running an Ultramarathon back in 2013 – the Run Rabbit Run at Steamboat Springs, I realized that I needed some time off from serious running during the months of December, January and February. But I did not want to lose all of my hard earned aerobic capacity. XC skiing seemed to be the ticket. A winter cross training sport that would rest the knees and improve upper body strength. I find that Nordic skiing is a good diversion from doing Ultra Marathons in the warmer months. It can inspire the soul as well as improve your aerobic capacity.

This year I am training for the 42nd annual American Birkebeiner. I heard about this XC ski marathon years ago but never had the time to train for it until now. I did attempt it last year on skate skies but only finished about half of the distance of 51k or about 15 miles. This year I am going to use classical technique which I am much more familiar with and so far I feel pretty confident that I can do the whole distance.

It is an amazing XC ski marathon that draws about 10,000 skiers from across the country and around the world. The distances are 51k for skaters and 55k for classic skiers. The route is a one way distance between Cable Wisconsin to Hayward Wisconsin. A huge celebration of everything Nordic! Checkout the web site for more information: http://www.birkie.com

Most of my training this year has taken place at the Eldora Nordic Center. With a touch of new snow each week to freshen up the trails followed by mild days, XC skiing has been good the last couple of weeks. ENC is a great cross country area about 21 miles west of Boulder. I feel that it is one of the more challenging XC areas in Colorado which makes it a great training ground for the Birkie. It also has a nice downhill area nestled right next to it if you want to partake in a little Alpine Skiing.

Ultramarathon season is coming up for me and it will soon be time to put in more running miles. The first Ultramarathon scheduled this year for me is the Quad Rock on May 9th 2015. This is the fourth running of the QR. Last year I did the 25 miler and this year I plan to do the 50. I feel that it is a challenging run because of the elevation gain – 5,500 for the 25 miler and 11,000 for the 50 miler. It all takes place behind Fort Collins in Lory and Horsetooth Mountain Park. A great early season run that gives fantastic views of the Front Range to the East and the Rocky Mountains to the West. The race/run is hosted by the “Gnar Runners” out of Fort Collins. They did an excellent job at hosting the QR last year. To learn more check out their web site: http://www.gnarrunners.com

Well that is all for this post – see you next week!!


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Wednesday 4th, February 2015 – MY FIRST BLOG POST!!

I felt sorry for the commuter traffic this morning. I am sure that it was a mess getting around the tri – city area of Fort Collins, Greeley and Loveland. I have had those days. Stuck in stop and go traffic – snow pouring down, stressed because I am going to be late to work and worried because I am afraid of being hit by the crazy person speeding on ice covered roads. There is always someone going too fast. Not sure what that is about? I want to shout “slow down” you are only going to be early for your own funeral!! (And maybe mine as well) My words if they could be heard would probably be wasted on deaf ears. Oh well – today was not one of those days.

It was not my turn to be at the day job. Got to stay home and savor the snow coming down. Did not have to worry about it. A good day to read, to write, to meditate and exercise. But I believe that the cat had the best idea for the day. The cat’s business for most of the day, every day, is just doing nothing – three hundred and sixty five days of the year. And true to her style that is what she did. There is something to be said for just laying around a hot wood stove savoring the heat and doing nothing. So I followed her example. Well if truth be told, for just part of the day. It was a nice snow day in Fort Collins.

After a little reading and writing the next order of business was “Exercise.” And on today’s menu: Running and walking the bike trail. The route that I took today included parts of the Power line, Spring Creek and the Poudre Trail for a total of about 8 miles. Very nice temperature of about 30 degrees, setting sun with broken clouds and no wind. It is days like today that remind me of how lucky I am to live in Fort Collins. In my opinion the trail and open space program in Fort Collins and Larimer County is second only to Boulders. I grew up in Wichita Falls, Texas. A city that for all of my youth did not have any bike or running trails except around the high school track. I have a great appreciation for what we have after coming from a place that had nothing. Just a note: Wichita Falls does have a limited bike and running trail now but plan to add more in the future.


Well this is my first Blog Post – I really do not have a plan at the moment to where this will lead – if anywhere? My feeling at the moment is that we all have a need to be acknowledged by the wider world in general. So this is my shout from the darkness so to speak. I hope that you the reader find the content interesting and feedback is welcome. This has been something that I wanted to do for a while – to tell a story about my life, where I live and the events that take place around me.