Sunday, June 26, 2016

Dawg Gone Long 50 Mile: Obstacle Course in the Heat



                Oh, it feels so good to be writing a race report! After a 2 year+ hiatus from ultrarunning, I ran the Dawg Gone Long 50 Mile race yesterday. My goal race for the year is the Grindstone 100, which requires a recent 50 mile finish. Lucky me, there was a local 50 mile trail race that only cost $40 (less than $1/mile!) and I happened to have the day off.
Training for this race was minimal, with weekly mileages ranging from 15-50 and longest runs of 24 tough trail miles at Mt Airy and 30 miles mostly on road. Balancing a 12 month old son and residency hours makes consistent running tough for someone who values sleep as much as I do. I was impressively nervous. I HAD to finish this race to qualify for Grindstone.
The course was 3 loops of a 16+ mile loop at Caesar Creek State Park, on amazingly runnable trail. If you were in good enough shape, you wouldn’t have to walk at all on this course. Enter Thursday morning, when a thunderstorm/tornado hit, knocking hundreds trees across the trail. Add in a high of 89. It was a tough race.
I always have a rough time with heat, so I made a couple rules for myself: 1) I would walk one minute out of every 10 for a least the first half of the race. 2) I would pee at least once an hour.
The race started with a road out-and-back to make up for a section of the loop that had been cut for downed trees. Down into the gorge we plunged and then back up a steep hill that made it easy to keep my promise to walk early. I fudged on the walking rule a few times this lap because of the line of people I found myself in, We waited our turn to climb over huge trunks, pick through branches and leaves, and crawl through underbrush on many detours from the original trail. One detour even took us down a hill we had just climbed and then back up again. I expect all of us to break out with poison ivy rashes tomorrow.
I started the second lap at 3:53, and soon found myself running with a woman named Stephanie. She had run her first 50K 3 weeks ago and found she could have kept going, so she signed up for this race. She was worried about making the cut-off of 8 hours for 2 loops and not being allowed to continue forward. I hadn’t been worried about this, but now I was! She gave me the adrenaline boost I needed to power through the second loop. We ran together most of the way, and I finished the loop at 7:35.
Comforted that I would finish, I set off on the last lap with a woman named Nicole, who was much faster than me but walking more often so we went back and forth for awhile. I saw one other man, but otherwise ran the third loop alone. It was especially discouraging to run through spider webs; there was definitely no one close enough to bother trying to catch. I mostly kept up my walking one minute out of every 10 with only a little trouble from nausea, much less than I usually have in the heat. My IT band flared up for the last 7 miles, probably giving me a funny limp, but not to the point that I had to walk. I stubbed my toes a few times, apparently causing throbbing hematomas beneath both of my big toenails. I finished in 11:49:10, and was surprised to learn that this earned me 3rd female.
Aside from finishing, I was most excited that I was able to manage the heat by keeping a slow pace and giving time for my gut to absorb the water I needed to stay hydrated. It ended up being a great training run for Grindstone!
The aid stations were great, with several of my running friends Pat Farrell, Steve Hamilton, and Geoff Peterson manning them and making my feel like I had my own crew at the race. I didn’t take much more than PB&J and bananas from them, sensing my stomach couldn’t tolerate anything else, but they had a nice spread. Instead, I ate more shot blocks than I care to again for a few months.
Thanks so much to the race directors, volunteers, and Nathan and Fuller for coming out to cheer! Time to knuckle down and train for Grindstone.

-Jordan

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