TRAINING LEAD-UP
Thursday, Jun 12:
I went to the USNWC to try to show my dad the fireflies. It started raining and thundering, though, so we found a shortcut out and only went 1.5 miles in 38:26.
Friday, Jun 13:
Went to Coleman's to test some hand loads that Andy had given me. The weather had looked ok when I went out, but by the time I got there, it looked like it would be raining for a while, so I didn't bother to try to wait for more ideal conditions. Maybe not great for controlled ammo experiments, but I didn't want to wait forever before giving feedback.
To keep the experiment clean, I torqued everything beforehand and used a heavy fill Schmedium Waxed Canvas GC. I only brought MDT Grnd-Pods, though... Ckye-pods would've been more stable.
I had already cleaned the rifle, so I started with 3 fouling rounds with the test ammo... supposedly, it matters that even fouling be done with the test ammo.
These handloads were taller than my Norma Golden Target Match 6.5CMs, so chambering requires removing and re-inserting the mag.
During testing, you want to make sure that the barrel stays at a consistent temp, which meant that I had to let the barrel cool between shots. I spent 60 minutes shooting 18 rounds. I was conscious about my breaths and consistency between shots. I only had so many of these hand loads, so I couldn't afford to mess any of the shots up.
Parallax seemed ok... any movement seemed like it was more from the pressure of my cheek on teh light gun.
Despite the rain, the reticle position on target through the glass seemed very stable and unaltered.
As cases were ejected, smoke would come off of them for a while... probably the humidity mixed with the heat.
My 5-rd group sizes were 0.55, 0.77, and 0.48 MOA. Chrono was 2640 ave, 15SD, 56ES.
I then repeated with Norma Golden Target (with no extra cleaning prior), to have a comparison, in case some of the group size was due to me or other factors.
I ended up with 0.83, 0.60, and 0.82 MOA on the Norma. Chrono was 2602 ave, 17SD, 68ES. This took a lot of patience to go through, needing to wait between shots and make every shot as perfect as possible.
After testing the ammo, I did Armored Eagle Training's June drill, where you shoot 10 rounds on a 1" square from 5yd with no time cap. I ended up yanking just one.
I went to the pistol arcade for some nice covered shooting, doing Scott's Drill and then a bit of El Pres + Plate Rack.
Minimize movement... arms only, no head/neck. Get rid of allll the slack before being fully pressed out, so that you're not doing it at the very end and yanking.
It was a night shooting evening at Coleman's, so I spent the rest of the night shooting at steel under NODS with frangible. With the weather, nobody else was out, so I explored the bays under NODS and practiced dry movements, too. It was great practice. With the MAWL on the rifle, it's almost like a laser training aid, too, where you can see where your NPA is if you turn it on when you think you're about on target.
Saturday, Jun 14:
9.5 mi trail run at Latta Nature Preserve in 2:44:09 in Innov-8 X-talons trying to stay in Zone 2, with an average HR of 127bpm. I did have to do one sprint to outrun a bug that was chasing me. I drank 2/3 of a bottle of water that I kept in my Goodwerks Boogie Bag. I did 771ft of ascent, and it was 85 degrees and mostly cloudy.
My dad came along, too, and he walked while I ran.
Sunday, Jun 15:
18A "Upper Body Prep" in 19:38, then HDT "Sanddoom" 20 min AMRAP with a 40#SB with 6 rounds and 13 reps, not palming the sandbag and taking a break before OH presses on the last few rounds, knowing that I'd otherwise break the set.
I did a finisher of 50 4-ct flutter kicks with a 30#RPC, followed by a 1 min high plank with the 30#RPC.
Tuesday, Jun 17:
At Blackstone, I did some ball and dummy with the G19C to practice with irons at 7yd.
I did some full mags afterwards to practice front sight acquisition, since that's what you need to get used to again when switching from red dot back to irons. I'm also trying to avoid looking at the target and staying front-sight focused.
18A "Dynamic Warmup" in 27:42 nose breathing, then HDT-KB 12.4.2 (core) in 21:14 surprisingly not that easy.
DEKA FIT
I had done a Deka Strong before back in 2022, but this was my first chance at doing a Deka Fit, which I prefer, since it involves more running. I researched the exercises and techniques and format a bit on Youtube beforehand, since I wanted to do well.
I volunteered to be able to run it for free, but even though everyone else registering was either in the age group, team, elite, or ruck division, all volunteers were put under the open division and weren't eligible for age group prizes, even though we ran under the same rules. That's what I ended up really liking about Deka... form is enforced, and there are judges checking reps and calories and everything. At Spartan Races, people in open heats can skip obstacles or penalties or help each other on the obstacles. At Deka, there is no open heat, other than the odd heat category they put the volunteers in.
Fortunately, spoiler alert, I wasn't quite fast enough to podium this time, so it didn't end up mattering. I had put up a good time, though, and I'd be even better with actual run training. I know to avoid the volunteer heat in the future.
I ran in the first heat. It is nice to not have congestion on the running paths, and it was a bit cooler in the morning. You run 2 laps before going into an exercise station and repeat for 10 stations.
- 30 RAM Alternating Reverse Lunges
- 500 Meter Row
- 20 Box Jump/Step Overs
- 25 Medicine Ball Sit-Up Throws
- 500 Meter Ski Erg
- 100 Meter Farmer's Carry
- 25 Calories Air Bike
- 20 Dead Ball Wall Overs
- 100 Meter Tank Push/Pull
- 20 RAM Burpees
They do a pretty good job of alternating the type of exercise that you're doing.
Started off strong with the run. They release people in mini-waves of 5 or so at a time, which is good. There was another woman in my group who was fast, so I tried to keep up with her, but I think after a few laps, she passed me.
After the race, my dad picked me up, since I was in the area, and I took him to Kannapolis to see the downtown area. It was sunny. There are cool things to see there, like the loop around the research buildings, the ballpark, the shopping area, the fountain, and the train station.
Afterwards, we went to Frank Liske Park to do the loop there. It's a pretty big park with a variety of things to do. There are some water features that make it nice.
We still had time to kill before my volunteer shift, so we sat in the park to snack for a bit, before shopping at TJX / Homegoods, etc.
I then went back for my volunteer shift, counting reps for the last heats in the race, before helping with tear-down.
Deka was a lot of fun. I like the environment... people all pushing themselves against the same, enforced standards. It was like a fitness festival.