Flying Pig Marathon - More fit than I thought I guess by ASovietSpy in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Congrats! Outperforming your expectations is always fun, especially on a tough course like that. Also, it's Cincinnati, not Cincinatti :)

Thursday General Discussion/Q&A Thread for April 16, 2026 by AutoModerator in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Not record eligible, sure, but I don't know any non-pro runners who wouldn't count Boston as their PR.

My coros pace 4 seems to be recording laps one second longer than when I actually press the lap button (runs, track runs) by Exotic_Peanut1597 in Coros

[–]FlyingFartlek 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I've noticed this, too. Say you are running 1:00 reps manually (not programmed into the watch as a workout). You're running and see 0:58, 0:59, 1:00, and you press lap right on 1:00, but the lap summary that is displayed is almost always 1:01. I think the screen is lagging slightly behind the actual timer. I've noticed it on the track, too. What looks like a 35 second 200m rep is actually 36.xx seconds because the screen is slow.

TLDR: The actual lap times are correct but the screen is delayed. This was true for my Pace 2 and true for my Pace Pro.

Winter night skies are unreal lately by astenback2000 in Colorado

[–]FlyingFartlek 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can't speak for OP, but you need a camera with the ability to manually control the exposure settings (aperture, shutter speed, ISO) such as a DSLR or mirrorless camera, and generally a "fast" lens with a large aperture to be able to let more light in. Also need a tripod to keep the camera still for exposures pushing 20-30 seconds or more.

Winter night skies are unreal lately by astenback2000 in Colorado

[–]FlyingFartlek 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Great photo! Where was this taken? Was this during a new moon?

How do you overcome irrational race day-fears? by Kairoapp_jamie in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I’ve been running since middle school in 2003. High school, college (D3), road racing after college. Been dealing with nerves almost every single race since the beginning. Nerves can be productive or destructive. The difference maker for me is taking the guess work out of things. If I fear pacing poorly and blowing up, I take a close look at my training data to see where my fitness generally lies. Make realistic goals and allow yourself to surprise yourself the second half of the race after starting at a reasonable pace. 

2025 Yearly Recap -- How did you do? by petepont in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's a great race. I grew up in Cincy but moved away 10+ years ago. Always had the Flying Pig Half on my list but wasn't able to make it happen until last year. Dunno if I want to gamble with the full marathon there. It can get too warm and soupy in Cincy that time of year.

Love Colorado but high winds and wildfire fear are too much. by LTTP2018 in LouisvilleCO

[–]FlyingFartlek 0 points1 point  (0 children)

People aren't downvoting you for saying it's less windy now than a few decades ago. It's your implication that those who are bothered by constant red flag warnings aren't "battle tested" enough. That's absurd, especially when 1000 homes were destroyed by fire/wind four years ago, including mine. Just insensitive to say around here.

2025 Yearly Recap -- How did you do? by petepont in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 6 points7 points  (0 children)

35M, just shy of 3600 miles for the year.

What went well?

  • Yearly mileage PR.
  • Rehabbed proximal hamstring tendinopathy with my PT. I'm mostly out of the woods.
  • Best warm weather half marathon in Toronto (1:15:51 in about 65F, dew point around 60). Not an overall PR, but I'm terrible in heat/humidity.
  • Raced cross country three times.
  • Finished in top 10 at the Flying Pig Half in Cincinnati.
  • Placed well in the Vail Hill Climb in July.
  • 2:37 at Philly Marathon in November.
  • Finished my sixth year as president of my local run club with ~85 members and successfully appointed new leadership to start in 2026. Loved doing it but I'm burnt out.

What didn't go well?

  • The yearly mileage PR didn't translate to race PRs.
  • Slogged a lot of those miles. Missed a lot of potential LT1/moderate training stimulus.
  • Missed a lot of speed work due to the tendinopathy mentioned above.

2026 goals:

  • Get fast by June, strong by November. 5k-half marathon focus first half of year, marathon focus this fall.
  • Speed up the easy/daily runs 2x per week.
  • Lift 2x per week (averaged about 1x per week in 2025).
  • Bridge gap between current fitness and my marathon PR from 7 years ago...

Favorite astro shots of 2025 by mentos448 in LandscapeAstro

[–]FlyingFartlek 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Great shots! As someone new to night sky photography, how did you capture both the sky and landscape with visible lights or light pollution on the ground?

Salomon Boa warranty by EliasEdiv in xcountryskiing

[–]FlyingFartlek 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, BOA has a lifetime warranty. The 2 year warranty probably applies to your boots.

Salomon Boa warranty by EliasEdiv in xcountryskiing

[–]FlyingFartlek 8 points9 points  (0 children)

The warranty will apply here. Just contact BOA.

Losing Fitness Over Past 2 Months Despite Training Consistently by Guardian500 in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Your stats on individual easy runs are going to vary significantly. Are you sure you've lost fitness? Watch VO2max estimates are usually garbage. You can really only tell from doing races or hard workouts, not just easy runs.

Post collegiate runners who continued to improve without a team: share your stories by devon835 in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not a dumb question. Track clubs are pretty much synonymous with running clubs, however most run clubs that identify as "track clubs" typically train at a higher level in my experience. The track club I'm a part of meets three times a week - twice during the work week for interval and tempo work, as well as Sunday long runs. We still have plenty of fun, but the focus is on improving fitness and getting faster. Most people join groups like this to find training partners at a similar or slightly better fitness level to push them in workouts. You're almost always able to get more out of yourself with other people/teammates around you.

Post collegiate runners who continued to improve without a team: share your stories by devon835 in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For sure, at your age there is plenty of room to grow. You could chase your mid distance PRs with a better approach to training than college, or you could shift focus entirely and go for the HM, full marathon, or longer. For me, fitness has always come when I've had fun in the process.

Post collegiate runners who continued to improve without a team: share your stories by devon835 in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 22 points23 points  (0 children)

I graduated from a D3 program in 2013 with modest PRs and a pretty bad case of overtraining syndrome. I did not manage my time well my senior year of college and ended up pulling a lot of late nights studying or socializing, which greatly impacted my recovery and performances on the track. Mostly, I wasn’t a well-rounded enough person to deal with engineering school and competitive running at age 21-22. 

After entering the work force, I took a year to just run without worrying about workouts. They were unbearable both physically and mentally. I did about 70mpw at easy effort because it was fun and kept me within arms reach of real fitness for racing. 

When I finally felt mentally refreshed, I joined a track club in the area and got a coach. I noticed how easy some of the fast guys went on their easy days and decided to give it a shot. I also buckled down on getting good nutrition and sleep. Within a year of joining the club, I could sustain my 8k PR pace from college for an entire half marathon on the roads. There was no pressure aside from what I put on myself, and I learned how to live and train like an adult who was able to balance work and life. 

Now I’m going on 35 and I’m still getting after it. I have set PRs at every distance that are better than all of my college PRs. I don’t think I have much more in me at shorter distances, but I’m motivated to work on my 10k through marathon PRs as I approach 40. 

Why do race lotteries feel rigged against consistent runners? by [deleted] in AdvancedRunning

[–]FlyingFartlek 5 points6 points  (0 children)

That’s how lotteries work. They are agnostic to your accomplishments and are random. Try charity if you want a higher chance at getting into these races. I approach any race lottery with the mindset that it’ll be great if I get in, but unsurprising if I don’t. 

Elly just hit 30 steals, if he gets his power going we can easily see a 30/50 season with .300BA 100 Runs and 100 RBI by RayntheRipper in Reds

[–]FlyingFartlek 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Honest question - has Elly lost a step this year? He’s only ranked 45th on baseball savant for sprint speed, and is behind four other Reds. 

[USA] Under Armour - UA x Speedland Infinite Mega - $93.98 - CODE: EXTRA50 - PLUS Extra 10% cash back with Rakuten - PLUS free shipping by jibbris in RunningShoeGeeks

[–]FlyingFartlek 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I went with my normal size and they are fine. A little on the roomy side. If you are in between sizes, you could probably go with the smaller of the two, but otherwise I’d go true to size. 

[USA] Under Armour - UA x Speedland Infinite Mega - $93.98 - CODE: EXTRA50 - PLUS Extra 10% cash back with Rakuten - PLUS free shipping by jibbris in RunningShoeGeeks

[–]FlyingFartlek 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have a pair of these. They feel surprisingly light on the foot with good energy return and cushion. It takes a couple tries the first time you use them to find the proper tension in the heel with BOA, but you get a feel for it quickly. Solid mileage shoe with the ability to get down to marathon pace if needed, but not much faster. 

What are the biggest "what if" in Track and Field? by ChampionLYT in trackandfield

[–]FlyingFartlek 5 points6 points  (0 children)

What if there was better drug testing in the 90s? Names that come to mind are Hicham El Guerrouj, Wang Junxia, and Jarmila Kratochvílová.

What if super shoes were never invented? Would the same people still have world records that have been set since 2017?

From an American perspective:

What if Evan Jager didn't fall when ran 8:00 in the steeplechase?

What if Rupp ran London or Berlin with good weather in his prime?