Labor Day Sale

August 26, 2009

Beginning Friday, September 4th we are going to have an end of the summer SALE. We will be putting our summer Life is Good, select footwear (KEEN,BORN, Aravon) and apparel. *Please note that no current running shoes will be on sale.

In addition to that, we will also put some XC spikes on sale for $5.00 and $10.00. These spikes are not new this season. They are perfect for the young athlete that is just starting XC or for the middle school athlete, who wants to get that “spike” feel.


Apples and Oranges

August 26, 2009

I don’t get too many people looking at this category. I’m not sure why…maybe because we’re all a little scared of having a disease that may prohibit us from doing somethig we love…before I was diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes I probably would have never read something titled, Diabetes and Me.

Anyway, I’ve had some interesting things happen to me in the last few days that have actually prompted me to want to write about my diabetes. 1. Had a conversation with my internist, Belinda Chan, I told her how frustrating it has been the last few weeks keeping my numbers up during my runs and that I was nervous that I started some of my runns too high. She was very calming…told me that there is new evidence that if you’re Type 1 and active, your A1C does not automatically have to be under 6…and assured me that I am not the only active person with these issues. 2. I had a terrific 12 mile run on Saturday, and I worked my numbers perfectly (this is what keeps me going), 2. Met a young woman who’s boyfriend has Type 1, was a high school and college athlete, but now in the “real” world he stuggles with his numbers. 3. Had a run tonight with Rick…at the turnaround I was at 78, 50% temporary basal. I took a GU and headed to Gretchen’s for a coke. Got my number back up and ran the 2 miles home.

I guess anyone who reads this is thinking well…no big deal…you got your number up and you’re fine. What I didn’t tell you is that when your number is 78 and you are running it’s doing nothing but going down and it feels bad, you feel like you’re going to pass out or worse. I also didn’t tell you that people ask you whether or not you’re taking care of yourself or eating enough.

They assume that it’s diet and exercise, like Type 2. They don’t know that Type 1 is so far from being like Type 2 they should call it “apples and oranges.”


“Can Running Actually Help Your Knees?”

August 20, 2009

My neighbor Jan sent this to me…who would have thought that I would ever post an article like this. Of course, my experience, having run for the last 40 years is…of course. I may not be posting the times that I have in the past, but I have been running for a long time and should show residual issues and potential damage to my joints…especially my knees.

 

By Gretchen Reynolds

An article in Skeletal Radiology, a well-respected journal, created something of a sensation in Europe last year. It reported that researchers from Danube Hospital in Austria examined the knees of marathon runners using M.R.I. imaging, before and after the 1997 Vienna marathon. Ten years later, they scanned the same runners’ knees again. The results were striking. “No major new internal damage in the knee joints of marathon runners was found after a 10-year interval,” the researchers reported. Only one of the participants had a knee that was truly a mess, and he’d quit running before the 1997 marathon (but had been included in that study anyway). His 1997 knee M.R.I. revealed cartilage lesions, swelling and other abnormalities. In the years that followed, the knee became worse, showing augmented tissue damage and more serious lesions. His exam prompted the researchers to wonder whether he would have been better off persisting as a runner, because, as they speculate, “continuous exercise is protective, rather than destructive,” to knees.

You can’t be a runner past the age of 40, as I am, without hearing that running will ruin your knees, by which doomsayers usually mean that we’ll develop “degeneration of the cartilage in the kneecap, which ­reduces its shock-absorbing capacity,” says Ross Tucker, a physiologist in South Africa and co-author of the new book “The Runner’s Body: How the Latest Exercise Science Can Help You Run Stronger, Longer and Faster.” In other words, we’ll be afflicted with arthritis.

 It’s not an unreasonable supposition; other sports have been linked with early-onset arthritis in knees. In a British study, almost half of the middle-aged, formerly elite soccer players were found to have crippling, bone-on-bone arthritis in at least one knee. Former weight lifters also have a high incidence of the condition, as do retired N.F.L. players.

But despite entrenched mythology to the contrary, runners don’t seem prone to degenerating knees. An important 2008 study, this one from Stanford University, followed middle-aged, longtime distance runners (not necessarily marathoners) for nearly 20 years, beginning in 1984, when most were in their 50s or 60s. At that time, 6.7 percent of the runners had creaky, mildly arthritic knees, while none of an age-matched control group did. After 20 years, however, the runners’ knees were healthier; only 20 percent showed arthritic changes, versus 32 percent of the control group’s knees. Barely 2 percent of the runners’ knees were severely arthritic, while almost 10 percent of the control group’s were. “We were quite surprised,” says Eliza Chakravarty, an assistant professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine and lead author of the study. “Our hypothesis going in had been that runners, because of the repetitive pounding, would develop more frequent and more severe arthritis.”

Instead, recent evidence suggests that running may actually shield somewhat against arthritis, in part because the knee develops a kind of motion groove. A group of engineers and doctors at Stanford published a study in the February issue of The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery that showed that by moving and loading your knee joint, as you do when walking or running, you “condition” your cartilage to the load. It grows accustomed to those particular movements. You can run for miles, decades, a lifetime, without harming it. But if this exquisite balance is disturbed, usually by an injury, the loading mechanisms shift, the moving parts of the knee are no longer in their accustomed alignment and a “degenerative pathway” seems to open. The cartilage, like an unbalanced tire, wears away. Pain, tissue disintegration and, eventually, arthritis can follow.

 The Takeaway With Gretchen Reynolds

So, the best way to ensure that your knees aren’t hurt by running is not to hurt them in the first place. “The biggest predictor of injury is previous injury,” Tucker says, and one of the best deterrents against a first (or subsequent) knee injury is targeted strength training. “The hip stabilizers, quads, hamstrings and core must all be strong enough. As soon as there is weakness, some other muscle or joint must take over, and that’s when injuries happen.”

If you’ve injured your knee in the past, particularly if you’ve ever torn an A.C.L. (an injury that, in the Stanford gait study, was closely associated with misalignment and cartilage degeneration), talk to your physician before running. But for most runners, the scientific observations of Chakravarty will ring true. “What struck me,” she says, “is that the runners we studied were still running, well into their 70s and 80s.” They weren’t running far, she says. They weren’t running frequently. They averaged perhaps 90 minutes a week. “But they were still running.” 


MIZUNO IS GREEN

August 17, 2009

Colin has been telling us the green story about Mizuno for a while now. I’m happy to see that treehugger.com finally picked up on it. Way to go Mizuno, and everyone knows that the Wave Rider is my shoe of choice…check out the following link: http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/08/downing_a_dose_1.php.


Chase’s lost text

August 14, 2009

Last Wednesday, we ran throughout the Supply Pond and saw many interesting things including a scary deer that was either rabid or robotic. After a vigorous run to the waterfall, we soothed our toes in the cool rapid, running water in a much needed rest. After a short run we found ourselves at a large swampish pond which some people elected to trench through, for some reason, instead of taking the clear path…some people are just not that observant and I’m not naming names (coughs…”Caroline”! Tracy was noticeably absent as she was yesterday, another uncomfortable hot day. Does anyone, besides me, see a connection?


FREE ENTRY FOR NEW HAVEN ROAD RACE

August 14, 2009

FREE ENTRY

Get a FREE entry to the New Haven Road Race by contributing to the Cindy Lynn Sherwin Memorial Foundation — Here’s how:

FREE REGISTRATION COMPLETE!


TAX FREE WEEK

August 14, 2009

TAX FREE WEEK

August 16 through August 22

It applies to:

Footwear and apparel under $300 (per item).


USA Masters 15 km Championships Set for Labor Day in Buffalo

August 14, 2009

The USA Masters 15 km Championships will be held on Labor Day (Sept. 7) in Buffalo, N.Y.  The championship is part of the Fleet Feet Run Into Buffalo 15 km.   The race will feature a great urban course and a fantastic post race party.  The race will start and finish at Canalside at the Central Wharf, a brand new park in downtown Buffalo built around the terminals of the historic Erie Canal.

A total of $7,100 will be awarded to athletes competing in the championships.  A list of athletes currently entered in the championships is available on the USATF website.


SOLES4SOULS

August 12, 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

soundRunner ANNOUNCES SHOE DRIVE TO BENEFIT

SOLES4SOULS™ Inc., THE SHOE CHARITY, AT 1088 Main Street in Branford and 762 Boston Post Road in Madison , on Saturday, September 5, and Sunday, September 6.

ALL residents are invited to recycle their ‘gently worn’ shoes for people in need and receive $10 off a pair of shoes to be purchased that day (not to be combined with other discounts).

Nashville, TN – August 14, 2009 – Every 13 seconds, Soles4Souls, Inc. gives away another pair of shoes to someone in need.  The shoe charity has earned glowing endorsements from Hollywood stars and professional athletes, but the people that truly make the non-profit organization effective are those who clean out their closets to personally drop off their ‘gently worn’ shoes at a participating location, such as soundRunner.

Soles4Souls and soundRunner will be collecting your gently worn footwear and/or donations to ship the shoes to a person in need, whether they are victims of a natural disaster or subject to living in extreme poverty.  It is estimated that Americans have 1.5 billion pairs of unused shoes lying in their closets. The charity can use each and every one of these pairs to make a tangible difference in someone’s life.

“We can use the shoes taking up space in your closet to change the world one pair at a time,” Elsey said.  “We need our partners in soundRunner to ‘STEP UP’ and get behind our call for action.  It’s one of the most simple yet profound gifts you can make, because it will greatly improve someone’s life in the most difficult of times,” he said.

soundRunner has been participating in this “needed” for several years and has sent hundreds of gently worn shoes to be distributed among individuals in need.

People and companies interested in donating can visit the organization’s website at www.giveshoes.org, and follow the instructions.

About Soles4Souls

Nashville-based Soles4Souls™ facilitates the donations of both new and gently worn shoes, which are used to aid the hurting worldwide. Soles4Souls has distributed more than 5 million pairs (currently donating one pair every 13 seconds) to people in over 125 countries, including Honduras, Uganda, Romania, and the United States.  The charity has been featured recently in Runner’s World and the Green Guide by National Geographic.  It has also appeared on CNN, NBC, ABC, FOX, CBS, BCC and hundreds of regional outlets around North America.  Soles4Souls is a 501(c) (3) recognized by the IRS; donating parties are eligible for tax advantages. Visit www.giveshoes.org for more information.

CONTACTS:

Local contact, Julie Francis, soundRunner, 203-483-8222

Kim Dettwiller, Soles4Souls, 615-330-5656, kimd@giveshoes.org

Chris Carmichael, 503-319-1726, chrisc@giveshoes.org


Awards

August 9, 2009

If anyone neglected to pick up their award from the recent soundRUNNER Sea Legs Shuffle, you can pick them up at the Branford store. It you are unable to get to the store please contact us at 203.483.8222 (Branford) or 203.318.8190 (Madison).

Congratulations to all.

For results, go to: www.jbsports.com

For photos, go to: www.capstonephotos.com