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Delco Road Runners Club Mission
A. To promote regular running as a life-long activity that will enhance the physical, mental and emotional well being of people of all ages. B. To sponsor weekly fun-runs in Delaware County neighborhoods for fun and fellowship. C. To promote communication and camaraderie among area runners. D. To facilitate competitive racing and team competition for all interested members.
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Hello Delco RRC |
44 runners and walkers joined us last night at Swarthmore's Fun Run. This may be the most in the nine years I've been running with the club. 19 joined us for dinner afterwards at Swarthmore Pizza. Come join us!
(Editor's note: There are several people that contribute to this email. Thanks go out those who do. Because of you, this has become a better forum for getting out useful and fun information to the club. If you have information you would like to get out to the club, send it to info@delcorrc.com.)
"The thing I remember best about successful people I've met all through the years is their obvious delight in what they're doing... and it seems to have very little to do with worldly success. They just love what they are doing, and they love it in front of others."
-The World According to Mister Rogers
With this quote in mind - I have been lucky enough to have met some (in my mind) succcessful runners. What makes them successful? Yes, the shear number of years and miles that they have under their belts makes them successful. What makes them stand out in my mind? They truely love the sport. They show up - without fail. There is no place they would rather be than at a Fun Run. And, on any given day, they can still kick it! You know who you are!!! It is a privilege to be a part of this club! |
Tyler Trail Race - 3/27/10 |
Thanks to everyone that ran, volunteered and did both this past Saturday. Here is a photo link for the race. Click Here and Here (Delco Picasa site).
On Friday, March 26, Terry Adamson, Mike Gormley and John Greenstine set off in the rain to mark the Tyler Arboretum 10K Trail Run course. Armed with spray chalk and orange ribbons, their quest was the penultimate challenge met by members of Delco RRC to plan, promote and stage this annual race. By noontime, they had succeeded in laying down 6 miles of markings that would guide nearly 400 runners the next morning.
Almost a year earlier the race committee-Greenstine, Bill McGurk and Chris Earley-settled on a new date for the race; a week earlier than usual, to avoid Easter and another big race. Since that time the committee placed ads in a national magazine, and listed the race on dozens of online calendars and schedules. The website was rebuilt, new applications were made and distributed, new and returning sponsors were laid on. The website opened for business on November 1st, 2009, and just three days later we had our first entrant, Tim Evers-the Associate Minister of Music at the Wayne Presbyterian Church-and a first timer at Tyler. Tim was, in many ways, the fresh face of Tyler runners. New to the sport, eager, out for an adventure.
Over the following months the race grew steadily, at a rate of 20% ahead of any of our past years. We were pretty sure we had the potential for a monster race field. And, as the final days clicked by and emails and phone calls poured in from people desperate to enter, all doubt vanished. Bill McGurk consulted daily on tee shirt sizes and numbers. Amy Binder stepped up to sponsor the seedlings, and a major bank practically begged to put up a table at the race. The only question was whether we would try to cap the race at 400 runners, an almost unimaginable number 17 years ago, when Tom Hirsch created the race. He was convinced that the trails couldn't take the abuse of more than 140 runners. Today, the limits are how many parked cars the Arboretum can handle, how many runners can squeeze into a room, and whether the neighbors will put up with overflow cars in their streets. Hint: 400 is probably the max the race can handle with the existing facilities at Tyler.
On race day, all our wildest dreams were met. A loyal pack of DELCO volunteers showed up and worked like a smooth machine. They included Amy Binder, Annette Cassidy, Bill Kracht Bill Weber, Bob Street, Brianne Danner, Candy Stephani, Carrie McTague, Chris Earley, Chrissy Mundy, Denise Talbot, Diane Lista, Dot Kracht, Elizabeth Randolph, Gene Archambeault, Heinz Wick, Janet Smith,Joe Freiberg, Joe Nolan, John Greenstine Kelly O'Brien, Marcy Harper, Maryann Cassidy, Meg Nilan, Mike Metague, Mike Nichols, Monica Freiberg, Pamela Stephani, Shirley Weber, Stephen Hostetter, Steve Hamilton, Steve Whitmore, Terry Adamson, Tom Weber, and Veronica DiNunzio. And the runners had a blast. Check out the pictures at the link in this newsletter.
We had a number of very positive emails from runners afterwards. Here's one: "What a wonderful race you put on yesterday! I ran the Tyler 10k race for the first time this year and it's one I'll do many more times. The volunteers were friendly, the food was great, the course was fun, and my dogwood seedling was a bonus! Thanks for putting on such a wonderful event." Such comments are a testament to the work and dedication of this club; we have always put the sport and the pursuit of fitness for everyone above our individual performance. The race committee thanks everyone who gave their time and energy to make the Tyler Arboretum 10K Trail Run such a smashing success.
--John Greenstine
Editor's Note: My apologies to John for the following as I'm sure he would prefer it not be said but John Greenstine is the driving force behind this race and is the reason Tyler has become the race that it is today. John is being gracious when he gives the race committee as much credit as he does. This race wouldn't be the success that it has become without John's untiring efforts. But no man is an island and everyone's involvement was crucial to making race day the success it was.
Volunteer t-shirts will be coming soon. | CD for Runners |
Remember this? From July 16, 09 email..."Several members of the club are putting together a running compilation CD. Do you have a favorite running song? Is there a song that makes you want to..."
Well, the CDs are done and will be given out to those that submitted songs for the CDs. Don't worry, we'll get them to you at a Fun Run or the upcoming Spring Fling (see below).
Thanks to everyone that submitted your favorite running songs. |
Anonymous Runner, I Salute You |
03/24/2010 8:47 AM Mark Remy The other morning, driving to work, I caught a runner being good. Has that ever happened to you?
I don't mean while you're running, or during a race; I think we all see runners being courteous or kind when we're running, surrounded by fellow runners. I mean when you're out and about in civilian clothes - an "undercover runner." Maybe driving somewhere, like I was.
Here's how my own recent case went down:
I was driving south, on a fairly busy road. Up ahead, I saw a woman running, also headed south. (She was running with traffic, but hey, whatever.) As I neared the runner, she stopped abruptly. She bent over and scooped up a fast food cup that someone had tossed onto the shoulder. Then she jogged a few strides to a trash can, tossed it in, and resumed her run. Barely broke her stride.
As I drove on, I debated pulling over and approaching her to tell her how cool it was, what she'd just done. I even wondered if I could take her photo, get her name, and give her some exposure on this blog - a random act of kindness, exposed to thousands across the nation! But I thought that might creep her out. And besides, I was super-late for a meeting. So I drove on, leaving her in anonymity.
Some might say it's sad that such a simple act is all it takes to impress a guy like me, that everyone who sees litter near a trash can should do exactly what this woman did, that there's nothing extraordinary or noteworthy about it. Others might say that with so much garbage in the world, what difference does one cup make anyway?
Maybe they're right. Still, I couldn't help but be impressed. I can't explain why, exactly, but witnessing this one tiny gesture really buoyed my spirits. Because this one runner performed this one act of kindness, it made me a tiny bit more hopeful for all of mankind.
In fact, the next day, while walking my dog, I picked up and threw away some trash lying near a dumpster.
Who knows? Maybe someone saw me do it, and will follow suit.
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Delco RRC "Casual" Spring Fling - Sat, Apr 10th, 7 - 11p |
THE DELCO RRC "CASUAL" SPRING FLING (WEAR YOUR FAVORITE RACE TEE) SATURDAY, APRIL 10th, 7 - 11 PM WOODLYN FIRE COMPANY 228 FAIRVIEW RD WOODLYN, PA $15 PER PERSON A BUFFET OF DELICIOUS SANDWICHES, SALADS, AND DESSERTS WILL BE PROVIDED BY OUR OWN DELCO MEMBER, JANET SMITH BYOB TO SHARE SET-UPS PROVIDED DJ ROBERT WILL SUPPLY MUSIC AND ENTERTAINMENT INCLUDING TRIVIA, KARAOKE AND A DANCE CONTEST. PRIZES WILL BE AWARDED!!! Please make checks payable to Delco RRC and mail to Marybeth Mundy: 214 Blunston Rd Collingdale 19023 or Shirley Weber: 720 Shadeland Ave Drexel Hill 19026
Please reply by April 1st. |
The Tabata Method - Good for increasing speed and other things |
(Editor's Note: I recently tried this out and it smoked me...in a good way. I did this on the treadmill and then with free weights and machines. Give it a shot for a very intense workout in a short period of time. Try it on one of your Fun Runs, though it won't be fun for long.)
The Tabata Method Fat Loss in Four Minutes by Dan John
A couple of years ago, a company came out with an exercise machine that guaranteed results in only four minutes a day. The main problem? The $12,000 price tag. My car doesn't cost that much. I'm not sure I've ever spent that much on anything, including my education.
Well, I'm going to save you a lot of money today because I'm going to show you how to do the same thing without an overpriced machine. This "top secret" training method may do more for you than all your other training combined and leave you with 23 hours and 56 minutes to live the rest of your day.
But there's a price to pay. Think exhaustion, vomit and pools of sweat.
Enter the Tabata Method
Tabata is the name of a Japanese researcher who discovered an interesting way to increase both anaerobic and aerobic pathways at the same time. It's one of those strange training programs that seems to fit across disciplines: it's excellent for bicyclists, speed skaters, Olympic lifters, or the person looking to lose fat quickly.
This training method is so simple, yet so incredibly difficult, that athletes tend to try it once, acknowledge its greatness, and then vow to never speak its name again. What is it? It's simple: take one exercise and perform it in the following manner:
1) For twenty seconds, do as many repetitions as possible. 2) Rest for ten seconds 3) Repeat seven more times!
That's it! You're done in four minutes! Oh, and that thing you're trying to brush off your face? That would be the floor.
Eight sets of "as many reps as you can get done," followed with a brief ten second rest- simple and effective. The two best exercise options for the Tabata method are the front squats and the "thruster," which I'll describe in a bit.
It helps to have someone record the reps of each set for you because, well, you won't remember after you pass out. I use the "lowest rep number" of any of the eight sets as my measurement to compare workout to workout. If you go too heavy, that number might be two. If you go too light, you might find yourself getting around 15 reps or more.
Before we talk about the exercises, let's take a moment to be perfectly clear about what we're doing. This isn't "eight sets of eight," although the goal of doing eight reps in each of the twenty second clusters is about right. Instead it's "as many reps as I can get in" during the twenty seconds, followed by ten seconds rest.
And by the way, ten seconds is not racking the bar, getting a drink, talking to the cute girl on the bike, looking at the clock, walking back to the bar, chalking up, adjusting the belt, talking to a friend, then doing the next set. Ten second is ten seconds! No cheating!
Tabata Exercises
You need to choose an exercise that uses a large number of muscles. I suggest the front squat. Now, you may argue, why not the back squat? Well, it's hard to dump the bar quickly into the rack with back squats, while with front squats, you can simply fall into it and start your ten second rest.
With something like a military press, you won't be using enough muscles to allow you to survive in the last minute; you might only get one or two reps with your shoulders on fire. Deadlifts have been tried, but most people get a little worried about injuries doing them Tabata-style.
The front squat might be the single best Tabata lift. Having said that, if you don't know how to front squat correctly, the Tabata method might teach you to lift better than a thousand coaches. In the four minutes, it's easy to get 64 to 70 reps, which teaches the nervous system better than a PowerPoint presentation.
The bar will be held in the "front" of the body, with the fingers relaxed and the bar resting on the clavicles with the elbows high. Sit down "between the legs." This actually gets easier in the third and fourth minute as you just start to "drop" back through. As you rise back up, you don't need to lock out the knees; in fact, don't even think about it. Just get up and go back down.
Weight on the bar? Let's just say this: a guy with a 465 pound front squat puked with only 95 pounds on the Tabata front squat. Generally, I urge people to go "light," like 65 to 95 pounds the first time. There are those in this world who've gone up to 155 pounds and still got "eights" in the last twenty seconds, but those are very rare people!
The other great Tabata exercise is the "thruster." The thruster is one of the greatest lifts no one has ever heard of in the gym. Take two dumbbells and hold them at shoulder height. Squat down, keeping the dumbbells on the shoulders. As you rise up, press the bells to the overhead lockout position. You can either press as you rise or use the momentum to help "kick" the bells overhead. I find that I do a little bit of both in the four minutes.
Thrusters do things to your heart rate and breathing that I honestly can't describe. Go light! A 35 pound dumbbell in each hand is a very difficult thruster workout! Check your ego at the door for the first two minutes.
Tabata Tips
You need to be able to see a wall clock with a second hand during your four minutes of fun. Stop at twenty seconds, rack the bar (if you choose the front squat), rest ten seconds, grab the bar and go again. Watching the clock seems to help with the focus.
And remember this: you really shouldn't consider doing much after the Tabata workout. Your lungs will be going like a locomotive engine. Go ahead and plan anything you like, but don't be surprised if it just doesn't happen. I keep the family dog nearby to chase the carrion birds away while I rest on the sidewalk.
The hardest thing about this workout is staying focused for four minutes. Don't let your hands leave the bar or dumbbells, if you can help it. After you put the bar in the rack during the front squat, stay right there, an inch or two back from the bar, and stare at the second hand of the clock.
If you do thrusters, put the dumbbells on a bench and watch the clock with your hands ready. This little trick of staying with the weight seems to help make those ten seconds seem like, well, not much, really! But at least you don't have to move much to get the weights again. I do either Tabata front squats or Tabata thrusters about twice a month. I'm sure someone will comment, "If it's so good, why don't you do it every day?" Go ahead, try it and report back after the second day.
240 Seconds of Pain
Why should you do this workout? The Tabata program might be the single best "fat burning workout" that I know. It might only be four minutes, but you seem to keep sweating and breathing hard for a long, long time afterwards. Moreover, it seems to teach the body the proper method of squatting far easier than all the instruction in the world.
One other thing: Tabata truly teaches a person the mental focus needed to push past pain and reach his body comp or athletic goals. It'll save you 12,000 bucks, too!
About the Author
Dan John is the Diocesan Director of Religious Education for the Diocese of Salt Lake City and a full-time "on-line" religious studies instructor for Columbia College of Missouri. Originally from South San Francisco, Dan came to Utah to throw the discus for Utah State University and never left. He has Masters degrees in history and in religious education, as well as having done intensive work at the American University in Cairo, University of Haifa, and Cornell. Currently, Dan is ranked number one in the world in the Highland Games, ages 45-49, broke the American record in the Weight Pentathlon last August, holds numerous National Championships in weightlifting and throwing and maintains a full-time free internet coaching site at http://danjohn.org/coach. |
Upcoming Races - 4/17/10, 5/15/10, 6/26/10 |
Gener8tion Run - is the signature fundraising event of Students Run Philly Style, the only program in Philadelphia that helps youth go farther through mentorship and long distance running. Delco RRC has been sponsoring SRPS for the past several years.
April 17 - This is an 8K Run or a .8K Walk. Race starts at 3pm in front of the Please Touch Museum, 4231 Avenue of the Republic, Phila., PA 19131. There will be a Health and Wellness Fair from 1 - 5pm.
Elwyn 5K - May 15th. Be part of a challenging race on Elwyn's historic 400-acre campus. This scenic course takes you over macadam roads, grassy trails and rolling hills. Register at this link http://www.runtheday.com/app/find
Chichester Business Association - 4 mile race and 3.1 Mile Walk, June 26. The 4 mile race has hills for the first 3 miles, the last mile is flat, fast and slightly downhill. To register, go to this link http://www.runtheday.com/app/find
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Eastern Mountain Sports |
April 23rd and 24th, receive 20% off all items at EMS in Haverford just by mentioning that you are a member of Delco RRC. Store hours are Friday, 10am - 9pm, Saturday, 10am - 8pm.
Need any ropes or pitons for climbing mountains? How about a Kayak to get you across the stream on your next trail run? Water bottle? Light for night time runs? This is your chance to pick those items up at a 20% discount. Mark your calendars. |
Good Eats |
Asparagus and Roasted Red Pepper Salad
This is a great addition to Easter Brunch or Dinner. Easy enough to double for a crowd.
2 cups asparagus sliced and steamed until bright green
1/2 cup diced roasted red pepper
1/2 cup sliced artichoke hearts
2 tbsp olive oil
3 tbsp fresh lemon juice
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
1 tsp minced fresh dill
1 tbsp minced fresh parsley
Combine the asparagus, red pepper, and artichoke hearts in a salad bowl. Whisk together remaining ingredients to make the dressing and pour over the salad. Chill and serve cold.
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Blue Rocks Baseball |
Our 5th Annual outing will be held Friday June 25th. Game starts at 7:05 with fireworks immediately following. The seats are behind home plate and tickets cost $10 each.
Please let Carrie McGoldrick(McTague) know many seats you would like to reserve.Remember, the more the merrier so family and friends are welcome. You can email Carrie at carriemctague@yahoo.com or call her at 215-837-2017. THE DEADLINE TO RESERVE SEATS is May 14th.
Carrie will also be organizing an informal BYOB tailgate that will include pretzels and hoagies(approx $5 per person). If you are interested in tailgating prior to the game, let Carrie know when you reserve your seats. |
Race Results - send in your race results to info@delcorrc.com |
Tyler Arboretum 10K Trail Run - 3/27/10
43 - Paul Randolph - 42:19
29 - Eric Mundy - 43:57
51 - Bill McGurk - 49:01
15 - Julian Randolph - 51:32
36 - Cecile Daurat-Thompson - 51:50
37 - Janet Smith - 54:00
62 - Byron Mundy - 54:55
49 - Mike Gormley - 55:56
18 - Ben Geveke - 59:33
50 - David Geveke - 59:34
49 - Bob Zwaan - 1:01:37
42 - Cara Greenspan - 1:03:45
55 - Robert Huey - 1:13:25
56 - Kathy Adamson - 1:14:32
59 - Rita Jorden-Keller - 1:19:40
Ocean Drive Marathon - 3/28/10
35 - Frank Durso - 4:22:42
45 - Bridget Morse - 4:58:47
| Happy Birthday!!! |
Upcoming Delco RRC birthdays this week: Doug Milana ( Sat 4/3), Amy Binder (Tue 4/6), Beth Birmingham and Mary Lou Long (Wed 4/7). Stay young by joining us on one of our many Fun Runs and making new friends.
On many Wed nights, birthdays for our regulars are celebrated at Swarthmore Pizza. So come on out and become one of the regulars, enjoy cake and make new friends. |
Book Club |
Next meeting will be held Sunday May 16th, 2pm at Dot Kracht's home. Email Dot at this email address.
The next book is The Magician's Assistant by Ann Patchett. 357 pages, 1998.
The Magician's Assistant sustains author Ann Patchett's proven penchant for crafting colorful characters and marrying the ordinary with the fantastic. When Parsifal, Sabine's husband of more than 20 years and the magician of the title, suddenly dies, she begins to discover how she's glimpsed him only through smoke and mirrors. He has managed to keep hidden the existence of a family in Nebraska--his mother, two sisters, and two nephews. Sabine approaches them hungrily, as if they are a bridge to her beloved husband and a key to the mysteries he left behind.
All Club members are welcome to join us. Email me at info@delcorrc.com if you have any questions. |
Pictures |
If you take pictures at club events or already have pictures of recent club events/races, we have set up a Picasa web account for club members to use. This will enable the Club to keep an archive of pictures in one location which will be viewable by everyone. If you are interested in uploading pictures to our site, contact me and I will give you the login information. Click HERE to email me and get the needed information. Bill
Click HERE to view previously uploaded pictures. |
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Message Board - If you have something to get out in a hurry, this is the place to do it.
Emails - If you want to have something posted in the weekly email, contact me (Bill) at this info@delcorrc.com. | |
Remember, this is your forum to get information out to the club. Please send in your ideas.
Sincerely,
Bill McGurk
Delco Road Running Club |
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