Tag Archives: race results

Off down the distance

Yesterday was The Yonge St. 10K, the first of what is now two 10Ks running down the central artery of the city. The 10Ks are popular because they are fast – a net downhill (a couple of small uphills) with only a few turns. I wanted to test my 10K fitness on a certified course, but not necessarily on an aided course that would * my time and generate a PB that I would never be able to replicate, thus setting myself up for future disappoint. I have a tendency to over think races. I ran, but only because I won a free entry at another race.

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I cross the ocean for a heart of gold

Well, that went better than expected. Way better than expected. By that I mean Around the Bay 30K, edition 118. This was my 5th time running the race, so I knew what to expect. Except I wasn’t expecting a humidex reading (it is March, where’s the windchill?), or the plague (again!), or another tendonitis flare-up (back on prescription strength anti-inflammatories) … so I also wasn’t expecting a great run. Which I said, publicly.

I wasn’t sandbagging. Really. Really!

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Racing with the wind

I secretly ran the Charleston Marathon last weekend. I said I wasn’t running a race until spring. This was not a last-minute decision. It was a 12 weeks before decision. I lied to everyone*. Continue reading

In the clearing stands a boxer

I ran my last race of the year yesterday. The Boxing Day 10-miler. It helpfully started at noon, giving a few extra hours for the turkey coma and hangover to subside. This was my first time running the race and I went into it blankly.  I knew two things: it’s an old race (this was the 91st year) and it attracts great local runners. I heard rumours it was a challenging course. I didn’t look at the route or elevation, heck ten minutes before the start I had to ask the location of the start line. Continue reading

My head is like a football, I think I’m gonna die

A week ago I ran another beer mile.  I’ve finally sobered up enough to write about it. Continue reading

I remember when I lost my mind

It is seriously just a matter of time before something like this happens to me.  And I probably won’t even have a marathon to blame. Continue reading

Someday I’ll be 18 goin on 55

Another 5 Peaks trail race under my shoes. This time in Terra Cotta.

Naturally I fancied myself a Terracotta Warrior and channeled that energy into my race.

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Don’t let your feet get cold in the winter

In an effort to coax my reluctant body into running faster than a snail’s pace I signed up for a couple of pre-Boston race-runs.  This weekend was the Chilly 1/2 marathon.   Although it was not so much chilly as it was snowy and slushy (and windy).  The 35-40km/hr winds were not as bothersome as expected, just a little tough on the few short northbound portions.  It could have been much worse.  ATB, coming up in three weeks, is always much worse.

Now that I’m in Monster Month 21.1k isn’t enough mileage, so I also ran an easy 10k before the race, ran the 1/2, then finished with a 3k cool-down.  A little choppy, but I got in the distance.  The aim was to run the 21.1k at marathon race pace or a bit faster and Mission Accomplished.  The road this year was a slushy foot-soaking mess (near record rainfall followed by an overnight blast of snow), so I think my miles are worth an extra 10% in effort. 

This popular event is worthy of a few words.  It’s the only local (local = within 90 minutes) 1/2 marathon in the early spring, but given the location (the ‘burbs) I’ve never run this race.  I would definitely go back to run it again.   It wasn’t the stereotypical suburbs of identical houses and expensive sounding street names, but a quaint waterfront village.   The organizers are lovely (the same group puts on the Santa Shuffle – you may recall my one and only foray into costumed running) and have a reputation for well-run races.  The start line corrals were a bit broad (e.g. 1.30 to 2.00 hours) but for the most part people did an okay job of self-sorting and there were lots of pace bunnies around for folks looking for company (including this guy).  I wasn’t blockaded before kilometre three, as is the case when there is rampant over-optimisim in the starting corrals.  The aid stations were reliably spaced every 3K and the volunteers eager and at the ready.  They even had a gel station and an orange/banana station, which is rare for this distance.  The course is scenic, running almost entirely along the shores of Lake Ontario, and traffic free.  It’s also relatively flat, which I know is appealing to some.  There were some slight elevation changes to relieve the repetitive stress of flat running.  So all in all, a decent event/course and well worth the drive out of the city.  My one recommendation is same day kit pick-up for out-of-towners … it is a long drive to get the kit and then return the next day to run.  If it helps my cause, same day pick-up would be better for the environment and not just my lazy ways.

My own run was uneventful.  It usually is.  I ran like a metronome, without varying from my pace even when briefly chatting with friends on the course.  I’ve never been one for k by k breakdowns, mostly because I forget things almost as they are happening.   A few notable exceptions: I kept my record intact and finished ahead of the costumed runner (a red hot chilly pepper, of course), I narrowly missed a direct hit by a giant spit ball (the man apologized multiple times as his phlegm grazed my eyelashes), I felt sorry for one poor lady who never learned the ‘do not wear yoga pants in soggy weather because they will grow to three times their length’ lesson and by 2K she was already struggling to keep her pants up, a hyper-competitive woman with no control over her flailing arms and legs raced passed me then slowed three times -tripped me once- before falling behind never to be seen again around the 10K mark, and I sped ate a powdered doughnut at the finish line before my cooldown and ran the next 3K with bright white lips. 

Title: the Eagles – Desperado.  1973.

Lets just see what the morning brings

I think husband should go with the Marathon Moustache.  It sure worked for Reid Coolsaet, who now boasts the fastest time ever run by a Canadian on Canadian soil.  He ran six seconds under the Athletics Canada Olympic Standard (2.11.23).  It was a record breaking day.  In the same race Kenya’s Kenneth Mungara and Sharon Cherop ran the fastest men’s and women’s marathons ever on Canadian soil.  I watched.  And ran next to all of them for a brief moment as they passed by me during my long run.  I think it’s fair for my memoirs to say I ran with them. 

Reid’s play-by-play race report is rather cool, so rather than say much more I’m going to send you to his blog:  Reid’s Race Report.   For his next trick, besting the all-time Canadian Marathon record set by Jerome Drayton in 1975 (2.10.08)?  It’s just a matter of time.  Ha.  I love puns.

Speaking of broken records, last year on this day a record of people visited this blog – a record that still stands.  What were they reading about?  The worst race of my life, run on this same record setting course.  Company loves misery?

Title Reference:   Tragically Hip – Wheat Kings.  1992.

Set my eyes on a blistering sight of a vicar in tutu

I said I would do it and I did it.  Wearing a tutu, wings, and carrying a wand.  The entire 30K.  I didn’t toss my costume at an unsuspecting volunteer 3K in as I had imagined.  And I did it with almost perfect pacing.  The race was great.  Even in the stifling 100% humidity that was our Midsummer Evening.  I’m so glad I was pacing and not racing.  I gulped about 18 cups of water and various colours of Gatorade at every station and still felt dehydrated.  I am endlessly impressed by the resolve of everyone who all-out raced in that weather.  As evidence that my body will never ever adapt to hot and/or humid weather running, I ran at a take it easy pace and still threw up twice later that evening.  And then I pitifully crawled out of the bathroom leaving Husband to flush the regurgitated remains of my post-race apple, beer, and banana.  That after nearly fainting on the bus ride back to the parking lot.  And complaining the entire car ride home.  I am a gem of a wife.  All this due to heat illness.  Or water poisoning.  The google symptoms are surprisingly similar.  I may also have a brain tumour. 

Back to fairy-ing.  I told my band of merry runners we would come in within a minute under the goal time.  Well, half the pack took off at 29K for a sprint finish, as my expert pacing left them with lots of fuel in the tank at the end.   A good fairy, I resisted the finish line surge and held steady, coming in 30 seconds under the goal time.  Dave was within 10 seconds of his Pace Fairy time, but he is a very experienced bunny fairy.  This was my first time in the ears wings.  I passed the pace bunny test.  Earned my golden carrot (or, in this case, my fairy wand).  Not that I have any evidence of this achievement.  Except the sworn testimony of my followers.  My chip timer did not work and my Garmin attempted suicide during the post race flood, taking my entire run history down with it.  The truth is out there.

p.s. For those who run for the t-shirt, the swag was excellent – a zippy jacket, moon medal, and a Planet Forward stainess steel water bottle waiting at the end. 

Title: The Smiths – Vicar in a Tutu.  1986.

Your shoes get so hot you wish your tired feet were fireproof

Ahh, the August civic holiday long weekend.  Seems like so long ago.  Sun, sand, great lakes and the always smoking hot 58th running of the Shore to Shore Road Race.  I don’t need to remind my faithful readers that I do not like warm weather running.  And by “do not like” I mean “passionately hate and want to hibernate with my running shoes until September”.  But this is a nice race.  Only $25, the earnings go to family literacy programs, and for a small race the aid stations are numerous and bus shuttle service  impressive (I don’t use it, but I’m impressed they have one) and a generous post-race fruit feast … so even though a few years ago I vowed ‘never again will I pay money to run in August’, how could I resist? 

The race runs from the shores of Lake Huron across the peninsula to the shores of Georgian Bay, a scenic 13Kish route across escarpment territory.  As the more clever among you have deduced, that’s why it’s called the Shore to Shore.  Escarpment, noun, a steep slope or long cliff that results from erosion or faulting and separates two relatively level areas of differing elevations.  So the route is a little up and down with a final downhill quadbuster in the last half kilometre.  With little shade we were lucky to run under overcast skies, although the oppressive humidity ensured there was enough torture to toughen us up.  Although the race attracts a solid field, it is collegial and supportive in that 200 personsized race kind of way.  To wit, as I passed a very nice woman from the Saugeen Track & Field Club gave me a hearty well done and offered me some of the Gatorade her on the course support crew provided.  So nice.

Husband and I ran this as leg one of a 27K long run, so we didn’t race (and I couldn’t anyway, at 95% humidity) as we needed to save our energy for 14K on the Bruce Trail that we never really found.   Instead we finished our run on lonesome country roads beside mountainous piles of bear poop and an invasion of flying insects and I had a complete run-down, but that’s a story for another day.  Or a story to repress.

Title Reference: The Drifters – Under the Boardwalk.  1964.

I’m lost in a forest

Once again I hit the dirt – not literally, this time – for another trail race.  This one was just under 12K and I finished with no blood or tears, but there was a little sweat.  On the technical scale this was much easier than my last trail race, perhaps because I didn’t try for a full flip at 9K.  

The race director sends us the most amusing updates, like this pre-race description of terrain:

In the second km you will enter the forest.  This km is a hilly, rooty, Godforsaken little patch of nature … you’re going to love it.  If you take it too aggressively or lose your focus, you WILL go to the ground.  Tripping hazards everywhere.  Brush up on your four letters words.  You may need them.

In trail running I found a key weakness in my fitness.  The inability (or reluctance) to run down hills at a pace faster than glacial.  I am endlessly concerned about tripping, a not unfounded fear as I was nearly taken out by an out-of-control downhill runner who hit a root on his downward spiral sprint.  I heard his panicked four-letter words and thumping from behind and I narrowly escaped getting caught in his rolling snowball as I leapt to the side.  He apologized and gasped out an I’m okay, so all was forgiven.  This is why I crawl down hills.

The location was lovely, although the new park facilities did not stand up to the test of a few hundred runners with nervous bladders and much flushing.  The course was a double loop, which I rather liked.  On a bad day I would find it tough to run past that finish banner for another go around, but on a normal day I like the finish line cheering and it helps me to know what to expect in the second half.  I tend to run solid negative splits on these types of course, and this was no exception with an almost three-minute win on lap two.  With the sport runners finishing after one lap, the second lap was rather quiet and I often found myself alone in the woods.  Except for the poor guy I passed in the final two kilometre who said he was “bonking bigtime”.  Hee, bigtime.  I hadn’t heard that one in a while.  I crossed the line in style, bought a celebratory hat, and went to brunch with my friends.  There are worse ways to spend a Saturday.  Although I am secretly disappointed I don’t have a story about a run-in with a giant hogweed.  Not a fatal run-in, but an amusing near-miss anecdote.  Alas, no near death experiences for me for you.  

And yes, I’ve already signed up for the final race of the series in October. 

p.s. A special shout-out to KLJ from toronotworkout.com (check our her race report) on finishing her first trail race and to two of my buddies who won group awards. 

Update: Turns out I won an age group award as well.  I knew I liked trial running!  Or maybe I just like medals.

Title Reference: The Cure: A Forest.  1980.  Title credit to Dave.

When I’m up I can’t get down

As you may recall, I recently  “trained” (and by trained I mean went on the first real trail run of my adult life) for an upcoming trail race.  A week ago I ran that race.   This report will be short because I could only type with one hand, the other one being too swollen, bruised and stiff to click keyboards.  I had hoped to finish top ten among women but narrowly missed my goal, which isn’t too bad given that around 9K my foot lodged beneath a root, sending me straight to my knees and a belly flop into the dirt, and then somehow, and I’m still not sure how, into a somersault over my right shoulder.  It was magnificent.  I call it my stop, drop, and roll.  My friend hilariously said his would be a drop, roll, and stop.   The wind was knocked out of me and I never really regained my momentum.  But I still loved every minute of it and I wear my swollen and bruised knees, shoulder, and wrist with pride.  And a whopping dose of Advil. 

The race was superbly organized (the next day the organizer emailed apologizing for a couple of small glitches that all only a few runners would have noticed and indicated that the problems would all be rectified for the next race – I didn’t notice any issues, but I think the email was first-class), the vibe collegial, I loved the branded hot-cold packs given with the race kit, the route markers were numerous and easy to follow, and the course marshals cheerful and helpful.  The post-race prizes were plentiful, alas, I failed to win any of them.  All in all an A+ event.  This explains why the races are all sell-outs.  We started in waves, which reduced the crowds but I’m still not used to running with a pack on technical terrain.  Also, I’m not used to running on technical terrain.  I surprised myself with my patience, although a few others could handle a dose or two, and if the leader of the pack decided to walk on single track I went Zen and embraced the break.  I’m not risking my fall marathon to bushwhack a few places higher.  Even with the rush of a race the runners looked out for each other and if an expletive was heard it was immediately followed by a round of “are you okays?” and a quiet pause awaiting the answer.  

Of the races in the series this one is billed as the most technical, which I like.  The challenge of the tricky sections works well with my personality.  I fair well with the fancy footwork although I’m a little too skittish on the downhills.  Surprisingly, my gymnastics move happened during one of the open (read: easy) sections of the course, which is good because I had a soft non-cuncussion landing.  I guess I got complacent for a moment.  I won’t make that mistake again.  Constant Vigilance!  My day after run was hilarious in that I moved, as Husband put it, like a robot.  I haven’t moved like a robot after a race in a long time.  Would I run this series again?  In a heartbeat …. I’m already registered for the August race.

Title Reference: Great Big Sea – When I’m Up (I Can’t Get Down). 1997.

Finally facing my Waterloo

Sunday morning at 7am I registered for a half marathon.  Sunday morning at 8.30am I ran the half marathon.  My last half marathon, if you recall was a complete disaster and my near-undoing.  I proceeded with caution.  This was a last-minute decision.  No planning, no taper, no expectations.  The result?  A PB, on a very hilly, very rainy, very headwindy course.  Let’s rewind.  Husband and a few friends were running the Waterloo Marathon.  I wanted to go and be a supportive wife/friend.  I love the city for reasons of youthful nostalgia and Husband meeting memories.  I’ve been feeling lazy lately, so I started to think maybe I could run the half for fun and then watch the gang run in.  I scaled back a wee bit on my training this week - a slightly shorter tempo run Tuesday, my hill training peaked but at a marginally reduced effort level on Wednesday, and a scaled back steady run on Thursday.  A taper-light, in case I decided to run.  On Saturday I decided to run.  Bright and early Sunday morning I handed $60 to the someone at the race registration desk in exchange for a t-shirt voucher (this is small race and they were out of my size shirts, so they gave me a voucher, which I think is awesome given that I registered 90 minutes before the race start and wasn’t really expecting a shirt) and a timing chip. 

The rainfall was torrential.  The words “cats” and “dogs” spring to mind.  The kind of rainstorm that leaves you drenched before you even get to the starting line.  At about 5K the gale force headwind coupled with the rain to create a force of nature worthy of a bible story.  Another 5K and a change in direction later and the headwind becomes a sidewind.  The side of my face was beaten senseless by the driving rain.  Now it feels silky soft.  Probably because I lost three layers of skin.  My right ear started to ache from the pounding.  I turned my head to the left so that a hair-covered area bore the brunt of the attack.  On the left I noticed that we were following the route of a raging river with whitecaps.  In normal weather it is a gentle babbling brook.  Despite the challenging conditions my legs felt perky and I appreciated the bagpiper serenade every 5K or so.  Also I had friends running the full and, the idea of running only 21.1K lifted my spirits in an I’m glad I’m not them kind of way.  With many, many ambulances en route (officially this is the St. John Ambulance Waterloo Marathon) this felt like the safest race in Canada.  If you ever have a heart attack during a marathon I hope it’s during this one.  You know what I mean. 

The scenic route runs through cute little villages and rural Mennonite country and the lucky marathoners get to run through the only covered “kissing” bridge left in Ontario - lucky only if you kiss someone while under the bridge.  Bad luck if you do not.  I wouldn’t take any chances at 26K, but Husband has been rather silent on the matter.  So has his running mate.  The latter went on to win his age group, but I’m not suspicious.  The last 5K of the course was not easy.  I want to say tough but that would not be very glass is half full of me.  Lots of  inclines and another brutal headwind.   Did I mention the hills?  Rollers from start to finish.  I’m glad I like hills.  And rain.  The wind I could do without.  I hope they fix that for next year.  Dear Race Director, please ask the wind to stay away next year.  Thank you in advance.

As I entered the park I realized that I hadn’t yet seen the 20K marker and I knew the finish line was close at hand.  Where would we make up the distance, I panicked wondered as I fought against the wind?  The finish line was my first glance at a clock the entire race.  That’s right readers, I ran this one Zen.  Also my sleeves were pulled down over my watch to cover my frozen gloveless fingers and I did not have the fine motor skills to unhook that thumbhole for a glance at the watch.  Earlier in the race, due to the aforementioned frozen fingers, I very nearly lost my PowerBar Gu down my pants.  After impaling my thigh with the safety pin attaching the Gu to my pants.  You know those ideas that seem good at the time?  And then I couldn’t open the Gu with my hands, so I ripped it apart with my teeth like a glycogen-starved animal.  My hands were too cold to squeeze the Gu out of the package, so I tried to extract the Gu without the use of my fingers.  The traffic cops at the corner seemed bemused.  And a wee bit worried.  I’m not sure they knew what I was doing with my hands down my pants.  I was, if you recall, looking for my Gu. 

But back to the finish line.  The dastardly route planner took the half marathoners past the finish (so close I could reach out and touch it), down a slope and through a muddy, water-logged parking lot, then back up the slope to the finish line.  Kind of fun.  And pure evil.  (The same fate did not befall the marathoners, who ran directly to the finish).  But then a lovely volunteer gave me a wonderful handmade clay medal, another volunteer gave me a prepacked bag of food and a cup of hot chocolate and even offered to spread the topping of my choice on my bagel, and a massage therapist rubbed down my legs …. and I quickly forgot about the devilish finish. 

Maybe it’s because the race is small (about 500 in the half and full marathon combined), maybe it’s because the race director is amazing and adds personal touches with his hands on approach (we chatted for about 10 minutes after the race and you can tell he loves the race and St. John Ambulance), maybe it’s the well-spaced aid stations stocked with M&Ms, and maybe it’s because the many volunteers are top notch (seriously, standing in the pouring rain for hours manning aid stations and tricky turns is going above and beyond.  Thank you).  Maybe it’s for all those reasons that this is one helluva a race.  Not the easiest course.  Not the most reliable weather.  But a great race. 

p.s.  I have a new race strategy.  I call it Low Expectations.  It worked for Around the Bay and now for the Waterloo Half.   I plan on retiring off the profits from my Race With Low Expectations pop psychology running book.

Title Reference: ABBA – Waterloo.  1974.

These vagabond shoes

The Beforemath.  Race morning I woke up with a backache, cramps, and a migraine.  It’s fun to be a girl.  Men, stop groaning and start saying thanks to Adam for not biting into that damn apple.  I may be wrong about the garden story, but it sure feels like punishment for something sinful on a biblical scale.  There are many things one never wants to do in a port-a-loo.  One of those things involves a tampon.  I hope those ewwws are ewwws of pity.  Always trying to be an optimist, even though it doesn’t come naturally, I convinced myself that the day could only get better.  A day that began with three blasting alarms going off at 4 am.  Plus a ringing wakeup call.  I tend to overdo it.  The shock from the noise permanently damaged my heart.  Better a threee-alarm heart attack than a re-enactment of that Seinfeld episode.

Michael J Fox joins the Team Fox Cheer Section

By 4.30 am we were out the door for the 1.5 mile walk to the 5 am bus pick-up.  So many numbers so early in the morning.  The streets at 4.30 am were filled with bleary-eyed runners chugging Gatorade and well-hydrated Halloween revelers returning home from a night of debauchery.  Both groups were similar in their disorientation.  Where am I?  How did I get here?  Am I wearing two different shoes?  After a quick pep talk and some words of thanks (the 220 NYCM runners raised almost $700,000 for the Michael J Fox Foundation) the Team Fox bus left for Staten Island.  The ride was speedy (I heard that later buses faced long waits on the bridge to get to the drop off zone) and we were at Fort Wadsworth and cleared through security by 6:30 am.  For a 9.40 am start.  Sigh.  Already awake for two hours I had three more hours to go before my day really began. 

Now for my first complaint (don’t worry, I have but a few).  Although the race area had lots of maps, none had a handy ‘you are here’ dot.  A big map is limited in usefulness if you can’t figure out where you are that map.  It may sound intuitive with the three colour system, but unfamiliar (not to mention sleepy) as I was with the staging area, it took several minutes to orient myself.  At first I thought the green corral, with the lines of loos and green balloons, was the green village.  A sparse little entertainment and bagel free village.  To my relief it was not.  We eventually stumbled upon the fully-stocked and lively village and created a makeshift shelter with our space blankets, sleeping bag, and umbrella (there was light rain in the early hours of the morning).  The pre-7am lineups for coffee, tea, water, bagels, and even the loos were refreshingly short.  The post-8am lineups were longer, but not crazy.  I waited in the loo line twice, once for 30 seconds and once for five minutes.  That may be a pre-race P(ee)B.  With such a long gap before the race, planning food and drink was an (unsuccessful) experiment.  I ate my usual amount, but given the long time frame I don’t think my usual was enough.  Unfortunately I didn’t realize my mistake until around 30K.  But I’m getting ahead of myself.   

We were snug in our shanty town tent and much better off than the shivering masses of runners forcing a single trash bag to shelter their body, serve as a ground sheet, and provide warmth.  No trash bag can live up to all those expectations.  We tucked in for an hour, but it was too noisy to sleep so we eavesdropped on amusing conversations.  One overheard phone call: I’m in the green village.  Keep going.  Keep going.  There you are.  I can see you.  Yeah, wave your hand.  No, the other hand.  Jump up and down.  Higher.  Turn around.  Keep turning.  The other way.  Just kidding.  I can’t see you.  Keep walking.  Later, the same prankster as he answers his phone: over his very loud panting … can’t talk …. huff and puff …. am in the lead … stop calling … puff puff puff … or I’ll never win this race.

At 8 am the loudspeaker’s reminders in 17 languages to bag check and get to the corral became increasingly urgent.  I was like, it’s 8 am, chillax, I have scads of time.  Turns out I did not.  By 8.30 am the loudspeaker started threatening me, warning that I needed to get to my corral before it closed (what?) and forced tardy runners into wave two (what the what?).  I rushed to bag check, tossed my stuff at a poor volunteer with quick reflexes, and tried to find the green corral.  Complaint, The Second.  This was not an easy task.  Runners were moving en mass in 13 different directions.  I didn’t know who to follow.  It was chaos, with everyone asking everyone else where to go and no one answering confidently.  The first wave of runners were outnumbered, swimming upstream against runners still looking for the staging area.   The route to the village was marked, but the route to the corral was Top Secret.  Flustered I rushed about, asked for directions twice, and made it to Green E with three minutes to spare.  Next time I’ll take the loudspeaker more seriously.  Those who lagged behind were locked out of the corral by the unsympathetic volunteers.  I applaud their resolve, especially as runners tried to climb the fence to get in.  It felt a little surreal, like the chosen few were selected to exit through the gates to freedom, but the door is closed on those who didn’t make it in time, left on the other side of the fence with their sad (angry) faces longing to join us.

The Race.  In the corral were thousands of runners in their thrift store best adding and subtracting layers by the minute.  My third complaint.  The clothing collectors were stationed before the corrals - you hand off your clothes then go into the corral to wait.  My corral closed at 9 am.  My race started at 9.40 am.  I needed those warm throwaways for another 40 minutes.  Most people discarded their layers in the corral, at the start line, and in the first 2 miles and those clothes quickly became muddy and trampled.  I worry all those clothes are trash, not donation.  More sensibly stationed donation bins would be a terrific modification to the race.  To all the powerful people from the NYRR reading this race report, take note. 

I should mentioned that Husband abandoned blue corral (and his obvious chance at a professional career) to hang with me in green.  Reportedly he could run with me, but I could not run with him, as I had the higher number.  Our plan was to run the race together.  Ahh, we’re so sweet.  Security at the corral was tight and the bouncer had to call a supervisor over to approve his entry into my section.  He was approved.  This would be our first marathon running side by side.  Stay tuned to see if the marriage survived.  For those concerned with such matters, there were lots of loos in the corral for nervous runners, but the waiting area was squishy and I wasn’t keen on standing still for 40 minutes.   I needed to conserve energy.  Fine, I’m lazy and standing gives me a backache.  Did you read my opening remarks?  Backache is one of the many punishments.  There were few places to sit, except in the middle of the corral, which I did.  Runners have nice legs.  Some are a little hairy for my taste, but for the most part are rather shapely.

We started moving more quickly than anticipated.  First the ropes between the corrals were removed.  Then we were moved ahead of all the corrals so that the wave two runners could start loading in.  For those concerned with such matters, once you leave the corrals you leave the loos.  Not that this stopped anyone of the male gender from unleashing on the unsuspecting plant life.  Finally we shuffled our way to the start line.  Or within five minutes of the start line.  People started jockeying for position and slower corral runners tried to sneak up.  I held back knowing I would be running about 15 minutes slower than my entry time, having just run the Marine Corps Marathon 6 days prior.  I forgot that most people are about 15 minutes optimistic in entering their predicted finish times.  In reality I was probably properly seeded and by hanging back I let a lot of slowing runners charge ahead.  Ah well, I could busy myself chasing them down in the second half.  

An observation – runners are amazingly fast undressers.  I’m not sure what this means, but I thought it worth mentioning.  By 9.38am the clothes were flying.  Literally flying through the air, landing on buses and skittish heads.  Speeches were made, but all I heard was wah wah wah Charlie Brown teacher style.  Around (not promptly, but close) 9.40am the race began with a bang.  And a rousing rendition of New York, New York which many sang at top volume.  Many are not good singers, but that’s part of the charm.

New York Times Marathon of Surprises Slideshow

Running in the green corral means one thing: the lower bridge.  The runners, obviously aware of the possibility of pee shooting over the edge from the upper bridge, stuck to the middle of the lower level.  Complaint IV.  I don’t think our views, from the dark windy tunnel, were nearly as spectacular as those from the upper deck.  All those sweeping vistas and aerial shots of masses of runners on the Verrazano-Narrows Bridge?  The lower class runners experienced none of that magic.  The longest single-span suspension bridge in North America shook beneath my feet from the thundering footsteps of 12,000 excited runners.  Instead of unobstructed views of New York City and a glorious bridge we looked at the backs of the runners ahead.  On the upside, no golden showers rained down on me.  The first mile is uphill and I started at a slow pace to warm up my screaming hamstrings.  They were not pleased to be running again and made their opinion known from step one.  I decided to take it mile by mile, coaxing them (and pleading, bargaining bribing, cursing … ) as needed. 

The route famously runs through five boroughs, but I admit to a total loss of orientation.  I had no idea where I was when.  I think I should have studied the course before starting.  I was busy.  There were like a zillion bridges and people keep saying things like ‘remember the Queensboro Bridge’ and I retort, I remember like a zillion bridges.  I do not know which is which, what, where or any of the other Ws. 

The race was everything I expected and nothing I expected.  With reports of two million spectators I was surprised that significant portions of the route were almost silent.  In the first few miles I think the bulk of the fans lined the blue/orange path, leaving the green path remarkably quiet until mile 7.  The empty streets contrasted sharply with the madness of the official cheer zones.  Along the route the usual suspects were present: high-fiving kids, gospel singers, rockus bands, silent Hasidic Jews, dance troupes, proud community members (Harlem United!).  I enjoyed running by profanity-laden and demanding signs (real examples: hurry the bad-f-word up and I’m not here to watch you walk), urban squalor, cultural enclaves, and city landmarks.  Mostly though I was transfixed by the sheer volume of runners.  The crowd never thinned.  Never.  On every inclined I glanced forward and back and all I could see were runners.  Before the routes merged I could see the orange and blue runners crossing along different paths, with the cool effect of runners moving in sync in multiple directions.  It was overwhelming, motivating, inspiring, and moving (literally and emotionally).  I watched my fellow runners more than I watched the city.  I watched the spectators more than I watched the city.  In a way I missed New York, but I didn’t miss the race. 

What then can I say about my race?  Husband and I stuck together for all 42.2K.  We soaked in the many moments and communicated via knowing looks, smiles, and telepathy, but few words were spoken.  My hamstrings eventually loosened, the lady pains remained, and we kept to a fairly steady pace for the duration of the run.  Neither of us had a bad moment, we just ran side by side, each taking in the craziness of the race in our own way (and occasionally comparing notes).  The runners were all courteous (I’ve read reports about pushing and jostling in the later waves, but I didn’t see or experience any of that), but there was very little chit-chat.  Most were singularly focused on the task of getting to the finish line in the shortest amount of time. Passing and being passed was surprisingly easy given the volume.  This was true before and after the 8-mile merge with the blue/orange.  A few times I found myself boxed in, but usually only when the road narrowed and at aid stations (the overeager volunteers did not stay close to the tables, instead moved way into the street effectively cutting the route width in half).  Dealing with the crowd of runners was easier than anticipated, but I should remind that I was not running for time and thus had none of that paceband anxiety compelling me to dart around trying to pass people.  Coming off that one long bridge (which one? I have no clue), where the rhythmic sounds of feet pounding pavement fade into the wall of screams as you exit the bridge and round the corner is a moment I’ll remember until my memory fades.  That mad cheering propelled me forward for at least a mile. 

I did start to slow as we started up fifth avenue (I think 5th, the end was near … kind of).  I didn’t hit the wall, but the cumulative fatigue and lack of food/drink was catching up with me.  My legs, not yet recovered, tired on the long incline.  Husband was peppy enough for both of us.  Still, I was pleased to run nearly even splits (the second half was 2 minutes slower than the first half, so I slowed down but didn’t crash and burn — a very real possibility in my first back-to-back marathon attempt).  Miles 23 – 25 or so are on a gradual uphill until the blessed turn into Central Park.  The glorious Park of Many Colours was a little rollier than ideal so late in the game, but my legs tend to like grade changes.  At mile 25 ‘like’ is a relative word. 

New York Times Reader Submitted Photos

As the end drew near the sign countdown began in earnest.  The only problem – I have no concept of 100 yards.  A mile I get, I can do miles.  But a yard?  Am I near or am I far?  Do I pick up the pace or hold back?  Silently I yelled, for the love of  Fred Lebow what the hell is a yard?  And there it was.  The finish.  With three chutes.  I became hopelessly confused, actually pausing before the finish trying to figure out where to go.  I was thinking three colours, three chutes, which one is green?  Husband had to guide my addled brain across the finish line.  As it turns out, any chute will do. 

I crossed the finish line about 14 minutes later than the previous week at Marine Corps, but still around a minute faster than my slowest (and first ever) marathon.  So this wasn’t, as expected, a PW (personal worst) and I did meet my goal of running a BQ time.  The difference between the back-to-back marathons – less than 14 minutes.  The difference between my fastest and slowest times ever - less than 15 minutes.  I have a zone.   A very narrow zone.

The Aftermath.  I was warned about the death march that follows the finish line.  Some said it was harder than the race itself.  But knowing and experiencing are not the same.  It starts out okay.  It starts with a medal.  And, meh.  Gold with a giant 40.  I spent the next two days answering the question “what’s the 40 mean”.  No iconic bridge, no race symbolism, just a big ass 40.  Then photos.  Then a space blanket.  Emergency pit stop at the medical port-a-loo.  A bag of post-race fuel (bagel, water, Gatorade, almonds, and an apple).  And then it begins.  My final complaint.  The race with no end.  The walk to the bag check.  The walk to the exit. 

With a low bib number my bag was about 2 miles (okay, maybe 2K — but post marathon 2k=2 miles, it’s the Theory of Running Relativity) past the finish.  Hundreds of trucks, counting down from 60,000.  Shivering and weary bodies shuffle in stony silence as they make their way to the UPS vehicle containing warm clothes and a face wipe.  In my double-layer space sheet (I was given a second space blanket due to the worrisome blue colour of my lips) I marched forward.  No fewer than 17 medical personal came up to me, put a hand on my arm and said “are you okay”, followed immediately by an “are you sure”.  One pulled me off the death trail for a breather.  Seems I was rather pale, except for my blue lips, and the extremely efficient medical team was determined to keep me out of the statistics.  I felt rather lightheaded.  I have an annoying tendency to faint and I know the signs.  Husband was on close watch. 

I finally made it to …. the line-up at my bagcheck truck.  Husband bravely offers to wait in line while I collapse at the side of the road.  As I waited my slow twitch brain came to the realization that upon exit I would need to retrace my steps – all 2 miles of them – to get back to the post-race party.  I started to weep.  Not really.  I was too dehydrated for tears.  Those smart folks who packed a change of clothes– I was not among them.  I fashioned my space sheets into a toga for warmth (I knew my keg party education would come in handy some day) and I soldiered on and on an on.   In every direction road closures forced a detour that added one, two, or three blocks to my journey.  I was resigned to my fate of circling Central Park ’til nightfall.  Total time elapsed from finish line to arrival at party near finish line = 100 minutes.  After the party no cab would stop and so we walked – still in my Jetson toga – the 3K back to the hotel.  Post-race walking distance estimated at 8longK. 

The next day we strutted around with our big gold medals like we’d won the race.  Oh yeah, I’m a finisher.  As we walked through Central Park a teacher flagged us down and said to a group of school children, look kids, those strangers ran the marathon yesterday.  To us they explained that they had just told the kids all about the race.  So we showed off our medals and puffed up our egos.  I bet none of those kids ran 42.2K yesterday.  Strangers on the street offered up high fives, congratulations echoed from every direction, and the sidewalks were filled with runners sporting race t-shirts and shiny medallions.  We gave each other knowing nods of acknowledgement, like we were all members of some secret society.  The New York Times published our names and finish time (gun, not chip), which means I’m published in The New York Times.  That’s going in the CV.  For this non-New Yorker the best part about the NYCM is not the course, the size of the field, the elites paid to run, or the fancy swag.  The best part about the NYCM is the highly contagious New York City marathon spirit that seems to infect everyone. 

Would I do it again?  Probably not, but I’m thrilled with my one time running of the race.

Finally, the end.

Title Reference: Frank Sinatra – New York, New York.  From the album Trilogy: Past Present Future. 1980.