 
		  March 30, 2013 (Morning)
Exercise Type: Run
Weather: 50s ->70
  
  Comments: 
Stayed up later than I'd like to, so I "slept in" til around 8ish.  Left the house around 9ish for the hour+ drive up to the McKenzie.
The MRT is...amazing.  Yet I rarely run there.  The biggest reason is it's a solid hour away.  However, I need to get out there more: it's SUPER runnable and a rare smooth singletrack that's challengingly winding, with only small climbs (most <100', if not <20').  In other words, it's a perfect training ground to learn how to run fast on trail.  Period.
That wasn't the focus today, though - it was a long "B2B recovery" day.  Wore the HRM again to enforce effort discipline.  
Got to the ranger station around 1030 and was on the trail, rolling easy, at 1045.  Started a bit cool, so I wore a jacket.  
Ran from the finish of the MRTR 50K so I'd have a better idea of mileage.  Kept it VERY easy - I was honestly hoping to keep the HR in the 130s range all day, but that wouldn't happen...
Took no water, but did take a "tube" of Trail Butter, an awesome nut butter product made in PDX.  I met the owner at Hagg Lake and got a free sample.  Low carb, high protein/fat, so a nice snack mid-run.
Pretty uneventful run: slowly rolled upstream, focusing on good form: 
- "EEN Form" - good hip extension and arm swing
- "opening up the hips" - which became huge when the pace went down (more later)
Saw a few people, mostly hikers, and only a couple mtn bikers, which was nice (MRT is a hotbed for bikes).  The weather gradually warmed to close to 70, but it was never uncomfortable.
Turned back at 1:4x; stopped for 5min to eat the nut butter, then rolled back.
The HRM is a great data source.  It's noteworthy how the heart rate drifts upward, despite decreased effort!  There's a couple theories on this: namely "cardiac drift", which apparently occurs due to decreasing blood volume (which I don't 100% buy, after reading Noakes' work).  But what happened to ME was FATIGUE.
Out segment (6.1mi): 50:00, HR 127
Out segment (3.5mi): 28:00, HR 131
Out segment (2.6mi): 23:00, HR 132
In segment (2.6mi): 21:00, HR 135
In segment (3.5mi): 28:00, HR 143
In segment (6.1mi): 4x:??, HR 151
(incomplete last segment, stopped the watch).
The HR just kept creeping up and up.  It was such a challenge to go for MAX EFFICIENCY and keep the HR down!  It's like:
- Running out of gas, but trying to go as far/fast as you can (you can relate!)
- Or the teacher/lifeguard telling you NO RUNNING, yet you're trying to "speedwalk" as fast as you can.
It's a terrific training tool - exactly what I'd hoped for: the ability to monitor TRUE effort and try to moderate it with absolute efficiency.
BUT, it also has another good measure: OVERTRAINING.  If you're gassed, the HR will climb up and up, despite perceived effort.  And that was the case for me: I was just gassed, after literally five hard days in a row (in some respect).  So I was really glad to have that data, and run accordingly EASY back in.
Pretty damn awesome 6-day stretch - I feel good about it.  I felt like my mechanics rebounded after a shitty Thursday.  I taped my back again today; interestingly, it was a significant challenge to keep things "open" in the low back and hips, running slow (like, 8:xxs on flats).  SUPER-important!!  
Post-run: hung out in the empty parking lot of the ranger station.  It was SUPS nice, so literally "laid out" for a good 45mins for some "Vitamin D"!  
Got back to the apt in the late afternoon (luxuriously lazy day!), but then threw down a 5-set of push-ups, abs, arm hang/leg raises, and single leg squats (another key training to fend off "Grandpa Joe"!).
Did some grocery shopping, then headed home.  Had a couple beers, pretty chill day.  It occurred to me that I spoke maybe 20 total words to other humans all day.  Weird.  Sometimes those days are OK.
| Distance | Duration | Pace | Interval Type | Shoes | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 24.5 Miles |