Saturday, March 26, 2011

New Photos


Pirate John, originally uploaded by gardahsam.

Been months since the last upload of pics, and I am still taking some on a regular basis, so today nearly 500 new photos and video clips made their way to the Flickr. We've got the full suite of photos from Lance's birthday party, the trip to Singapore, and more. Do yourself a favor and head over to take a look! http://www.flickr.com/photos/gjsamps/

GJS

Lance's Birthday Party

It was a low-key affair with a very limited guest list, but we had a good time!

It's my birthday party!
I got SKILLZ!
No slouch in her own right
The cake is ready
A chocolatey masterpiece!

I want some of that!
First bite...not sure what to think
OK, I have decided that I like chocolate!
Big brother takes a break from eating to wash it down
I also know baby sign language - MORE!
A little milk to wash it down really hits the spot
There are indicators of cake consumption all around
Then came the balloons
And now for the presents!
Gonna be a while before this one will fit
Something else to eat!
Check out my new dinosaur tattoo!
Lance wanted to get in on the tattoo action as well
Who's that on the TV screen?
Check out his new "ink" - Thomas and Friends! (of course)

I also like going to the playground
This rock is almost as big as me!
GJS

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Race Report: 2011 Ironman 70.3 Singapore

2011 IM 70.3 Singapore finisher's medal
Wow, just wow. This race was a stark contrast from my last race two weeks ago. It was so well-organized! Plus, Singapore is fantastic. I would love to spend more time there. Alas, this trip is over. Let's hear more about the race and the trip.

These were a welcome sight near the race start/finish
Good: Port-a-johns and other on-course restrooms; good shade on most of the course (important due to the climate - very hot and humid), flat bike and run courses; very little wind; rain came right when I needed it (on the run); fantastic accommodations for families at the race venue (see more on this below); race materials very informative (competitor's guide, etc.); airlines shipped my bike for free both ways! (I was expecting to pay at least $75 each time, per the airlines' published guidelines. Thanks Dragonair/Cathay Pacific!)

Old enough now to get some work out of him :)
Other: The race needs to coordinate a better system for getting to and from the race site (shuttle buses would be optimal). Getting to the race in the morning wasn't a problem, as that we were able to reserve a taxi the night before via the hotel concierge. After the race, however, we searched in vain for a taxi cab for at least an hour after the event was over, and we got a cab relatively fast (others were waiting much longer than we did).

At the pre-race briefing, Singapore International Convention and Expo Center
This triathlon was my fifth at the half-Ironman distance. I have also completed five marathons and a number of half-marathons, as well as numerous Olympic- and sprint-distance triathlons, 5K, 10K, and 15K runs, and a few century and metric-century bike rides (organized events, not just training rides). All that is missing is a full Ironman. (Coming in May!)

The transition area, T-20 hours or so
As far as my goals for the race, I think I mentioned here not too long ago that I was treating this race as a sort of "preview" for racing internationally at IM China in May. I wanted to see what lessons I could take from this and apply to the next race, the big race. There are a couple. First, I forgot my bike bottles. It wasn't a problem as that I was able to easily purchase some replacements at a mall across the street from our hotel. However, I am not sure that the city that hosts IM China will have the same sort of facilities readily available, so I need to remember to take them next time. The second issue was much larger, and will possibly be much more difficult to deal with in China. It is regarding bike mechanic availability to build my bike up after traveling with it. It was somewhat of a hassle to locate and get my bike to a bike shop in Singapore to have it put together after being transported in a travel case (and it wasn't cheap either). It was even more tricky to get them to put the bike back in the box after the race, due to problems with their hours of operation and our timeline for departing Singapore. In short, if it was that difficult to take care of this issue in easy-to-navigate Singapore, it will probably be ten times harder in China. I have to have a better plan going in to take care of these issues ahead of time.

The home stretch!
Surprisingly, my finish time was within 5 minutes of my time at IM 70.3 Taiwan last fall. My training getting ready for this race had been pretty cruddy, so I figured that coupled with a challenging climate (heat and humidity) would leave me significantly slower. Not the case.

Let's now talk about the various parts of the race.

Heading out into the South China Sea
Swim: The waters of the South China Sea were like distilled in comparison to the murky depths of the Love River two weeks ago. No sewer smell here, folks, and the water was a very comfortable temperature. There was a bit of a current that made a couple segments of the two-lap course a little iffy, though. I don't know that I am ever going to enjoy swimming with so many people at one time - it's just not very much fun. I did really like how the race start was broken up into multiple waves, about five in all. I started a half an hour after the first wave. That makes it so you only have to swim with a few hundred people starting off. In contrast, the IM 70.3 Taiwan was a mass start - all 1200 or so athletes going out all at once. IM China in May will be a mass start...not looking forward to that. I'm also not looking forward to how cold the reservoir water near Beijing will be in May - I definitely need to get a wetsuit, pronto!

Swim - check!
Near the cycling start point (note the good shade trees - most of the course was like this)
Bike: It was a three lap course along quite a scenic route out past the airport and up along the east coast of Singapore. If a person was in good cycling shape (I wasn't, hence the very conservative speeds I was clocking), this would have been a very fast course. Interesting note: as I was starting my second of three laps on the bike, the elite men were starting on the run and the run route paralleled the bike route for a short distance. I was cycling along at a moderate pace and was barely passing these "machines" absolutely flying on the run course! It was pretty amazing to see - these folks are able to go all-out for the whole course. I'd "blow up" a mile into the run if I tried to push that hard!

Coming through the spectator area near the run start/finish
Run: It was a flat course along the ocean - two laps. Saw a Singapore Airlines A380 airplane coming in for a landing as I ran on my first lap. (That's the new, giant passenger aircraft manufactured by Airbus that looks like it is top heavy because it has two levels throughout the cabin.) The rain started when I was about halfway through my second lap, and it was just what that doctor ordered. The sun had begun to come out from behind the clouds towards the end of my bike segment and I was really starting to feel the heat on the parts of the run course that weren't shaded. Once the rain started, it really cooled me off and it made no difference to me that I was getting rained on - after all, I had been pouring water on myself to cool off at every aid station, anyhow. The only drawback was that my shoes also got wet, which created conditions that could have created some nasty blisters if I had to keep on running much farther (such as in a full marathon in a full Ironman race).

Catching some air!
Regarding the family accommodations I mentioned above, this is the first race I have seen where there were booths and other diversions set up for the families of competitors. I'm talking about a "bouncy house"-type thing (see the photo - John bounced around in it so much be split open his shorts in two places!), cotton candy and popcorn stands, arts and crafts, face painting (again, see the photo nearby) and various other carnival-type games. And get this - it was all FREE! Attention all other races and events: learn from these folks in Singapore! They did this up right.

We found a ZOMBIE in Singapore!
Can you tell that he likes dinosaurs?
Singapore itself made a great impression on us. I had been there once before (1998), but didn't remember it being as nice then as it was this time around. Everything is so green, there is foliage everywhere, and all of it seems to be manicured and pretty. The air pollution there is not bad, at least it wasn't during our visit (perhaps like other cities in the region, it is better and worse at specific times of the year) and the city is very clean. There are no scooters zipping around the roads and sidewalks making nuisances of themselves (note to Taiwan), nor are there packs of stray dogs wandering about and defecating all over the place (another note to Taiwan). Most surprisingly, they openly advocate that people drink the tap water! Singapore is a city-state of something like 4.5 million people, and is located in Southeast Asia, and you want me to drink the tap water? So we did, and it was good. No crazy diseases (at least not yet). Can't drink the tap water here in Kaohsiung. I'd be open to going back to Singapore anytime, maybe even working there, if I play my cards right.

Typical scene at East Coast Park
Looks quite idyllic, doesn't it?
Singapore is also an interesting place because of the cultural diversity. There are three main ethnic groups there (Chinese, Indian, and Malay) and because of the British influence, virtually everyone speaks English in addition to one of the other ethnic languages (Mandarin Chinese, Tamil, or Malay). All signs appear in all four languages (and they even add Japanese at the airport). And you know what? They have bookstores stocked with books IN ENGLISH! After the repeated disappointment of browsing bookstores in Taiwan with only a handful of books in English, it was great to walk into a Borders with easy-to-read books in English everywhere you looked. Can't wait to actually walk into a Barnes and Noble once back in the U.S. (my preferred chain bookseller).

Bottom line - great event, great trip! Go see Singapore, people. And do the race.

GJS

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Happy Birthday Lance!

Well, the little guy made it - a year old! We celebrated in abbreviated fashion today with a little cake and song:



We plan to have a little more elaborate birthday party for him this weekend when we are more recovered from our recent trip to Singapore (more about that in a future post) and our friends here will be able to attend.  Here's a few more photos from today:

What is about to take place?
First bite of cake - EVAH!
Get used to this, son - first drink of cow's milk
A good time was had by all
GJS

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

"Confucius' Revenge"

With some new friends just before the race start
The triathlon last week wasn't done with me when I thought I was done with it. No, come Monday afternoon, I was spending an inordinate amount of time in the bathroom with a case of diarrhea the likes of which I had not experienced in many years. Thank God for Immodium! I also was feverish and lethargic. We figure it must have had something to do with the Love River water. Remember how I mentioned it smelled like a sewer? You can't really go swimming in any body of water and not end up ingesting at least a little bit of it - it's just not possible, no matter how hard you try. I also discovered a cut on my foot after exiting the water on race day, probably from another competitor's fingernail amidst all the flailing that takes place at the beginning of the swim leg, when people are clawing to get past one another until the pack eventually thins out some as the race progresses. Anyhow, we figure I got sick via one of these two methods - either inadvertent ingestion or infection via my open wound. Took me about a week to kick it. I'm feeling much better now, but being laid low by "Confucius' Revenge" pretty much removed any chance I was going to have for additional training after the Kaohsiung triathlon and before heading to Singapore for the Half Ironman. We travel in just a few days. What this all boils down to is that the Singapore race, due to issues with my training and the anticipated hot and humid weather (which the very mild winter and spring - much cooler than last year - in Southern Taiwan has not helped me prepare for), is going to simply a completion exercise for me. Its greatest utility may in fact be the "rehearsal" aspect that it is for my Ironman aspirations in May - after all, there are a lot of moving parts when traveling internationally to a race, and it's best to do it a time or two before really wanting to do it right, which is basically what I am doing with this trip to Singapore. I will make note of all the things that I forget (gear, equipment, etc.) or can do better in May and hopefully make that experience better than it would have been not having had the chance to conduct a rehearsal race. Plus, it will be neat to visit Singapore - after all, it's been nearly 12 years since the last time I was there! And my family members have never been there. New stamps in the passports - yay! Looking forward to the trip, though I feel that race day will be a long one.

Oh yes, and the results from the Kaohsiung triathlon were posted online, here. For your convenience, I am pasting my results below. (FYI - the first column after the name column is swim time, then bike time, then run time, then place within the division [I'm in the 35-39 bracket]. The final column in team affiliation - I was one of the few without such a designation.) As you can see, my overall time estimates were about right. It is obvious, though, that the transition times are added to the respective event times (for example, my own calculations on my bike time were about 1 hour 12 minutes, while these results add about 10 minutes to that, which approximates the transition time). Anyhow, have a look at the rest, if you like.


 GJS

Sunday, March 06, 2011

Race Report: 2011 Kaohsiung Romantic Love River Triathlon

The calm before the storm: race venue, T-16 hours
Look, I didn't name the race, OK? It's a silly translation from the Chinese - nothing about "romantic" in there, except that the river really is called the Love River.

There, now that that's out of the way, let's talk about the race!

The good: The course was flat and fast. The river was slow-moving and free from waves and currents. The swim start was conducted in three waves, making it a less "punchy" situation in the water than when a mass start of all competitors is used. The weather was highly cooperative (read: the sun didn't come out and the day was essentially cool, with an overcast sky). There were many enthusiastic supporters cheering on the competitors. There was essentially no wind on the bike course. (BIG contrast to my last triathlon!)

Watch out for "logs"
"Other"*: The Love River is an urban river. Yes, that means that there is at least some degree of sewage drainage that reaches it. It smells a little bit like a sewer. It was hard to get past that during the first part of the swim today. Thankfully, I didn't see any "logs" floating by as I was swimming. There was a marked lack of restroom facilities both at the transition area (a middle school, which had a few restrooms that were quickly overwhelmed by the volume of participants and support personnel) and on the course (no facilities dedicated to the race - not a single port-a-john). Race materials were entirely in Chinese. There seemed to be little to no enforcement of drafting rules on the bike - there were pace lines and pelotons all over the course.

Random: This is the first triathlon I have ever seen where flotation devices were not only authorized, but seemingly encouraged! Seemed like about every other person was "swimming" with some type of "floaty". Weird.

"Floaty" at center
Let's discuss my times for a moment. I am not sure when or if official finish times will be published, so I can only go off how my wrist-mounted GPS unit describes my performance and the time on the official race clock when I crossed the finish line. I finished at about 3 hours 5 minutes on the clock, but if you subtract the five minutes that elapsed prior to my start (five minutes between waves; I was in the second wave), then you've got pretty much 3 hours flat. This exceeded all my expectations for the race! I figured I would be lucky to finish in 3 1/2 hours. (It had been a while since I had run this length of race, known as an "Olympic distance" race: 1500m swim, 40 km bike, 10 km run; so I couldn't really remember what my last finish time in this sort of race was. I just looked it up - I've got to get a bit faster to catch up to where I was in 2008!) I didn't wear a timing device of any kind on the swim, so I am not sure how that turned out, but based on the overall finish time (approx. 3 hours) and the times I did record on the bike and run, we can interpolate the approximate swim time. More on that in a minute.

Heading for the finish line
My bike time was 1:12:28, good for an average of about 20 mph (this is probably my biggest triumph of the race; I have been doing close to no cycling recently), and my run added another 55 minutes and 30 seconds. That's a grand total of about 2 hours and 8 minutes. That leaves 52 minutes for the swim and 2 transitions. Supposing each transition took 5 minutes, that would mean I did the swim in about 42 minutes. Remember, this is just an estimate. Hopefully at some point I will be able to get my hands on the actual official finish times, split times, etc.

Looks like 3:05:12 to me
I was hampered by thigh cramps on the run. At about the same place each lap (it was a 5-lap run course) I had to stop and do some static stretching and a bit of slow walking to work out cramps in my right (and later my left) quadriceps which slowed my overall run pace average considerably. Since it was only a 10 km race course, I tried to pour on a little speed, but it kind of backfired on my with the cramping. I am not going to be trying to go fast on the run in Singapore in a couple weeks (see below).

One interesting aspect of this race that made it really unique was the participation of a great number of Taiwan's military personnel. The Republic of China (ROC) Marine Corps is actually headquartered in the greater Kaohsiung area and there is also a major ROC Navy base here, too, and there were no shortage of personnel from both services participating in the race.

Me n' my boy
As for the future, I won't have much time at all before it is time to race again - exactly two weeks from today I will participate in my 5th Half Ironman race in Singapore, where the course might be flat, it might be calm (not windy), but it won't be cool. (Daytime highs there this week have been around 90 degrees, whereas it only got to about 80 degrees here today.) The Singapore race is notorious for being hot, in fact it is advertised as being quite similar to the Ironman World Championship course in Kona, Hawaii, in terms of the climate and environment. Since I've raced on the Kona course twice (just the Half Ironman, not the full shebang), I know that it gets really hot out there. The temperature and climate in Singapore will be a challenge for me.

I need to keep up the training, because before you know it, it will be time to head to Beijing in May for the big one - 2011 Ironman China. I had a scare in this race last night - I saw something online that said wetsuits were compulsory for the swim (turns out they changed that at the last minute, which is good for me, because I don't have one). I am going to need to pick one up soon, though, because I am sure the reservoir we will be swimming in near Beijing is not going to be warm! (I recall a triathlon I did in May some years back near Kansas City - the water was absolutely frigid! I think Kansas City's latitude is a little bit south of Beijing's...)

"W I N N E R !"
Happy racing!

GJS

*A Marine aviator I once worked with told me that these are the two categories that they use during their after-action debriefs - "good" and "other" - in an effort to make the not-so-good less, umm, charged, shall we say. I kinda like that formula, and will use it forever myself.