orienteering 1:19:39 [3] ***** 7.53 km (10:35 / km)
ahr:154 22c shoes: O' Shoes
Straight line was 6.3k.
I had a really awesome run today!!! I did everything right that I was trying to do! I even had 3 people pass me in the woods, and each time I saw someone, I focused on doing something technical instead of paying attention to them. For context, people distractions accounted for ~10 min of my errors at West Point.
Giovanni's courses were really good for me since I need to work on simplifying, so it was really good practice. I feel ready for Team Trials!
Running (mostly trails/soft surfaces) warm up/down 13:07 [2] 1.2 mi (10:56 / mi)
Orienteering (walking) (Pickup) 30:00 [0] ***
spiked:5/6c
orienteering 20:00 [3] 1.0 mi (20:00 / mi)
Corridor-O with Anne, Julian, and Madison. We did pretty well at the beginning and then lost contact, so we just jogged to a trail and came back. Fun!
Note
Alexei's verdict on my course write-ups from the Billygoat and West Point:
"Good things:
1. When you are concentrated you deliberately and systematically read ahead to the next leg and check you exit direction. This is very important! Keep doing this like you did at WP races.
2. You can perform all technical actions (map reading, terrain reading, compass bearing) accurately.
Bad things:
1. You pay too much attention to other people while on the course. In your case it's a disaster! On the WP middle you lost time mostly (if not all) when you got distracted by others (#1, #3, #7). To heal the problem you should concentrate more on technical work while on course. Like as soon as you see somebody say to yourself "Stop! Look at the map! What should I see next." In other words, every time you see somebody in the woods you should do something technical (no matter what) and do it deliberately. Also you can try psychological training at home. (I can tell you some exercises you can do)
2. You are getting into the map too slow. I mean at the start it takes you awhile before you get to your normal orienteering flow. To deal with this I would recommend "technical warmup" before the start. You should try to a) read a warmup map (of the start area or similar) and b) try to look around and imagine how warmup area would look on the map.
3. You read just separate features but not the situation on the map (especially in the vicinity of the control). The exercises for this I told you last time I sent you armchair exercise map (BTW if you run out of the armchair exercise maps I can send you more).
4. This issue related to the #3 above. While you are running a leg you read point features on the map (boulders, cliffs, trail bends etc.) but more effective is to see lines connecting the dots. In future you should change the way of thinking: you should think in terms of lines not dots! Not suddenly but slowly we will work on it in future.
A separate issue is your physical shape. You are saying that you feel to be in a good physical shape. But your results tell me that you are still quite slow in the woods.
About the upcoming Team Trials. It will be a very tricky terrain. Everybody will be slow there and everybody will be making mistakes. The winner will be whoever makes fewer mistakes than the others.
So, first of all you should do exactly the same that you did at West Point middle. Don't try to run faster. If you need to stop - STOP and read-read-read map. Concentrate on the map reading! Not on how fast you are moving. If you see other competitors concentrate on the map reading."
My thoughts: I agree with everything he said about my technique, except I hadn't realized I was getting into the map too slowly. Luckily for my people problem, I did a reeeeally good job focusing on my map whenever I saw competitors at Lynn Woods, so now I have an example race to visualize between now and Team Trials!
Fitness: I'm actually not in that great of shape compared to where I've been in the past. I could probably run a 21- or 22-something 5k right now, and I ran a 19:40-something right before I got sick. I just feel good about my fitness because it's been coming back more quickly than expected:) The *good* news is that having this pointed out to me will make me rely more on my technique! And I'll be super focused!