Well, there were a couple of detours during these two weeks.
The first was during my long trainer ride in Week 13. It was a four hour trainer ride. I now know that’s a really long time to spend on a trainer. It’s about 15 minutes longer than the first season (yes, season!) of The Detour on TBS. If you’ve ever watched TBS on Sling, you know you get the same commercials over and over and over and over. Well, after enough commercials for The Detour, I decided to watch it. One ride and I’m now half way through the series!
My long run on the following day was almost exactly the length of The Fifth Element. Just over two hours straight on a treadmill. When does the wind go away, the sun stay out longer, and the temperature get warmer so I can do more of these workouts outside? Not soon enough, as I now measure my workouts by how many TV shows and movies I can watch while not actually going anywhere!
The other detour was more significant. I have been training with Trainer Road for the last 3+ months. They use what they call Virtual Power. It’s great, but with limitations. It takes speed and info about your regular old trainer and converts that to power. Since I already owned a speed sensor and a trainer, it was very low cost. After about two months of training with power, I decided I wanted to measure power during my outdoor training and racing. So I was on the lookout for a proper power meter. I found a good deal on a pedal-based version, so I ordered it two weeks ago.
I installed them on my bike and did a test to compare my new power meter to virtual power. Detour! Even after calibration, the power meter was showing 30 watts lower than the virtual power! This doesn’t mean I haven’t been improving, because improvement is based on relative numbers. It just means that my absolute numbers are not what I thought they were. So all of that stuff last time about the absolute power numbers? Well……this is a setback for those numbers.
The new power meter will be great going forward, but with the new power measurement, I needed to do a new FTP test to set a baseline going forward based on the new measurement method. I dropped 23 watts, so as far as improvement goes, I’m 7 watts better. And it was reinforced that FTP tests hurt!
It’s basically an hour of riding, with some preliminary hard efforts to set the stage and mitigate some common things that could throw the test off, then it’s a 20-minute test. This test is 20 minutes of riding as hard as you can maintain for the full 20 minutes. Basically you need to ask yourself every minute or two if you can maintain your pace for the rest of the 20 minutes. And there’s only one correct answer. If the answer is no, you’re going too hard. If the answer is yes, you’re not going hard enough. The answer better be maybe!
After the FTP test, my legs were pretty beat up. I missed a bike ride and a run, and I pushed a bike workout to the following Monday. But Week 13 was still the highest volume week so far (I told you I’d be saying that a lot).
The swimming was good, with my last workout having a 1000yd interval that I did at race pace! It’s only a quarter of Ironman distance, but I really feel like 1:50/100yd is very achievable on race day.
Week 12: 4700yd/1h27m swimming; 59.7mi/3h45m cycling; 20.1mi/3h10m running; 5700 calories
Week 13: 6600yd/2h05m swimming; 119mi/7h30m cycling; 17.1mi/2h45m running; 6500 calories
Cumulative: 53,150yd/22h34m swimming; 975.3mi/64h14m cycling; 164.3mi/26h40m running; 63,600 calories

