Bike Tour of San Francisco

Elizabeth and I had an amazing time doing a bike tour of San Francisco. We started at the Bay Bridge, worked our way along the bay, went under the Golden Gate Bridge, and stopped for lunch at Baker Beach.

Most of this can be accomplished on bike path and it all feels pretty safe. The Presidio Tunnel Top Park is a major highlight, it’s so well done.

Here is the link to my Strava map https://strava.app.link/hFi1GfOjULb

This is a great ride, give it a try.

Explore Nashville Run With Elizabeth

Nashville, what a great city. This morning’s run was about seeing various areas of the city and ending up at a local coffee place for beverages and a little food. Part two of the adventure was walking back to the hotel.

I researched a few coffee places and I saw Vanderbilt University was in the area so that gave me my two points of interest I was looking for.

Vanderbilt did not disappoint. The school is 150 years old and very pretty. We had a great time running through exploring and ended up using more milage than expected in the campus.

From there we set off to find Honest Coffee Roasters on Lea Ave. The City is fairly easy to navigate so it wasn’t hard to find. A coffee, a juice, and an avocado toast hit the spot. The people were great there.

We took a different street back on the walk back to the hotel and saw a whole bunch of other cool stuff.

I’m going to call this Nashville exploration mission a success.

Here are our Strava maps

Map 1 The Run Part
Map 2 The Walk Back

#explore @nashville

Planning Your Weekly Workout Schedule

Probably the biggest key to my workout consistency is having a weekly routine that I don’t have to think about from day to day. I have had this routine for at least the last 15 years. Depending on race preparation, I have made some adjustments but the main structure has worked through it all.

My point isn’t for you to adopt this particular plan. My point is when you thoughtfully layout your week, knowing where the challenges are, you are much more likely to stay on plan. Here is my thinking for my schedule and the reasoning behind it. I have found with this schedule I don’t get bored because every day is something new and I have managed to avoid injury logging 1,200 miles running and 5,000 biking annually the last 15 years.

Saturday and Sunday I have the most time available to workout. Saturday I do my long bike ride and Sunday I do my long run. Three hours on the bike, that’s 50 miles (give or take 2-3) and 9-12 miles running on Sunday depending what I am training for. The weekend workouts covers about 45% of my weekly volume.

Monday and Friday are active recovery and strength days. I lift weights on those two days emphasizing upper body with a little bit of lower body mixed in. I ride my city bike for an hour around town just having fun being on the bike. I keep my heart rate fairly low and focus on spinning and recovery.

Tuesday and Thursday are intermediate run days of 7 miles. I will mix in interval days, hill days, or just keep it chill depending how I am feeling.

Wednesday is intermediate bike day, typically about 30 miles. It’s a great way to break up the run days.

You can scale this how ever works for you and for the sports you enjoy. The point is to have a plan that you don’t have to recreate every week. It will make being consistent so much easier. I did a TikTok and Instagram video on this if you want to check it out.

Boise Workout Adventure

I had the opportunity to go to Boise this week for our quarterly Black Box VR meeting and I will tell you this is the time of the year when Boise shines. It’s light early and late, it’s warm but not too hot and the trails are clear and ready.

Day one I decided to get up to Table Top Rock, where the giant cross is that overlooks Boise. I used Strava maps to calculate my route from the hotel down town.

Find it on Strava @ralphrajs

I ran in a clockwise location running as much trail as I could on my way out and took the faster street way back.

The climb to the top is no joke, 1 mile at 10% average grade. Yes there is a Strava segment for it.

The view at the top is well worth the effort. I was very pleased with myself because I didn’t walk any part of the climb, which was a mental challenge.

I took a moment to say a prayer of gratitude for the opportunity to experience this wonderful adventure.

I highly recommend this trail when you get to Boise. It’s very well marked and well kept. I was out there early on a Tuesday and there were a lot of friendly people and dogs out there.

The final approach

Stay tuned for Day 2 workout fun

Day Two – Portland Oregon

Today we took a trip out to the gorge for this amazing hike with our friends Jarod and Adina. Jarod knows the gorge well and recommended this hike and it did not disappoint. It only took us about 40 minutes to drive out there from downtown Portland, that was after a stop at HenryHiggins Boiled Bagels

Snipped from Alltrails.com

This is a relatively easy hike with moderate elevation gain but the visuals are stunning. You will hike along the river getting higher above it as you go which changes your perspective.

From the Start

We hiked up to Punchbowl Falls about 3.2 miles up but there was plenty to see along the way.

Here is the Punchbowl. You can get down to it but it’s not easy and didn’t seem worth the time to us.

Punch Bowl Falls

I’d say this hike is family friendly because it’s not steep and you can turn around at any point and feel successful.

Our hiking crew, Fletcher the dog was in the water and missed the picture. Thank you to Jarod and Adina for hosting us.

We wrapped up our trip with a short drive over the bridge to Stevenson WA for lunch. A very cute town with lots of lunch options.

Get out there and have fun.

Santa Barbara Get Away

Elizabeth and I decided to make a quick run to Santa Barbara during the holiday week. Part of any get away for us is getting out for an early workout. Here is my write up from the day.

Rainy morning so we decided to make the morning workout a walk. To spice it up we picked two spots on either side of town as our destinations. First Helena’s Bakery for tea and scone, then up to Handlebar Coffee Roasters for coffee and muffins. Such a fun morning.

Running through Las Vegas

By Ralph

I recently had to travel to Las Vegas for a work trip. It’s always tricky to keep the workout patterns intact while traveling, but with some planning and commitment it’s possible. 

When I get to a new city, I prepare for a morning run by first going on Google Maps and seeing what points of interest are within three miles of wherever I am staying.  I always look first for a bike path, major park, or trail system in the area.  That can take a lot of the guess work out of an unknown location. I also look to see if there are any major districts on the map. For example, a district I always enjoy in any city is the Arts District. There is one in Las Vegas just off the north end of the strip. There is always great graffiti art in those areas and usually some cool buildings to see. If you look up the city’s art district you will get the whole history of the area as well as the main points of interest.

I did that this time in Las Vegas because I can only run up and down the strip so many times.  For me, it’s important to try and see something new everyIMG_1456

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time I go to a city.  Here are a few of the pictures I took running around the “18b” or 18 Blocks Art District of Las Vegas. Just a sample of what you can see when you adventure outside in a new location.