The pic above is of me emerging from the tunnel around the first two miles or so of the Colorado Marathon. Only 24 miles to go. I felt great at a 9 minute pace. I didn’t know it was a 9 minute pace, I had my watch set to monitor my heart rate. I didn’t know my pace until completely afterward. It felt fast.
I maintained that pace for the first 13 miles. Well, I had a 4 minute wait to pee at 11 miles. It felt like I was there for 15 minutes. My heart rate was entirely rested and I’d given up on any goals. Of course, I didn’t know mile 11 was at a 13 minute pace until after the run. I simply ran how I felt after that. I ran comfortably. While waiting in line, I took off my vest to switch my alpaca long sleeve for a tank. That maneuver likely would have taken me 3 minutes on the road, so theoretically, I could subtract those 3 minutes from the 4 minute pee stop. Whatever the time series math, I felt so much cooler. It was a smart gear swap.
I slowed down to a 10 minute pace for the 3rd 10K. I got used to people passing me. From a people-watching perspective, I have some good stories. I no longer saw pacer signs and wasn’t monitoring a chronograph, so I was temporally lost. I enjoyed people-watching. I took a photo of some horses running in a field. I focused on my training plan for the 2025 Bandera 100K. I fueled per plan, which is triple what I normally consume in either calories or hydration. I was able to confirm my discovery during the Desert Rats 50K – which brands my stomach could tolerate. That was a big win. And I kept myself out of both a calorie deficit and electrolyte debt. I never cramped, not even afterward.
I even picked up my pace a bit for the finish. I’d been running an 11 minute pace for the 4th 10K but dropped back down to 10 for the last two miles. Not sure I’ve ever done that. A bystander near the finish, a man who could not have been much younger than me, shouted out, “Way to represent us older runners.” That didn’t sit well with me. Still doesn’t. Whatever, I’m running slower now but ran perfectly to my pace expectations and it was awesome training for my pending ultra where I’ll need to run slow.



