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As I left my house I had one eye on the weather, living inland it’s almost a given at this time of the year that the weather will not be as warm at the ocean and I wasn’t disappointed. Low cloud obscured the sun and the starting temperature was 56f degrees; perfect running weather. I made the short drive to the start line and arrived in good time with nearly an hour to go before the race actually started, I was amazed at the number of cars already there and I was forced to park on PCH. I grabbed my coffee and walked to the registration table. After I had picked up my number and pinned it to my shorts I bumped into Meiko from the TRC who was running the 50k and then I also saw Billy and Jes also from the TRC, Billy was running the 30k with some friends from a RW world forum, Jes was running the 50k and was worried; she has been suffering from ITB issues and was dreading the thought of a DNF, I gave over my mantra band and told her to think about the acronym for the next 6-7 hours and see if she could work it out! I also bumped into someone from work who was running the 18k and his wife who ran the 9k, quite a contrast to this time last year where I just turned up ran and left!
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The race is run around a figure of 8, it starts at a parking lot just by the ocean. You run the first loop twice and then one and a bit of the second loop, it has you running up and over two valley passes and covers 5 hills each of which are about a 1000' of climbing. The first mile is along a reasonably wide path this is followed by another two miles along a twisty single track and you gain your first 1000’, needless to say because of the steepness of the incline lots of people slow to a walk and if you get bunched up your forced to move at their pace, with this in mind I pushed hard at the beginning to get a good place. I pushed up the hill and topped out after about 35 minutes. The trail then rolls for a couple of miles looping back and then drops down for another five until you reach the start point. Having only run once this week post surgery my legs had a real spring in them and these miles all whizzed by at sub 10 minute mile pace (four at sub nine). I reached the start and blew past the aid station without stopping, I was wearing my Wasp vest and had a handheld and was popping a gel every forty minutes.
From the start point I started up hill #2. Two miles later I was up the top and running down the fireroad into the next canyon, this was a route change from last year and apparently this was because several people fell running down the single track; which we would run up it this year. While running down a fireoad is fine, this one was strewn with ankle turning rocks and we had to swerve to avoid some mountain bikers. I pushed on the down the hill opening my stride and pace and dropping in a 7:29 mile, this was my fastest mile by far so far and would be the quickest of the day. As we bottomed out we picked up another fireroad and hit the second aid station and turn around point, I grabbed some water to cool off and wet my cool tie. From here we about faced and ran along the fire turning left to pick up a single track trail which then rejoined the fireroad and we ran back over the hill; three down two to go. It was here I recorded some video (sorry about the angle!) as I hadn’t taken many photos. Quite clearly I had in mind what could happen in the next half. I pushed over the top and back down into the starting valley and it was during this climb that the cramps started. I am not prone to cramps, in fact I can probably say I’ve never had them while running, but three times in the last week I have had cramps;hamstring once and calves twice. This time it was my calves again. Not bad, well not really bad but bad enough especially on the uphills so much so that from here any major hill became a real slog. To be honest I have no idea why, I was taken an Endurolyte every hour and had no real change to my diet in the last week, so it’s is and remains a mystery, one that will need to be solved within the next two weeks!
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I stretched out and grabbed some Sprit which hit the spot as it always does and relaxed chatting to other finishers and Sarah, one half of Sarah and Wendell the Race Directors who, once again, put on a great event, anyone in California could do a lot worse than attend a PCTR event as their first ultra, they’re well organized and very friendly. I hung around for a while and saw Jes finish; after 7 hours she still hadn’t figured out the acronym and I didn’t tell her!
So post event here is the postmortem; going out too fast too soon, such a rooky mistake, aided to my blow up in the second half, I could have probably bluffed my way through however the addition of the cramps really knocked my game into touch, had I not had those I could have run more of the ups; I walked a lot of them and could had had faster coverage on the flats, that would have reduced my time significantly, a minute here, ninety seconds there and a sub 6 hour race would have been a reality. That being said and not wanting snatch total defeat from the jaws of victory I did PR, this was actually my 1 year ultraversary (there's no such word but you get the idea) and last year I finished in 6:54 so it's a pretty big reduction year on year.
Of more concern is the recent cramping episodes, I need to do a bit of research and address then as it’s one thing to have then at mile 16 in a 31 mile race but having them at mile 16 in a 50 mile race is a whole ‘nother ball of wax so that gives me two week before Twin Peaks to figure it out. Other than that from a fitness perspective I felt pretty good, HR was high but it usually is I peaked at 185 bpm and spent 5:30 in Zones 4 (51% of total) and 5 (36% of total). Recovery was fine and although a bit achey and stiff I am in pretty good shape.
There’s a few photos here and the MotionBased data is here:
I am first :)
ReplyDeleteGreat race report-- and knocking 12 minutes off your PR despite the tough course and cramps? Fantastic. Happy ultraversary!
ReplyDeleteHoly..freaking... cow that is a ton of time off last years!! You have to feel pumped about that.
ReplyDeleteHappy Ultraversary!!!
I found at MMTR that is hurt more to climb all those hills than the running at mile 50. Weird when you think that walking is worse than running.
AMAZING!!!! Congrats on your PR, and an awesome race report. Too bad about the cramps and all the other stuff, but to take that much time off your previous race is incredible! Congrats again!
ReplyDeleteGreat job out there Stuart - way to gut it out and PR in a scenic, but very difficult race!
ReplyDeleteThe 30K was tough enough for me, but I still have my eyes on the Twin Peaks 50K in Feb!
The cramping issue...I deal with that constantly and it's frustrating. I first dealt with it on a trail race last year and ever since then, it's always crept up in the latter stages of marathons. I think it's one part psychological and two parts muscle fatigue.
I've tried gobbling up Endurolytes and drinking as much as possible in my last couple of marys, but they still found a way to creep up on me. Perhaps these measures could have staved them off later than sooner, but my theory is that it is mainly muscle fatigue and one needs to put in the long runs to train their body to keep them at bay.
Anyway, great job again! You going to be at the TRC Turkey Trot this Thursday?
nice work on that PR! Working through the tough course and the cramps make it all the more worth while.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations SBR on a shiny new PR. Great job fighting through. In many ways your report reads very similar to my first marathon this weekend - pick-up too early, math, metal games and finishing happy... Great improvement over the previous PR - 12 minutes is huge.
ReplyDeleteWow, Congrats on the PR! :) That course looks amazingly tough and you should be happy you finished! Way to be an encouragement to others and congrats on finishing that hilly beast!
ReplyDeleteWow!! A 50k PR!!! Congrats SLB! ;-)
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the PR, Quad! I can not even imagine a 50K then PRing it. Excellent! Hope you recover well...
ReplyDeleteawesome job!!!! great race report and CONGRATS on the huge PR!!!
ReplyDeleteHey!! It's exciting to read a race repor after reading about so many miles of training!! Congratulations on the PR!
ReplyDeleteWow. I've been following your training...and wow.
ReplyDeleteFantastic.
I bow to you...
Great Race report.
ReplyDeleteIt has been a long road, I mean long trail to get here to this point.
It shows the level of fitness you possess, and your determination.
Believe me, I've been writing way too many checks my body and mind cannot cash. This is not the case with you. The hard work you’ve put in the past year shows you must work hard for what you want, and you got it!
Look back on the days leading up to the race and whether or not you were drinking a lot of fluids. If you were, you could have flushed out a lot of electrolytes, and despite taking in electrolytes, you can still get cramping.
RECOVER-EASE Time
Great race report! Excellent time. Ultraversary, that's great!
ReplyDeleteAnother fantastic race report. Great recovery and back in prime form.. You rock . . .CHEERS
ReplyDeleteWow congrats on such a huge PR!!! Great race report!
ReplyDeleteStuart, that is just amazing way to go!
ReplyDeleteAnd, I have to thank you (again) for re-introducing trail running to me...I'm LOVING it!!!
Way to go on the PR! If it was a "cake walk" it wouldn't be half as impressive!!! Way to go!!
ReplyDeleteWow, that's an incredible elevation map. But huge congrats though on finishing and pushing through it. Nicely done!
ReplyDelete