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Greetings! Welcome to my blog!

Firstly, thanks for taking the time to check out my blog! I hope you find my blog interesting.

Saturday 28 November 2015

Where have I been?

So you may have noticed a huge gulf in time between this post and my last! This is because as far as sport has gone, I have been away! Away for a long time and this is because of injury, the kind that gnaws away at you unrelenting! 

Since June 2014 I have had a very opinionated ankle that has refused to sort itself out. Despite a history of ankle rolls in the past, there was not such event during this month. This may have been because I had been trying to get by and refuse that there was a problem, in truth I do not really know but from June onwards, I decided to take a rest from running. Later I dropped cycling as the pain was still persisting and not running was still not helping. 

Then my beautiful daughter arrived and I thought, in the new year I will seek out help and get this sorted. However disaster struck in January when my son fell awkwardly and broke is femur. How could I get myself fixed with chaos around me, so I soldiered on.  Thankfully by May my son was back on his feet and I got referred to see a specialist. Months of physiotherapy followed but still no improvements were being made and the pain pushed on relentless, not even with pain relief could I get any closure and my mood began to suffer. I'm sorry for that.

In the Summer of 2015, I had a MRI scan and Xray on my ankle and another specialist recognised the problem and advised that surgery would be required. I was shocked. For the first time in over a year I had an answer, and it was not in my head.  I tried a steroid injection to get me through to the next term, it worked amazingly but sadly it did not last. Taking time out for surgery and the subsequent recovery took some careful planning to fit in my day job as a school teacher.  But we got there, so on 16th November, I went under the knife with a skilled surgeon in Singapore. Which brings me to today. Half way through keeping it elevated not putting any weight through it. It is also the longest time possibly in my life that I have not been in the pool.

Which is why I took an usual step in having a tattoo. A tattoo with a name, the Bungai Terung. This was performed with the traditional hand tapped method. Living on the island of Borneo, I have always been interested and intrigued by the tribal culture of the people who live here. The tattoo I have had is from the Iban tribe of Sarawak, who traditionally have lived around water ways (their transport links) in buildings called Long Houses that home people closely together. They have also been called 'head hunters' due to an ancient tradition however this is no longer practised. The Bungai Terung is the first tattoo that young Iban men get and is there first step in becoming a warrior. After receiving the Bungai Terung, received in pairs across the front of the shoulders (where the straps of a back might go) they were ready to go out on their 'Berjalai' journeys.I was interested to learn the deep meaning behind it. On each shoulder  they make you stronger to carry your travelling pack, they give protection and the centre coil, the rope life to symbolise the transformation from tadpole to maturity.

Well after the year my family has had, I would welcome further protection. As for my 'Berjalai' I am working abroad to help improve the lives of my family. I am or was a fit athletic person, a swimmer, and a triathlete. Hence my journey is going to be getting back to fitness and beyond...

Thanks for reading, I might do another blog about the tattoo experience, which with the absence of any sporting adventures, might be what the doctor ordered? As for 2016, bring it on!
The four hour process was not dissimilar to many endurance events for both myself, Pemantang (tattooist) and Ten (the stretcher and assistance.)

Tuesday 24 June 2014

70.3 Ironman to Caberman

It has been a very interesting year for me so far, particularly where sport is concerned.
I'm very lucky and privileged to be currently living on the island of Borneo. The conditions are perfect for an outdoor life and once you allow for insect bites and high humidity you can really have a blast!
Every day has pretty much the same number of hours of sunshine and the weather is only hot, hot and wet or hotter but you can pretty much with the few exceptions plan to do something and nothing stops you.
I spent most of May in the gym doing compound moves like squats and deadlifts because in June I am taking part in a Highland Games type event. I am doing tug of war and it now looks more lightly caber tossing!
Saturday 21st June soon arrived after an terrible week in which sadly my Grandfather passed away.  As you can imagine I was distracted and training was the last thing on my mind and it was not until just the day before that I resolved to compete and give it my best shot.  I attended one tug of war training session where we trained against a few other teams, all seemed positive.

We went into the tug of war weigh-ins with confidence despite only being able to field 7 men from 8 due to the weight limit of 720kg, unbelievably almost all had lost weight this week, myself included. We weighed in 30kg below the other teams and with a pair less boots on the ground we were going to have our work cut out.

We drew the local fire brigade in our first match. We easily won the first pull, we were so close to winning the second, just a few centimetres short but something went, and the team were hauled back. By the third pull something was missing.  One of our team was injured and taken to hospital with a twisted knee. We were out of the competition.  Then we found we were in a draw with the best losers.  We made our substitution and in a one pull tug of war we beat a Scottish team.  Less than 10 minutes later we had to pull against a fresh German team, we put up a good effort but their freshness, extra boots and weight ultimately had the better of us. We were out.

I used the next few hours to try and rest, hydrate, feed and loosen up before my solo Caber Tossing event.  A morning of maximum effort pulls is not the best preparation!  I tried to apply a bit of sports science and opted to wear some compression running tights to try and keep my legs together.  Now for those that do not know the rules of Caber, below is a brief outline of the rules;
1.) You have to toss a length of wood (caber) so that it rotates and lands facing away from you.
2.) You score if the end of the wood lands between 3 and 9 on a clock face with 12 being a perfect 100 points.
3.) You can have up to 3 goes at any weight of caber and move up if you have had a successful toss.


I began with the 8 caber, and scored 95. I moved up to the 9. I threw poorly the first two goes I do not think the caber was in the right position before I threw. I aced the third go.

Moving onto the 10, I took my time, I breathed and went for it, first go, maximum points. Someone else had also done this so I had to toss two more times. Sadly these two attempts
were not as good but they still earned me points. I was in 2nd. Someone later came and had a go
late on and this person managed two perfect tosses and moved into first place. I finished in 3rd position, yet knowing I aced the first toss.


Next year should be interesting. I now know nothing short of three perfect tosses will win the competition.  I doubt there are man 70.3 finishers who could compete in such a strength power based event? Nevertheless a determined mindset is required for both.  Currently, no further events are entered, with the arrival of baby number two fast approaching, my energies may be directed elsewhere, for now.
3rd place with my medal

Tossing the biggest Caber available

Tug of war, in anchor position

About to toss the Caber

Sunday 1 June 2014

Gym Bunny refocus

As you know, in April I undertook my first 70.3, Ironman Putrajaya (1.9km swim, 90km swim and 21.1km run.) This as you can imagine took a lot out of me and post race training is something all should not neglect!

It was several weeks before I even started thinking about doing further training. I had read in another blog about treating any training in these post race weeks not as training but as exercise. So I played some recreational tennis and very gradually dropped in some running and some shorter rides.  I was really pleased my immune system held up and I didn't get ill and that I have recovered well apart from some tightness in my Achilles. I've had to be kind to myself.

I decided that I needed to spend May doing some different training to the rest of the year to date that had been made up of cardio. So, I took myself inside the gym for some rebuild and consolidation.

I've reacquainted myself with the Olympic bar, dumbbell and kettle bells. I've dusted off full body moves like squats, deadlifts and bench press and hauled myself over the occasional pull up and dip, and finally even roll outs! I started off lifting quite light for my historical max loads so worked at around 60kg.

Throughout May I've gradually increased the weight during this period until bench press is up to 90kg, deadlifts and squats 160kg. This has obviously put a smile on my face- goal of any training programme!? This type of training may not fit with the traditional triathletes programme but I never was the build of a traditional triathlete...

Now with June almost two months since the 70.3 upon me, I find myself wanting to find another event to enter: this must be a good thing with some consolidated strength thrown in! Cue eyeroll from the wife ;)

Friday 18 April 2014

Ironman 70.3 Putrajaya Review!


Historically, I am what I tend to refer to as a 'binge-trainer,' I would train like mad for a few weeks at such an unsustainable rate I would invariably fall ill or go off the boil, things had to be different for this challenge.  All the training plans I looked at began building a base of consistent training volume which then moved into a phase of building up the distances over several weeks before a lower training volume week.



Journey to 70.3 Ironman!

The training window.


I entered this event in that special week between Dec 25th and Jan 1st where dreams and goals take formation. April seemed so far away and like any guilty internet shop, it took just a few moments to fire off my online registration and payment.  Reality soon set in when counting back from the race date of April 13th to my start of training, it 4 month window was actually made up of only 14 weeks. Now you are going to be hard pushed to find a training schedule for a half ironman in just 14 weeks, but that was the time I had, so that was the time I was going to use!


I set about by dividing the weeks I had available into clear sections. I had a base building phase at the start where I tried to maintain 4 hours of training volume per week for the first 4 weeks. Then I had a phase where I increased the volume of several weeks before having a lighter training week. Now pacing is something that I have never been good at, I have always been either on or off with not much in between but while training for this event, I came to terms with the fact that every session can not be all out and that that most importantly, is ok.

After these weeks, I then wanted to have a building phase where I gradually increased the weekly volume in an effort to get into double  figures. This was the first time I had tried to do such a medium term plan for myself rather than just record what I had done along the way and yes there were weeks when I didn't hit the targets but I felt it was important to listen to my body during these faces, particularly as I had set some tough figures for myself. Yet I had some key goals in mind that I had to achieve;
Swim - well this is my best discipline and is where my bank of hours in the past has mostly been spent. I just wanted to keep this ticking over, maintaining good technique, I did most of my swim work in the early hours before work, reasoning that swim into a day at work would put that side in good stead.

Bike - I wanted to ride 90km plus on just two 750ml drinks bottles, and get used to the heat (I've been living in Brunei on the island of Borneo since Sept '13). When I started riding in the tropics, I was needing two drinks bottles by 30km, this had to change if I was to be sustainable, over the 14weeks I gently pushed the distance on my weekend ride from 30k - 60km - 75km - 80km - 90km and a couple of centuries.
Run - This was my chink in the armour. Being heavier than streamlined traditional triathlete, with a history of ankle strains and sprains, I ran very sparingly I based most of my running around 5km and 8km but had intended to run a half marathon distance to satisfy my mind that I could run that far in the heat - this did not happen and yes I rolled an ankle about 3 weeks prior to the race! A big changer and meant I couldn't run anywhere near as much but I worked on rehabbing the ankle through self treatment and in the final weeks I was walking 8km-10km on it with minimum discomfort.

The week leading up to the race was very nerve-wracking, as someone who has the habit of over thinking every turn unless kept in check, I checked and rechecked by gear before getting it packed up.  I finished work at noon on the Friday and after more fuzz I got myself to the airport and untook the 2hour or so flight to KL, Malaysia. I arrived at my hotel at around 8pm on the Friday night. This was the first time I had travelled overseas with a bike and I must say building a bike in a hotel room felt quite special - like a travelling athlete!  It also made me realise how lonely it must be for professional athletes as I sat looking at my assembled bike alone in my room. This did not last long as my stomach grumbled and reminded me I needed to eat and get bottled water for the next day. Walking around Cyberjaya (my hotel location), I found a pizza restaurant and this went down well. I then got my self to bed.

The day before the race.
I slept well and got myself ready and went for breakfast in the hotel breakfast room. People didn't stare too much at me in my gear! After that, I cycled across the district (about 10km) to the practise swim and race registration. After spending time around the stalls, watching the race briefing video and listening to the athlete interview with Crowe, I racked my bike in transition and headed back to the hotel on foot.  For a late lunch at around 3pm, I had two main courses, a chicken and rice dish and a fillet steak and chips back to back. I stopped in at the shop I bought water the day before and bought some more water and some baked beans and sliced bread for my race breakfast.  I had some cheese sandwiches for my evening meal that night before retiring to bed around 8pm after laying out all my race gear and packing up my suitcase.

Race day!
The alarm beeped once at 4:45 am and I jumped out of bed after sleeping in running compression tights to try and rest legs as much as possible. Race number transfers put on and some beans on raw toast eaten with a banana. My taxi arrived and I checked out of the hotel and headed across to the race start at 5.45am. The taxi could only get so close to the transition due to road closures so I had a short walk to the transition. Immediately it hit me how dark it was, I hadn't even considered it would be that dark and that it would not be well lit. My advice to any one is take a head torch or something to help you see setting stuff up for your transition. I was quite lucky with my racking location and I found my bike easily.  With my bike ready, I put my bag into storage and heading across to the swim start.  It was a wave start and my age group entered the water closely after the professionals.
The swim started and straight away it was a bustle of limbs and splash, I worked hard to find some clear water and soon had some space to breathe. Lots of people seemed to surge forward, I just let them get on with on, figuring I'd have someone to catch later. 4 white buoys marked the corners of the loop swim course with another, only having buoys on the corners means that you need to be careful to spot them, to do this, I try to fix my view on some part of the landscape just beyond the buoy as this is easier to focus on when you look up: that's what I did, and I think it paid off and I swam a straighter line than many of the other swimmers that day.  I finished the swim in 38 minutes, even catching a few red swim caps from the wave before. I was careful not to over kick during the swim as this was something I had done on an Olympic distance a few years ago and had had jelly legs on the exit. This did not happen and I ran out of the water strong. 

The bike leg
My transition was quite quick for me, around 3 minutes. I made an effort to dry my feet and wear socks but next time I will train and try it without socks.  As soon as I got on the bike my glutes were tight, like I had never experienced before and it was difficult to stay in the saddle. I just went steady, never did quiting cross my mind. The bike route is mostly on highways with some really good surfaces, but the sudden climbs on highway slip roads as you moved between roads took some getting used too.  Strava shows I climbed 200 plus metres during the ride, as each slip road was no more that a minute or two, you get the idea of some of these short gradients. The heat was already getting hotter but thankfully there was a breeze while pedalling. By the end of the second lap, I had got much more successful at catching bottles and gels from the enthusiastic rest top volunteers. I finished the two laps in 3hours14minutes and headed out on the run.

I managed to run well for the first 1km receiving much, 'Looking strong' comments from spectators. Running alongside the lake I had an idea, if I could splash water over myself I could cool myself down. But as a crouched down I cramped in both hams and these forced me to walk until the pain eased.  After that, I adopted a run/walk strategy.  I had kept my cycling gloves on when offered ice at the food points, I eagerly filled them up with ice and also inside my hat. This ice became so integral to my run segments that I became to look forward to the next opportunity for ice. The aid stations were very well stocked!

I completed the half marathon in 2 hours 43, with a total time of 6 hours 43 minutes. There was a queue for the massage tent but once they brought out some chairs, I'd have sat  there as long as it would take. Once I felt more human, my thoughts turned to getting back to my hotel and catching my flight home. I packed up and tried to walk out of the closed road section to see if a taxi would take me and my bike. They would not, so I ended up ride another 10km back to my hotel, via a certain drive through restaurant for a feast!  I got to the hotel, packed my bike, changed clothes and it was time to head back to the airport and back to Brunei with the 6am alarm call for work not far behind!

As I write this blog a week on, I can say it was an amazing experience, it took a lot of planning and was much more than just training. I am lucky to have such a supportive wife and although our son might not have been aware, I was very grateful for him sleeping through the night on those first few nights after the race…  All done on an average over the last 10 weeks training volume of 4.5 hours per week, with total time from entry to race just 14 weeks.

Resting heart rate is down to 52bpm and the aches are subsiding as are the blisters so hopefully, you will see me out on the road again soon…
Thank you for reading, if you are interesting in hearing more please get in touch. Can I add that I am not a coach, and that I in no way promote or recommend following my training program, I'm just a man, trying to fit it all in, to have a go, but what I do have is a determination and iron will that failure was not going to be an option.  My advice is train, listen to your body and coach, know that it will hurt and get the job done.  REMEMBER, THAT LAKE, LOOP OR TRACK WILL BE THERE ANOTHER DAY, MAKE SURE YOU ARE… ENJOY X
MATT.

Thursday 4 July 2013

If you've wondered why I've not entered any significant races this season...

Hold on to your hats...

The simple answer is that this summer I am heading off on an adventure that I am not entirely sure of the start date of.  It is July now and to be honest I had expected my gear to have all been shipped, but it hasn't so I guess I could have entered some races after all, if only my head (and my funds) had been in order...

Yet I am distracting from the point.  The point of which, maybe has not fully sunk in.  it may be a case of being careful what you wish for, as with a little hard work and some luck, your wishes can come true...

As you know, I am a teacher living, working, training and tweeting from the UK but I am proud to announce that from August this will not continue, I am going to be moving with my family to work on the other side of the world on the northern tip of Borneo in a small country called Brunei! 

My wife finishes her job tomorrow and our house is up for rent, this is really going to happen!  I hope that the move, while being a fantastic opportunity for my career will give me more time with my immediate family, an opportunity to travel, and some more time to get even fitter - I mean training in 30 degrees in 85% humidity has got to make you fitter right?!

So I want to thank everyone who has supported us, and if you are reading this from a link on twitter, you are also a great group of people who are inspirational in your own right - I hope I return such inspiration!  So my tweets might hit your time lines a little off on the time stakes, but don't forget me, I hope we can still compare training and if you're on strava look me up and join my team to stay in touch!

As I move forward on to the next chapter of our adventure, I will leave you with an Old Proverb,
'There is a choice you have to make, in everything that you do. You must always keep in mind that the choices you make... make you.'

Blue.

Thursday 25 October 2012

Slowly but surely and the importance of body fat

Well, like most people in the Western world, I am trying to loose weight or at best not put on any more.  Word to the wise, it's easier not to put it on in the first place.  I'm not following any particular diet regime, except that I'm trying to eat a little less and move a little more.

At one point, I had got quite obsessed, weighing myself every day but as too much of anything is no good thing, have since eased that urge to constantly check, which was not easy.  Weighing yourself in the morning, generally gets a lighter reading than say in the morning as your weight can fluctuate during the course of a day, so it's important to try and weigh yourself at the same time.

Unfortunately, there have been times when I have not been happy with the readings on the scales and this sadly, has then had a knock on effect on my day.  It seems my body likes to hold onto calories, in one sense this is good for building muscle in the gym but not for loosing weight or shrinking waist lines...

Then I tried something different, I used the scales in the chemist that also measure your body fat, to my initial confusion I found that although my overall weight was not going down as quick as I'd hoped, my body fat weight was.  In other words, I was building muscle which is by nature much more denser than fat.  Since then I have tried to take this reading every 3 months.  My results are below and although I've only lost 3.6 K.g over all, I have actually lost 4.8 kg of body fat; suggesting to me (and please correct me if I am wrong) that I am not loosing any muscle mass that is so often the risk with not eating enough and in fact am loosing body fat, and in some cases building more muscle which should then in turn burn more calories?  Still feels like a long way from 100kg and below though....

I welcome any constructive comments.
Thanks for reading my blog and if like me you were getting disheartened about not loosing weight fast enough, check out your body fat.  Cheers!

Date Time Weight (KG) Height BMI Body Fat Body Fat
      (m)   Mass (KG) %
27-Apr-12 15:06 116.1 1.89 32.5 32.7 28.2%
31-Jul-12 14:13 114.9 1.89 32.2 29.5 25.7%
25-Oct-12 11:07 112.5 1.89 31.5
 
27.9 24.8%

Tuesday 23 October 2012

My 1st Marathon - Wolverhampton Marathon 2012

Wolverhampton Marathon Sunday 2nd September 2012


Well, let me tell you, this was some way to end the summer holidays!  If I told you that I entered this marathon as little as 6 weeks before, you'll probably think me mad, I probably am (a little!)  Never-the-less I did it and now nearly 2 months later, I feel compelled to write this blog about it.  Can I say, only do what you think your body can handle, I in no way aim to promote how I went about training for this marathon, this blog is simply there to entertain and share my ideas.  There is more than one way to cook an egg...


Below is an outline of how I trained in August, I have also included what how I trained for July. 15th July was my 1st Olympic distance triathlon (City of Birmingham, just over 3hours);
Date Activity Distance (Miles)
01 July 2012 RUN 3.33
02 July 2012 BIKE 20.25
03 July 2012 RUN 3.2
04 July 2012 WALK 4.5
05 July 2012 REST  
06 July 2012 BIKE 24.86
06 July 2012 RUN 6.21
07 July 2012 REST  
08 July 2012 REST  
09 July 2012 RUN 4
10 July 2012 REST  
11 July 2012 BIKE 9.6
12 July 2012 REST  
13 July 2012 REST  
14 July 2012 REST  
15 July 2012 SWIM 0.93
15 July 2012 BIKE 24.85
15 July 2012 RUN 6.21
16 July 2012 REST  
17 July 2012 REST  
18 July 2012 REST  
19 July 2012 REST  
20 July 2012 REST  
21 July 2012 RUN 14
22 July 2012 BIKE 26
22 July 2012 X-TRAIN 0
23 July 2012 RUN 3.3
23 July 2012 SWIM 1.25
23 July 2012 X-TRAIN  
24 July 2012 BIKE 51
24 July 2012 RUN 6.22
25 July 2012 RUN 3.4
25 July 2012 SWIM 1.56
25 July 2012 RUN 3.4
26 July 2012 REST  
27 July 2012 BIKE 14
28 July 2012 REST  
29 July 2012 BIKE 15.42
29 July 2012 RUN 5
30 July 2012 WALK 12
30 July 2012 RUN 12
31 July 2012 WEIGHTS  
01 August 2012 SWIM 0.62
02 August 2012 SWIM 1.59
03 August 2012 RUN 3.1
04 August 2012 BIKE 37
05 August 2012 WEIGHTS  
06 August 2012 WALK 2.7
07 August 2012 WALK 2.3
08 August 2012 REST  
09 August 2012 BIKE 17.4
09 August 2012 BIKE 16.4
10 August 2012 WEIGHTS  
11 August 2012 TURBO 5.4
11 August 2012 WALK 3.2
12 August 2012 BIKE 65
13 August 2012 REST  
14 August 2012 REST  
15 August 2012 REST  
16 August 2012 REST  
17 August 2012 SWIM 0.25
18 August 2012 REST  
19 August 2012 REST  
20 August 2012 RUN 7.41
21 August 2012 REST  
22 August 2012 REST  
23 August 2012 REST  
24 August 2012 SWIM 0.32
25 August 2012 REST  
26 August 2012 REST  
27 August 2012 REST  
28 August 2012 WALK 4.9
29 August 2012 REST  
30 August 2012 REST  
31 August 2012 RUN 3.2
01 September 2012 RUN 2
02 September 2012 RUN 26.2

As you can see, I didn't run large distances but aimed to train pretty much every day however towards the end, I did rest more.  I would also like to let you know that I don't really have a runners build, at 6'3" on race day I weighed 18 stone 4 Lb.  As a larger guy, my concerns were aimed at staying hydrated and not too hungry! I ran in a race belt, with 9 high-5 banana flavoured gels that I rationed throughout the run.  For breakfast, I had a 2-egg scrambled egg on 4 pieces of toast and half hour before the start of the run I ate a banana and had some high-5 zero drink.

I set my watch to count down 9:45 on repeat and this was my target time to try and cross each mile marker before the beep; I did this fairly steadily for the first 10miles, went through 10km in 57 mins but from 10 miles onwards, the belly began to rumble and I was hungry!  I drank at most water stations and had two pee stops over the marathon distance however a blister began brewing from mile 4.  Mile 11 was the first mile over 10min/mile pace and I went through the half marathon in 2:12.  Now Wolverhampton marathon is a 2 -lap course, I can not tell you how easy it would have been to peel off after that 1st lap and head to my car but I didn't.  Miles 14-18 were the worst, and I've never been so grateful to receive a jelly baby off a passing runner in my life!  I contemplated going into corner shops and trying to get mars bars on credit but kept going one foot in front of the other.  Then something happened.  I felt lighter, was this the wall?  Had I gone through it?

A group of lads handing out cartons of orange juice who at first riding towards me caused me to hestitate turned into my saviours and I kept going and going.  I even caught up a few of the runners who had over took me earlier. 

The race got hard again in the 20 miles, I missed a mile marker and began to doubt that I was moving.  The blister began talking.  Soon I recognised the park edge where the race finishes, I caught up another runner and as I crossed the finish line I became over whelmed but my legs would not stop!  I was very grateful that someone could take off the timing chip!  I was doubly grateful for a dip in the local swimming pool on my way back to the car! 

I'd done it!  Marathon goal truely ticked off in a time of 5hours 1minute 13 seconds.  My goal all along had been to go around 5 hours, I 'd predicted 4:50 and although I just missed 5 hours I was and am so happy with my achievement.   The blister was the size of two 50 pence pieces side by side. A word to the wise though, marathons are hard, I advise you train!  Mental toughness is a must!

Needless to say the following week I came down with a cold.  I've ran a few times since but strangely I've felt a little down. I need to sort out the next challenge but I'm rather disillusioned by entry fees. Until then, I've joined a masters swimming club in a new attempt to reduce my waist line.  Also considering growing a mo for movember and doing #turbovember twitter challenge.
Thanks for reading.