I started thinking about new ways to get into the zone after watching this TED conference video by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (pronounced "Chick-sent-me-a-high-E"):Chick-sent-me-high-E"):
Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi: Creativity, fulfillment and flow
One of the results of his study is a graph that compares the challenge of an activity vs. the perceived skill that you have in doing the activity. The intersections of the two fall into mental state zones with Flow (or "in the zone") in the upper right where a high challenge is being met with a high skill level. If you think about the things you do every day, it's pretty easy to figure out where they should be placed on the graph and it's pretty perceptive in figuring out your mental attitude toward those tasks.
I printed out my version of his diagram and I try to mentally graph my tasks onto the chart. Then I try to find ways to alter the tasks to shift them toward the upper right (or at least the middle).

I'm reading his book FLOW: The Psychology of Optimal Experience now and it is great as well. It is providing a lot of insights into my personal behaviors that I have hypothesized about and it's interesting to see that worldwide research supports them.
I'll find myself in the zone (or the "Flow") at various times during a programming project, usually when I concentrate enough to start a new part of the project where I have to really apply my skills or research and learn new skills. Once that part is over and the drudgery of repeating and refactoring code, documenting, testing, etc. start it's much harder.
Unfortunately, by Csikszentmihalyi's definitions, reading the web, reading books, talking with friends, and participating in things like SO are also "flow" activities, so they are particularly easy to get distracted by and locked in for a long period of time.
Because of that, Leechblock has been my biggest help in staying on task. I haven't had to add SO to my daily blocks yet, but I do have a special category for it where I can do a "lockdown" on it if I get too distracted.
