Uhwarrie 2013

Make sure you read the lead-in 1st.

None of the information in the lead-in was meant to be an excuse.  Yeah the final 13 days before the race didn’t go quite as expected, and 10 days off from running was not ideal, but I don’t think any of that really played into my race day blues.  I had a great first 22 miles.  But I’m getting ahead of myself.

I think I’ll just do a quick re-cap and then list out some thoughts.  Writing a race report for the same race four years in a row gets a little old.  You can see the elevation profile and some shots of the trail in past years’ reports (2010, 2011, 2012).

Race-recap:  The last shuttle was leaving but there were no more seats!  Turns out there were about 20 of us in that situation, so we got on the real last shuttle.  I got to sit next to Scott, who I could tell was a bit nervous as he was about to run his 1st ultra!  The driver seemed to take his time deciding to leave until I gently prompted him that we should check with the folks in charge if we should get going…

After the 10 minute ride to the start, as we were getting off the bus, the race director was yelled “5 minutes to go! Hurry Hurry!”  I still had a lot of extra clothes on (it was 19F!) and I thought I’d hit the port-a-pot one last time, and I had just enough time to get all my gear right and drop my drop-bag in the big pile of bags and run to the start.  Just in time to hear the 2 minute pre-race briefing and we were off.

Right out of the gate and up the 1st big hill, I was in the top 10 runners, which was not wise.  In fact, I was just behind Brandon, who I knew was going for a sub 7:00, so it was a little silly for me to be up there.  The lead 5 or 6 went off the wrong way, and before I could say anything Brandon was yelling and corralling them back in.  I’d like to note that this is the same “split” that I missed in my training run three weeks ago — when it was dark and foggy.  But really, if you’ve never run this race, it would not be obvious at all to turn.  I thought in past years there was a rope, but maybe not.  Turns out the 20 milers an hour later and 8 milers two hours later all did the same thing.

Well, it took a couple miles for me to back off, but I finally did, and felt pretty good.  I walked all the really steep hills and ran everything else.  I never felt like I was pushing too hard, though in hindsight I probably was.  I was looking at my pacing and comparing it to last year, when I broke 8:00 hours, which to me was always only possible on a near perfect day.  Could I possibly replicate that again?

To cut a long story short, I ran the first 22 miles pretty well, often trading places with Ernest whom I had met and run with last year.  I hit the turn at 20 miles in 3:45, pretty much the exact same time as last year.  I was in and out in 1-2 minutes, and I felt even better coming out of the turn than going in.  For about two miles.  It was then that I felt like I was fading, and fading fast.  I let Ernest pass and said “have a great race!” because I knew then I was going to suffer.

There’s not much to say about the last 18 miles…  It was a struggle.  I walked just as much as I ran.  Nothing major was wrong, just lots of little things.  Left knee was bugging me, breathing was not great, nutrition was not bad but nothing really hit the spot and gave me the big burst of energy that I so needed.

One thing that did help is that when I reached mile 32, I saw Jason there.  He had taken kid duty of his own two and our two while Kelly and Lauren ran the 8, but had opted to hang out there and run in with me.  I felt terrible as I was more than an hour behind when I would have been had I been able to duplicate the sub 8:00.  But it was nice to have someone with me, and now I know what it would feel like to have a pacer, if I ever have one.  Anyone reading this that wants to pace me at Leadville this year, please let me know.  🙂   I did tell Jason to run off a few times — he was fresh and itching to get in a work out, and I didn’t want him to get too cold “running” at my pace.

I finished in 8:49, 52 minutes slower than last year, but only a minute or two faster than two years ago.  I had actually gone into this year thinking anything under 8:30 would be pretty decent, though of course I secretly hoped I could better last year’s 7:57.  All that to say I’m not really super disappointed.  I know the 7:57 might just be one of my best runs ever and I shouldn’t expect to run like that every time I head out the door…

Thanks to Shannon who caught this photo at the finish:

That’s Jay behind me, who drafted off me for, oh, 8 or 10 miles last year, before I finally pushed him on with 5 miles to go.  🙂  This year we struggled in together from about 35 on…

Ok, here are my thoughts on specific items:

  • Shoes:  I went with the Merrell Mix Master 2, and this is the 2nd time I’ve gotten lateral knee pain in my left knee on a long run in them.  The 1st time was the Art Loeb – Run Gone Bad training run, in which we sort-a kind-a lost the trail and had to head back  to the start, 10 miles downhill on pavement.  I had put off the MM2 issues to the downhill pavement section, but maybe not.  Overall I like the shoe a lot, at least in shorter runs, but it might be time to look for an ultra-distance shoe that doesn’t cause any issues.  I’m thinking about the Altra Superior.
  • Breathing:  After the debacle that was Ridge 2 Bridge this year, in which my breathing fell apart in mile 1 and only got worse, I have taken to albuterol again a few times.   Prior to that run it had been 4+ years since I’ve needed anything, but since then, I’ve gone into wheezing shallow breathing mode a couple of times.  So I tried albuterol and it does seem to help.  For Uhwarrie I took the prescribed two puffs about 6:15 a.m. and threw the puffer in my drop-bag.  I am still regretting that I opted not to take another puff there!  I saw the inhaler and briefly thought about it, but my breathing had been fine on the 1st 20 and I thought I’d be ok.  But around mile 22+ when I started to fade, I had trouble breathing deeply.  No wheezing or tight constriction like R2B, but I was not able to get the amount of air I wanted.
  • Nutrition:  I had experimented with plain Ucan super starch flavored with Nuun on a 5 hour training run in Uhwarrie a few weeks prior to the race, and stuck with that.   I had used less than 500 calories on that run with no problems.  For the race, my 1st bottle was flavored with Heed, and my turnaround bottle had Nuun it.  To that I added some BCAA’s (MAP) in pill form, but I don’t really know if they made a difference or not.   I think I took one gel around 2 hours in and another maybe 5 hours in, as I felt like I needed a bit more.   I ate a few of the peeled boiled potatoes and a few potato chips.  And a few nibbles of cookie.  But nothing felt great, and nothing gave me the spark I was looking for.  I never had Gi distress, I just didn’t feel super energized.   Oh, and I had my 1st sips of soda in maybe 5 years…  At mile 26 I had 3 sips of coke, but it was not flat, and that was all I could handle.  Then I had one or two more sips of coke and a few  sips of mountain dew at the subsequent aid stations.  Again, I was just looking for something, anything, that would give me a spark, but nothing did.  I’d guess I was in the sub 1000 calorie range for nearly 9 hours, but I don’t think the low calories was the heart of the issue.  I might need more experimentation with ucan to figure out how to use it to its fullest.
  • Recovery:  A few days later and the muscle soreness is all gone, the L knee feels good…  I’ve walked one mile and run one mile, so not a lot, but I don’t think there will be any lasting damage.  🙂
  • Rest of the year Race Schedule:  From mile 30-40 I was considering canceling the rest of my races that I had been planning this year.   It was that much of a struggle!  Of course, I know better than to make race plans while racing, so I told myself to just get through it.  The definite’s are Umstead Marathon in March, Black Mountain Monster 24 hour run  in June, and Leadville in August.  I’m leaning towards the NF50 in NY in May…  Within 15 minutes of finishing Uhwarrie, I was back on track and have not cancelled anything.  🙂

Life of Pi. Yann Martel.

It’s not often that I will read a book with just one passing comment from a Facebook friend.  But that is what I did this time, so I had literally no idea what the book was about.  And even after part I I had no idea what part II was going to turn into!  It was a fun read and I’d like to see the movie sometime soon…

 

Uhwarrie lead-in

A lead in to the Uhwarrie 40 miler in bullet form…

  • I love this race and this was the 4th year I’ve been lucky enough to get registered!  It typically sells out in < 20 minutes…
  • Past reports:
  • January 19 Little River 10 miler – In the past this race has been 3 to 4 weeks out from Uhwarrie, so I’ve run it hard.   But this year it was only two weeks out, so the plan was to run it “easy,” but that did not work out so well for me.  I got caught up in the race atmosphere and still ran at a fairly hard effort!
  • January 20th – tweaked my right knee at the playground.  Doing a 25-28″ box jump with no warm up the day after a hard 10 miler is not a good idea!
  • January 21st – ran 12.5 miles out at New Hope with David H. for my last long run.  Barely felt the knee, so I thought that was a good sign.
  • January 22nd was feeling the knee pretty good and it was not a good feeling.  😦
  • January 23rd – easy 4 miler
  • The next few days the knee discomfort would come and go — one day being very significant and one day being 100% absent.  Very odd.
  • Long weekend in the mountains with snow and ice so I opted not to run at all.
  • And then a somewhat unexpected trip to Europe came up…
  • Monday January 28th:  red-eye to London
  • Tuesday January 29th:  meetings in London, train to Paris
  • Wednesday January 30th:  All day meeting in Paris with literally no time to do anything other than the meeting and dinner
  • Thursday January 31st:  Morning meeting then head to the airport to fly home.  First flight out to London was delayed, meaning I would miss my connection from there back to the US.  Was told I was rebooked on Air France but I had to *run* to the other terminal, so back out security and passport control, run over, back through security and passport control, etc.  Made the flight but was *stuck* in a middle seat in the back for 9+ hours!  This flight was delayed so I missed my connections state side.  Was put up in a hotel by Air France and given meal vouchers.  I was booked on a 5:45 a.m. flight for IAD but there was no connection to RDU.  So after going all the way back to the AF desk in the terminal, got them to put me on to a 9:45 a.m. direct flight to RDU.
  • Friday February 1st:  Arrived home around 3 p.m. after running a couple of errands on the way home from RDU.
  • Saturday February 2nd:  Race day:  up at 2:30 as I couldn’t sleep. (Alarm had been set for 3:45).  Went to Heather’s at 4:15 to head over to the race by 4:30…
  • Quite a two week lead-in, but my training had been pretty good — other than the unexpected “taper” and the R knee tweak.

However, I had bumped my mileage up from last year’s training and thought that might help…

2011-12 training:

2012-13 training:

And note that 0 on week 48 was 18 miles of hiking…

 

So, how would I do?  Stay tuned….

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.