Greek History

The Independent reveals that satellite photography techniques have finally allowed historians to read a vast collection of ancient Greek & Roman documents. Known as the Oxyrhynchus Papyri, the collection was discovered in Egypt in the late 1800s and has been stored in Oxford University ever since. Should be interesting to see what lessons we’ll learn.

Final Run

Got up this morning, and while Jacqui went off to her exercise class, I went for my last run of the week. Felt pretty good, so did 4 laps this time instead of 2, for a total time of 20mins and approximately 3.6km.

There was a film crew at Diamond Bay who seemed to be filming a Toyota commercial. There was a Kluger and a RAV4 parked right at the cliff edge and a couple of guys with surfboards around, so it will be interesting to see what the final result comes out as.

WK2: S: 100m – R: 7.2km – W: 3 sessions

Stiff

Made it to the gym this morning just after 7am. It took longer to warm up than going in the evening, and seemed to be a bit harder to lift than it was on Wednesday. Whether that’s due to the time, or the fact that it’s my third gym session of the week I couldn’t say. Had a big feed afterwards to keep my energy up for the lunch-time swim…

200 warm up

2 * {100 K/200 FS} on 5:30

200 swim down

Total: 1000m

…which didn’t go to well. I’d eaten too much for breakfast (who knew pasta would take 4 hours to digest?) so was a bit bloated. Couple that with the fact that my arms were exhausted after the morning’s weights session and I decided to call it quits after a km.

WK2: S: 1000m – R: 3.6km – W: 3 sessions

Slime Mould

The ABC reports that new slime-mould beetles have been named after the US administration:

Two former Cornell University entomologists named three species in the genus Agathidium after the US leaders, Cornell has announced.

Quentin Wheeler and Kelly Miller christened 65 new species of slime-mould beetles, named for the fungi-like moulds on which they feed, which they discovered after collecting thousands of specimens for a study of their evolution and classification.

Early Morning

Last week, at the start of Fitness Phase 2, I decided that I’d try getting up earlier in the morning so I’d have more time to do stuff. After about 10.30pm there’s nothing interesting on TV (apart from Lateline maybe) so there’s not much point staying up. I figured that I’d start getting up at 6 and go to bed around 10.30 and see how that worked out.

The plan was to do some exercise in the morning before going in to work, but I’ve been a bit knackered so I usually just go straight in to work, arriving around 7am. It sounds crazy, but the plus side is that I can clock off around 4pm, exercise then instead and still be home at a reasonable hour.

It’s all been working out well so far, and I’m slowly getting used to crawling out of bed at that hour. This morning was the first time I managed to do some morning exercise as I went for my short run again. I put the iPod Shuffle on the arm-band and off I went. It’s pretty nice being out and about at that hour, with the sun low in the sky and some classical music for company. There’s a surprising number of people around as well, with lots of chicks doing their power-walking and a group of dog owners chatting while their pets ran around barking at each other. I could get used to this.

Oh yeah, the run was the same as Tuesday. About 10mins, 2 laps, average lap time of 4:45. I’ll take the MTB out tonight to measure the loop if I get time.

Wk 2: R: 3.2km – W: 2 sessions

Running

I haven’t done any running for ages, so I decided that it was about time I got back into it. Went for a short run around the park last night after work, and seeing as how I’m so crap at it I decided to limit myself to 10mins or so and build up from there. The intention is to get three 10min runs in this week, and then increase by about 5mins per week from there. I did just over two laps of the park at an average time of 4m 50s.

I’ve no idea how long a lap of the park is, so I decided to time a lap of the marked rugby pitch, then find out what the dimensions of a rugby pitch are and work my speed out from that (nerd)! So, doing all the calcuations gives me a run speed of 11.25km/h, and 1 lap distance of 900m. Given that rugby dimensions are not set in stone, and that I used the maximum, my speed is probably a little slower, but I’ll get my bike computer set up on my MTB and use that to figure the distance out once and for all.

Week 2: R: 1.8km – W: 1 session

Weigh-In - Week 2

Weighed in at 86.4kg yesterday morning.

Skipped the lunch time swim to meet an old collegaue who i hadn’t seen for quite a while, but went to the gym after work. The weights program I am doing is divided into four 4-week segments. I’m in the first of these segments at the mometn, which calls for light weights and lots of reps as follows:

Low weights, minimal strain – 30 reps of:

Squats

Lat Pulldown

Knee Extension

Hamstring Curl

Bent-arm Pulldown

Bench Press

Bicep Curl

Core

Calf Raise

Seated Row

Dips (machine)

Tricep Extension

The idea behind the low weight/minimal strain approach is that your muscles respond to work much quicker than your joints & connective tissues, leading to an imbalance and hence greater potential for injury. To combat this, a slow build-up is appropriate before increasing the weights and decreasing the reps in the later segments of the program. This segment is the ‘adaptation’ phase, where you’re not really doing any significant lifting, just getting your body used to the idea.

I usually precede the weights with a 10min row as a warm-up too, gradually getting faster as the clock counts down.

Week 2: W: 1 session

University

The original article was about bias in political science university courses, but I think the following quote sums up quite accurately what the aim of a third-level education really is:

The question is, whether students come out of the class having learned to reason about a set of problems or not. The content is not as important, since they’ll forget a lot of the content anyway, and will receive it selectively, both during and after the class. But if you teach them to take things apart and see how they work, to think about social and political causation, to see how things work together, in a particular field, then they can produce their own knowledge and understanding about it thereafter.

Juan Cole

Going well

Just back from a good swim session at lunch. Felt a bit tired, but not as bad as on Monday, so managed to finish the session quite comfortably. Was a little bit stiff after weights yesterday but no ill effects apart from that.

400 warm up

200 IM

4 * 400 FS, last 50 BC on 6:10 (5:55)

4 * {

100 FS on 1:40

100 IM on 1:40 }

100 swim down

Total: 3100m

Week 1: S: 4800m – W: 2 sessions

Gym

Joined the gym at Cook & Phillip yesterday and did my first session. I plan on taking it pretty easy for the first few weeks, just to get used to doing weights again without killing myself. Will write more on my intended program later.

Week 1: S: 1700m – W: 1