Strathfield and back
Well, this was a nice run except maybe for the hills coming up Canterbury Road. But absolutely a first class a-grade spring morning, perfect weather. I'm starting to taper now, so this was run at a fairly gentle pace; plus, I think I'll go easy on the exercises for the next couple of weeks. I've almost made up my mind to start at the pace I want to finish. I watched the IAAF marathon this AM when I got home - just amazing really, 3 minutes/kilometer, 42 times. Sadly, I don't think I can run the second half of mine faster than the first half, no matter how tactically sound that might be. Slowing down gently is the right tactic for me.
Here's something trivial. 1% of 100 meters is 1 meter; of a marathon it's 422 meters. That takes near enough to .1 second for the sprinters, and about 76 seconds for the marathoners. The margin in Daegu today was more than 2 minutes, so that's about 2 meters in sprinting terms. A real thumping. When you see 2 marathoners come in only a few seconds apart, as, say, in the Commonwealth Games women's in Melbourne, that's a sprinter's .01 of a second.
If it's Spring it must be flowers and it was. The casuarinas are out, and there are masses of them along the Cooks; casuarina flowers are as subtle-coloured as their leaves and make a fine muted backdrop for the wattles. I saw at least three (species of) wattles, hardenbergia, and lots of short-plumed grasses, bright green leaves and soft white florets; my guess is wallaby or plume grass. Plenty of exotics, too, including orange trumpet vine - one massive display at the back of the racecourse - and a couple of azaleas.
Lots of birds; ducks and ibis mainly.The ibis are a menace out of the water but they look quite picturesque sitting in it.
Not much else to tell really.
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