Share your thoughts on this column at the Well blog.
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Rave Run: Waukesha
One of my favorite places to do hill workouts is Madison Street, which leads to the hospital. It's a great place to run because it's very shady, and the neighbors are super friendly; they cheer me on as I go! I love heading there for hills because it eaves options open. It's fairly steep, then levels off, and then goes up more, so I can do so many short, and so many long. Then, partway through, there's another short, steep hill if you turn onto the next street. It's a fun, challenging workout that's different every time.
Much love, Kate
Sunday, May 15, 2011
Well, better late than never...
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Congratulations!
Friday, September 10, 2010
HI GUYS

Monday, July 26, 2010
Around the country in 50 days
Sunday, July 4, 2010
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
For Those Emergencies
Sani-Fem Freshette F.U.D.
$22.95
Item qualifies for annual
REI Member Refund (typically 10%)
This Feminine Urinary Director is convenient for travel, camping and mountaineering.
- Lightweight, palm-sized device is reusable and comes with a carrying case
- Requires minimal undressing for discreet use
- Helps you avoid hazards like unsanitary restrooms, uneven terrain, poison oak and ivy and rough weather condition
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Tramps Like Us Baby We WERE Born to Run!
The Human Body Is Built for Distance

BASIC FOOTWEAR Arnulfo Quimare, a Tarahumara Indian who is a champion distance runner, laces up his sandals for a 50-mile race on canyon trails.
Does running a marathon push the body further than it is meant to go?
The conventional wisdom is that distance running leads to debilitating wear and tear, especially on the joints. But that hasn’t stopped runners from flocking to starting lines in record numbers.
Last year in the United States,425,000 marathoners crossed the finish line, an increase of 20 percent from the beginning of the decade, Running USA says. Next week about 40,000 people will take part in the New York City Marathon. Injury rates have also climbed, with some studies reportingthat 90 percent of those who train for the 26.2-mile race sustain injuries in the process.
But now a best-selling book has reframed the debate about the wisdom of distance running. In “Born to Run” (Knopf), Christopher McDougall, an avid runner who had been vexed by injuries, explores the world of the Tarahumara Indians of Mexico, a tribe known for running extraordinary distances in nothing but thin-soled sandals.
Mr. McDougall makes the case that running isn’t inherently risky. Instead, he argues that the commercialization of urban marathons encourages overzealous training, while the promotion of high-tech shoes has led to poor running form and a rash of injuries.
“The sense of distance running being crazy is something new to late-20th-century America,” Mr. McDougall told me. “It’s only recently that running has become associated with pain and injury.”
The scientific evidence supports the notion that humans evolved to be runners. In a 2007 paper in the journal Sports Medicine, Daniel E. Lieberman, a Harvard evolutionary biologist, and Dennis M. Bramble, a biologist at the University of Utah, wrote that several characteristics unique to humans suggested endurance running played an important role in our evolution.
Most mammals can sprint faster than humans — having four legs gives them the advantage. But when it comes to long distances, humans can outrun almost any animal. Because we cool by sweating rather than panting, we can stay cool at speeds and distances that would overheat other animals. On a hot day, the two scientists wrote, a human could even outrun a horse in a 26.2-mile marathon.
Why would evolution favor the distance runner? The prevailing theory is that endurance running allowed primitive humans to incorporate meat into their diet. They may have watched the sky for scavenging birds and then run long distances to reach a fresh kill and steal the meat from whatever animal was there first.
Other research suggests that before the development of slingshots or bows, early hunters engaged in persistence hunting, chasing an animal for hours until it overheated, making it easy to kill at close range. A 2006 report in the journal Current Anthropology documents persistence hunting among modern hunter-gatherers, including the Bushmen in Africa.
“Ancient humans exploited the fact that humans are good runners in the heat,” Dr. Bramble said. “We have such a great cooling system” — many sweat glands, little body hair.
There is other evidence that evolution favored endurance running. A study in The Journal of Experimental Biology last February showed that the short toes of the human foot allowed for more efficient running, compared with longer-toed animals. Increasing toe length as little as 20 percent doubles the mechanical work of the foot. Even the fact that the big toe is straight, rather than to the side, suggests that our feet evolved for running.
“The big toe is lined up with the rest, not divergent, the way you see with apes and our closest nonrunning relatives,” Dr. Bramble said. “It’s the main push-off in running: the last thing to leave the ground is that big toe.”
Springlike ligaments and tendons in the feet and legs are crucial for running. (Our close relatives the chimpanzee and the ape don’t have them.) A narrow waist and a midsection that can turn allow us to swing our arms and prevent us from zigzagging on the trail. Humans also have a far more developed sense of balance, an advantage that keeps the head stable as we run. And most humans can store about 20 miles’ worth of glycogen in their muscles.
And the gluteus maximus, the largest muscle in the human body, is primarily engaged only during running. “Your butt is a running muscle; you barely use it when you walk,” Dr. Lieberman said. “There are so many features in our bodies from our heads to our toes that make us good at running.”
So if we’re born to run, why are runners so often injured? A combination of factors is likely to play a role, experts say. Exercise early in life can affect the development of tendons and muscles, but many people don’t start running until adulthood, so their bodies may not be as well developed for distance. Running on only artificial surfaces and in high-tech shoes can change the biomechanics of running, increasing the risks of injury.
What’s the solution? Slower, easier training over a long period would most likely help; so would brief walk breaks, which mimic the behavior of the persistence hunter. And running on a variety of surfaces and in simpler shoes with less cushioning can restore natural running form.
Mr. McDougall says that while researching his book, he corrected his form and stopped using thickly cushioned shoes. He has run without injury for three years
Friday, February 5, 2010
From the Chicago Tribune:
Why women make better runners than men
Statistically, it's sad but true: Women run 10 percent slower than men at all distances.
But women are actually better suited for the sport than their male counterparts, Amby Burfoot argues in a revised and updated edition of the "Runner's World Complete Book of Running."
Women tend to pace themselves better at longer distances; studies show men,perhaps fueled by testosterone, go out too hard, too soon and end up bonking more often than women. But a man's real obstacle is his notion of competition, Burfoot said.
"Men think sports are about beating the other guy. That may be true in boxing, but it's not true in running," said Burfoot, a Runner's World editor-at-large and winner of the 1968 Boston Marathon. "Runners must learn to compete with themselves and not against anyone else. Women seem to find it easier to understand that running is its own reward. ... It's not a matter of what you can do to an opponent; it's a matter of what running does for you."
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Shoes?
Karl told me about research Nike has been doing for decades that say more cushioning = more impact.
Anne just showed me an article she found about a new study in Nature about barefoot running and its benefit over cushioned running shoes about an hour ago.
And then it came up on my "Science news" box in igoogle:
http://sciencenow.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/2010/127/1?rss=1
So who's up for a barefoot run in 12 degree Wisconsin windchill? Anyone? Ok great, see you all at practice :-)
(But seriously. Stop making us buy $100 shoes if they're bad for us!)
Monday, December 21, 2009
A Tale of Two Bars

Love Karen



