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May 24th was a fantastic day for a trail run, and now you can relive the action of the Scenic City Trail Marathon & Half Marathon.  The video is up on the site! Please comment on whether or not the video quality is any better than previously posted videos. We’ve switched from You Tube to Veoh.

Flickr

Video

By SAM MCMANIS

Most of us, at some point, have uttered that tired old refrain,

“I just don’t have time to work out.” And it’s not an excuse. Really, it’s not.

Our plates aren’t just full, they’re overflowing. The job’s been a bear. We’re putting in major hours, meeting insane deadlines. And then there are family obligations: dinner to make, kids to taxi about, traumatic late-night math homework to correct. Got to say hi to the spouse, too.

Day in, day out, who has the time, energy and inclination to lace up the running shoes, strap on the bike helmet or hoist metal slabs at the gym? And you’ve got to be kidding if you think we can carve out enough hours to train for time-consuming endurance events such as marathons, double century bicycle rides or open-water swims.

Believe it or not, it can be done without sacrificing work, family or even blissful sleep.

Talk to Sacramento Police Chief Rick Braziel, who works 10-hour days, is a father of five and still trains for marathons.

Or Andy Hitchings, an attorney who once argued (and won) before the Supreme Court? He’s logged major billable hours while simultaneously training for next week’s Boston Marathon and the upcoming open-water swim season and cheering on his two daughters in their sports.

Or John Whitehead’s who works as an engineer at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory – and still bicycles 100 miles a week.

Or check out marvels of multitasking such as Channel 3 morning anchor Deirdre Fitzpatrick, who juggles breaking news, an active 2-year-old son and marathon training; and long distance cyclist Caryn Holmes, a single mom of four and a counsel for the California Energy Commission who can log 100-mile weekend rides before the kids even get up.

Exhausting, isn’t it?

Not really, these high-achievers insist.

Their secret: The three P’s – planning, persistence and prioritizing. Then again, as Fitzpatrick quips, “Maybe we’re just whacked.”

In any event, read their stories and judge for yourself.

CARYN HOLMES

  • Profession: Senior attorney, California Energy Commission
  • Age: 49
  • Sport: Cycling
  • Holmes is nothing if not flexible, both in her musculature and her busy schedule.

    “The key is to not be rigid,” she says, “and have options.”

    Mother of four – three still living at home – Holmes is separated from her husband, is working 50 hours a week dealing with state power plant licensing cases, and maintaining her fitness base so she can compete in double century (200-mile) bicycle rides.

    It’s easier than it looks.

    “First, the (children’s) dad is involved and supportive of my cycling,” she says. “Most important, I ride my bike to work every day, and the commute is a marvelous base. And when I’m really training, I’ll add more miles going home, so I’ll have at least 150 miles there.

    “I’ve got to get in long rides, so I might take two or three vacation days during the week and use it for that. I’ll work with the kids’ dad to find out when a good day for him to take the kids is, and I’ll ride then. And one thing about having teenagers is that they sleep until 10 or 11 weekend mornings, so if I start riding at 6 a.m., my ride’s half over before they even get up.”

    Because her commute doubles as her workout, Holmes can spend most evenings with her children.

    “And support at work helps, too,” Holmes says. “I’m able to work at home some and at night, if it’s a tight time (at work) when I’m training. Of course, there are only 24 hours in a day.”

    RICK BRAZIEL

  • Profession: Sacramento police chief
  • Age: 48
  • Sport: Marathon
  • Something had to give and, unfortunately, it was Braziel’s Achilles tendon in mid-February.

    He had been training for next week’s Boston Marathon by doing the bulk of work on weekends and squeezing in an hour run each weekday. He had been sworn in as Sacramento’s new police chief a month before, so more weekday training was out.

    It was near the end of a long out-and-back run when Braziel felt an ache in his tendon. It worsened as he pushed on. Finally, it was debilitating. He took a few days off, but it didn’t help.

    Boston, Braziel’s goal, will have to wait a year. (The race allows entrants a year’s deferment.)

    “I put the testosterone away,” he says. “I just can’t do it this year.”

    But that doesn’t mean Braziel has subsequently vegged out on the couch. While his injury heals, Braziel and his wife, Karen, put in 25-mile weekend bike rides, and he swims laps to maintain his cardiovascular fitness until he can run again.

    Motivation for Braziel goes beyond race goals.

    “I exercise in the morning so the rest of my day goes well,” he says. “It’s my quiet time, it focuses me, gets my day all set up. I tell this to people at work – I’ve never come back from a run where I’ve said, `God, I hated every moment of it.’ I come back and say, `I’m glad I pushed through and did it.’ “

    As his rank has gotten higher, Braziel concedes he has made concessions to the job.

    Back in 2001, when he was a captain, Braziel had enough free time to train for – and finish – the grueling Hawaii Ironman Triathlon. He would swim in the early morning, run at noon in lieu of lunch and put in long runs and bike rides on weekends.

    Even as deputy chief in 2007, he was able to put in serious marathon training for December’s California International Marathon, where he qualified for Boston. Now, once the injury heals, he says he’s determined to carve out time.

    “I’ve been telling my secretary to schedule meetings later, because I’d like to free up my mornings again,” he says.

    Because all but one of his children have grown and left home, Braziel doesn’t feel that parental tug as strongly as before. And his wife is a former triathlete, so he says she understands his athletic desires.

    In fact, she didn’t blink when Braziel suggested this alternative way of getting to a dinner party with friends: “I decided to ride there, a good 40 miles from my house, and meet her there. Then I’d shower and dress for dinner and throw the bike in the back of my wife’s car for the ride home.”

    ANDY HITCHINGS

  • Profession: Attorney
  • Age: 44
  • Sport: Open-water swim, marathon
  • Heck, compared to his wife, Hitchings is a slacker. Jenny is an elite master’s athlete who runs sub-three-hour marathon times and puts in 70 to 80 miles a week.

    “The most I’ll do a week is 40,” says Hitchings, whose wife does not work full-time. “For people who have full-time jobs, that’s enough.”

    It was enough for Hitchings to qualify for next week’s Boston Marathon along with Jenny. Well, maybe a little behind, since Jenny has earned a starting spot in the elite women’s race.

    But still, not bad for a guy who mostly runs marathons (Boston will be his fourth) to get ready for open-water swimming season, which runs from June through September.

    “I train with a pretty dedicated group who meets at Lake Natoma when the water gets a little warmer and go 2 to 21/ 2 miles,” Hitchings says. “It’s really important to have a group. It makes it a lot better to jump in the cold water on a Sunday morning when you’ve got a core group with a sense of humor.”

    Hitchings says he found it harder to work out when he was younger and working as an associate at a major San Francisco law firm. But he’s at the point in his career when he can block out time at lunch to swim or run with friends.

    “It’s only five minutes by car from my office to Lake Natoma, and Discovery Park is close for lunch runs,” he says. “But if I have a work meeting, that takes preference, of course.”

    As does family time. Hitchings has two daughters, Molly, 15, and Maggie, 12, who both play sports, and need homework help and attention.

    In one breath, Hitchings says he might “retire from long-distance running” after Boston. But in the next breath, he says, “I’d like to do a full Ironman (triathlon) when I’m 50. My oldest daughter will be in college, my youngest will be finishing high school. I’ll be able to put the time in.”

    DEIRDRE FITZPATRICK

  • Profession: Broadcast journalist
  • Age: 35
  • Sport: Marathon
  • For the longest time, Fitzpatrick, a Channel 3 morning news anchor, felt her proudest athletic feat was finishing a full Ironman triathlon in 2002. That, however, was eclipsed two years ago when Fitzpatrick ran throughout her entire pregnancy.

    “On the day I gave birth, I ran six miles,” she says. “My doctors weren’t crazy about it.”

    Fitzpatrick is still pounding the pavement, but now she’s apt to have 2-year-old Collin strapped into a baby jogger. He’s something of a personal trainer.

    “He’ll yell, `Faster, Mommy, faster,’ and when we’re on the trail, `Pass them, Mommy,’” Fitzpatrick says. “It’s bad form. But maybe he got it from me.”

    For a self-described “laid-back” person, Fitzpatrick remains driven. But before marriage and motherhood, she was focused almost solely on work and working out.

    Her routine then: Awaken at 3 a.m., arrive at Channel 3 at 4, do the morning show, field report for a few hours, nap for an hour at 2 p.m., then work out for three hours – five on weekends.

    Her routine now is pretty much the same, except the nap is replaced by playing with her son. She’ll also take him with her on her run. And even while working for KCRA, she’ll sometimes run during downtime.

    “In the back of my car, at all times, I have running shoes, five pairs of shorts and shirts and a couple of visors,” she says. “I sneak in every minute I can, because when I’m home I want to be there for him.”

    She’s not exaggerating. Recently, serving on jury duty, Fitzpatrick went on a seven-mile run during the lunch break but miscalculated time and ended up getting called to the jury box still sweating.

    JOHN WHITEHEAD

  • Profession: Engineer
  • Age: 49
  • Sport: Cycling
  • Sure, Whitehead notches 5,000 miles a year on his bicycle pedometer. Sure, he thinks nothing of going for 20-mile “early bird” rides while most people are groping for the snooze bar.

    But he’s no athlete, he says, not at all competitive.

    “Workout? I don’t use that word,” he says. “I just ride all over the place for fun and transportation.

    “Look, you can spend your Saturday driving over to Napa wine tasting or spend your Saturday biking there – and you get to eat more cookies biking.”

    Spoken like a true bike-lover. Yet, not everybody in town has finished 15 double centuries (200 miles). And not everyone has Whitehead’s work week.

    “It is insane,” he concedes.

    Monday mornings, at 6 a.m., he rides for an hour and half with his Davis Bike Club buddies. Then he drives to the Lawrence Livermore Lab and stays in a small apartment (“a crash pad in Dublin”) through Thursday.

    Tuesday through Thursday mornings find him riding on the Iron Horse Trail, which winds through Contra Costa and Alameda counties.

    He’s back in Davis on Thursday night, does the “early bird 20″ on Friday morning before taking his son, Will, 10, to school – on a tandem bike, of course. Then, after doing household errands, Whitehead often will put in long rides in the afternoon before his son returns.

    Weekends, he and his wife, Anne Huber, also a cyclist, take Will with them on their rides.

    “It’s a family thing, not a competitive thing,” he says. “It’s just the way you live.”

    Jimmy M is flanked by friends Josh & Jonathon post-race

    The Rock/Creek race season has officially begun with the River Gorge Trail Race held March 29th, and our cameras were rolling to capture some of the action. Check out our YouTube page for video action, and Flickr for the photos. Conditions were wet & sloppy, but the hardcore showed up for event and proved that it’s more fun to get up and go on a wet Saturday morning than stay in bed.

    Check out the runner in Video Part 1 at time marker 2:06. If your coverage is iMULTISPORT-Certified, we’ve got you covered for that plus a whole lot more! A check with paramedics at the end of the event revealed no serious injuries.

    Looking forward to covering more of these types of events in the future. Let us know of your next upcoming event–maybe we can cover it.

    by Karen Schaler/ABC NEWS

    Bored with the usual skiing, snowboarding, skating and snowmobiling?

    One of Mother Nature’s most impressive winter playgrounds — and home to a new lineup of winter extreme sports — is hitting peak season.

    The best time to explore the snowy, ice-cube cold Canadian Rockies is between March and May, when the weather’s not so brutal.

    As ski season wraps up farther south, Banff and Lake Louise in Alberta, Canada, rev up for some challenging offbeat winter adventures: snow biking, dog sledding and ice hiking.

    Snow Biking: Tour de Snow

    For those who have already mastered skiing and snowboarding and are searching for the next adrenalin rush, this is it. It’s daring but the beauty is, even if you’re not the most coordinated person in the world, no problem; you can easily scoot down the hill at your own pace. Once you figure out the balance issue, snow biking can be exhilarating. On the flip side (no pun intended), daredevils and BMX masters will be satisfied with snow biking’s endless possibilities.

    It’s basically a combination of skiing and riding a bike. But instead of tires, your bike has skis, and you also wear special ski boots and snow blades (short skis). The bike is very light, so there’s no problem getting on and off ski lifts. Snow biking downhill is similar to skiing; you make S turns and turn sharply to stop. The trickiest part is figuring out how far forward to lean. Go too far, and you’ll fly over the handle bars into a classic “face plant.”

    Snow biking is allowed at all three ski resorts in Banff National Park, but the only place you can rent the equipment is at Sunshine Village. It’s about $60 a day, which also includes a half-hour lesson — a great way to go if this is your first time snow biking. Learn more at Ski Banff

    Dog Sledding: ‘Ruff’ Riders

    If your legs and ego are worn out from snow biking, try getting some love and respect from man’s best friend and sign up for a dog-sledding adventure. The tradition has been around for thousands of years, and, while there are several great sledding operations in the Banff, Lake Louise area, the only group allowed to operate inside the protected Banff National Park is Kingmik Dog Sled Tours.

    read more

    and don’t forget to purchase a travel/medical policy when going outside the country.  Your health insurance policy will not cut it up there

    Extreme Insanity?

    Splat! That’s the sound BASE jumper Jeb Corliss promises you won’t hear when he attempts to land a several-thousand-foot free fall without a parachute. The 31-year-old Californian and former host of the Discovery Channel’s Stunt Junkies has been developing an intricate touchdown procedure. He now claims he’s less than six months (and a $2 million TV deal) away from making the drop in—where else?—Las Vegas. “It’s the equivalent of summiting Everest for the first time,” says Corliss. “Imagine doing that in front of a crowd of 500,000.” Key to his strategy are a wing suit (increasingly popular among BASE jumpers as they evolve toward gliding down mountainsides) and a customized runway.

     Read more…

    For those who have been to the Grand Canyon you’ll quickly realize that IMAX is not big enough (despite it’s 6-story high screen) to capture the awe one experiences when standing on the rim. Don’t get me wrong…the film is amazing and definitely worth seeing. The footage shot while running the rapids is quite exhilarating, and made us want to return to the Canyon. The soundtrack was amazing too!

    Combined with a timely message of conservation and sustainability, the movie addresses the ongoing drought affecting the Colorado River and how we are collectively contributing to the problem. Suggestions on what we can do individually along with intimations on what needs to happen politically are woven into the presentation. If you’re able to see the 3-D flick, let us know what you took away from it.

    from Wired.com

    Your odds of outrunning the snow? Not so good. An avalanche can accelerate to 80 mph in seconds. But if you follow these tips, you might just limp away from it or get carried on a stretcher to the ER.

    Ski one at a time. Ski between islands of safety. Make sure somebody is watching your entire descent. Shout to warn others. Ditch your poles. Keep your pack on. Insert AvaLung mouthpiece. Pull the ABS ripcord.

    1. Grab a tree. The more snow that slides past you, the less likely you’ll be buried alive. Hang on for dear life until the force knocks you off.

    2. Do Not Swim. Research has shown that swimming does not increase odds of survival and it’s better to protect yourself and conserve energy.

    3. Create space. Once the snow stops, it’ll set like concrete. As it slows, exhale to clear the snow that is packed in your mouth.

    4. Raise a hand. Before the flow ceases, get a limb to the surface to help rescuers find you. Between 15 minutes and 45 minutes under the snow, your odds of survival fall from 90 percent to 30.

    5. Breathe slowly. To delay an impermeable ice mask forming around your face, stay calm and don’t bother yelling until rescuers are on top of you. Your fate is now in their hands. Pray that your beacon is working. Pray that their beacon is working. Pray that they have practiced using their beacon. Pray that they have a shovel that won’t break. Pray that they have practiced the latest shoveling techniques. Pray that there is no major trauma. Be thankful you had the insight to outfit yourself with coverage from iMULTISPORT

    By JOE MILLER McClatchy-Tribune

    RALEIGH, N.C. — Like a lot of triathletes, Deanna Babcock is starting to train for the 2008 season. She’s swimming a couple of days a week at the YMCA, and she’s gradually upping the miles on the bike. Soon, she plans to start running. Her goal is to be ready, by June 1, for the Kerr Lake Triathlon, a 1,500-meter swim, 40-kilometer bike ride and 10k run. By November, she plans to do the Beach 2 Battleship Half-Ironman in Wilmington, N.C., which will involve swimming 1.2 miles, biking 56 miles and running 13.1 miles.

    First, though, she needs to break in a new piece of equipment.

    Her left leg.

    “There’s a lot to learn,” says Babcock, a 23-year-old grad student at N.C. State whose plan to do Ironman Florida this past November got derailed the afternoon of July 20 when a routine workout cost her her left leg and nearly her life. “That’s OK. There’s a lot of people out there willing to help you. It’s not like Sarah Reinertsen is out to keep her trade secrets.”

    Sarah Reinertsen, for those of you outside the triathlon community, is the reason you shouldn’t scoff at Babcock’s plan to do a half Ironman. In 2005, Reinertsen became the first female with an above-the-knee amputation to finish the Hawaii Ironman, generally regarded as the toughest Ironman going.

    Run an Ironman on just one leg? In Babcock’s opinion, it’s just a matter of figuring out the new hardware. The rest — the open water swims at Jordan Lake, the hours of pedaling the back roads of North Carolina’s Wake and Chatham counties, the long training runs through town — that’s a matter of doing what every other triathlete has to do: getting yourself physically and mentally prepped for the challenge ahead.

    “It’s pretty sweet to put your body to the limits of what it can do,” Babcock says. “I kinda inadvertently did that this summer.”

    When everything changed

    By “this summer,” Babcock means July 20.

    Her recollection of the day is fuzzy. She remembers rising early and heading to her 10-foot by 30-foot research plot along Davis Drive. For her graduate thesis in soil sciences, she’s testing various materials that may help minimize erosion. She spent the day working in the sun — the temperature peaked that day at 88 degrees — before knocking off about 3 to get in a swim at N.C. State.

    The swim was important. Nine months earlier, Babcock, who had run cross-country as an undergrad at Albion College in Michigan, was watching the Ironman world championships in Kona, Hawaii. That looks like fun, she thought. She’d done a couple of sprint triathlons over the summer and performed well, winning her age category in both; an Ironman would just be more — a lot more — of the same. She joined the N.C. State Triathlon Club, picked an Ironman a year out — Ironman Florida, on Nov. 4, 2007 — and started training. That training had included the Myrtle Beach Marathon in February (time: 4 hours, 1 minute), the collegiate nationals triathlon in mid-April and the White Lake Triathlon, an Olympic distance race (just under a mile in the water, 24.8 miles on the bike, a 6.2-mile run) in May. Her next big test was the Duke Half Marathon in September. She needed to swim.

    Babcock has to rely on the recollections of others for an account of what happened after she rode her bike to the pool. At some point in her swim her heart stopped. N.C. State lifeguards pulled her from the water and began CPR. Wake County EMS arrived and had to use a defibrillator three times to revive her. No one can say for sure how long her heart was stopped. One estimate puts it as long as seven minutes. “It certainly was at least a few minutes,” says Dr. Marc Silver, her cardiologist.

    Certainly, he adds, long enough to do some serious damage.

    Bad to worse quickly

    When she arrived at WakeMed, it was feared that Babcock had an enlarged heart, a thickening of the heart muscle. Silver says the condition is more common than generally thought; it only becomes apparent when the heart undergoes an intense workout. When that happens, the heart practically explodes and the situation is almost always fatal. About 125 athletes younger than 35 die each year from an enlarged heart; among the more prominent recently was 28-year-old marathoner Ryan Shay, who died five miles into an Olympics qualifying event last fall in New York.

    An echocardiogram ruled out an enlarged heart in Babcock’s case. A diagnosis would have to wait until other life-threatening problems could be addressed.

    When the heart stops pumping and cells stop getting blood, bad things happen quickly. The immediate concern is brain damage. Brain cells start dying after three to four minutes without oxygen. After the brain, the heart and kidneys start to go. With Babcock’s heart down for perhaps as long as seven minutes, there was plenty of cause for concern.

    That concern immediately focused on her kidneys. The blood-deprived muscle tissue in her legs began leaking an enzyme damaging to the kidneys. Both failed. She went on dialysis.

    Then there were her legs. The muscles in her left leg were especially bad, the lack of coursing blood causing the veins to collapse. Doctors cut the muscle fascia — the thin layer of tissue encasing all muscle — to re-stimulate circulation. Her right leg stabilized; her left worsened. The next day it was amputated about mid-thigh.

    She developed pneumonia and was in an induced coma — to keep her still for healing purposes — for four weeks.

    During that time, though, surprisingly positive signs began to emerge. Her kidneys regained full function, there was no evidence of brain damage, and her right leg began to improve.

    “She is incredibly lucky to be alive,” Silver says. “She’s a miracle child.”

    An aggressive treatment

    Babcock is quick to second that “incredibly lucky to be alive” observation. Asked Monday how long it had been since the incident, she replied, “My six-month anniversary of not dying was two days ago. We went out and celebrated with refined sugar.”

    She’s quick to second the “miracle” thing as well. The miracle is the technology that saved her life and promises to get it close to where it was before July 20.

    Miracle One: The reason Babcock survived as long as she did without a heartbeat is a procedure called induced hypothermia, being used with increased aggressiveness by WakeMed. Induced hypothermia involves dropping body temperature through ice packs and an injection of an icy saline solution via a catheter into balloons placed under the skin.

    “The target temperature is 91.4 degrees,” says Eric Reyer, a nurse with WakeMed who’s involved in the hospital’s induced hypothermia program. Cells in a chilled body require significantly less oxygen to survive and thus prevent damage from spreading. The procedure has been in use for several years, but gained widespread attention last fall when Buffalo Bills tight end Kevin Everett suffered a severe blow to his spinal column, the type of injury that often results in paralysis. Doctors credit induced hypothermia with the fact that three months later he exhibits few signs of his injury.

    Miracle Two: Silver still isn’t sure what caused Babcock’s heart to stop, but the current thinking is that it was caused by an enlarged right ventricle, something a person is born with. If the ventricle has improved on her next checkup, then Silver will scratch that diagnosis — a genetic condition can’t “improve” — and look elsewhere. Regardless, Babcock will keep the implantable cardiac defibrillator inserted under her left collarbone. It’s a tiny, battery-operated device that, should Babcock’s heart stop again, will deliver an electric jolt to jump-start it.

    Miracles One and Two were lifesaving. Miracle Three has more to do with saving Babcock’s spirit.

    ================================================================================================

    Deanna Babcock’s goal is to be ready, by June 1, for the Kerr Lake Triathlon, a 1,500-meter swim, 40-kilometer bike ride and 10k run. By November, she plans to do the Beach 2 Battleship Half-Ironman in Wilmington, N.C.  — we’ll be cheering her on.
    if you’d like to help her in her cause, then check out Dollars for Deanna

    hear Deanna’s interview with Beginner Triathlete

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