Little River 10 Mile Trail Run

Ok, so I can’t follow a plan… I was supposed to break this race up into thirds, and run easy/medium, medium, and then medium/hard, and I was going to use my HRM to stick to that plan.  I’ve got Uhwarrie 40 in two weeks so I figured it was a good idea to go “easy,” but I guess it’s not in my blood to not run hard when I’m in a race. However, I’d probably say this was an 8 out of 10 effort wise, so I wasn’t killing myself out there.

Here’s a photo from mile 4 and this makes it look like 8+ effort-wise… But this bridge was icy so maybe it was that…

dsc_0061

I’ve not worn an HRM in a race in 4 years! It was way off the 1st mile or so, and when it finally came in accurately, I decided not to worry about it. I was feeling pretty good even though it was reading right around LT level…

HR

I did accidentally grab a pair of road shoes — my Kinvara’s — instead of my trail shoes. My Mix Master 2’s are the exact same grey and red! So all the rain and snow and snow melt, which created a lot of mud, made for quite an adventure in the Kinvara’s, but I never went down, though I came close.

I ended up finishing in 1:25:07, according to my Garmin.   Here are the splits… Lots of down hill the 1st two miles, and then miles 5-10 are tough as it is on the mountain bike trail — lots of tight twisty turns and ups and downs.

Splits

Official race times:

2013 39 Sean Butler Pittsboro NC 42 16/82 M 40-49 1:25:08.8 8:31/M
2012 59 Sean Butler Pittsboro NC 41 22/83 M 40-49 1:25:09.7 8:31/M

Looking at other times from 2013 vs. 2012, seems like many runners were 1-2 minutes slower in 2013. So that plus the shoes I wore and I think I had a pretty solid run!

2012 Reading List

I definitely “fell off the wagon” a bit in 2012 in terms of reading…  I suppose I needed a bit of a break from some of the “deeper” reading I’ve done in the past, thus the higher count of “easy” fiction like The Foundation Books, the Hunger Games series, and Ender’s game and following.  I started a few other books that I never finished, but I will work on them in 2013!

The Invention of Hugo Cabret. Brian Selznick.

The_Invention_of_Hugo_Cabret

 

Riley brought this home from the Library as part of the book of the month club.  We had already seen the movie, which I loved.  The book is beautiful — the hand drawn images are used to tell the story, as are the written words, and it flows really well.  I would add this book/movie combo to the list of those in which I like the movie better than the book…  There was just some small nuances of the movie that I liked better than the book, but I won’t reveal them here.  Contact also falls into that category, and perhaps no others do.

Ridge to Bridge Marathon – Random Thoughts by Mile Marker

I’m going to try something new with this race report…  Random Thoughts by Mile Marker.  Not that I can remember all the thoughts I had exactly when I had them, of course, but I’ll give it a whirl none-the-less.

Just a bit of background, or many of the thoughts might not make sense…  I had relatively good training for this marathon, up until about mid September, when many of my runs just started feeling a bit off — heavy legs, sluggish, etc.  So while my original stretch goal was a sub 3:15, and my main goal was a sub 3:20, I figured both of those were out of reach and I was ok with that…  I didn’t have great expectations going in, but I’m also experienced to know you might just have “one of those days” out of the blue, so I hadn’t given up!

Here’s the Garmin Elevation profile:

Mile Pace Thoughts
1 7:23
  • “I’ve been housing all these doubts, and insecurities” lyric won’t leave my head!!  GET OUT!
  • hmm, feeling ok, could I have found my run?
  • don’t go out too fast!
  • dang ipod won’t work!
2 7:25
  • oh, finally got the ipod working!
  • uh-oh, feeling wheezy!  Not good! I haven’t taken albuterol in years….
  • oh, there goes Jason — bye!
3 7:31
  • wheezy wheezy wheezy
4 7:50
  • wheezy wheezy can’t breathe
  • there’s Kelly on the out and back, grab a kiss, scream “I can’t breathe!”
5 7:49
  • can’t breath
  • wow these people must think i’m crazy huffing and puffing like this so early…
6 8:21
  • ugh, a “hill”
  • can’t breathe…can’t believe I’m thinking of walking already
  • eat a gel before the water stop so i can wash it down..
  • just make it to the big downhill! then you can see what happens!
7 7:02
  • weeee!
  • wow that guy in orange is flying
8 6:57
  • woohoo — passing all those people who passed me on mile 5 and 6!
  • wonder if this is too fast??
9 7:13
  • weeeee!
  • man i wonder how my quads will handle this — hopefully not like when i previewed this hill in july
10 7:18
  • man that guy seems to be swatting flies with his right hand every step…  what crappy form!  wonder what I look like?
  • i wonder if i will have jello legs later?
  • can you run on jello?
11 7:32
  • hey, there’s the guy in orange not too far ahead
  • man that guy passing me sounds terrible!
  • hmm, I probably sound worse
12 7:23
  • passing the guy in orange!
  • Diana Krall — are you serious??!!!

 

13 7:44
  • Yeah, half done!
  • wonder if that is my half pr??
  • hmmm….
  • Oh no, half done means half to go.  wow.  :-/
14 7:30
  • Will this hill ever end?
  • Hmm, do I want it too?
  • oh no, getting passed by a couple of folks i passed up top…  :-/
15 7:33
  • there’s the bottom, finally!
  • cool, 7:30 average pace so far!  wonder what i can hold the rest of the way?
  • probably not 7:30, maybe sub 7:40 for a 3:20?
  • i can live with that…
16 7:48
  • oh, a little out and back…
  • checking out the runners in front of me
  • oh there’s Jason, check watch to see how far ahead he is
  • turn-around — oh wow all that was up hill, didn’t even notice
  • Jason is about 5 minutes ahead of me
17 7:57
  • uh-oh, wheeziness has turned into chest constriction, mostly in the back
  • can’t get a full breath
  • hold on hold on hold on
18 8:14
  • wow this is way to early to enter the pain cave
  • pain cave
  • pain cave
  • pain cave
19 8:27
  • pain cave
  • wonder if i can catch one of these pretty leaves falling down?
  • pain cave
  • come on hold on!
20 8:18
  • wow feels like back cramps whenever I try to breath
  • hold on hold on
21 8:25
  • need water
  • need energy!
  • doh, my 3rd and final gel i’m gonna need more
  • man 3:20 is probably not happenin’ maybe i can go sub 3:28 for a pr
  • hold it hold it hold it..
22 9:23
  • ugh
  • ugh
  • stop try to stretch back but how do you stretch chest constriction
  • hands on head not really helping
23 8:54
  • wheezy wheezy wheezy
  • i’m ripping this stupid shirt off man it’s hot hot hot!
24 9:22
  • am i really walking on this DOWNHILL
  • ugh look at all these people passing me
  • come on run!
  • i caught a leaf i caught a leaf!!
25 9:24
  • ooh Johnny Cash’s Hurt — “I hurt myself today…”
  • how apropros
26 9:44
  • oh there’s the finish over there!  but i know there’s a ways to go…
  • sub 3:30 still possible?
  • hmm probably not  😦
26.2 9:15
  • ugh will this parking lot ever end???!!!
  • 3:32, sigh…  not disappointed per se but what could have been if i could have taken a full breath today?
finish
  • need water
  • need calories — ooh chocolate milk?  No HFCS?  score!
river
  • whoa that is cold!
  • ah, numbness
  • can I sit?  should I?  will I be able to get back up?
  • shiver
  • time to get out
  • Jason look that guy is about to fall in — doh!  that’s gotta be cold
  • uh oh left foot middle toe is locked — please rest of foot don’t follow suit!
  • need warm clothes!
  • need more food!  burgers and dogs

A few photos:

Check out this bib number!  I certainly didn’t have “The Answer” for R2B!

The Answer

I never get blisters! Well, scratch never…  My “footpads” were on fire for about 45 minutes after the run…  I guess I was sliding a bit too much in the shoes on all that downhill.  But no blisters there and the burning subsided and was fine.

There is NO WAY I could have been this happy at mile 16 or so, where Shannon got this shot of me!!!

Here we are all at the finish… Jason rocked a 3:11 BQ for 3rd in the 40-44 age group and top 20 overall!  Kelly and Lauren came in around 4:50 and Heather came in at 5:30 after struggling a bit with digestion…

Post race thoughts:  I’ll be back!  Maybe not in 2013, but in 2014 or 2015.  A 3:20 is possible for me…  Assuming I train well and don’t have breathing issues.  🙂  And in two years I only need a 3:25 to BQ.  Though a 3:20 is still one of my running goals!

I’m already anticipating Uhwarrie 40 sign up later this week — hope I can get in!  So while my lower body is completely in pain, it’s not so bad I’m not thinking about what’s next!

Top 3 Best Runs (R2B preview)

I’m getting ready to head to the mountains to run the Ridge to Bridge marathon tomorrow, and I’m still just not feeling it.  Right now I’d rather sit on the couch and watch a movie tonight, but I signed up for this race a few months ago thinking how fast I could run a down hill marathon, so I’m committed and I’ll do it.  Here’s the profile:

At the time I thought that section from mile 5-14 looked really fast.  And then I ran 6.2 miles of it fast in July.  And it hurt.  A lot.  For days.  Quads were just toast.  I’m not really looking forward to that at all now.  :-/

Anyway, I’m sure I’ll love it once I’m there — it is peak color season and I love the mountains.  But this has been a crazy week with a lack of sleep — Mom’s surgery, big blow up at work, car battery dying, and on and on.  (One bright spot — Kelly and I celebrated 25 years of dating with an excellent Dinner at Oakleaf in Pittsboro.)

As my running has not been great the past 4-6 weeks, it should be interesting.  I no longer have aspirations of a 3:15, or even a 3:20.  I will start with a decent pace, just in case I feel good, but I’m not worried if I need to back off to just enjoy it.  We’ll see what tomorrow brings.

So, I just started thinking back about my “top 3 runs” ever, at least in terms of performance, and not so much in terms of beauty.  I love mountain “runs” and the inherent beauty of them, even if it is a 15:00/mile pace, but that’s not what I’m thinking about here…

So, in order, here are my top 3 performing runs.

1)  Boston 2011:  This was actually a tough choice between this and number 2… But Boston is special, so I put it first.  I’m not even a road runner, and it is first — that’s how special Boston is!  I really went into that race without a lot of training, and went out way too fast, but it felt good and I held it an awfully long time.  I ended up running a marathon 17 minutes faster than I predicted!  And my sister beat me — as strange as it sounds, I was really happy for her because she had trained so hard.

2)  New Hope:  This one wasn’t even a race, but I ran so amazingly well — about 1 minute per mile faster than I’ve ever run at New Hope before or since.  Where does something like that come from?  It was not an easy run — I worked my butt off — but at the same time it was not a difficult run.  I was in some kind of zone… It was great!  Wish I could find that zone again in a race someday…  This was about two weeks after I had run the North Face 50 miler in GA, and for about a month after that race, I was flat out flying…

3) Uhwarrie 2012:  Uhwarrie 2011 was a struggle…  From the first climb, my legs felt tired, and I never could find a rhythm with my breathing.  But 2012 was different — I took nearly an hour off my time on this 40 miler.   I went out hard to get in front of the crowd on that first climb, and didn’t let up for a long time.  I felt like I was going too fast — nearly 1 minute per mile faster than planned, but it felt good, so I went with it… I did have a stretch from around mile 19 – 25 that was difficult, but I came out of mile 25 like a new runner.  Was it the Endorlytes?  Not sure, but I had never managed to “run” the Uhwarrie Walk of Shame, my nickname for mile 32-40.  But this time I did, nearly all of it.  And I came in under 8:00 hours.  I had always thought if I had a perfect run, I might break 8, yet even with the middle stretch where I struggled, I still managed it.  And I was barely sore and recovered quickly!  Quicker than any other ultra I’ve ever run.

So where will tomorrow fall?  I’ve not given up that by some miracle my running legs might show up tomorrow, but I’m not really expecting it either.  I’m sure I’ll have fun and it will be beautiful, and fun is what it’s all about.

Art Loeb: Run Gone Bad

David H. and I have been talking about this run for a while, and we were finally able to find a weekend when it worked for both of us.  The Art Loeb Trail is billed as “one of the longer and more difficult trails in the state, and it’s also one of the more popular.”  Thirty one miles of tough single track sounded like a nice little run…  🙂

On Friday I drove the four hours from home to meet David in Brevard at his brother’s house.  We had to have two cars as it is a point to point run, and we had no other way to shuttle from the start to finish.  We got a quick bite to eat at a local Mexican place, went through gear and food one last time, and hit the sack.  The alarms were set for 6:00, and at 6:15 when I didn’t hear anything from David’s room, I went to wake him.  A quick coffee and we were on the road.  We dropped my car at the trail head in Pisgah near Brevard, and drove 276 up and over the mountains to the trail head at the Daniel Boone Boy Scout Camp.

Here we are at the start:

  

The trail head and some random shots.  As you can see, much of the trail was very overgrown!  It was also not very well marked in some places.

Somewhere around mile 5 or 6, David had a sharp pain on his foot.  Turns out he had a blister that he didn’t even know about pop suddenly:

While he stopped to tape it, I thought I’d head on at a leisurely place until he caught me.  After about 30 minutes, I got worried, and headed back.  I ran a full mile back before I finally found him.  He had gotten off the trail at some point and had to bushwhack back up to the ridge!  This was the 1st sign of the “run gone bad.”  Now I had an additional 2 miles on top of the planned 31!

This next section was through Shinning Rock Wilderness:

This area was incredibly crowded, with tons of people picking blue berries, a few day hikers, and a few backpackers.  Turns out we were close to the Blue Ridge Parkway and there was a paved road and a parking area close by.  There was also a pretty rough forrest road, and we saw a couple cars make it over a pretty sketchy area.  The trail was not well marked here and we actually got off the main trail and found ourselves on the rough road at one point:

We eventually found ourselves in the parking area and had to run the paved road to get back on the Art Loeb and Mountains to Sea Trail, which at this point ran together.

More rough trail:

It was somewhere just past this that we went wrong…  David was a little ahead of me and stopped to wait at a trail junction.  There were signs for the Art Loeb and the Mountains to the Sea trail, but they were not clear at all.  We choose poorly, but did not figure it out for quite some time.  😦   The Mountains to the Sea is relatively new, and uses white circles as the blazes, while the Art Loeb uses white rectangles.  We did not know that at the time, or we would have realized our mistake much sooner!  Or if we had only had a map… The map we expected to be at David’s brother’s house were missing, and we did not have time to pick up another.  😦

As we were running along the wrong trail, we were talking about how the elevation profile did not match what we expected.  I’d never been on the trail and David had only been on it a year or more ago on a backpacking trip.  He expected a deep descent, a cross of the Blue Ridge, and then a quick climb up Pilot Mountain.  Instead we had a long gradual climb, which neither of us remembered.   (I had only looked at an elevation profile online…) We did eventually cross a road that we assumed was the Blue Ridge, but it was not labeled.

Somewhere along here David rolled his ankle pretty good.  :-/

We reached a stream crossing where we decided to fill up on water:

As I was standing there with fresh water in my hydration bladder, I felt an incredibly sharp “pinching” on my right achilles…  Turns out a few bees were stinging me…  I’d feel one of the stings rub the back of my shoe just about every step for the remainder of the run.  😦  20+ more miles…

Here are a few shots from this area:

Somewhere along this point I was questioning David’s memory of the trail, and he was questioning my questions… He thought for sure we were still on the right trail, but I was beginning to have my doubts.  Then we saw a road that he did not expect to see, and he finally agreed with me!   At that point I pulled out my phone, checked the GPS, and we figured out we were pretty far from where we were supposed to be.

David saying “I have no idea where we are!”

At this point, we were so far off, we decided to bushwhack up to the road, knowing from the GPS it was the Blue Ridge.  Here’s the short 500 foot bushwhack.  Not too rough, all things considered.  I’ve had some considerably worse bushwhacks from back in my Adventure Racing and Orienteering days!

Once we got to the Blue Ridge we had to orient ourselves to figure out exactly where we were and where we had gone off track, and make a decision on how to proceed.  It looked like we could run the Blue Ridge about 3 miles east, and hit highway 215.   That looked to be a 10 – 12 mile downhill run back to our starting place and David’s car.  The alternative was to run the Blue Ridge 5 or 6 miles back to the Art Loeb, at which point we’d have a good 15-18 miles of single track left.  We really didn’t have the food or the lights to make it that far, so we opted to head back to the start.

At first I opened up some sub 9 minute miles on the newly paved 215, but my left knee started bugging me, and I was really worried about it being ITB, so I backed way off and walked a lot.

Oh, I forgot to mention, it started pouring on us.

This was a bit of a death march for me… Turns out it was about 16 miles of pavement.  Once I reached the flatter bottom, my L knee did not hurt so bad — but everything else did!  David ran ahead the whole way and his quads are now paying for it, while I feel pretty good.  🙂

There was a pretty nice waterfall along the way:

At some point on this road, I heard a gun shot.  And then another, and another, and then some semi-automatics opened up.  I was a little concerned that I might be running through a red-neck party gone bad, and they might not take to a lone runner that well.  I was picking up the pace to a sub 8:00 to get the heck out of there, when I saw this sign, and felt somewhat relieved:

Yet a minute later I saw this and realized that a shooting range may not be so safe afterall:

I struggled on a few miles until the sign for the Daniel Boone Boyscout Camp, and made it up that road about 2.5 miles just a half mile short of the car, when David finally came around to pick me up.  I wondered what had taken him so long!

Here’s a map of the run… Right where we turn west along the Blue Ridge, we were supposed to head steeply down and cross the road to continue on the Art Loeb…  Instead we headed a few miles west on the Mountains to the Sea, picked up the Blue Ridge, and then headed down 215…

And here’s the elevation…  That first 7 miles is quite the climb!  It was pretty hard to maintain anything better than a 20:00/mile pace there…

We were pretty exhausted, of course.  42 miles is a long long ways to go on foot.  🙂   We headed back over the mountain to pick up my car, and then went straight to dinner before showering as it was getting late and places to eat shut down in Brevard pretty early!

Quick Gear Review:

  • Merrell Mix Master 2:  more ground feel, yet more protection than the Peregrine’s I’ve been doing most of my long trail runs in recently…  More flexible, so my feet have to work more.  The shoes were fine on the trails, but on the roads the left ITB started bugging me… Not sure if that was the shoes or not.
  • Ultimate Direction Wasp:  I used a camel back bladder instead of the one that came with the Wasp, and the tube somehow rubbed my lower back pretty raw.  I did eventually turn it around, but too late!  The Wasp is a tiny bit too big for me, so it does bounce around, but it is the smallest they made at the time I got it…  I also used a handheld 20 oz bottle…
  • Under Armour 7″ compression shorts prevent chaffing!  But the 200 body fit Icebreaker shirt really rubbed me raw in the arm pits.  😦 Seams are too big and I need to find a better shirt for the long stuff, I guess.  I also like the Teko socks I’ve been using…

Quick Food Review:

  • I’m still mostly following a “train low, race high” strategy, in terms of carbs, and while this was not a race, I was treating it as one in terms of nutrition.  While I don’t go out of my way to eat low carb most of the time, when you cut out refined foods, a lot of the carbs disappear.  I’ll still eat a bit of white rice, sweet potatoes, and fruits in every day life, so I’m not that low carb.  I’ve not measured it recently so I can’t give a specific number, but probably 20-30% carbs at most.
  • I’ve also done some fasted runs to work on the fat burning…
  • Just before we started running I had two hard boiled eggs and pemmican.  Then an hour in our so I had another pemmican, and finally started sipping on some perpetuem maybe two hours in…
  • After that it was a mix of:  jerky, one honey gel, one hammer gel, a few LARA bars, a few chocolate covered espresso beans…  And I think that is it.  So definitely some carbs there…
  • I had packed nearly 3000 calories, but probably ate more like 1500 – 2000 (at most).  In the past I would shoot for 200-250 calories per hour, but this was more like 100-150 over the 11 hours.  So maybe the fat burning was working.  I never had any real stomach issues so the food choice worked pretty well.  (For the honey gel, I did eat it over 10 minutes and diluted with water, instead of all at once, as that has bothered me in the recent past.)

All in all a good run, but I do hope to go back and run the trail proper in the not too distance future…

 

It Starts With Food. Dallas and Melissa Hartwig.

I’d have to say this has replaced “The Perfect Health Diet” as the first book I’d recommend to someone interested in the ancestral health movement (aka paleo diet), though PHD would be second.  🙂  I just received “Practical Paleo” in the mail but at 420+ pages of condensed info, that is going to take a while to work through!  It is getting great reviews, though, and I do like the Balanced Bites Podcast a lot…

I won’t review It Starts with Food as others have done a much better job than I could (Wolf, That Paleo Guy, Kresser, etc.)

But I will include their elevator pitch here, as just that is worth reading…

I eat real food – fresh, natural food like meat, vegetables and fruit.  I choose foods that are nutrient-dense, with lots of naturally occurring vitamins and minerals, over foods that have more calories but less nutrition.  And food quality is important – I’m careful about where my meat, seafood and eggs come from, and buy organic local produce as often as possible.

This is not a “diet” – I eat as much as I need to maintain strength, energy, activity levels and a healthy body weight.  I aim for well-balanced nutrition, so I eat both animals and a significant amount of plants.  I’m not lacking carbohydrates – I just get them from vegetables and fruits instead of bread, cereal or pasta.  And my meals are probably higher in fat than you’d imagine, but fat is a healthy source of energy when it comes from high-quality foods like avocado, coconut and grass-fed beef.

Eating like this is ideal for maintaining a healthy metabolism and reducing inflammation within the body.  It’s good for body composition, energy levels, sleep quality, mental attitude and quality of life.  It helps eliminate sugar cravings and reestablishes a healthy relationship with food.  It also works to minimize your risk for a whole host of lifestyle diseases and conditions, like diabetes, heart attack, stroke and autoimmune.

The Art of Slowing Down. EdwardYu.

The most important running book you’ve (probably) never heard of.

Granted, I’ve not done all the exercises yet, but I’m working my way through the book a second time and will start some of them.  I do think I have a bit of a head start from the years of yoga I used to do (and miss now), that gave me a pretty good body awareness… But these exercises look like a different methodology and I would like to read more about Fendelkrais…