Tag: 100 races

  • [689] Virginia 100 Mile

    It was my fifth 100 Mile race this year.  I did not plan to run this especially since it was the race’s inaugural year.  I’d rather let others be the test bunnies but in the end I glad I did show up and put on a performance of a lifetime. A master class in running a 100 mile, Antin’s edition.

    A friend and I joked about that we have to find a race we call it our own such that from its first year to the last, we would go back year after year until we couldn’t do it any more.  To be the ground pounder for that race like 40 times.  I think it is crazy to run the same 100 miler that many times over. Truly a groundhog day. But we ultra runners are a crazy bunch so that how I signed up. Maybe this will be a race I will do every year.

    Every race has its story.  I hope my race report will bring it out.  On the surface, it seems a rather boring race.  Flat.  Mostly out and back.  Plenty of time to do it.  I asked myself what would be the challenge?  Well there were plenty, and of course like any true 100, (bad) things happened  unexpectedly and a good race is how as runners we make it right again.  We call it grit.  Rubber hitting the road.  I don’t think I have the grit but those around surely did, especially my girlfriend. One who would not let me quit in many of my 100s.  This time I saw it with my own eye, running along side her.

    The race was supposed to take place last year but it was canceled due to Hurricane Helene hitting through southwest Virginia.  The race was pushed to this year.  I was flirting to run or not to run till I was on my way to my first race of the year, the Old Dominion, which was another Virginia 100, I signed up. Oh, an interjection.  A few of us wanted to do all Virginia 100s in one year too.  We now have 8-9 100s in our state.  They (or we) called themselves the Joe 6-pack. Back then there were only 6 100s in Virginia, but now more and more pop up.

    Another reason I signed up was many stella runners (friends) signed up and I wanted to be with them.  Most important of all was my girlfriend signed up. I had to go regardless if I were running or not.  Better to be there out on the course than sitting waiting at the finish line.  In the end many of them did not run and only just me and my girlfriend ran.  Everyone else bailed out, not sure their reasons. They had their reasons, maybe conflict of interest or they were unwell. I on the otherhand was just back from couple bad races, and hope that this one would make everything right.

    Don’t let this imply that the race was not good.  It was super good.  We had best weather and many finishers.  Plus, this race gave 32 hours where many only give 30 hours to do.  Spoiler, your truly used all available time (31:08) almost earned the DFL award (also known as the last runner) to finish it.  That what makes it a awesome race.  A lot of tears and pain to get to the finish line.

    Third reason, was I was there to pace my girlfriend. I did not really want to, since we usually fight and have our disagreements on how to run a race.  Let just say my way might be unconventional or I am just inexperience.  She would never follow my pace anyway.  So it was really ended up she was pacing me.  I think probably was too fast a pace for me.

    Probably I could have paced her regardless if they allowed or not, but by signing up, there was no if-or-but. I was out there on the course as one of the runners.

    This was a twist in that the race ended up way tougher than I thought.  I think it was the lack of training for this particular kind of super flat course.  The race hurt my feet due to the repetitive pounding! Unlike other trail races where there are hills to break up the same motion, there are none for a flat course.  The RD warned us it is hard (or harder) to run on a flat course.  It did get hard for me at the final third of the race.  More will be told later.

    Note, my girlfriend asked why she was not mentioned more in many of my previous races, she wants to make an appearance here, I don’t want to be mean, but she should write her own report.  This will mostly be about me and my race.  Yes, she was there.  I hoped she enjoyed her time and the challenged she went through.  Her being there was incidental (I would have run either way) but did have a major effect in the end for my race.

    Let’s start from the beginning.  So on our way to a 100 mile back in June, I went and signed up this race when my girlfriend brought told me about it.  I guess she has been training for a whole year.  For me, I checked that money just was available, I got paid, and my schedule was open. 

    Schedule being open meant I don’t have another race that weekend but I did not check that I have a 50 mile the weekend before and a 100 miler two/three weeks earlier. Maybe I did know and thought i could handle it. Hey, it is flat how bad can it be. 

    Note, I was eyeing this race since last year, as it was on my to-do list, but money was tight last year, so I had to take care of my A-list races first before jumping on the B-list.   For those who don’t know, it is better to sign up the next race before running a race since usually after running a 100 mile (or a marathon), one would never want to do another one again.  That was my secret of signing up so many marathons or 100s the last couple years.

       I ran 16 x 100 mile races so far and the goal is to reach 100.  Interestingly, I met a runner (Rosie), she is on her way to running 100 x 100 milers, and at this race it was her 98th.  We were rooting for her hard to reach her goal.  Not sure when she started her goal of 100 but it seems like she runs every weekend. So, reaching a 100 could be achieved within 2-3 years. I think 5 years is very reasonable.

      This year,  I have done one almost every month starting from June.  5 so far with one more left for the year. I have  to keep up at this rate to reach my 100 x 100 by time when I retired. 

    The five 100s I ran this year:

    June,  Old Dominion

    July: Vermont 100

    August: Eastern States

    September: Grindstone 100

    October: Virginia 100

    I have one more left for the year, Devil Dog in December, rounding to total six for the year.  I did not finish Old Dominion or Eastern States, so possibly only have 4 finishes this year.

    It was almost a pattern, one race I would not finish and then the next I would. If I did not finish Virginia 100, I would have to go back next year.  50-60% completion rate seems like a poor planning, but that was the idea if I reach 50% I know the challenge is hard enough and I am not underestimating or overestimating myself.  If I have 100% completion rate, it maybe is too easy for me.

    All five races I have done this year have been hard, and each finish (Vermont, Grindstone and Virginia 100) was a pyrrhic victory.

    Remember in Old Dominion, I was doing on time well until mile 75.  Then I blew away all my lead and ended up not finishing.

    Vermont 100 was almost the same.  I got to Camp 10-Bear (mile 70), then race got hard, after midnight and there were doubts if I could pull a finish.  But I did and finished at near 29 hour (1 hour before the cut off).

    Eastern States was a repeat of the same.  I started just by walking early.  The race gave 36 hours, so I should have enough time.  Somewhere between 4-6 am, I lost a lot of time due to fatique and sleepiness.  I was able to cling on until 10:30 mile 75-80. The race ended with a ride to the finish. I had a pacer too, where I did not have one at Old Dominion or Vermont! I did get lost, but if I have been a stronger runner, that would not been an issue.  Getting lost is part of the fun of running a 100 or any trail races.

    At Grinstone, mile 80 at Camp Todd, I got fresh strength. It was raining.  I was wet and cold.  The extra time at the aid station allowed me to change into dry shirt and put on rain jacket helped me stay in the race. The end was not pretty but got it done with 15 minutes left on the clock.  That was what different between Eastern States and Grindstone, time to burn at the end.

    There seems to be a pattern that mile 70-80 is pivot moment whether I will finish or not finish a race.  It is similar to mile 20 in a marathon, called hitting the wall.

    At Old Dominion, I blamed it on the weather.  Rain came around 4 AM and it wrecked my running pace.  I slipped and fell.  Injured my toes and so forth.  There were no cutoffs but finishing was not realistic and so I asked for a ride back.  I was very tired.

    At Eastern States, it was a battle of time.  There was just not enough time to do it and zero chance for error. I slept three times during the night. Used up 15 minutes, I could have used at the end.  Also I had some issues with technology.  My phone was not showing me the way (the map was frozen).  It was one of the portion of the course that I have skipped studying because I thought it should be easy. So got lost there. That sealed my fate.  As a lesson from that race was to prepare better for the night run and for fatique by bringing Red Bull and caffeinated drinks. Also, study the course well!

    At the Virginia 100, it was my leg acting up at 4 am in the morning.  I got it done, barely, finished at 31:08:33, 8 minutes ahead of the last runner.  It was a slow walk to the finish from mile 78.

    All these flashbacks are a bit boring but hopefully they serve a purpose for my future races. It is a learning process.  We learn from our mistakes.

    So back at the beginning, I was a bit nervous as I headed down to Max Meadows, which is 6 miles from Fort Chiswell.  We went there a day before to familarize the driving directions.  It was not hard.  There are plenty hotels and restaurants nearby. 

    We stayed in Whytheville, maybe another 10 miles away. I would recommend staying at Fort Chiswell.  Prices are relatively inexpensive.  Camping is an option, but hotels are way better for post race.  Because Monday was a holiday, making staying the night after the race a better choice, without rushing to get home for work.

      The drive down was long and food was bad.  We had Subway –  Cheese and Sub but I chose the wrong kind of cheese.  Not that Subway was a bad choice, but I just customized it poorly.  Anyway, let not complain about the food.  Dinner was good.  We had all you can eat buffet for 11 dollars. Where?  I forgot the name, but it was near Days Inn.  Yes, if stay there in Whytheville, stay at the Days Inn, where it is near all kind or restaursnts. They tempted us with senior discount!  Sweet and what a steal.  Though they forgot to put the discount in our final bill because I did not look old enough.  Oh well. The food was good though and worth the buck.

    I could eat anything before the race.  So food was not an issue.  I cared more about what to wear.  The forecast was to be cold and rainy like my time in Utah.  42 F.  I could handle 42 degree but just not the wetness.  So having learned from my last weekend fiasco in Utah, I dressed as warm as I could and put plenty of shirts and jackets in my drop bags.  I rather carry on me than not being able to get warm. Once you have been through like in Utah, I don’t ever want to be cold again.

    About the drop bags, we were all required to use 2 Gal Zip-loc clear plastic bag.  The size of a 2 gallon bag is about the size of a standard 8×11 paper. It is small for a typical drop bag we used in a race.  The RD stated that any other bags would not be accepted.  It was a last minute scramble the night before to find 2 Gal Zip-loc bags.  My fellow runner and girlfriend told me she started not like about this race. Hey, it was for our good we were limit by what we could bring.

    For me, it was a challenge to put in my drop bags all the things I think I needed, such as headlamps, coffees, granolas, socks, shoes!  How on earth do you fit a pair of shoes into a zip loc?  In the end shoes did not make the cut and neither did my trekking poles.  Wait for it.  More to the Trekking poles.  They did not fit into the bag. I prioritize caffeinated drinks adn food over everything. I put in canned soups.

    We went to bib pickup on Friday night.  Drop bags were to be collected the next day before the race, which is a bit unusual.  I was fine with it because it gave me more time to decide what to be placed in them. The start/finish location was easy to find.  It was one straight road from Fort Criswell, then made a left turn and another left, we were there. There were signs.  Follow them and should be good. 

    The race required us to purchase parking passes.  It was more an honor system.  We purchased a 2 day pass, but were handed only one day ticket during the commotion.  Yes, should have double checked.  In the end it was not an issue.  I don’t think anyone checked, not on race day nor at the finish.  Crew vehicle too needed a separate parking pass for various crew stations since some of the places are  on private properties.  Parking passes were $7-10 a day.  We did not have a crew so that was not a thing for us.  We did not have take care of their parking passes.

    The next day, we arrived at the race bright and early (it was dark and foggy).  Still I think 50 cars beat us to the start.  We wanted to park at the very front and be close to the start and finish, thinking when we came by during middle of the run, we could use our car as an aid station.  Nope, the course did not go through the parking lot.  It did not matter at the end, but it was good after we finish, because it was just a short distance for me to limp back to the car. My girlfriend moved the car. Oh how did we get a closer spot even though we showed up late?  My friend moved her car closer because I was near the last to finish (second to the last).  Everyone already left by then so plenty of room to park.  Also, everyone was parking on the first row, we followed the latecomers to start a second row so we were lucky to be parked closer to the starting line than other people.  It did not matter though since the aid station was not in the parking lot but on the course itself.

    We dropped off the 3 drop bags allowed, Gambetta (mile 28 and 35-ish), Hiawasie (mile 68 and 78), and Start/Finish (Mile 54 and 92). Each of those we would pass by twice.  Those who run will need to strategize what to put in each of them. 

    The early station at Gambetta did not matter too much, maybe some food, drinks and socks.

    The night time station such as Hiawasie is more important to have warmer clothes.  Headlamps and spare batteries for all locations.

    The course was a 3-way out and back, a sideway Y shape.  The finish is right at the center.  Two branches go to left (Fries) and the other branch to right (Draper).  We were running on a rail to trail.  The course was not marked though except at the turn arounds and at the couple turns we made.  Almost everyone should know where to turn even if the signs were removed.  But we appreciated the signs.

    We started in the dark.  No one mentioned that we did not bring our trekking poles along.  I remembered earlier but then forgot while eating breakfast.  There were too many things going on.  There was a morning devotion for Christians and believers, so while attending, I forgot many things. It was not important at the time.  It came back to bite me the next day toward the end of the race.

    Foggy morning

    The first 20 miles out to Fries were peaceful.  We went at a 16 ish min pace, sometimes as fast as 14 other time dropping to a fast walking pace of 18.  In early stage there were fewer aid stations.  I think there were only two.  One was at Jubilee (mile 9) and the other was at Fries Junction (mile 15), which was a water only station (with sodas). It was a fancy water only station.  The cutoff was around 11:30, we reached it an hour early.

    The second major stop for us was at Gambetta, mile 28 ish.  It was the second out and back from the Fries Junction.  We went to the waterfall for a turn around.  Miles started adding up.  My legs were tired. By evening we reached halfway.  From Gamretta we went back to Jubilee.  My friend Scott was at the aid station, volunteering.  He has been going from station to station. 

    I did not need much help, so I sent him over to help other people.  I had packed evening I needed in my drop bag, including food, clothes, socks, drinks.  Night was coming, so I needed to put on reflector vest, christmas light decoration (be-seen reflector), warmer clothes, gloves, and some rain protection.  The whole process took me 20 minutes to put on. Yes, I spent way too much time, but I thought it was worth the troubles. Caroline, my friend, already left 10 minutes ago. So out the aid station I went chasing her.  I wouldn’t see Scott again until past midnight at Hiawasee, mile 68.

    Between Hiawasee was a water only aid station called The Depot.  On our way there, we saw faster runners coming back.  Most are fast and still moving.  As the night deepened, runners were slowing down.  We rarely passed anyone now since we too were slowing down ourselves.  Right before we got to Hiawasee, the wheel came off for my girlfriend. She was in pain.  It was the witching hours (midnight).  We were basically limping from that point on. Caroline found some stick from side and used it as a trekking pole.  Later, I did the same.  Don’t belittle the stick.  It got me to the end.   It was only two miles from Hiawasee but it took us an hour to get there.  I knew we were in serious trouble (meaning no way to get to the finish).

    Not much could be said for the rest of the night.  My friend found herself another pole and used both as her trekking poles.  Our pace were no longer in sync.  I knew I had to abandone her if I want to finish the race myself.  I went on ahead to Draper where the turning around was and arrived there around 3 am.  It felt a mile longer than on paper.  We were told it was 5.1 mile but I believe it was like 6.1 or longer.

    My pace continued to degrade on my way back from Draper.  Here the rest of the field passed me except for a few.  From Draper, we just had to backtrack to Hiawasee, and then to Depot, and back to Start and Finish.  At the start and finish, we still have another short out-and-back to Austinville. There were only 28 miles left.

    It seems short but actually it took me all night.  Morning would come soon at 7 am.  I was hoping to get to Depot by then.  It was like waiting for water to boil, only it never would.  My right leg now started to develop a slight cramp, in the back of my knee.  I would massage it from time to time to ease the pain.  At first, it was some discomfort and slight pulling, but as the miles piled on, it got to the point I had to stop and rest every so often.  It was to the point, where I think reaching the Depot was no longer possible.  When hope was about to fade, Depot showed up.  The time was 7:30 am, which was still within the projected time for a finish.  Two other runners were there filling up their bottles.  I told them, I don’t think I could make it back to the finish.  They said they would let the volunteers know so they could send someone back here to pick me up.  I told them likely we were the last three runners on the course.  They agreed.

    So I filled up my pack and found a bench to sit on.  I still wanted to slowly make my way back to the start but moving at the race required pace did not seem possible.  It was about 8 miles to the Start/Finish aid station.  I had to be back by 11 ish to be still in the race.  I was doing calculations in my head.  Yes, that likely be the time if I would get there.  If I get there, then I could quit.

    While sitting on the bench on the side, a runner and someone on a bike passed by.  The runner turned and saw my bib and exclaimed, you are one of the 100 miler runners.  I said yes.  I planned to give up.  She then said, they were the course sweepers.  So got up from the bench and started walking with them, and also explained my leg hurt and I could not run any more.  I have been going from bench to bench, to sit down and then walk some more.  There generally a bench every mile or so. 

    The eight remaining mile to mile 92 went by eventually.  The sweepers were commenting, I was moving at 17 mile pace and I could still make the cut off.  Indeed, I got to the aid station at 10 am. We had 4 remaining hours to do last 8 miles.  I decided not to drop at mile 92. 

    Though I wanted to stop there for good but thinking if my girlfriend were there she would not let me stop.  She in more serious pain had walked the night before to Draper, I now could walk 4 miles to Austinville. It was in God’s hand whether I could make it back from Austinville or not.  He raises up kings and deposes them as he pleases.  Some race I could do it and some I can’t.  I accepted my fate.  I got a sense of relieve as I thought of a kid song about Peter and James went to pray and they healed a crippled man, who then went jumping and leaping, praising God.  I wanted to jump and dance too.  Amazingly strength returned and I went jumping and leaping figurative out to Austinville and passed a friend and 2nd to last runner, Josh.  Thus I avoided the DFL, being the very last runner.

    On the way out to the last out and back to Austinville, I saw all the previous runners who were still on the course.  We cheered for each others.  I was still maintaining a 17 min mile pace even though I knew a 25+ min pace would get me a buckle.  So the buckle was certain.  I came in at 1:08:33.  I took me a little over 3 hours to do the last 8 miles.

    Railroad Tunnel
    The Buckle
    Trestle, one of many we ran on

    Conclusion:  Hard to come up with anything to say.  I almost thought I could not finish and then I did. There were so many twists and turns, like first I was way confident that it would be an easy race and wasn’t. I am very glad in the end.  A time on the trail was a spiritual renewal.  This race also helps me to rethink everything about running.  One was trekking poles helped a ton.  100 mile has a way to strip everything bare and to go back to the fundamentals. 

    As for future races, everything is on hold so far. I have to dig deep and decide what race I really want to do, otherwise, I likely get more dnfs and not finish what I set out to do.

    My girlfriend drove me back home.  It was always good to have transportation arranged beforehand.  Food must have been good, but the memory of the trip is fading fast.  I think we went to Tony’s for some connolies and fried squids.  I woke up somehow at the restaurant back home.  I am grateful to the RD and all the volunteers.  I made new friends.  It was a ton of fun.  That’s ultra in a few words.

    (I wrote this while on the way to another race, Bluff, hope to get that report out soon, if ever.  MCM is coming too, so I want to focus on that).

  • MMT100 reflection [Day558]

    Saying I am lost for words to describe seems like a lazy way to put it. This is not a race report. It is too raw and there are too many thoughts to condense it to something as a report.

    I just posted the pre-race feeling. There were a lot of anticipations. There had been a lot of training runs and a lot work putting into it. Preparation. Thoughts. I looked at the last year race, especially why I could not finish and why this year would be different. The run was pretty much in line with my expectation at every phase.

    100 mile races are tough. Unlike with marathons, I go in not knowing if I would finish. In fact the drop rate for any ultras are usually high, like 30-40% and sometimes even 50%. This year is no different. No one goes into a race and think they wouldn’t finish. We all go in thinking we have a fighting chance. For me, not having finished last year, put a lot pressure on me, because it is more likely I would not finish again. What happen once can happen again! I know couple runners who did not finish last year and I asked them what were their expectation. They didn’t tell me. Statistically, they did not finish. I was afraid myself.

    With the dismal stuff out of the way, yes I was excited and I was confident. It was not a blind confidence like last year. I knew where I will be struggling and I knew almost every inch of the course. Some parts, I have been through multiple times training on it.

    I entered the race probably was not in my optimal condition. Left foot was still bothering me since December. I was hoping it would be healed by now. I had a sprain (twice) during Naked Nick 50k. Ever since, It has been hurting. I haven’t reinjured it since but it hasn’t either completely healed either, maybe because I haven’t ever truly taken a break from running.

    Also, nights leading up to the race, I haven’t been sleeping well. I stayed up late for way too many nights. Thursday night I stayed up till 3 packing (packing was done by 1 ish, but I was no longer sleepy afterward). Friday night was the pre-race camping out, bugs and cold temperature, and maybe anxiety had kept me up.

    Lastly, I didn’t taper! I ran a 44 mile the week right before the race. Many of my running friends were suprised to see me still running. To say I was a bit tired is an understatement. Plus I was trying the Streak thing with Great Virtual Race Across Tennessee (GVRAT – Rat race). I ended the streak after day 14 though (not by choice), which was probably a good thing looking back to give my body a week of rest from running before the race.

    There are just so much to say! The race is big. It has a lot of history. It is well known for friendly people. Everyone knows everyone! Last year I didn’t know anybody but this year coming in to the race, I almost know everyone (well maybe about 25% of the people there) and if I didn’t know them, I would be by the end of the day. It has many great aid stations, probably the best in all the races I have been to. It was super fun and well organized. The race is epic. I can just heap on superlatives. Unlike many popular 100 mile races, this one is one giant hoop in a relatively remote area and is a mountain race, so in theory, it is a bit hard to support, but the race did above and beyond to get the race done year after year.

    There were those who ran it twenty years ago and came back for a second time! MMT branded itself as multi-generational race. I bet for every runner, they must have known someone from somewhere who had run the MMT before. There were very few fresh first timers (Costi & Charlie, Stuart and Wayne too, but it wasn’t their first rodeo), but who just happened to sign up for the race.

    It is my second time running it, so a lot of the mysteries are no longer a surprise (my last year MMT’s report). The race being hard, and that was handled in training runs. The race being long (36 hours, new this year). I did a few 12-hr runs. I still struggled with sleep deprivation but it is no longer strange to me. A few times in the final miles I saw trees turning into people taking pictures of me and then turning back to trees! — or maybe they might have been actual people being camouflaged well, who knows.

    The main things entering this race were to correct my last year’s mistakes. I wanted this race to be a redemption. It did. The joy of succeeding in doing something when the first time failed is so much enriching. Because last year there were a series of races that I DNF’d (didn’t finish) — Devil Dog 100k, MMT, and Iron Mountain. MMT was the most important to me. I was able to redo the Devil last December and redeemed it. I ran Blackbeard 100 successfully to show myself I can still do a 100 mile race. MMT was like the final exam. Can I put everything I have learned so far into the real deal?

    My flaws of last year race was mainly not having sufficient energy for the final push up the last mountain (mile 88-mile 96), Scothorn. Also I was wasting too much time at many of the aid stations leaving not enough time for the run itself. Third flaw was physical condition, the long format race wears the body out, especially the feet. I was not taking care of my body enough.

    So this time around, I prioritized more time on the course and less time at the aid stations. It mean being smart and planning ahead. It takes care of all my three major flaws.

    Packing food and leaving them in drop bags, is one solution. My last year solution was to carry two foot long hogies and that did not work well once I finished eating them early in the race. My thinking back then was I wouldn’t have the appetite to eat on the second half anyway, so I pigged out at the beginning. It doesn’t work like that for ultras unfortunately. The key is to eat little by little!

    They gave us 9 drop bag locations (actually 10, because we came through one twice, Gap Creek 1 and Gap Creek 2) and I packed 10 doggie bags of snacks (good snacks like granola and raisins as well as junk food like gummies — you need both because your appetite changes very quicky and you need to keep eating regardless, junk food makes good food goes in easier). I packed milk (muscle mik that doesn’t require refrigeration). I had sport drinks (Costco brand which has higher sugar and salt contents).

    You can’t count on aid stations, some did have gatorade/Tailwind, but they do run out or being too diluted and they did run out. Always pack your own necessities. I don’t count calories and electrolyte intakes as some athletes do, but I monitor my overall feel. I had also a can of coconut juice for that extra refreshment. I ended up didn’t need it during the race, but at post race it was a wisdom from above and kept me awake for my drive home. As much as one been drinking, I was dehydrated, and that can of coconut juice was amazing.

    I still ate at aid stations but my drop bags had my main meals. This allowed me carry food on the go, including the food provided by the aid stations. When I arrived at a station, first thing was to grab water, making sure I drink, then filled up all my water bottles (usually a voluntert would help you with that). Then I ate from the table or if something was too big (heavy) that needed more than a couple bites to chew, I’d toss them into my food bag.

    Next is to go for my drop bag that is stored at the station. It either is to clean myself (like changing shoes, shirts, socks, etc) or get more food. Some drops I have baby wipes. But the most important thing is to exchange my food bags. My food bag does not always have the same food (a lesson learned from Blackbeard’s Revenge 100, where I got tired of my own food). The early stations I only leave a candy bar or so. But later stations have weightier meals. I don’t necessary finish eating everything, but I could make a decision whether to take a new bag or continue the current one, or mix-and-match food items that I like. The point is to keep eating. Note, I don’t eat much while I’m at the aid station, all those food items are meant to be taken on the go. I only eat while out on the trail to save time and to force myself to constantly feeding. Usually, time spent at a station is less than 5 minutes, but time on the trail between the stations is couple hours long. Hence, the reason to prioritize getting/packing things on the go instead of eating at the aid station (a big lesson I learned from last year MMT).

    Nutrition is a big part in finishing an ultra. It is much more important than in a marathon run. In marathons, bonking usually results in a slowet finish, but with ultras, bonking usually leads to-flunking-out, because the body shuts down. I had that happened to me last year at MMT. I literally so tired that I could not even lift my foot for another step. I had seen ultra runners fainting (at the Devil Dog) and I had near fainting experiences. We were trained to push our bodies to the point of exhaustion, with very little left in the tank and if race conditions change for the worse, like temperature drops or the sun suddenly hotter than expected, or sudden climb in elevation, would lead to the body shutting down. It is a fine line we walk. The body is tough but also very fragile. You do see that in marathons too but it is so much more common in ultras. So watch the body, don’t push it till it can’t go any more.

    Being smart about planning what I need and when reduced the time I need to spend an aid station leads to more time on the course. This was the key to success this year.

    I might have gone out too fast last year. This year, I was willing to ‘wait’. My motto is slow is speed. By moving slower, I was actually making up more time at the end. Moving slowly actually saved me more time this year. Here is how: There were no conga lines on the way up the early mountain sections. That was always frustrating, when you felt you can run faster than the person ahead but they are blocking your way and it takes hours to clear up. Not just one person but whole line of them for the next few miles. Last year, I did not escape from the crowd until 33 miles later. I avoided all that this year. There were no frustrations and no trying pass one another. No conga line. None. Because I was willing to let all the hotshots go first.

    There probably were traffic but I seemed to miss them. The first four miles seemed to separate the different pace groups well. Last year, I was passing people one after another for the whole first 33 miles. This time, I somehow hit the right pace very early on. There I stayed. No one passed me much and I didn’t pass others much either. Passing people takes a lot of energy. Not having to do it save those efforts for later push. It was amazing. If you do it right, this is how it should be. It was as if the whole field has disappeared and I was the only one running. I was very surprised myself.

    One very important thing I learned this time is I could have anything solved while on the trail instead of waiting until I get to an aid station. Most of the time was being proactive at problem solving. I kept asking myself what is likely the biggest problem I am having right now or soon will have and how do I go about solving them and what is the optimal solution. I would rank them in my head and go about them in a round-robin way. I would repeat again and again. Always checking for any possibly issue. I kept asking myself “What can I do at the present.” This is the new insight I learned from this race! You have to proactively seek out problems (warning signs) — otherwise, the brain would hide them from you and you will forget them at the aid stations. This was the solution to my mistakes I made last year, when I repeatedly forget to eat, because I was so scattered brain at the aid stations. Runner’s foggy brain is real.

    I surprised myself – for instance, I was finding I started to get some rashes from the rub burn. At first, I thought, hey it’s just a little discomfort, I could wait till I get to the station for some clean shirt. Then an idea came. I carried body lotion on me (sometimes sunblock lotion, body lotion, vaseline, or even lip balm, etc). I have heard stories someone used lipbalm for underwear rashes! You got to use whatever you have on hand!

    So I asked myself: Why not stop and apply them. I did, it cooled the irritable area and the problem was dealt with. There were so many similar things. Stop rashes from starting. Stop blisters from happening. That quick one or two minutes on the trail fixes saved time when arriving at an aid station. Sometimes, it is unavoidable, but we deal with as much possible while during the run rather than wait till we get to the aid station. I also stopped whenever I felt grits had gotten into my shoes and I would stop and empty them.

    When things done right, the race was pretty boring and uneventful. Unlike last year or previous races, I did not let things get too far out of hand. This race I think was very boring in term of my execution! Everything was done by the book. I was bored.

    My biggest problem was and it was a rookie mistake. It was my hubris. I wore the wrong type of shoes for the race. I prepared four pairs of shoes. Two pairs are old shoes, and two are completely new (same two pairs I acquired at the Roanoke Marathon).

    You probably know where I am going with this. I have been running for 7 years and I pride myself of being able to run in any kinds of shoes as long as they are not sandals. I probably would, but I stubbed my toes doing that before and stopped doing it. I typically do not wear trail shoes for trail running. However, I do most of the time break in my shoes long before an important race. This time I did not do so and I suffered for it.

    It was not the shoes to be blamed. I wore two new pairs on my daily usuage and even light running and they seemed fine. I had them for maybe couple weeks. I had not used them for harder stuff.

    As for the race, the shoe plan was to start with my trusted old pair first, and if I like it I will continue to wear it. I stove the first new pair at mile 33/35 at Elizabeth Furnace. The next pair was at Camp Roosevelt (mile 63-65-ish), it would be an extremely old pair because it would go through mud before getting to Gap Creek. From Gap Creek I (mile 70) to the finish would be my last new pair. The plan seemed well thought out to alternate between the old and new pairs.

    It is the last pair that gave me the most trouble. Well the first new pair after putting it on, I know immediately I didn’t like it. Not because it was uncomfortable, it is very comfortable but the issue was I couldn’t “dance” on the trail. Shoes required trust. I was not trusting them.

    I found out the reason why! I have been lucky in all my 7 years of having road shoes that are made of harder leathery materials that protect my toes and my side and the back of my heels.

    These two newer pairs were made of the lightest fabric in the universe and they offer very little protections on rocks or what not. The shoes were like having a brain of their own. I went left they went to the right. When I hope on rocks, it slides under me – very dangerous. The inside of the shoes does not stick to my feet. The shoes were too soft, and plyable. I cannot land tip toe. Many times with trail running, you got all different kind of angles you will be landing on, and I need a shoes that does not bend or move away on their own. I need them to be able to balance from any spot/point under my feet. These two new pairs failed miserably. Note, I got them half a size larger anticipating my feet to swell, my feet did not, and so, it was too roomy! It was one of the reasons, the shoes were uncontrollable.

    It is not the shoes fault but the user. I chose the shoes and I had to live with the consequences. The shoes were clearly not designed for trail running.

    The first new pair from mile 33-62, I beared it grudgingly. But at Gap Creek I had the important decision to make to run with a wet and muddy pair or to which to the new pair. After weighting the pros and cons I chose the newer pair.

    That might have been a bad decision because I would be going through one of the most technical sections on the course. The new shoes were not helping. Because of all the slipping and sliding around, my feet were messed up. I hated my shoes every moment of it for the next 12 hours (from 3:30 AM to 3:40 pm until I finished). It was basically no more running. Even walking on the trail was difficult with the new pair. I was lucky that I did not roll or sprain my ankles out there with new but useless shoes.

    Conclusion: I learned a bit about shoes especially road shoes. Need to buy shoes that you cannot fold them in your hand or roll them into a ball.

    I did not want this to be my race report. There were so many other dimensions about the race. Shoes and drop bags were just a small but important aspect.

    I started this post before I wrote the race report. I did not expect to get the race report finished but I did. So what to do about this post?

    The night before the race near Kennedy Peak trail (maybe 2 mile away from the peak). I drove up.
    our camp headquarter, not the barn. Some stayed in lodges, I camped in my car. Staff parking in the rear. We could set camp anywhere except like 200 yards from the start line.

    I tend to overthink on things like with the aid stations and drop bags. It does get tedious and boring. They worked as intented during the race. I did better this year in packing not too much and not too little. Almost just right. Actually, I could maybe reduce them a bit. It was an improvement from the Devil Dog. It was my fourth 100, so yes, I learned and improved from all the previous tries.

    Anyway, I had trouble of closing this post and I lost the energy to continue. I was glad I got the race report out. This post became secondary and even unneccessary. It is a mini report. It was originally to serve something in the interim before the final report is out. However, I hope this can be interesting to some of my readers. (I found it interesting myself).