Sunday, July 28, 2024

the food question

In 2018, I didn't do a trans-Korea walk because I was visiting America and France. I spent two weeks in France at my buddy's place in Le Vanneau-Irleau, and much of that time was spent walking. When I sat down to eat with my French family, the food was always good and nutritious, and as a result of a better diet and nearly constant exercise, I lost 6 kg in two weeks. That roughly corresponds to the average amount of weight I lose during my trans-Korea walks, i.e., about 10-12 kg in a month while burning around 3500 calories a day (a figure I've had to whittle down over the years as my body became used to the exercise).*

This year, I'm going to see whether I can lose even more weight. Now that I'm more or less used to the idea of walking while in a fasted state, I'm going to eat only Survival Tabs on certain days (eleven days, to be exact). Remember those tablets? They first got a mention here, then some photos here. They're these huge tablets that you chew on (see photo below); they provide a bare-minimum number of calories plus a day's worth of nutrition for an average-sized human being. Burning 3500 calories a day while taking in only about 400 calories ought to induce some weight loss. However, I'll also be eating the Tabs on my off days as a way not to load up on calories when I'm not really exercising. Meanwhile, I'll be eating regular meals on most of the days I'm walking over 25-30 kilometers. Over 20 days, it'll be 11 days on Survival Tabs and 9 days having regular meals. One of those regular-meal days will be when I'm in the city of Namji, where two of my favorite on-the-trail restaurants are located (NeNe Chicken and the Chinese restaurant located next door to it).

a few of my many bags of Survival Tabs—strawberry, butterscotch, vanilla, chocolate

official photo of Tabs out of their package (found here)

My father used to call large pills, like multivitamins and certain medicines, "horse tablets." Luckily, Survival Tabs are the kind of horse tablets that you can chew, so even though they're chalky and taste a lot like powdered milk, they go down easy.

Food is related to the larger health question, and if you've been following my main blog, you know my health is shaky. In 2021, I suffered a minor stroke that put me in the hospital for a week, and this year, I had severe breathing problems that returned me to the ER. I ended up staying in the hospital for three or four days, and I was told I'm suffering from a type of heart failure: severe left-ventricular systolic dysfunction. For practical purposes, this basically means that God has placed the cardiac version of a car's velocity-limiter on my heart: if I ingest too much in the way of carbs, I get angina, the chest pain that can be a precursor to a heart attack. As long as I stick to foods that only minimally spike my blood sugar, I feel perfectly fine, but I guess this is God's way of telling me that, if I'm not going to curb my bad dietary habits on my own, he's going to do it for me, in his own harsh manner: Eat carbs, you die.

So wherever possible during my walk, I'll try to eat at Korean restaurants, which generally serve nutritious fare (as opposed to Korean street kiosks, which are all carbs), and I can avoid things like rice on the side or pasta. I will no longer be noshing on Snicker's bars or downing regular Cokes when I happen to pass by a convenience store; at such stores, I'll more likely buy fruits (carby, but filled with water and fiber, thus minimizing carb impact), nuts, and diet drinks (or just good old water). If it's a store that sells "lunchbox"-style meals, and it's the only place in the area to get food, I'll eat those meals but avoid the rice. Much about my diet has to change, and this walk is an opportunity for me to discipline myself even more strictly.

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*That's 3500 activity calories on top of my basal metabolic rate, which is around 1800 calories. Expending 5300 calories on a walk day ain't so bad. It's just distance and time and a little bit of effort. As I've said before, on these walks, I'm my best self.



Saturday, July 27, 2024

tees now available!

Kevin's Walk
Gukto Jongju, Nakdong River Path
(bottom) Total Distance: 403 km

2024
GTJJ = Gukto Jongju
NDGG = Nakdonggang-gil (Nakdong River Path)
DBYH = Dobo-yeohaeng (walk or walking trip)

The new walk-tee design is now ready for sale. The "403 km in 20 days" line feels a little cringey: anyone can do the math and see that that averages out to only a bit more than 20 km a day, which isn't much. Between you and me, though: I'm taking six break days because quite a few of those segments are actually over 30 km in length. My longest segment is, in fact, 40 km. I've done longer, but that's still a pretty big chunk for an unathletic guy to do in a day. So 403 km over 14 walking days (plus I'll be walking on my "off" days as well) averages out to 28.8 km, which is a bit more impressive for the regular folks. For you pampered people who've been following these walks, you know that 28 or 29 km in a day isn't that big of a deal.

Meanwhile, go get yourself a tee! Shop link is on the sidebar.



Friday, July 19, 2024

walk dates now locked in!

I went to my once-in-several-months doctor's appointment today, and my next appointment will be on October 15, which happens to be my brother Sean's birthday. On October 15, then, I'll visit the doc, go back to my place, grab my stuff, and train down to Busan. The following morning, preferably early, I'll wake up, grab a cab from Busan Station to the Nakdong River Barrage (낙동강하굿둑 or 하구둑), then walk the Nakdong River trail backwards (this is gonna feel weird) to Yangsan City and the Bliss Hotel. 

I've already updated my itinerary, so if you click the itinerary link on the right-hand sidebar, you'll see the now-settled schedule. The only thing that still needs to be filled out is the daily step count, and I'll be filling those numbers in every day as I walk so I can finally arrive at a walk total. As per usual, I will not be relying on MapMyWalk to measure distances because the app is so battery-intensive. It's fine for shorter walks of up to three hours, but for eight- and nine-hour walks, it's no good. I'm battery-obsessive enough as it is.

It occurs to me that I'll be finishing the walk on November 4—just before Election Day in the States. Yikes. I didn't plan it that way, I swear.

So, to reiterate: the walk will be from October 15 to November 4 this year—twenty days, with many of those being rest days. This will be a comfortable, fairly lazy walk (with some long-ass segments thrown in) that will finish at the Andong Dam, a very exciting, beautiful, and auspicious place to end. I'm pumped: at a tiny bit more than 400 kilometers, this is going to be a much shorter walk than usual, but it'll be along one of my favorite parts of the Four Rivers trail: the Nakdong River. I'm really looking forward to this.



Thursday, July 18, 2024

shoes: update 2

It's been a bit more than a week, and I've been wearing the new Skechers this entire time. The bad news is that there's a tightness across the top of my left foot—bad enough to cause minor irritation leading to a small abrasion. The pain is irritating and distracting but not excruciating. I solved the problem with a little cross of Leukotape across the instep, and things have been fine since. They're good shoes; maybe they need a little breaking in. Every shoe is different.

what it looks like after a few days of wear



Thursday, July 11, 2024

the shoes update

I did my first 9K walk with my new shoes last night, and the walk went well. The new shoes (still Skechers, like last year) feel just like the previous shoes, but they're a little easier to slip on thanks to the new design, which was explicitly intended for us laces-hating, slip-on-slip-off types. There was a tiny bit of friction on the top of my left foot, but it appeared and disappeared during the walk, so here's hoping that the act of breaking the shoes in will take care of that little problem. If not, I can figure out some way to pad or bandage that part of my foot to protect it.

Aside from that, the new pair feels like a continuation of the old pair. The soles, being spanking new, haven't yet worn down from thousands of kilometers of walking, so it feels a little bit as if I were floating: there's a bouncy, cushiony aspect to my steps. I'll be taking the shoes for a longer walk this weekend. Suffice it to say they get a thumbs-up from me.



Wednesday, July 10, 2024

shoeses, Precious

I became a believer a year or so ago when my boss suggested I try the same type of shoes he wears. My boss is a big, bulky guy like me, so I shrugged and told him I'd give the shoes a shot. They were Skechers—a relatively cheap brand often looked down upon by serious hikers and walkers. I made a lot of noise about how I might need to take along an extra pair in case my main pair wore out, but as it turned out, the shoes were great, being stretchable and not needing any tying or untying of laces. At the time, there were no black walking shoes in my size, but this year, the boss managed to find and order a black pair, which just arrived.

note the flared-out rear of the shoe, allowing for easier slip-on and slip-off

I could probably do without the funny red coins on the sole.

The configuration of the new shoes' soles is better than that of my previous pair of shoes: the previous pair looked like huge, puffy pieces of bubble gum, with large gaps in the tread that allowed pebbles to get wedged into them. This new pair seems less likely to trap pebbles.

While my feet aren't really size 13 (closer to 11), the 13 has a decent toe box, allowing my toes to spread fairly comfortably. I'm still going to end up with my usual blisters, wounds, and irritations when I do the walk this fall, but overall, the shoes will still be fairly comfortable.

I'll be taking my first long walk in these shoes tonight (my 9K route to the Han/Tan confluence and back) and will report whatever I discover. My main hope is that this new pair will turn out to be just as durable as the previous pair.



Wednesday, July 3, 2024

first post!

Welcome to this fully armed and operational walk blog, Kevin's Walk 8, for 2024. Expect big things as we build up to the walk in the fall. I haven't yet nailed down the exact dates for the trek; you can check out my itinerary (link is on the sidebar); the dates on that document are, for the moment, all dummy dates subject to change when I have a definite time period.

For those who haven't been following things over at my main blog, this year's walk is substantially shorter than the 633-kilometer trek I normally do along the Four Rivers trail. This year, I'm doing only the Nakdong River Gukto Jongju* (낙동강 국토종주), which comes out to about 385 km for the trail itself. Because my stopping points are off the trail, my total actual distance will be a little over 400 km.

Check back here for prose and pics. All walk-related thoughts will, from now on, find their way onto this blog as opposed to on my main blog.

The blog banner shows what I'll see on my final day of walking: the massive Andong Dam, which holds back the even more massive Andong Lake. I had wanted to think that the Nakdong River's source was Andong Lake, but no—the river actually comes out the other side of the lake and snakes along to who-knows-where. (Saying "comes out the other side" is a bit misleading: the river flows from the other side, then flows roughly southward out of Andong Lake toward Busan.) I tried following the river's eastward path on a map and got lost, and it looks as though there's no real bike trail on the other side of the lake, so I'm not sure how walkable the Nakdong River is on that side. Something to explore later, perhaps.

Right—well, welcome, once again, to this newest walk blog. If you're curious, check out my previous walks, each with its own blog and all of them linked on the sidebar.

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*Guk/국 = country
To/토 = soil, land, etc.
Jongju = end-to-end path

The path across the nation's land. Or something like that.

Traditionally, a jongju/종주 was a path along the craggy crest of a mountain range, from beginning to end. The meaning has since expanded, and it's used to describe many trails, especially bike paths, that run across South Korea with very few hills and mountains. There are big gukto jongju like the Four Rivers trail, which runs from Incheon to Busan; there's the east-coast gukto jongju that runs from the way-up-northeast Unification Observatory all the way down to Busan. There are also smaller paths that are arguably misnamed gukto jongju, including a local bike path that passes by my neighborhood.