Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Black Friday Success!!!!

This past Friday was a day that shoppers across the country know and love...Black Friday!
It's that ever amazing day where, as long as you are willing to get up at ungodly hours of the night and morning, you can stand outside in the cold and the dark with hundreds of other (insane) people...
...to await that time when you will finally all be let into the store, only to stampede over the top of each other in a race to get inside...
...to all rush to grab the same 17 items that everyone "absolutely has to have because they are SUCH a good deal", but nobody actually needs!
Normally, people in a civilized society would ridicule anyone who was acting so idiotically...however, since almost every American seems to subscribe to the Black Friday philosophy of "get the deals while they last", no one seems to mind that we turn into a bunch of greedy, neurotic, selfish, a$$holes every Friday after Thanksgiving!

Now, it would be hypocritical of me to completely and utterly berate all Black Friday shoppers, because I've been known to go out an partake in the wonderful shopping festivities myself from year to year...I am proud to say, however, that I have never waited more than half an hour in a line to get into a store (what could possibly be SO great that I would need to stand outside freezing my keister off for multiple hours just to make sure I got one, when I could simply wait for it to go on sale again the following week?!) and I have NEVER pushed, shoved, punched, man-handled, or otherwise harmed one of my fellow shoppers in my quest to get the thing I was shopping for.

This year, my sister really wanted to go Black Friday shopping, so Thursday evening, after all the turkey, stuffing, mashed potatoes, green bean casserole, and pies were comfortably stowed in our tummies, we curled up on the sofa with all the store ads and mapped out our "plan of attack".  I didn't really have anything that I desperately needed to get (nor did I have any money to purchase anything with anyway) so I was just perusing the ads when I came across the one thing I had told my parents that I wanted for Christmas...a Garmin Forerunner 405 Running Watch.
This baby does it all...because there is a GPS system built into the watch, not only can it keep track of your total time and your mileage, but it can calculate your pace per mile, track your elevation gain/loss, and even monitor your heart rate.  Then, when your workout is done, it can wirelessly send the data from your run directly to your computer so that you can keep track of your workouts and how you are progressing.  In other words, what avid runner wouldn't want one of these watches?!?!?!

The prices on Garmin watches stay fairly consistent, so much so that up until last Thursday, I had only had my eye on the Forerunner 110 because it was the cheapest model available (amazing watches they are, but reasonably priced they aren't!).  It still tracks distance, time and pace, but obviously isn't nearly as cool and can't do nearly as many things as the 405.  So imagine my surprise when the Black Friday ad for Sports Authority was listing the amazing Garmin Forerunner 405 for $150 cheaper than it normally sells for, making it less expensive than the most basic model!  Being the economically savvy daughter that I am, and not wanting my parents to have to spend more money than needed on my Christmas gift (like how I tried to make myself look totally selfless there?!  Yeah, I did too!) I immediately showed my mother the ad.  She apparently thought it was too good of a deal to pass up as well, and before I knew it, Sports Authority had been named our first stop on our Black Friday extravaganza!  The store was opening Friday morning at 5am, but seeing as how it wasn't one of the huge departments stores with all the "can't pass up" deals on tvs and other electronics, we figured that as long as we showed up a couple minutes early, we wouldn't have any problems getting in and getting what we wanted.  So we unwittingly showed up to the store at 4:45am, only to find a huge line of people down the side of the building, down the side of the Barnes & Noble next door, and around the corner of the bookseller.  At this point, I started to panic because, let's face it, I'd kind of gotten my hopes up that I was finally going to get a Garmin running watch.  But my mom, ever the logical shopper, said we might as well wait the 15 minutes until the store opened and go in to see if we could get one.  So we waited, and eventually the crowd started to slowly but surely surge through the door and into the store...and much to my delight, everyone started to disperse to all different areas.  My mom, sister and I headed to the back of the store where the watches were kept, and low and behold, there were still a few Garmins left!  I happily picked one up, and didn't even have to fight off any other shoppers to get it.  We got in line to check out, and after only a few minutes waiting, we had my watch and were out the door.
After the high of the Garmin watch success, I was fading fast, energy wise, so a well timed stop at Starbucks was just what the doctor ordered to keep us going strong!
We literally shopped until we dropped, and my mother also generously purchased me a Kitchenaid Mixer as a second Christmas gift (mainly because it was freakishly on sale, but also as part of her ever vigilant quest to turn me into a domesticated woman).
The one quasi-bummer about these amazing gifts is that, since they are my Christmas presents, they are still at my parents' house to get wrapped and put under the tree...so I don't get to use them for another month.  But it's a small price to pay for two of the most awesome gifts ever...I have to say that I have the most generous, loving, selfless mother imaginable!!!  All in all, Black Friday shopping was a huge success!

What awesome Black Friday deals did you manage to snag this year?

Monday, November 21, 2011

Resolution 2010: Race 4--Easter

My Easter run presented the biggest challenge of the N.Y.R. for me for one very simple fact...there aren't really any Easter weekend races out there.  For that matter, I was having trouble finding any races the weekend before or after that were anywhere close to me.  I finally lucked out and located the Skagit Valley Tulip Run, which is part of the Annual Skagit Valley Tulip Festival.
I was excited about the possibility of running among all the beautiful flowers, but I was a little apprehensive about the fact that I was going to have a 2 hour drive that Sunday morning in order to get to the race, then run 5 miles, then drive 2 hours home.  In the end however, I had to get a run in, so I decided to suck it up and do what I had to do in order to run the race.  So I woke up bright and ugly at 6am on my day off, got into my running gear, hopped in my car, and drove the 2 hours up to Burlington.  I was tired for sure, but I got more and more excited about the prospect of running through vast fields of tulips as I drove past all the beautiful scenery.
The gorgeous flowers were calling to me, and I was ready to answer with a great run...
..because, the silly, logical, math-minded person that I am, I assumed (and yes I know what they say about what happens when you assume) that a "Tulip Run" meant that you would run near the tulips...
...however, I quickly found out as I got my number and timing chip at the packet pick-up table that not only wouldn't we be running through the tulip fields, but we wouldn't even get the slightest glimpse of them on the ENTIRE run!!!
The run instead took us around the tiny airport and through the woods for a portion of the race...not exactly what I would call a scenic, tulip run (they really shouldn't be allowed to advertise this as a 'tulip run' in my opinion if you don't get to see a single friggin' tulip along the entire course...but what do I know?!).  But hey, I was there, I was registered, it was a gorgeous day, and most importantly, I was getting my "Easter Race" done.  So I got up to the starting area with the rest of the 5-milers, the gun went off, and away we went.  This was my first encounter with "trail racing" for part of a run, as a portion of the course meandered through the woods around the airport, which I actually ended up enjoying.  It took a little getting used to, as I was used to running on even ground, and I pretty much had to stare at my feet the entire time to make sure that I didn't trip and fall on my face or break an ankle, but otherwise, the experience wasn't all that bad.  I crossed the finish line with a time of 47:34 (which averages out to be around a 9:30 mile pace) and ended up right in the middle of the pack, placing 355th out of the total 669 people who ran.
For my first ever partial trail race, I didn't do too bad, so even though I didn't get to see any tulips along the run, I was pretty happy.  And I ended up with a very colorful shirt out of the deal...
...although, again, I'm going to mention one more time that you shouldn't get to put a tulip on the shirt if the runners don't see any freaking tulips along the course! (Wow, you'd have thought I'd have gotten over that by now...apparently not!)  On the way home, I thought about stopping by the actual Tulip Festival so that I could at least claim to have seen some tulips that day, but with a 2 hour drive ahead of me, and a 5 mile run behind me, all I really wanted to do was get home so I could take a much deserved nap!

Have you ever experienced a big disappointment at/during a race?

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Three So Far...

As I've mentioned in previous posts, I'm a big fan of making and keeping New Year's Resolutions.  For a while, I was toying with the idea of making my resolution for 2012 to run one half marathon every month.  But then I made the mistake of starting to ask other people what they thought...and it seemed like everyone I talked to came up with pretty rational reasons to steer clear of this goal, including but not limited to...

1) The huge toll it would take on my body

2) The fact that I would have to endlessly train for a year straight

3) Each half marathon has an entry fee, most of which cost anywhere between $70-$130, depending on the cost to put on the half marathon and the amount of swag you get as a runner

4) Most of the half marathons I have my eye on are out of state, so I would need to factor in travel/food/hotel costs

...so it was seeming like it wasn't going to happen for me.  However, this morning I realized that I've already signed up for three different half marathons in three different months in 2012!  So much for keeping away from that N.Y.R.!  This morning, I signed up for the third half marathon for next year, the Napa-to-Sonoma Wine Country Half Marathon!
The course starts at the Cuvaison Carneros Estate Winery, weaves its way through multiple vineyards and wineries in Napa Valley, and end in Sonoma Plaza right in front of City Hall, where there will be a huge Wine & Music Festival for the finishers and their guests!
I'm extremely excited for this race...not only is it the weekend before my 29th birthday and therefore a PERFECT way to celebrate the kickoff of the last year of my 20's, but the run promises amazing views and one hell of an after party!

I'm also signed up for the Inaugural Rock 'n' Roll Portland Half Marathon on May 20, 2012


...and the Rock 'n' Roll Seattle Half Marathon on June 23, 2012!


So who knows, I may still keep the one half marathon per month New Year's Resolution yet!

Are you signed up for any half marathons?

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Resolution 2010: Race 3--St. Patrick's Day

For the third race of my N.Y.R. (New Year's Resolution), I decided to switch it up a little bit and headed down to Portland to visit my wonderful friend Amy so that she and I could run the Shamrock Run together.
Since it was a holiday run, and we knew that everyone else was going to be running in all of their green splendor, Amy decided that we needed to rock as much green as possible as well.  She got us amazing matching green Nike running shirts...
...and I added my own flair with the shamrock Boston Red Sox hat, the green jacket I had from coaching track, the shamrock tights from my St. Patrick's Day girls' weekend the previous year with my wonderful friend Kristine, and my striped green and white Christmas socks with the white fluffy trim that only my mother would find adorable and therefore put in my stocking for Christmas.  I'd say I had done my job on the obnoxious green outfit well!
Amy and I before the race, ready and raring to go! (Not really sure who the creeper is in the back of our picture, but I'm very weirded out right now!) And I must say that Amy did a great job rocking her green ensemble as well!
We got up to the starting line with the rest of the 6400 other runners on that crisp Sunday morning in March, and as we heard the gun go off, we started our slow procession toward the starting line (we were pretty far back in the crowd) where we were hoping to get a little more breathing room to run...not so much.  I don't know what the planners of the streets of downtown Portland were thinking, but they were clearly not designed with hugely attended races in mind.  6400 people is a lot of people to cram onto a regular old city street, so we spent the majority of the first half mile trying to find a break in the crowd so that we could increase our pace from painstakingly slow to simply moderately slow.  We finally found an opening and were able to start running at a normal pace, and even though we spent the first half mile of the race basically walking, we were still able to cross the finish line in the fairly decent time of 34:03 (which works out to an average of 10:57 per mile).
Normally this time might upset me, but the average female time was 33:59, so it seems as if everyone else had as much trouble getting out at a good pace as we did.  As far as my other stats go, I finished 472nd out of the 884 people in my age group (females 25 to 29), 2005th out of 3951 females, and 3813th overall out of the 6400 runners in attendance...so for the most part, in every single category I was right in the middle, which isn't all that bad.  And to top it off, I got a great finisher's shirt out of the deal...
...the very first Dry-Fit Technical Shirt of the N.Y.R.!  I could not have been more excited about that, or about the fact that I got to run the race with a very dear friend...running with someone always makes the race more fun, especially when you dress for the occasion!

Do you prefer running races solo or with a running buddy?

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Resolution 2010: Race 2--Valentine's Day

With my New Year's Day race under my belt, it was time to start looking for a Valentine's Day run.  There were several in the greater Seattle/Tacoma area to choose from, but eventually I decided to go with the Love 'em or Leave 'em Valentine's Day Dash up at Green Lake Park in Seattle.
I've always loved Green Lake, it's so beautiful, and one of my favorite things about running outside is having gorgeous scenery to look at...and it doesn't get much prettier than Green Lake.  Another one of my favorite things about running races (particularly holiday races) is ALL THE COSTUMES!!!!  There were people dressed like Cupid, others in pink and red galore, and some people had even brought their four-legged friends in costumes to participate in the day's festivities.  Humans and dogs alike got up to the start line, the gun went off, and we were gone on our mission to finish this 'lovely' 5K.
I took off, and the energy and electricity of everything and everyone around me pushed me around the lake.  I crossed the finish line at 27:43, which averaged out to just under 9 minutes per mile (the average of everyone who ran was 33:58, so I was extremely happy to have finished faster than average) and I ended up placing 619th overall out of the 2,338 runners who participated.  No real idea how many dogs beat me, but let's not think about that!  In addition, out of the 1,577 females that ran, I placed 288th, and in my division (females 20-29) I was 117th out of 524.  Overall, I did pretty well for the second holiday race of the year, and I got a pretty great shirt out of it...
...so I was a pretty happy camper...er, I mean runner!

Have you ever run a Valentine's Day race?