Showing posts with label ultras. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ultras. Show all posts

Monday, July 23, 2018

2018 Vermont 100 Endurance Run: No finish this year :(


This was a tough weekend for me in Vermont.  My race ended at Lillian's Aid Station, just under 4 miles from Camp 10 Bear.  I really haven't had a chance yet to reflect on all the whys - but I started off slow, and just got slower - and when my ankle flared up, I started shuffling w/a limp... it was time to pull the plug.

My Vermont record now stands at 3 finishes, 4 DNF's - with my last 2 outings both DNF's (argh)! 

Aside from my personal performance (or lack thereof, as the case may be) - everything else was great.  As always the race organizers and volunteers did an outstanding job.  And all the people I ran with were inspiring, to say the least.

Will I re-up for 2019?  Without a doubt :D

Saturday, June 30, 2018

Recapping the First Six Months of 2018


Just a quick recap of my running for the first six months of the year.  I've managed to rack up more than 1,500 training/racing miles so far this year (1,507.1 to be precise).  To put that in perspective, it's been more than a decade since I've run that much in the first half of a given year!  In another decades long first, I've managed to run more than 200 miles a month for the first six months (averaging 250 miles per month) - with a one month high of 300 miles in March.  Again, I haven't run a 300 mile month in maybe a decade?

As for races, I ran a total of 16 so far, ranging from 1 Mile up to 100K (last weekend, actually).  That total included one marathon, three 50K's and one 100K (it also included a 3 Hour Run, for a total of 23.6 miles).  The remainder, half marathon and shorter, included trails and one relay.  In a twist, only one of the 16 races was a NYRR event (the Italy Run).  Normally, at this point of the year I'd have run close to half a dozen NYRR races (going for my 9+1 goal).

Not sure what the second half of the year has in store for me, but doubt I will keep up a 200+ mile per month pace!  That would give me a 3,000 mile year - again, something I haven't racked up in more than a decade! But I will try to get in another hundred miler (next month in Vermont).  And definitely get in NYC Marathon #16 in November :D

Stay tuned!

Here is the monthly mileage recap:




Sunday, March 25, 2018

2018 Broadway Ultra Society 4 Hour Run & Awards Lunch



This morning was the B.U.S. 4 Hour Run followed by the Annual Awards Presentation (Lunch), where the 2017 Grand Prix awards were presented to the winners!  This year, to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Broadway Ultra Society, the run was extended 1 hour (from its typical 3 hours)!  The run and post-run celebration are high points on the B.U.S. calendar!


The last time I was at this venue (the 2015 edition), I managed to squeak in just over 20 miles in 3 hours - of some serious sub-zero wind chills!  This time around the 1.453 mile loop I managed 20 miles in just over 3 hours (14 loops) and ran a full 16 loops for 23.248 miles.  I stopped with just over 10 minutes left on the clock.  Given that I ran the Savin Rock Marathon in West Haven yesterday, I was more than pleased with that outcome!


After the running came the food (something very close to my heart)!  There was plenty of pizza and salad - among other things.  And, what anniversary would be complete without cake?!


The next B.U.S. event (2nd on the 2018 Grand Prix schedule) is the reconfigured Sybil Lundington 50K in Carmel in April.  For the first time in its long history the Sybil course will consist of two 25k loops instead of the one 50K loop set-up.  It will also feature a new start/finish location. 


I'll add link to the 4 Hour Race results once they've been posted.










Sunday, March 4, 2018

2018 Caumsett Park 50K: Race Photos & Results


It's been a few years since I last ran the Caumsett Park 50K (maybe back in 2011, or earlier).  One this that hasn't changed is the wind!  But this was the first time the I ran the loop counter clockwise.  By comparison, I think this direction made for a slightly less challenging trek - although the added distance to the dog leg portion was a mental challenge (so close, yet so far from the end/beginning of each new loop - and, of course, the finish)!


As for the event itself, it was excellent!  GLIRC and all the volunteers were great - especially the volunteers out on the course!  Post race, there was a ton of food (to get ahead of myself, I ate 2 slices from the hero sandwiches, a huge cranberry muffin, and - for good measure - a small Danish.  Wolfed down probably a more apt description since I ate all that minutes(!) after crossing the finish - before I changed out of my soaked running clothes).


My only mishap during the day involved missing the start of the 50K proper (despite having arrived more than a half hour before the start)!  The 50K went off at 8:30 - the 25K went off at 8:35 - and I somehow missed than announcement starting the 50K (not too hard with the 25k runners milling around the same place waiting for that race to go off)!  So my official (gun) time is overstated by five minutes from my actual (net) time - which, hopefully, will eventually be corrected (fingers crossed).


Either way, I was more than pleased with my 4:58:27 (official) finish (4:53:27 net)!  Even the official came in under my target of 5 hours for the race.  My marathon split (4:07 official/4:02 net) was a little disappointing because I had wanted to slip under 4 hours.  But either way, was more than happy with the entire day!  By way of comparison, it was almost an entire hour faster than my last 50K back in December (5:51:33 at the B.U.S. Trail Mix Up) :D


Next up is first training run for the 2018 edition of the TGNY - next Sunday.  Not sure I'll be up for the entire 35 miles (50K is my target), but I'll see a few runners from today's race there :D


Here are the official race results from JMS Racing.


Here are their race photos (of which my mid-race photo is taken!).








Friday, March 2, 2018

March 2018 Race Schedule



March is here!  While I'm not sorry to see February recede into history, it may have been one of the warmest Februarys in recent history (albeit a very wet one).  As I write this post (Friday morning), the rain is coming down in buckets, with a chance it switches over to snow(!), as it washes over the Northeast!  A somewhat fickle start to the month :D


As for races, despite today's weather, this weekend should be dry (and maybe a little sun) for the Caumsett Park 50K on Sunday.  I haven't run this one in a while (maybe 8 years?!) and when I looked at the course map it seems as if the direction of the loop has been reversed.  Maybe that's just my imagination - haha. One reason I haven't run it lately, it conflicts with the Boston Buildup 25K - perhaps my favorite of the 4 race series.  This year I'll miss it in exchange for the longer distance.


Keeping with the longer distance motif, the following weekend is the first training run for The Great New York Running Exposition (TGNY) 100 miler this June.  I thought it would be 20-25 miles - but turns out it's 35!  A bit of an eye opener for me (to put it mildly).  I'm planning for the entire distance, yet 50K of it will make me happy :D


Mid-month will be something of a breather, with Taconic's St. Patrick's Day races.  I'm not sure if about running or volunteering for this one.  I'm leaning toward volunteering.


The following weekend is the Broadway Ultra Society 4 Hour Run - to precede the Annual Awards Brunch.  Saturday, the day before, is Savin Rock Marathon in New Haven.  I'm tempted to run that because it would be a new race for me.  Looking at the course map (a double loop), it seems to include a good portion of the New Haven 20K route.  Maybe it's time to squeeze in a weekend double?


But the real open question for March is the last day.  I'm very tempted (aside from what comes to pass the weekend before), to sign up for the Naked Prussian 50 Miler.  I haven't run a stand alone 50 Mile race in a while, so this is under serious consideration.  Will decide mid-month (probably right after the TGNY training run).


Here's how it looks so far:


3/4 - Caumsett Park 50K
3/11 - TGNY Training Run #1, 35M
3/18 - Taconic St. Patrick Day Races (volunteer?)
3/24 - Savin Rock Marathon?
3/25 - B.U.S. 4 Hour Run
3/25 - B.U.S. Awards Brunch
3/31 - Naked Prussian 50M?


As always, if you're at any of these great events, say Hello!

Monday, January 1, 2018

January 2018 Race Schedule


Frigid start to the new year!  Here on the east coast we've been stuck in an icebox of cold temperatures and even more brutal wind chills.  Hopefully, things will warm up soon and we can look forward to running races in balmy 20 degree weather - haha.

It's strange now having to get used to the idea of 2018 - when even 2017 still seemed a bit alien as recently as last month!  But January 2018 (the new racing year proper) will kick off this weekend with Boston Buildup 10K - a perennial on my race calendar.  It may be, weather conditions permitting, be preceded by the Mid Hudson Road Runners "Recover from the Holidays" FA 50K.  I'm keen to do it, but the hour and a half drive is only doable (for me) with decent (e.g. dry) road conditions.

The next event is the Boston Buildup 15K on January 21st.  Nothing penciled in yet for the weekend of 13-14th because there really aren't too many local running options available.  The other possibility for the 21st was the NYRR Manhattan Half - but it closed out early, at the end of November/first week of December.

The last weekend of the month is a bonanza of options (3)!  In a first, Taconic has moved the Freezer 5k into January (it's typically a 1st week of February race).  And the GLIRC has added an "International Marathon" (run in Eisenhower Park) that weekend.  But my choice for the 28th will most likely be the small and informal "Run Around Manhattan" 50K in honor of Ted Corbitt!

Here's how it looks so far:

1/6 - MHRRC "Recover from the Holidays" 50K
1/7 - Boston Buildup 10K
1/21 - Boston Buildup 15K
1/28 - "Run Around Manhattan" 50K

As always, if you're at any of these - say hello!

Sunday, December 3, 2017

2017 B.U.S. Trail Mix-Up 50K: Race Photos & Results


Today's Broadway Ultra Society's Trail Mix-Up 50K in Alley Pond Park was challenging - and probably my last "long" run of the year (it is December, after all)!  What made this one especially tough is the 30K option - which is the siren song of cutting it short if ever there was one!  In fact, a few years ago, I exercised that option and bailed out of the 50K in favor of the 30K (and nice warm park house).

But this time around I managed to do all 10 of the 5K loops (the loop was roughly evenly split between trail and pavement sections).  Mile for mile, this was probably tougher than running the Knickerbocker 60K two weeks ago (if only because we could stop after 6 loops/30K).  However, given that we share a portion of the course with a dog run (and some decidedly unfriendly dog owners and their equally snarling pets) - this was hands down the most dangerous course I've run all year.  This is no creative exaggeration because I was right behind Grant when some obnoxious dog (thankfully on a leash) leapt at him during the 2 loop - forcing him off the path!

Aside from that adrenaline moment, the rest of the day was like any other ultra.  As for my race, I got thru the first 6 loops in under a 10 minute pace.  After that point I mostly ran, jogged, walked the remaining 4 loops.  Given how tough - mentally - the last 4 loops were I was more than happy with my 5:51:33 finish (11:19 pace)!  The best part of the day was the post-race food - which, just from memory, included, ravioli, eggplant parm., lasagna, veggie pasta, chicken marsala!, and, no ultra would be complete without - pizza! Not a bad way to recoup the 3,700+ calories burned getting the 50k done :D

As always, thanks Richie (and all the volunteers) for putting on another great B.U.S. event!

Here are the official results from New York Ultrarunning.








Saturday, November 18, 2017

2017 NYRR NYC/Knickerbocker 60K: Race Photos & Results

 

I finished the NYRR NYC/Knickerbocker 60K - and am more than a little surprised to be writing that sentence!  As I pointed out early, when I picked up my shirt and bib earlier in the week, making it to the start line didn't seem like a realistic possibility given how much time I've spent "sick" during the last couple of weeks!  But things looked up on Thursday, and I managed an easy 4.5 mile run on Friday - so at a minimum, would go in, line up, and run as many laps as I could eke out!

Five laps (21 miles) was my initial goal.  Even that seemed like a stretch considering I only ran twice since the NYC Marathon (the Raven Rocks 10K, on trails, and the 4.5 miles, on roads, Friday).  Somehow 10.7 miles, broken up by Bronchitis and a chest cold, didn't seem like a realistic lead in to an ultra!  But in a counterintuitive miracle, maybe all that "rest" that came along with feeling sick worked some magic!

After the 5 loops I stopped for hot soup!  The perfect thing, actually, and I also took a couple of minutes to switch my phone over to a mofi because the charge was dying.  At that point I was on a solid 9:40 pace (roughly 3:23 in).  The next loop I stopped for a cup of coffee (mainly for the caffeine).  But I had started slowing down (10+ minute miles).  The last two loops were the toughest - I had slowed to 11/12 minute miles by this point.  But, amazingly, the only cramping I had the entire day was in the last 2 miles of the entire distance!  The only walk breaks I took were during the last (9th) loop.

I was incredibly happy with my 6:46:07, 10:54 pace, finish.  While it was way slower than my PB for this course (5:23), it was a solid - and gratifying - finish!  Given the trepidation I had at the start, I count this as one of my happiest race finishes :D

Here are the official results from NYRR.






 



Thursday, November 16, 2017

2017 NYRR NYC ("Knickerbocker") 60K Packet Pickup


Yesterday I picked up my bid and shirt for the NYRR NYC 60K (f/k/a Knickerbocker 60K). It's been a long time since I did this race - going back to 2009, if memory serves me correctly! Back then it was called the Knickerbocker 60K and was put on by the Broadway Ultra Society.

Given the forecast for rain, I have serious qualms about lining up for it. But a more practical matter may sidetrack me because I've been trying to recover from a sore throat that morphed into a head cold, then blossomed into a chest cold - argh! While the physical grief is behind me at this point, I've missed a few running days (to put it mildly).

Be that as it may, I'll line up and see how many loops of the park I can get in :D

As always, if you're at this one - say hello!

Thursday, November 2, 2017

November 2017 Race Schedule


If it's November, then the NYC Marathon kicks off the month!  This weekend will be my 15th consecutive NYC Marathon (and my ninth race for the 9+1 guaranteed entry for 2018).  I've said it many times over the years, but this is my all time favorite running event :D

While it may tend to overshadow the rest of the month, there are plenty of other good races out there.  In fact, I plan to revisit the Knickerbocker 60K (now called the NYC 60K) later this month.  Then, on Thanksgiving Day, another blast from the past - the Beachfront Bushwack!  This 5 Mile cross county race at Tods Point in Greenwich disappeared from the running scene a few year ago.  Now it's back as a Thanksgiving Day race.  Two days later, on Saturday, it's back to Greenwich for the annual Turkey Trot 5k (on behalf of the Alliance for Education). 

I may try to squeeze in another race or two this month, but nothing definite yet.

Here's how it looks so far:

11/5 - NYC Marathon
11/18 - NYRR NYC 60K
11/23 - Beachfront Bushwack 5 Miler
11/25 - Greenwich Turkey Trot 5K

As always, if you're at any of these events - say hello!

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

2016 Vermont 100 Mile Endurance Run


The 2016 Edition of the Vermont 100 Miler Endurance Run ended for me well short of 100 Miles.  Despite the DNF at mile 58.5 (the newly designated Margaritaville), I had a great time all around (an a pair of Margaritas waiting for the sag wagon!).  I knew going in that I was undertrained for the course/terrain (despite having run the Great NY 100 Mile Running Exposition last month).  I didn't have the necessary hill work and mileage base I would have liked.

I realized coming down from Sound of Music (roughly mile 28) that it would be a tough day when my quads starting pounding me.  I expected sore quads - just not that early in the day (maybe at the half way point).  As it turned out, the one mile downhill into Camp Ten Bear (mile 47) was a relatively brutal stretch for me.  It was, perhaps, the low point of the day!  How ironic was it that a course noted for its unrelenting climbs would trip me up on the downhills!

Toss in my old nemesis - chafing - and it quickly became apparent that it wasn't going to be my day.  I managed another 10+ miles, but finishing the 100 wasn't in the cards.

Still, it was an excellent time - and I have no regrets!  Now, finish #4 will have to wait until next year :D



Wednesday, June 22, 2016

2016 The Great New York 100 Mile Running Exposition: Race Report


a bit long... but hey, it was a long race :D

I am so very grateful to start off this race report knowing that in the end I cover the distance – which is not how my last attempt at 100 miles (at this very race) ended! Back in June 2012, the inaugural edition of The Great New York 100 Mile Running Exposition (there wasn’t 100k option that first year), I had to drop out at the mile 41 aid station. The foot (and shin) pain that led to my DNF was subsequently diagnosed as chronic compartment syndrome. That, in turn, led to a significant drop off in my running (both mileage and races). I had to miss the Vermont 100 the following month and the JFK 50 Miler in November (both of which I was registered for). Long distances weren’t in the cards for the next year or so.

Fast forward to 2016, the GNY 100 filled in 3 hours! So I was on the waiting list for this one. As an aside, I wanted to run the 2015 edition because I had put the chronic compartment syndrome behind me and successfully rebuilt my mileage base. But it wasn’t in the cards because I had cataract surgery that pretty much knocked out my running for most of June and July that year. When I got the email from Phil at the end of April that I could run it – I was simultaneously ecstatic and mortified! Mortification was overriding because I had just under 2 months to train and prepare! I was game – and immediately focused on building up my mileage base.

That weekend was the third GNY 100 training run – which I did want to run. But the day before was the Ted Corbitt Memorial Run Around Manhattan, so I kicked off my training with a slow and easy 50k. It would, in fact, be the longest distance I’d cover in the run up to the race. Aside from the fourth GNY 100 training run, which covered the final 18 or so miles of the course, my longest training run would be a 20 miler.

My overall monthly mileage was well below what I would consider an optimal level heading into a hundred miler. I ran 154.4 miles in April and edged up to 167.5 miles in May. The May figure would have been larger, but I had a business trip to Kuala Lumpur that basically took up two weekends with trans-pacific flights. Still, on the bright side, I ran 135 miles in June, leading up to the GNY 100 (and 225 miles in the 30 days preceding the race). All in all, I thought I built up a decent enough mileage base given the time constraints!

As for the race itself, all things considered I wanted to get to 100K (which I was sure I could do) – then just keep moving forward to 100 miles (that I wasn’t sure of at all). Aside from the physical preparation, the only real qualm I had (mentally speaking) was the bridge crossings. At a minimum I knew getting over to Queens via the Triboro Bridge from Randall’s Island would be pretty stressful (as it was for me back in 2012). And, while I didn’t reach it the first time around, I have the same anxiety/panic crossing the Marine Parkway Bridge later in the race.

But I’d cross those fears (pun intended) when I reached them. Before the first bridge, however was 50K+ worth of running. The race kicked off a couple of minutes after 5 AM, following a group photo in front of TKTS. This stretch was a familiar run north up to Central Park, along the West Drive, exiting at the North end of the Park and heading over to the West side – then north. I’ve done portions of this stretch many times. My goal at this point was to get in as many miles as possible during the cooler temperatures. While I don’t advocate “banking” miles, I didn’t pay attention to that bit of wisdom.

I felt pretty good at that stage, despite the steadily rising temperatures. I carried a small backpack – instead of the fanny pack I had worn in past ultras. While I didn’t think so at the time, in hindsight I did over pack it (but that didn’t make a difference in my race - just something to file away for future reference). In addition to the pack, I carried a 20 ounce water bottle. I actually drank the contents of that bottle (mostly water, but occasionally gator aide or iced tea) between each aid station! At the early aid stations I mostly stuck to watermelon, nuts and pb & j sandwich quarters. Later in the day I was more interested in real food (mostly salted baked potatoes and pizza where I could find it).

I ran the first 50k in roughly 5:35 – making only one small wrong turn before reaching Randall’s Island. I made another wrong turn on the way to the World’s Fair Marina aid station at mile 41. Those were the only missteps until much, much later in the race. Then I would miss a turn and run about 9 blocks off course before realizing the mistake (but I’m getting ahead of myself). For the most part I was running this portion of the course (with the exception of “power/speed walking” over the bridge, as I clutched the hand rail!). I reached the Alley Pond aid station, just shy of 51 miles in about 11 hours.

I was about a full hour ahead of my rough time estimate (12 hours for 50/15 hours for 100k). But the sun and heat had started to take a toll. When I arrived at Alley Pond, Esther was there sitting on the ground not looking that well. After a bit, we continued on together – mixing in a lot of walking to reach the next aid station. At the Kissena Park aid station I took some Motrin because my legs were starting to ache. It did its job well because it knocked out the pain and kept me moving forward.

Esther and I reached the 100k finish/aid station at Forest Park in just under 14:30! Truth be told, I was ready to call it quits at that point. But a combination of the incredible restorative effects of cold beer and warm pizza slowly brought my body came back to life. Plus, Rob, my pacer, was waiting for me at mile 64 and I wanted to at least get there to meet up with him before making that decision. So, after a couple of minutes enjoying the simple act of sitting – ah, the sweetness of sitting in a chair after all those hours on my feet – we reluctantly moved on.

When we reached Rob, he made it clear that I couldn’t quit – and said, in effect, I had 15 hours to just simply walk the remaining 36 miles. Very doable in his fresh eyes, very daunting in my exhausted eyes. At this point Esther went on ahead to meet up with her pacer, waiting for her at mile 70. Rob and I began walking. And walk we would for almost all of the remaining miles. Rob had planned to run about 20 miles but stuck out the entire distance with me!

I must add that for the next 10+ miles his determination single-handedly kept me in the race and moving forward. At any given point up to the Marine Parkway Bridge – and especially the Bridge – I could easily have tapped out. In fact, at the foot of that bridge I had my last bout with panic/anxiety (even going so far as to imagine running over it on the roadway instead of the pedestrian overpass). But I sucked it up and forced myself across the footpath (mentally chanting, “don’t lose it, don’t lose it…” while again holding on to the railing as moved across).

Once we were on the other side Rob said the rest of the course should be one long bridge because I just did my fastest mile getting across it! While that line is funny in retrospect, at that point my heart was beating so fast I thought it would leap out of my throat! Still, not only did a wave of relief sweep over me, but that was the point I knew I’d finish (even if crawling)! I was finally in the great state of Brooklyn, my home town.

The only hitch we had on the way to the finish was missing the turn arrow for Bay 52 – which, unfortunately led to us running 8-9 blocks out of the way before realizing the mistake… and then having to run back that distance to Bay 52! What made that detour somewhat annoying (not getting off course, that happens.) was that I had just run that portion on the final GNY 100 training run a few weeks earlier! But that did get me motivated to run again. In fact, after the mile 84 aid station at Bensonhurst Park, we pretty much ran the 2+ miles to the Verrazano Bridge. And, at the mile 90 aid station at Leif Ericson Park, Richie had hot coffee (and a slice of pizza) there for what became my early breakfast.

The remaining miles were relatively uneventful, but by the time we got to the Borough Hall aid station at mile 95 I had to take some more Motrin (my third dose) because the soreness in my legs had come back with a vengeance. And, in an incredible act of random kindness – when I got to the Manhattan side of the Brooklyn Bridge, a total stranger/volunteer offered me a cup of Starbucks iced coffee! That caffeine fix was just what I needed to power up the last 3.5 miles to the finish!

It was such an incredible positive feeling to cross Times Square (surprisingly it was crowded with tourists at 8 AM!) and reach the finish line!! Phil handed me the finishers buckle – and in the other hand I had a cup of cold beer! What a perfect ending to a great day. And I’ll say it again, if it hadn’t been for Rob during the stretch of miles from 64-75 I would have celebrated a 100k finish instead! And i need to give so many thanks to Phil and all the volunteers for putting on such a great event – a great event every step of the way!

As a post-script, my feet were pretty swollen for a couple of days (and I did lose the nail on my right pinky toe) – but otherwise, I was no worse for the wear. I’m already thinking about the 2017 edition, even though I swore a million times over that I’d NEVER cross those bridges again :D

Here are my race photos &results

Monday, June 20, 2016

2016 The Great New York 100 Mile Running Exposition: Race Photos & Results


Wow, seems like a very long time since I completed a 100 Miler (2011?) -- and this one was in the category of "unfinished business" for me because I had to drop out at mile 41 during the 2012 edition (its first year)!  The Great NY Running Exposition is an absolutely fantastic event - every step from beginning to end (including the 2 bridges that gave me panic attacks when I crossed them)!

I'm writing up a race report, so will keep this short.  Most of these photos come from race volunteers that shared them on the group Facebook page.  I took a handful of selfies along the way, but not nearly enough to capture the full flavor of the day.

My favorite picture (aside from the great one at the finish :D) is from the 100K aid station.  I'm sitting there (first time in nearly 15 hours) with a cup of beer and slice of pizza - there I'm in heaven (however so briefly)!

Here are the results for the 100 Miler.








Here are the rest of my photos, up on Facebook.