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| This view lessened the pain of our runs. |
The Polar Vortex has worn on all of us this winter. All of
us. My students who live in Alabama and Florida tell me about their “freezing”
temperatures. And I reserve all judgment because, after all, they’re
experiencing their coldest temperatures too. Even we thick-blooded northerners
are feeling the pain of colder-than-average temperatures. As a result, dozens
of the local yocals have sought a respite.
So did we this weekend.
Only the Troxells go further north during the coldest months
of the year for vacation.
On Friday shortly after 5am we roused the blessings and
headed north to Duluth for a little respite from the norm. We basked in the
beauty of the north woods as we caught up with friends and engaged in some
great training sessions with fitter-than-us friends and played with the kids.
All in all, it was a great weekend. Here are a few of the highlights:
- A great start: we anchored the weekend with an excellent week of training—some of the best we’ve put in so far thanks to a bit looser schedule (hooray for Nikki’s Winter Break from classes!)
- Fastest trip ever to Duluth: the blessings did wonderful as we booked it to Duluth and made the best time we’ve ever made on this trip as a family.
- Sadie: This has nothing to do with training but much to do with last week. Sadie is our one-year-old who has decided to keep us on our toes more than any of the other children. She doesn’t make the blog lots because, well, she’s one. She does what one-year-olds do. But after this week I’m going to give her a new name: Houdini. This week she did things none of our other kids have ever done. Tuesday: she stuck a pea so far up her nose I had to use a tweezers to extract it. Thursday night: she took off her own diaper. I found her bottom-side up asleep in her crib when I checked on her before turning in myself. Friday and then Sunday again: she worked her way out of two points in the five-point harness in her carseat. Seriously, how does a kid do that? And then she opened her own window. You think she wanted out? The stinker. We love her.
- Caribou Coffee: it anchors our stops. Mr. T. plans this particular trip according to the Bou locations along the way. We drive until we arrive at a Caribou OR someone demonstrates a dire need for a potty stop.
- Supper at Grandma’s Restaurant. Mr. T. found a spacious hotel room near Canal Park, walking distance from both Grandma’s Restaurant and Caribou Coffee. So Friday night after some time in the hotel pool with the kids, we caught up with friends over some of the best food that Duluth has to offer in an historic building.
- Five people in one hotel room. Family vacation with three little blessings doesn’t mean lots of sleep, but it does mean lots of memories. Our kids found ways to make the most of the hotel room, pretending they were hotel security and making “keys” out of the notepad and pen in the hotel room. They also discovered a cupboard in the room that the two biggest ones could fit in at the same time.
- GREAT workouts. We managed to put in two fantastic workouts Saturday with some friends of ours. While the dads took the kids swimming at the hotel pool, the moms did laps at EssentiaHealth’s lap pool. Then while the moms took the kids to lunch, the dads put their laps in. The runs in the afternoon worked in a similar fashion with dads and moms taking turns watching kids and running.
- Long run in subzero temps: our
friends have a screw loose, to put it nicely. They live in one of the colder
areas of the lower 48, and yet they insist on running outside. So, when in Rome
. . . we comply. With several layers on, we both took our turns at
approximately 1-hour runs in subzero temperatures (windchills hovered around
-20F). My eyelashes froze and started to stick together. My running buddy’s
pants accumulated some condensation and literally had a layer of ice on the
front. Oh, and our running companions, they both had faster paces than our regular
pace. All in all, we put in great workouts we did not enjoy in the midst but
felt great about at the end.

There's a LeSabre under there somewhere. - Snow. LOTS of snow. We thought we had winter. These people have winter. Saturday afternoon we found ourselves wandering through a residential part of Duluth thanks to a malfunctioning GPS. The snow piles and drifts dwarfed our SUV. I just wish our kids could’ve seen whatever snow removal equipment pushed this snow. Really, this quantity of snow was insane.
- Jacob’s Ladder: After we finished the swim and survived the run, the dads ran off to pick up some Papa Murphy’s while the moms recovered and took care of kids. Our buddy Jason showed Mr. T. the Anytime Fitness where he works and trains. He gave Mr. T. a brief introduction to Jacob’s Ladder, which left Mr. T. breathless after a minute. Yep, a minute. I guess it’s an effective training tool.
More than anything, this little break from regular life,
despite the subzero temperatures, offered us the chance to push the re-set
button. Life has felt somewhat like a never-ending routine, and this particular
break gave us the chance to just breathe a little and think about what we want
to accomplish in the next 30 weeks. Because we have just that amount of time
before we IMChoo. Bring it. We’ll be ready.

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