Monday 21 March 2016

Sunny Andalucia

After an easier week at home and a quick weekend trip to Tampere I decided to go back to Spain to get another good training week before the season start. It was a last-minute decision to go there but I’m very pleased that I made the trip. Not did I only get plenty of training in good weather, decent amount of orienteering, and more than enough of hills, but also a nice tan, several CR:s, and ridiculously easy completion of the Strava March Climbing Challenge within only a few days. Mission accomplished.

I spent first some time in Barbate and then a few days in Fuengirola. On the way to Barbate my first stop was in Playa de Bolonia on a map called El Lentiscal. Grassy meadows, detailed hillside, and endless beach. What a paradise! I finished the training on the beach and couldn’t resist temptation to jump to the sea after the run. Just a perfect start for a week!

El Lentiscal
Playa de Barbate 

First day in Barbate included a morning run, an easy introductory session and hill reps followed by downhill orienteering with the Finnish team in the afternoon. I was slightly worried whether I could keep up with the girls in the national team but luckily I was able to hang in there (skipping over the recoveries helped a bit). It was good fun and it was great to meet up with the girls again. Next day I did long distance in the morning and sprint in the evening on my own. Somehow the climbs felt a lot tougher than the day before. Afternoon sprint I ran in Vejer de la Frontera, a cute little village on the top of a hill. Definitively worth a visit!

Hill training, Le Brena  
Sprinting in Vejer de la Frontera
















On Saturday I had planned to do a sprint training together with the Finnish team but I woke up with some soreness in my foot. It was the very same spot that had bothered me over two months before Christmas so I chose to play safe immediately and rented a bike instead. To rent a bike was a funny little story itself but when I finally got one we had a wonderful time together and I had no regrets skipping over the planned trainings that day. 

had googled and found a bike rental in Conil, half an hour drive away from Barbate. So I drove there first thing in the morning but the hotel complex, by which the rental was supposed to be, was closed. I tried to search around and got help by some local people, none of whom spoke any English though. I tried words like ‘bike’, ‘bicycle’, and ‘cyclo’ while trying to animate cycling at the same time. First gentleman I met nodded “si, si” and offered to show me the way. We walked a long way in silence until we came to a some kind of outdoor gym. Muchas gracias, but it wasn’t really kind of cycling that I had in mind. Luckily a woman who was passing by stopped and understood the word ‘bicycle’ and guided me further until we met a next person who could walk with me to the bike rental. So finally, with the help of three enormously friendly local people, I found my way to the bike rental. It wasn’t anywhere near the hotel where I had left my car but it seemed like a good bike shop and I got a nice road bike for only 15€ per day and went off for a wonderful ride in the sun. My route was Conil  Canos de Meca – Barbate  Vejer – and back to Conil via El Palmar. Fairly easy route but with a few nice climbs, first one up from Canos de Meca and another up to Vejer de la Frontera. Vejer was also a perfect spot for a coffee stop with numerous of cafés on either sides of the road. I just picked randomly one that I liked and enjoyed my coffee there in the sun. Life was smiling. I continued my ride through the town and descended on the other side of the hill towards A-2230. Views that opened up on the way down were quite beautiful.

Pure enjoyment!
Nice views over Atlantic

Surprisingly my ankle felt a lot better when I woke up next morning and I went for an early morning run to test whether I could actually run with it. Amazingly I didn’t feel a thing. I did just a short jog to spare the foot for the main training, which was O-intervals on the map just a few kilometers away. Funny coincidence that there was a trail race going on and the runners were passing the start point of my first interval right there and then when I came to the start. They had a drink station and a spectator point there so I got my share of the cheering when I passed by. What a nice race feeling at the start of my intervals! In the afternoon I did an easier session focusing on some technical elements. It went well and it was only at the end of the session that I could feel some mild discomfort in my foot.
 
Start of the intervals

Next day I did only one run in the morning before I went back to Fuengirola to meet up with my father. The day after we went to Mijas, a lovely small white-washed village on the mountainside between Costa del Sol and Sierra de Mijas. It was a beautiful village and the views from there were gorgeous. But obviously it wasn’t enough for me, I wanted to get to the top of the mountains. There were some trekking routes starting just above the village and I followed a nice marked route up to the saddle between Pico Mijas and Mendoza. From there my plan was to follow a line or a border that looked like a path on the map but in reality it was something else. There was no path, just endless stone field. But since I had already come that far there was no way I would go down without actually reaching the summit. After climbing just a little bit further I was able to see the mountaintop. There was still a kilometer to go and about a billion stones. But I didn’t mind, I was determined to go there no matter what. It was a good adventure but I chose to follow a path down.


Morning in Costa del Sol
Pico Mijas 

















I came back to Sweden just in time for season opening in Nyköping. First a long distance race on Saturday and then Måsenstafetten on Sunday. I won the individual race and did solid runs in both days but wasn’t really up for racing twice in the same weekend and felt extremely tired on Sunday. It was first time I got to run last leg for Linné and even if I was slightly horrified when I heard about it I really appreciated to get the chance. Hilda and Lisa did brilliant job on the first two legs, giving me the best possible starting point. I had almost forgotten how exciting it is to go out in the lead! IFK Lidingö with Anna Bachman and OK Ravinen with Helena Jansson gave me some hard time on the last leg but I was still proud to bring us home as third. Two podium places was an excellent way to start the season!

Nice way to start the season

Friday 4 March 2016

Fight against larvae in Alicante

On Monday I came back from a training camp in Alicante. According to Thierry it is one of the best places to spend winter as an orienteer, so at the last minute I signed up to Linné’s training camp in Guardamar. I have been there on training camp twice before in the late 90’s, although back then in Torrevieja, but all I can remember (in addition to some funny incident in a local restaurant) is a burning rash and itching. This time, the thing that I most likely won’t forget any time soon, is a burning rash and itching. I still have red dots all over my body and skin is just starting to smoothen after being like a burning potato field.

Apart from the larvae and burning skin, the training camp was terrific and just what I needed. A week filled with technical training in otherwise perfect conditions and relaxation in good company. I feel like my shape is getting better and better after just a few months of training but my orienteering is still far behind. It can be irritating when your legs go faster than your brain but mostly I just enjoyed it. It’s definitively better that way. It took me some days to find a good pace and rhythm to my orienteering but it was great to see day-to-day improvement.

Albin had planned us a full schedule with three trainings a day and with fair amount of high-speed quality sessions included. I skipped most of the night sessions but still got 18 orienteering trainings in eight days, half of them in full speed (or at least high-intensity). I call it a good week. It was also a good mixture of dune terrains, sprints, and hill terrains, to get some variety into your training. It was a great week and without the larvae I would love to go there again. Maybe worth mentioning is that only a few of us got serious problems with the rash and just one of us needed a hospital visit due to anaphylactic reaction. Most of us didn’t get anything or just a mild rash. So it’s probably fine to go there but take some antihistamines and hydrocortisone with you. 

On the way back I picked up a flu probably due to massive sleep deprivation (impossible to sleep when you’re itching all over) so I have spent most of the time at home sleeping and recovering before my next visit to Spain. This time I will head further to south, to larva-free zones. Adios!


Sprinting on the streets of Caravaca de la Cruz

Early birdie training on the dunes 



Breakfast in the sunshine

Tricky sprint around Atalaya castle in Villena

Morning runs on the beach

Typical training terrain, Guardamar Sur