The middle of the
pack: my first ultrarunning experience
My decision to run
Over the last few months I have run more than I ever have.
When I got in the lottery for the Way too Cool 50KM race, I was stoked and
scared. I had run 5 half marathons and capped off my summer last year by
running a 35KM race. The 35KM race I ran was in the Sierra Foothills and
overlapped with the Way Too Cool course for a few miles, so I had a general
feel for the terrain and knew what I was getting into. I had told myself that I
wanted to be less than 220 pounds before I signed up for an ultra-marathon
race. I had lost weight during the summer while training (from 270ish down to
245). Even though I wasn’t there yet, I figured that may the next bout of
training would help me shed the pounds.
Training
I started ramping up from the 20-25 miles per week of maintenance-mode
running to 40+, hitting 46 and 47 miles in the weeks around Christmas and continuing
on up from there, topping out at 56, including a 25 miler the last week of
January. February offered a lot of challenges with my kids getting a stomach
bug and multiple colds. These involved sleepless night in various chairs
holding kids. Not the best situation – and we topped off the month with a trip
to the hospital with one of our daughters and adding new preventative medicines
for them. As for my weight, I dropped down to 230 during this ramp up. Not as
much loss as I had wanted, but I felt a lot stronger and capable than I had
been going into the other races I did.
Race week
Like every taper I have done for swimming or for running,
all the little aches and pains started bugging me. I had a pretty intense week
in the lab as well, doing a lot of experiments for my own projects and helping
out with some other peoples’ projects as well.
As race day approached I got more and more nervous about how I was
feeling and about whether I would finish or not. Thirty-one miles is not short
and sweet. It isn’t long by some standards, but I had never run more than the two
25 milers I did in training, so 31 miles was uncharted territory for me.
My brother flew in from Seattle on Friday and the kids and I
picked him up at the airport. We ran a bunch of errands, met my wife, April,
for dinner and then we got on our way. My brother is a more experienced runner
than I am having done a couple marathons and a 50KM last fall. He re-assured me
that we would both finish, that I had done the training and now it was time to
go enjoy the course and have a good time. This reassurance was nice and
necessary – there is nobody like your brother and oldest friend to reassure
you. We slept a sound night in a Roseville hotel the night before the race and
were able to sleep in until 6am, which is late for us.
The race itself
I was issued a wave two start, meaning I would start 10
minutes behind my brother and what seemed the vast majority of runners. The
first mile was on the road and then we hit the trail to go down the Olmstead
loop trail to Knickerbocker Creek. Hitting the creek was the first stream
crossing of 12 or so for the day. Instead of waiting for people to cross, I
just ran right through the water knowing that there would be a ton of water and
mud throughout the course. I tried to ease myself into a steady moderate pace
that was comfortable and settled in with a couple other folks for the first (8
mile) loop back to the starting area while nursing down a Clif Gel. I hit the 8
mile mark in 1:20, which I knew was on the quick side for pacing for the day,
but I was feeling good, so I picked up an S-cap and a gel and was on my way.
I knew the next bit of trail pretty well having run it
during the 35KM race I did, but it was a muddy mess with several streams
running through it unlike the dry dusty trail I experienced the previous fall.
But the huge vertical drop was still the same. I rushed down as fast as I could
without trashing my quads and hit the highway crossing while they were stopping
traffic for the runners. I would later learn that my brother got held up for 4
minutes waiting to cross.
The trail along the river was beautiful and I could hear the
water rushing below. Not long after crossing the highway, I saw my brother from
behind. I knew I was going out too fast and he said he was going to take it
easy for the first 20 miles, so I wasn’t too surprised, but I was thinking that
I would catch him around 20 miles, not 13. I didn’t work to catch him, but, I saw
him leaving the Maine Bar aid station at mile 16.7 and just said “hi” to him at
that point, as he was leaving the aid station and I was just getting there. I
wouldn’t see him again until the end, and his splits show to be much more even than
mine were.
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Me, on Quarry Road, about half done. Photo from ultrarunnerpodcast.com. |
Around mile 17 I heard a guy talking behind me saying he was
from Point Reyes Station. I turned around and asked him if he was Josh who I
had randomly followed on Strava. I randomly followed him because I like to look
at the maps of West Marin and dream about running the trails out there. We
stuck together chatting and running a solid pace until just after we left the
Goat Hill aid station.
Somewhere around mile 23 or 24 I caught my toe on a rock and went down pretty hard cutting my finger. The worst part of it was actually getting the gel I was carrying all over my hand and shirt; that stuff is sticky. Falling does very little to raise your confidence, however, and I was being a little more timid with pacing after the fall. At mile 26 we started the most brutal ascent in the race, Goat Hill. This knocked me for a loop. Not that it was a huge climb, but it was a steep climb and also that it comes as you finish the marathon distance. Getting to the top was a relief, but I was pretty well spent and ended up eating a bit too much at the aid station. At this point, Josh wanted to put some time on me and try to beat me since I started in wave 2, which was 10 minutes behind him.
With the combination of having fallen, climbing Goat Hill, having
my new friend take off at a faster pace than I could stay with, and eating one
too many Oreo cookies, my wheels sort of fell off. Over the last four miles,
there was a big descent and then another climb to the finish. Thankfully there
was another aid station right before the climb, where I filled my water bottles and
got doused in cold water before heading up the hill to the finish line back
near the Cool firehouse. The climb seemed to go on and on, though it was only a
mile long. It was sure nice to see the top and know the finish line was in
sight.
I tried to kick it up a notch at that point, with a half mile
left, but I had very little left in my legs. I ran in through the mud splashing
my way and enjoying the cheers and having my name read over the PA. As I got my
medal and a water I saw my brother and Josh right there waiting, having
finished not too long before me.
Post-race celebration
After chatting with Brett Rivers, who took 4th
place, for a minute or two, we headed over to the food. The race organizers had
pizza and cupcakes, as well as fruit and soda. Thanks to Victor Ballesteros at Victory
Sports design, we ended up getting a Hill 88 IPA from Headlands Brewing Company
as well. We got a hat from Strava as well and chatting with some of my new
Pamakid Runner teammates. We looked around the other vendors. We probably
should have waited for a spot on the table at Monsters of Massage, but we opted
to walk back to the car. This was the longest mile of the day. I took off the
shoes and put them in a bag and then changed to flip-flops and cotton cloths
for the drive home. The drive home was uneventful, thankfully, and I was even
able to get out of the car unassisted afterwards.
When we got back to my house, April had fixed a wonderful
recover meal of wind salmon, kale, asparagus and garlic mashed potatoes. It was
awesome, considering the amount of sugar that I consumed during the run. Sleeping was a bit more difficult and didn’t
really come until I took some Advil at 3 AM. Nothing was sharply painful, but
every part of my lower body was sore. Still is, really since it is only a few
hours later.
Special thanks
To my wife, April for putting up with the extra hours of training, especially the sessions that went overnight. Thanks to my brother, Tom, who has been a life-long inspiration and a sort of mentor in this running thing. Thanks to my dad, for showing me what master's level athletics is all about through his life-long swimming activities, and to both of my parents for all of the help they provide in my day-to-day life. Thanks to Josh Luftig for helping me through those miles with good conversation. Thanks to Victor for the beers. And finally thanks to all the race volunteers for doing such a great job and to all the people out cheering on the runners.
This race on Strava:Special thanks
To my wife, April for putting up with the extra hours of training, especially the sessions that went overnight. Thanks to my brother, Tom, who has been a life-long inspiration and a sort of mentor in this running thing. Thanks to my dad, for showing me what master's level athletics is all about through his life-long swimming activities, and to both of my parents for all of the help they provide in my day-to-day life. Thanks to Josh Luftig for helping me through those miles with good conversation. Thanks to Victor for the beers. And finally thanks to all the race volunteers for doing such a great job and to all the people out cheering on the runners.
Stay tuned for the next adventure.