I
wanted to complete an Ironman in the year I turned forty. Initially I
intended to do it when I had actually turned forty, but once I was
bitten by the idea I didn't want to wait that long. It's a compelling
need to do Ironman.
I started
triathlon in 2010 when, as a former swimmer who had recently taking up
cycling and running, Mr TOTKat said he wanted to do another triathlon
after doing one a few years back and I looked around online. I found a
"civilised" one where the swim was in a pool and it wasn't that far from
where we live so would be quite easy to get to.
The
Thames Turbo Sprint Triathlon races are held at Bushy Park/Hampton Open
Air Pool - a half hour drive from our house. Thames Turbo Triathlon
club is one of the oldest and largest triathlon clubs in the UK and
"...can count three World Champions and other elite athletes amongst our
alumni: Stuart Hayes, Spencer Smith, Richard Stannard and current World
Champion Tim Don have all been Turbos on their way to the top!" Their
sprint series is geared towards introducing people to the sport of
triathlon and every race the question is asked "how many people are here
for their first race?" and so many people raise their hands... the
races are excellently run and marshalled, with firm but fair application
of the rules.
In 2010, we
entered the whole race series and I ended up having to miss the first
one having injured myself skiing earlier in the year and was signed off
from running by the physio. I cheered Mr TOTKat on at the first one,
while freezing in insufficient clothing on a cold Easter Monday morning
that started as the alarm went off at 04:45. All of the races are on
bank holiday mondays and for the first three races of the series in
2010, it was utterly freezing cold and we suffered horribly with the
temperature both when waiting and when spectating. We made a lot of
mistakes in the first couple of races, but learned and got better,
stripping down the equipment in transition to just bike shoes, running
shoes, bike helmet, race belt and sunglasses. Makes for nippy
transitions (and oh boy was I glad of that at the British Super Series
race at Blenheim - I was way up the field in the fourth discipline there
thanks to that learning at the Thames Turbo races).
The field of
competitors at the Thames Turbo sprint races is asked to estimate their
overall race time and their 400m swim time. The field is then split,
roughly at the 01:20:00 mark and those who estimate over that time for
the whole race go in the first half, and those who estimate a faster
overall time go in the second half. Those halves are then seeded by
swim time to determine the order in which you start in the pool. This
stops a lot of congestion in the pool and works really well, it also
means that the slower athletes aren't the last to start in the morning
and left to finish last, extending the race duration out for a very long
time. As a former swimmer, it's my strongest natural discipline and I
seed early in the swim starts, but until 2011 I was in the first half of
the field of competitors. There's a great advantage to that on a bank
holiday monday morning in that there's almost no traffic on the roads,
and that's a big plus for a race where the roads aren't closed.
Over the
Thames Turbo races in 2010, we improved and we did a couple of 10K races
too. Come Christmas 2010 we were sure we wanted to do more and, in a
night of tipsy foolishness, we registered for all of the Thames Turbo
races for 2011, all of the British Super Series races (some of which had
a choice of sprint distance or Olympic distance and I decided to take
the plunge and sign up for one Olympic one), most of the Clapham Common
10K races and the Speedo Hampton Court Thames swim. And over 2011 we
started working through the races, having the odd injury niggle, missing
the odd race because of it, signing up for a couple more races here and
there, a half marathon, a 5km swim... and then someone started me
thinking. I can't remember how Paul seeded the idea into my head, but
he did. And it sat in the back of my head.
I bought a
few books, read them, looked at all of the courses and decided that heat
was a bigger enemy than hills. And the decision was made. I'd wanted
to do an Ironman race when I got to forty, but the race calendar was
against me for the end of 2012 and I didn't want to wait any longer.
MrTOTKat asked whether I'd be OK with him doing this too. So. Wales is
the choice at the moment and we're signed up for Wimbleball Half
Ironman already, which is at a good time in relation to when Wales will
most likely be scheduled in 2012. We're volunteering at the first
Ironman Wales to get an idea of what the event will be like, and the
course and the area. If all goes well, we'll register for Wales Ironman
2012 while we're there.
Wow. Good on you for planning 2012. I've a friend racing at Henley in a couple of weeks. Having been swimming further i'm only worried about the marathon - partly because I know how hard that is. Back in the pool tomorrow morning and running in the evening. :-)
ReplyDeleteOpen adventure running and mountain biking in October.
Stay injury free. :-)
I used to swim at hampton outdoor pool 20 years ago. Loved it,very much like the pool where I grew up in Kingsbury.
ReplyDeleteWhy did they close so many I wonder? They made swimming in the UK so much more affordable.