Quad Rock training week 15
Week 15 was my peak week before Quad Rock. I didn't run a lot, but it was all high quality running.
14 hours, 23 minutes all training
24.8 miles running
6,020 feet D+ running
Tuesday I hiked and ran up and down Green Mountain in Boulder, my first time on that route. I went up the steep side and down the runnable side. It's a ridiculously steep trail: in the first mile I gained 1,300 feet of elevation. There's a ladder at one point, that's how steep it is. The second mile has a short runnable section and averages only 19%. I went steadily to the top and ran the downhills of Ranger and Gregory Canyon as fast as I could while sight-reading. Green Mountain is fun, easy to access, and loved almost to death by Boulderites. The Amphitheater and Saddle Rock trails are in bad shape.
The geology of Boulder's Mountain Parks and Lory State Park are similar, but because the intrusion of the Boulder Creek Batholith there is broader and 1,000 feet higher than at Horsetooth Mountain and Arthur's Rock, there is no schist or gneiss to be found on Green Mountain. It was shoved aside a billion and a half years ago. The red Fountain Formation sandstone that provides Boulder's striking backdrop is immediately adjacent to igneous grandiorite and pegmatite.
Thursday I ran Quad Rock's second climb and first descent from the Horsetooth Open Space trailhead. I went hard for half of the climb and got some personal bests on a few segments. I was close to a personal best on the descent as well. Some parts of Spring Creek are in such bad shape that I slowed down to stay safe. Hopefully we'll get some moisture before Quad Rock, that would keep the rocks and gravel a little more glued down.
Saturday I went out for 13 miles on the Quad Rock course with other local runners. I pushed on the climbs again, got a few PRs, and a near PR on the Mill Creek climb pretty easily.
The other half of my week 15 training was on my bike, on my yoga mat, or moving weights. Daily crunches, calf raises, and heel drops are keeping my hips and Achilles tendons, perennial sources of pain, in great shape. My knees are the only things bugging me now, and they'll be okay once I'm warmed up and racing.
Speaking of heel drops, I got a great tip recently: unless your heels touch down on a surface below your toes, your body may not adapt as effectively as it could. I'd been doing heel drops into space, but have switched to dropping from a thick book (Sunset Magazine's Western Garden Book). I believe it's making a difference.
Week 16 will be fine tuning, not tapering. I will run hard, but in smaller doses.

The many high summits of the Indian Peaks Range, with a modest snowpack, viewed from the top of Green Mountain (2.477 meters).



