Showing posts with label Bowl Full of Tutti Frutti. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bowl Full of Tutti Frutti. Show all posts

RACE REPORT: 2025 Get in Gear 10K

>> Monday, April 28, 2025

Saturday was the BEST day for the "Get in Gear 10K!" It's historically a wet and cold race, but it was in the mid-40s, calm, and sunny. So I "took care of business" at home in the bathroom before heading out the door:


I did this at the race too, but without my phone this time.


Good turn out for the Fleet Feet team! (I'm 3rd from the left in the back.)


My boys and my niece and nephew were all doing the 5K!


And my wife was doing the 10K too!

The 10K started 15 mins before the 5K, so my wife and I headed off to line up with about 5 minutes to go before the race started. I met some new teammates, jumped around nervously, and tried to go through possible race-plans in my head: I wasn't sure if I'd go out harder (more of the "norm" for me lately) or start a bit easier and work to negative split the race (as I wrote about pre-race on Thursday).


10 secs before the gun!


And we're off! That's Charlie's hands on the left, and Wes in the Santa hat!


Ready to suffer.




The increased back/shoulder/arm work shows a bit here. :)


My wife behind me! (She'd admit later that she was over-dressed...)


Charlie and Wes starting the 5K a bit later!


Go boys!!


And my sister-in-law Steph and Evie starting just behind the boys!

I started out a little closer to the front than I’m used to. I often feel like I start a little too far back, and I purposely didn’t make that mistake this time. But that also pushed me out of the gate. My first half mile was a dangerously fast 2:47 when I was hoping I could hold onto just below 3:00s. Yikes. I tried to ease up a little, and my first mile ended up being a great start:

• Mile 1: 2:47 + 3:01 = 5:49.3

An unusual thing happened between miles 1 and 3 that I’m not used to. Because I normally start a little too far back, I often start a race, pass a few packs of people, and then settle into a spot pretty quickly. But in this case, I had a group of 5 people pass me here at the 1st mile marker, and I had two more groups of 4 to 5 people each pass me in the next few miles. I wasn’t used to that!

Mile 2 ended on a fast note:

• Mile 2: 2:57 + 2:50 = 5:48.1

My splits were still golden! I was feeling optimistic that I could hit my sub-37:00 goal, and that maybe I could be around my OLD PR of 36:46 (that I broke last year when I ran 36:33).

Mile 3, however, felt a little more rough, and it showed in my splits. My optimism was waning. D'oh.

• Mile 3: 2:58 + 3:02 = 6:01.0

We ran across a 5K mat, and I glanced that my time was around 18:25. "OK... I can hopefully hold on and evenly split this race, and still finish around 36:50... but CAN I evenly split this? Am I about to crash and burn?"

The two worst short little hills are in the last half of this race. I was staring up the first one of those hills at this point (and the next would come at mile 5.5 as we go under and then loop back on top of the Ford Bridge). I WAS THRILLED WHAT HAPPENED HERE: I didn’t find myself working much harder, but I ended up pulling away from the people I was running with, as well as passing a few people heading up that hill! Maybe my better strength workouts for my lower body have been paying off!


We were past the 1st arrow (crossing the bridge), and the 2nd arrow was
the hill we just climbed. The 3rd arrow was what I was dreading at mile 5.5.

The slower half mile up that hill ended up not being the slowest half mile of my race! And then I bombed down the other side of the hill to turn in a respectable 4th mile:

• Mile 4: 3:01 + 2:47 = 5:49.5

I felt a little wind in my face crossing the bridge around mile 2.5, and may be just a little bit after getting up that hill, but wind wasn’t a factor. It was a beautifully calm day to race! I was hoping that would help me in this last half of the race.

I didn’t know what was going to happen in these last 2 miles. I was hurting, and my pace felt all over the place. I felt like I would surge for a few strides, and then start to die and back off for a few strides. Again, not feeling confident. But I was happy to get to mile 5, and HAPPIER YET to still be turning in good splits!

• Mile 5: 2:51 + 2:54 = 5:45.6

I noted my overall time at mile 5, and I was only about 10 secs slower than my goal PR pace from last year! And my splits were moving in the right direction, so I was really ready to push to see what I could do! I was just barely starting to think "...could I PR again?"

I tried to use the hill going down under the bridge because I knew climbing the hill on the other side to get up onto the bridge was going to be brutal. I was kind of running by my lonesome, but I had been slowly passing a few people for the last 1.5 miles or so - moving in the right direction!

I bombed down the little hill around mile 6 and passed a guy I had been back-and-forth with earlier in the race. I didn’t know if I would be able to hold him off for the finish, but he was a good push in those final few blocks.

• Mile 6: 2:51 + 2:53 = 5:44.9

I SAW MY OVERALL TIME! I WAS JUST UNDER 35:00!! THE FINAL 0.2 MILES OF THIS 10K USUALLY TAKES ME AROUND 1:20, AND THAT WOULD BE A BIG UNEXPECTED PR!! (Bettering my 36:33 from last year.) SO I WAS GOING HARRRRRRDDDDDD!!!!


Pic from Coach Laurie, just in front of the guy I passed 20 seconds earlier.


Hurting!

Brother-in-law Jon (who took all the photos at the start - thanks Jon!) saw me coming. The guy I had just passed was able to pass me right back, but he was a good pull to the finish. And the little kid in orange was a 5K runner (who's course meets up with our 10K course for the final 2 blocks), so I look REALLY COOL passing him in the final few meters:




Guy in white is now back in front of me!






Big strides toward the finish!


You can see the hole in my butt - I can only wear these "Tutti Frutti" shorts
in cold weather because of the wind-proof briefs I wear under them!


Closing in on the finish line!





• Final 0.2 miles: 1:19.0 (Garmin had it as 0.25 miles.)

Holy balls. An unintentional PR brought on by a big negative split!

OFFICIAL RESULTS:

Steve Stenzel, M, 44, St. Paul

36:17
5:51 pace

54 out of 1492 overall
51 out of 742 men
6 out of 86 in the M 40-44 age group
12 out of 401 male masters (40+ years old)


54th overall at mile 1
63rd overall at 5K
54th overall at the finish

18:30 first 5K / 17:47 last 5K

(Garmin: 36:17.3 for 6.25 miles, or 5:45.37 pace)


5 POST-RACE NOTES:

• I really don’t know how I did this! Like REALLY! For how bad I felt at mile 3 (with splits moving in the wrong direction), but then how much I ended up negative splitting it, I... I just don’t know. I mentioned in Thursday’s post about better / faster / stronger long runs I’ve had in the last 6-8 months, and I’ve also had some consistent and really good track workouts. Maybe that all did the trick!

• I took myself RIGHT to the edge of the pace that I could hold onto in the last half of this race. When I was hurting around mile 3, I was very concerned I wouldn’t be able to hold on in the last half especially because I hadn’t raced in a while. And it hurt like hell, but I was able to speed up and have my fastest 2 miles as my last 2 miles. Whew. Training has been treating me right apparently! Which brings me to my next point...

• I'm not necessarily proud of THIS RACE, but I'm proud of my TRAINING. I feel like my solid training these last few months has been "seen" by this unexpected PR. It's not that I raced it perfectly on a perfect morning (which all might be true as well), but I just feel happy that my good training is showing.

• I train to negative split my runs, but this was a huge negative split! My average pace in the first 5K was 5:58/mile, and it was 5:44/mile in the last 5K! I was hurting so bad, so I can honestly say I wasn’t sandbagging. I think it was just all of my negative split training telling me I was running pretty fast early on, but then I had the fitness to keep speeding up, even though I was dying.

• A blog reader finished around me and recognized me, and we chatted a bit in the finisher’s chute. Sorry, but I didn’t get your name! My brain wasn’t fully working yet! He knew I had a sub-37 goal, and he knew I had PRed as soon as I mentioned my time! Thanks new friend!! (EDIT: by his comment, his name is Cory! Hi Cory!)


I got through the finisher’s chute quickly so I could grab my phone, go find Jon, and go cheer on the rest of our family. I found Jon quickly, but just like last year, I had barely missed Henry finishing. And then somehow, Jon and I both missed our young boys who were running together, as well as his daughter!


Jon's pic of Henry finishing the 5K!


Henry on one side, and Rob E finishing the 10K on the other side in green!




Henry off to the finish!


Superhero boys!


Our entire racing crew!


Boys ringing the PR bell for Wes! (28:03)


Evie with a PR! (33:03)


Old man Steve ringing the PR bell! :)


54th at mile 1, down to 63rd at the 5K point, back to 54th at the finish.




My 10K (with half-mile splits).
Slow up the hill to split #7, then fast down the other side.


The "random speed" like I mentioned above: surging, then dying, then surging, then dying...


Slow up the hill at the half-way point, then faster down the other side.
And a pretty consistent last half!


Stopped for 2 DELICIOUS fritters on the way home!


Charlie went to play at Wes' house for a few hours, and I got him home looking like this.

Well, a PR in your mid-40s is a great way to kick of the race season! Back with more shortly!

We All Survived 'Get in Gear!'

>> Saturday, April 26, 2025

It was FINALLY a nice day for Get in Gear today! It seems it's always historically rainy and cold!

The cousins all did the 5K:


Pre-race cousins!

And my wife and I did the 10K:


My family pre-race!

And then Henry and I each had a LARGE and DELICIOUS apple fritter from Longfellow Market on the way home:


They both had a BEAUTIFUL crust on the outside!

Back with a full race report shortly! I have some surprising news!....

2023 Year in Review

>> Wednesday, January 31, 2024

Everything is tallied. Here are my training numbers for 2023:

• SWIM: 119,457 yards.
• BIKE: 1710.13 miles (15.3 mph ave, across all biking).
• MOUNTAIN BIKE: 69.08 of those 1710 biking miles (all with my boys).
• RUN: 1,160.22 miles (7:28 / mile ave).
• BIKE TRAINER: 67 hours 27 minutes. (1,281.55 miles calculated at 19 mph.)
• STRENGTH / CORE: 507 hours 46 minutes.
• WEIGHT: 157.4 start, 156.6 finish, 160.2 high (Jan), 155.0 low (Sept), 157.29 monthly average.
• BODY FAT: (monthly average) 13.8% high (April), 12.8% low (Jan), 13.18% average.


SOME NOTES ON THOSE YEARLY NUMBERS:

• SWIM: 8th biggest year of the last 18 years of training. That's OK. Nothing great. It's not bad considering I only swim 1x/week. I was pretty consistent all year, and it wasn't uncommon that my individual swim workouts were longer than in the last few years. I'm happy with this number, but not necessarily "proud" of it. Nearly all of my swims ended with 300 yards of kick drills (only skipped or shortened when really short on time).

• BIKE: BIGGEST YEAR EVER!!! Yes, even bigger than my Ironman year (by 200+ miles). I still don't LOVE biking, but the big thing that happened in 2023 is that I started commuting more on my bike. After my classes were done last spring, I biked the boys to-and-from school when I could (something we started a year or 2 before). But 2 NEW things happened that to added to my biking miles. First, I started biking to the pool over the summer to swim when it would work. And I also started biking to class 2 days/week this past fall. (See also this post about gearing up as it got darker and colder, and this post about getting home on some ice late in the year). I noted that over the last 25 classes of the semester, I biked to 23 of them (plus 3 extra times: 2 to grade, and 1 to meet with a student). Besides getting in extra little workouts, I also saved $4-7 on parking on each trip!

I had my 2 biggest months of biking in 2023! Taking the boys to-and-from school by bike a lot in May led to that being a PR month of 275 miles, and then I crushed that again 2 months later in July with 323 miles! And one ride in July was my longest and my fastest since wearing my Garmin.

Of the 1,710.13 miles of TOTAL biking in 2023, 629.33 miles of that was commuting or riding with the boys, 102.38 miles of that was training on my "commuter" bike as my regular bike was in the shop for a month, and 69.08 miles of that was mountain biking with the boys. So really, I only logged 909.34 miles on my tri bike. "Actual" biking. 909 miles would be my 6th biggest of the last 18 years, so that's still in my top third if I didn't count all those "extra" miles. Not bad.

• TRAINER TIME: 3rd biggest year ever! I thought this was going to be ranked a lot lower honestly! It's lower because I biked more outside, so I'm OK with that. But the previous 2 years (2021 and 2022) were BIG for trainer time, so I didn't come close to those. Converting my trainer time to "actual" miles still has 2023 just behind the previous 2 years: combined totals were 3,067.46 miles in 2021, 3,537.56 miles in 2022, and 2,991.68 miles in 2023. The bigger bike trainer years led to the biggest overall numbers as I tend to put in more consistent time on the trainer than I do outside. (Worth noting is my biggest "combined" mileage year of 2022 only saw 454 miles outside on my bike!)

• RUN: BIGGEST YEAR EVER! FOR THE 3rd STRAIGHT YEAR!! Running a lot with baby Henry in the stroller got me up to 4-digits for the first time with 1,027.62 miles in 2012. I didn't get close to that again for 9 years, until I hit 1,030.58 miles in 2021. And then I broke that AGAIN in 2022 by nearly 100 miles with 1,123.81. Well I added 35+ miles to that to PR AGAIN for 2023 to have my biggest year ever, and my 3 biggest years back-to-back-to-back! That's amazing! It shows what I can do when I fall into a good rhythm and keep myself from getting injured!! Never missed a run all year.

Also, I started running earlier in the morning (more regularly) sometime in 2022, so looking back at my runs in 2023, I only had 10 runs that were done after 7:00 a.m. (I would have guessed that I had even less, but that's what the yearly count showed me.) The rest were pretty equally either starting in the 5 a.m. hour or the 6 a.m. hour. Most of those 10 post-7 a.m. runs (I think 5 or 6 of them) were over the summer when the boys didn't have school. I used the treadmill when footing wasn't good: 29 runs on the treadmill to start last year (winter 2022/2023 was ROUGH), 1 treadmill run in Italy in August when we were short on time, and then 3 more to end 2023 in Nov and Dec (this winter has been GREAT for running so far! - at the end of 2022 which was the start of that nasty winter 1.5 years ago, I had 15 treadmill runs between Nov and Dec).


Long runs in 2023: only shorter before or after race weeks!
11+ MILES EVERY WEEK if not a race week!


Weekly distance in 2023: 21+ miles every week if not racing.

(Notice how before 5 out of those 6 big dips there's a peak of miles - that's a race that's on a Sunday to end my week [as my training weeks are Monday thru Sunday] which ends up being an extra run for the week, and then a small post-race week the following week.)

• STRENGTH / CORE: BIGGEST YEAR EVER!! And like running, I had a "PR" for strength time in 2021 (428 hours), then broke that in 2022 (473 hours), and then broke that AGAIN in 2023 (over 507 hours)! As I did in 2020 and 2021, I started lifting more for my upper body in 2023 (which I didn't do AS much of in 2022). But I also started doing slightly longer leg exercises when I had the time, and I started doing longer core workouts too. (Not "better" necessarily... but "longer.") So a big year here!

• WEIGHT: holding pretty constant the last 3 years (2021-2023 at 157.x lbs) after coming down from a heaiver few years (2016-2020 over 160 lbs). Feeling A-OK about this.






Here are my monthly totals according to my training log:


2023 distance. A lot of good biking mid-year and onward! (For me.)


2023 training time.


2023 distance with "trainer time" added in (thanks Photoshop) at 19 mph.

Only ONCE in the past (one time in 2022) did I have that graph get CLOSE to 500 "miles" (miles of running and biking, but swimming is yards x100) hitting 494 miles in March of that year. But in 2023, I had 3 months that were OVER 500 miles! May was so big because I biked a lot with the boys to-and-from school. And then November and December were big because I kept biking to work throughout the year.


TOP ATHLETIC HIGHLIGHTS OF 2023: (counting down from #10 to #1)

• TEN: three USATF MN gold medals. This is "fun," but not a big deal as it feels a bit like a handout because I was first out of a few each time. From left-to-right below, I was 1st out of 1 at the USATF MN 2023 Indoor Championship for the 5000 meters, I was 1st out of 2 at the USATF MN 2023 Track Championship for the 800 meters, and I was 1st out of at least 3 at the USATF MN 8K Cross Country Championship:


Warming by the fireplace post-race in March, still on the
track in June, and with my medal post-race in November.

• NINE: the cancelled TC 10 Mile (and marathon for my wife). It's a bummer. But the day just got too unseasonably hot. I ended up attempting my own 10 mile race in the pre-dawn hours the following morning, but it was still too hot. It's an unfortunate and unforgettable part of 2023. (I still might post some extreme reactions people had about this...)

• EIGHT: racing the Square Lake Sprint Triathlon. Square Lake is a fun one. I had an OK swim, a pretty fast bike, and then the fastest run split by quite the margin (18:08 for me, with the 2nd fastest in 19:15 on those hills). I think I ran from about 6th into 3rd overall on that final run (and ended up just 0:14 behind 2nd):


Starting the final run, up a nasty little hill to start.

• SEVEN: my boys ran their first 5K! And their 2nd (Brian Kraft)! And their 3rd (TC 5K)! We got out on some training runs this spring, and then they did the Get in Gear 5K together as I was running the 10K as part of my team race. I finished in time to see them finish, which was AMAZING!


Henry with a 25:14, and Charlie with a 31:54!!

• SIX: my first 800 meters since high school. This was a brutal race. I truly forgot how much 800s hurt. I was pretty happy with my 2:17 finish.


1 lap in. About to start hurting a LOT.

• FIVE: track/speed work! I always like to run part of my longer runs faster each week, but I slowly got away from doing TRUE speedwork 5-10 years ago. The last few years, I've been working it back in - I never gave it up, but it's becoming more regular again. I started doing this more in 2022, and I noted in my year in review back then that I had 22 posts tagged with "intervals" in 2022. In 2023, I had 24 posts tagged with "intervals," and I counted 26 workouts that were tempo runs or intervals in 2023.

• FOUR: walking more to help stay injury-free. Regarding the last point of running HARDER more often... I really think I've been able to stay injury-free lately WHILE running harder because I've been walking more. (I wrote about this in yesterday's post too.) I've been making it a point to hit my allotted 10,000 steps/day since last February: I did 60 days straight (all of Feb and March 2023), and then I had some foot pain and rested for 2 days. Then since early April 2023, I've had 10,000+ steps every day! As I'm writing this, I'm on day 303 of that streak that started on April 3, 2023.

• THREE: training for and then nailing my goal at the Raspberry Run 1 Mile. I had a goal to get another sub-5:00 as a 42-year-old, and I trained on the track to hit this. I had perfect ascending splits (when I love to descend) of 1:12.2, 1:12.4, 1:13.2, and 1:13.6 to finish with a 5:52:


Pic from this post. Mid-race, starting to hurt.


Dying at the finish (from this post).

• TWO: winning the Fall Classic Duathlon. I took the lead after just a few seconds at this race, and I ended up holding on for a wire-to-wire win. It was a BLAST! (Stressful during the bike waiting to be caught... but then never getting caught.) I had the fastest run, fastest bike (WHAT?), and fastest run at this race. Here are a few photos from this big album of photos:


From shortly after the start, starting the bike, and finishing the final run with a 7 minute lead.

(Number 2 and number 1 could be flip-flopped, but the truth is I'll rememeber 2023 more for what I did in #1 than #2... even through #2 sure was fun!)

• ONE: commuting by bike a lot. I didn't expect this to be a "thing" in 2023. Sure, I've always said I wanted to try biking more, but it's just never worked out. Last summer, I took the time to bike to the pool for a lot of workouts. And then in the fall, I biked to class 23 times (and a few more to grade and meet with students) because it fell into my schedule at a time where I could do that - I didn't need to haul any kids to or from school right before or after, and I didn't feel the need to RUSH home to my boys as they are getting older.

SIDE NOTE: I have a lot of "pro-bike/anti-car" friends, and in the past, I've come down pretty squarely in the middle. Sure, I love having more bike paths through the city, but I also see the need for cars. I've been a triathlete/cyclist(?) since 2005, and until the last few years, the majority of those biking miles were outside. So I haven't been a stranger to riding in the city. Over the last few years, I've slowly gone more towards the "pro-bike" side of things. But my mentality shifted a LOT over the course of the last 3 months of commuting to class regularly. Because of drivers, I'm now MUCH more pro-bike and anti-car. I'm at least much more aware of how "car-centric" people expect the world to be. I have a 3.3 mile ride from home to the door at the University, and I average about 1 near-maiming experience for each day I bike to work. Sometimes I can be in a pissy mood just WAITING for a driver to act up, and nothing happens. Other days, I'm happy and cheery, and then I nearly die 3 times over a few miles. It honestly averages a bad NEAR CRASH experience maybe every-other week, and some "glad I was paying attention because that driver wasn't" about once/day on these commutes.

I've been passed by a driver while in a bike lane along Cleveland near the U, and then nearly turned into by the same car as they slam on their brakes and try to quick cut in front of me instead of slowing up and waiting 2 seconds for me to clear the intersection.

I've had a car pull right into me while I'm in a bike lane (on that 2 block stretch of Myrtle near University) because they needed to pick someone up on the side of the road and couldn't have taken the time to legally pull into one of the 3 open driveways for a parking lot right next to me.

I've been honked at twice for going straight through an interesction at a green light because the driver coming towards me who wants to cut in front of me to turn left doesn't want to wait for me to go straight though the intersecion.

I've had a car drive right at me inside of a bollard-protected bike lane that has paint signage all over it (on Pelham just south of 94) - to be fair, I don't know of any cyclist who thinks those side-by-side bollard-protected bike lanes are a good thing (they seem to be what city planners thinks will appease cyclists).

I've had a driver round a corner at a red light without stopping, see me trying to cross straight using the crosswalk (at a freeway exit, so I'm not in the road), look ahead to look for the crosswalk signal to justify trying to run me off the road, and then realize that I had the signal in my favor (the crosswalks change before the stoplights because they know drivers try to speed through and clip pedestrians) so instead of stopping and being like "oh sorry" he instead puts his head down and speeds through the intersection (illegally) nearly clipping me... all because he WANTED to be right when he was legally wrong.

And just this week, I had a woman come within inches of me because she ran through the crosswalk at a red light while looking straight down on her phone - she looked up and was freaked out that I was legally in a space that she was illegally blowing through while her light was red as her face was straight down in her phone in her lap. (She was the 5th and final car in this 5-lane road, so she came flying through behind other cars that had stopped as they should and I couldn't see that she was coming until I was almost being run over by her, so don't start with the "you needed to look up and make sure no one was illegally going to blow through the long-standing red light when the signal was fresh and in your favor" - it was sunny, noon, and the sun was at her back. Also, no, I wasn't flying through that intersection. I commute on a cheap mountain bike that I bought in 2004 with no upgrades - I had to re-lube the chain this fall as it was catching because it was so rusty. It's heavy and slow, but safe!) On that same mid-day ride home, another car drove my speed half in the bike lane for a block in front of me without seeing/caring about me, decided to fully park mostly in the bike lane just in front of me, and then decide to pull back out into traffic (across the sliver of bike lane I was still trying to use) as I was passing them without looking while nearly taking me out. Cars run the city, and if you don't have one, you often don't matter. (See also.) All the bike lanes in the world aren't changing that just yet. Rant over.


Illustrating my red light face-in-her phone near miss a few days ago.


Goals for 2024? Nothing dramatic.

Keep up the consistency and work to stay injury-free.

Try to work in some more duathlons and triathlons (something I said last year too, and didn't really do).

Keep being OK with shorter/easier weeks post-race. I've been good about this over the last few years. My last little injury was right after the 2021 Brian Kraft 5K, and that's because I was trying to add on a few more easy miles to "pad" my miles for the day. That's the LAST time I did that (nearly 3 years ago). I want to race a bit more, but then also be OK with seeing smaller weeks/months of training totals because I need to take it easy around those hard efforts.

And really, that's about it. I'm really happy with my training and racing lately. And I'd just like to keep that up. I have no plans to change too much this year! No plans to keep trying to PR! (I honestly rarely look at monthly or yearly distances before they're over with the intention of trying to "hit" or "beat" a certain number - for example, I don't think I'd have stopped at 99.8 miles of running in June had I been aware of my monthly mileage at the time. I just go and workout and do what feels best for me in that moment. I'm somewhere between "self-coached" and "un-coached," and I'm loving it.)


Finally, here are a few Instagram pics from 2023 to highlight my year:


Jan: Mexico with my family!


Jan: more Mexico pics in this post with a highlight video here.


Feb: winter was feeling long, so a trip to Great Wolf Lodge was in order.


Feb: Great Wolf Lodge.


March: my first indoor 5000 meters since Henry was a baby (17:39).


April: taking the boys out on their first training runs!


April: Charlie on a training run.


May: Charlie's birthday party at a reptile zoo!


May: opening day at Valleyfair.


June: taking my Mom on a 5-day adventure in northern MN.


June: Soudan Mine with Mom.


June: showing Mom all of the boys's favorite north shore places.


June: Henry's birthday at Wild Mountain!


Still June! Mountain biking for 3 days with my nephew
and bro-in-law in Cuyuna! (June was a fun month, obviously!)


July: mountain biking around Theo Wirth with the boys for the first time.


July: family fun at the lake.


July: Charlie's 15" largemouth!


July: Henry came to the track with me to do some sprints for his soccer speed.


August: an amazing trip to Italy for our 20th anniversary!


Sept: saying goodbye to Grandma Jean.


Sept: finishing the Square Lake Triathlon in 3rd overall.


Oct: Charlie's first (of what will be many) broken bones.


Oct: a quick and fun family trip to Chicago!


Nov: Henry's fencing photo!


Dec: not much snow here, so hitting the man-made snow on the slopes! Henry boarding...


Dec: ... and Charlie skiing.

Here's to a great 2024!!

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