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The Red Loop

05 Sunday Jun 2016

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Ragnar, Snowmass, trail running

race photo Pearl Street

The Snowmass Ragnar Relay is an endless stream of runners, racing around trail loops through the hills above Snowmass Village.  Starting Friday evening, I run four loops, green at 6:30 pm, yellow at 10:00 pm, green again at 5:30 am and the red loop for my finale at 12:46 pm.  There are 200 other runners out somewhere along the 15 miles that make up these three loops.  Math suggests there are over 10 runners per mile.  Given the sparse distribution this late in the event, it’s rare that I find myself racing neck and neck against another runner.  There are four runners running in the space of 100 yards in front of me as I start out the red loop.  I pass three of them within the first mile, running on the bike path alongside Brush Creek Road, and just catch the fourth runner before turning onto Sinclair Road.  I fail to pass him though.

We run side by side for the entire second mile, still on the street.  We introduce ourselves, both happy for someone to push us up this steep street.  Dave looks about my age, which I mostly judge based on his conservative dress.  Us older guys show less skin than the couple of kids we passed in the first mile.  Dave is relentless on this climb.  I would not run this fast pace the first two miles of this seven mile loop, were I running by myself.  My plan was to go up slow and try to race down fast.  Half the runners we pass are walking, which is fairly typical of all runners on their third loops.  We’re both breathing loudly, but I make the bigger grunts by far.  I sense Dave is better at altitude than me.

The street ends just after two miles and we turn right onto the Rim Trail North.  Dave sprints ahead of me to take the lead on the single track.  I described the course elevation profile to him, having run this last year, while running up Sinclair.  It helps to know the top of the climb is marked by a park bench at 3.5 miles.  Dave is willing to let me pass him at one point during our ascent, because I’m breathing down his neck.  I tell him that not only can I not pass him, but that I’ve been power walking for the last quarter mile.  When you can walk as fast as someone else can run, you should walk.  It’s an interesting phenomenon actually on steep mountain trails.  It lowers the heart rate but maintains the same speed.  No doubt, this just pissed Dave off.

Dave screams downhill as soon as we begin our descent.  I try to follow his pace but he forms a sizable gap.  Another much younger runner that Dave has passed runs between us for about a mile.  Once I pass that kid, I close the gap with Dave.  This is past where the red loop joins the yellow, after 5 miles.  I finally pass Dave crossing the first wooden foot bridge.  I suspect the 3.5 mile descent was too long for his wicked pace and shredded his legs.  Running downhill provides you with unlimited oxygen, but your legs turn to jello.  It gets a little scary when you lose confidence in your ability to brake around curves.  My slower start to our descent left me with some strength at the end.

These 24 hour relays are all about self preservation.  It takes discipline to maintain the strength to finish three or more runs on seriously steep mountain trails.  I would have loved being able to race each loop with equal intensity, but I couldn’t recover well enough from my first run, and I wouldn’t have had anything left to run so hard on my final loop.  Really happy I chose to run the middle loops slow and easy.  My thighs are still sore the next day, which tells me that running the downhills took more out of my legs than the uphills.  Running uphill makes an impression on your heart and lungs, but it’s the downhills that thrash your muscles.

This photo is from last week’s Bolder Boulder, just before the 6th mile, turning off Folsom.  I like how it shows another mature runner directly behind me.  Several of my teammates commented on how this year’s Snowmass Relay seems younger and more competitive than last year.  I think us old runners hung in there though.

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Here Kitty, Kitty

05 Sunday Jun 2016

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Ragnar, Snowmass

Version 2

Our relay team name references an exchange among team members a few years ago about what to say when you see a mountain lion on the trail.  I wasn’t there, but it captures the zaniness of these runners well.  This photo is of Ken running the first leg of the Ragnar Snowmass Mountain Trail Relay this weekend.  Ken runs the green loop which is the easiest of the three trail loops for the relay.  It’s four miles in length and has an elevation gain of over 600 feet.  Most of the climb is in the first two miles while the return is back down hill.  This is my first loop as well and I ran my fastest pace of the event.  I raced it hard knowing my legs wouldn’t recover well enough to run the other loops as hard.  And maybe because I was a little excited for my first run.

Carolyn

Carolyn is next out of the gate and runs the yellow loop, considered tougher than the green because of the more intense elevation gain, although it’s nearly the same distance, going up the first half and returning back down.  Carolyn was a ballet dancer before getting into running.  You can almost tell by her running shorts that look more like a girlie, party dress.  Carolyn is a trail dancer.

Eve

Eve, pictured here, runs our third and final loop – the red loop – the toughest both in terms of distance, 7 miles, and elevation gain, 1,250 feet.  The rest of us repeat the same three loops.  I run my loops in this order, but run an additional green loop for another teammate who couldn’t make the trip.  I ran the yellow loop at night, under the stars.  My red loop pace is a minute per mile slower than my green loop, but involved a great race against another runner named Dave.  This course rises for 3.5 miles before dropping back down for the second half.  Dave remained a step ahead of me the entire climb, then widened his lead over me for the descent.  He ran out of steam though the final mile.

Harry

Beth, Keith and Brian complete our team.  I don’t have pictures of everyone running, but have to show this photo of Henry, Kristin’s 13 year old son.  He ran two of her loops with her.  This second run, where he is pictured here about two minutes from the finish, is the 7 mile, 1250 foot, ball-buster, red loop.  Henry’s mom, Kristin, establishes a lead on him after a mile, and never looks back.  Understand, some of the runners I passed on this course were walking, but several others were standing to the side, bent over in some cases, negotiating terms with God for oxygen.  Kids don’t run up mountains like this for fun, because there’s nothing fun about it.  But Henry couldn’t turn around because his mom was running up the hill in front of him.  How can a boy turn from such a challenge?  He finished a full mile behind his mother, but he finished strong.  And that’s my idea of parenting.

Team Photo

I raced two of the loops hard.  My first run over the green loop, and my fourth run on the red loop.  I preserved my leg strength on the middle two runs with a slower pace, when it became clear during the second loop that surviving to my final run was paramount.  Racing three miles downhill on a mountain trail is about as fun as it gets.  It’s also exhausting, as was this entire weekend.  These relays are as much about sleep deprivation as running.  Beth ran it with the expectation the incessant running would be good prep for her TransRockies Run later this summer, where she’ll have to maintain over 20 miles per day, for six days, running from Buena Vista to Beaver Creek.  We completed this relay after 23 hours of non-stop running.  I might take today off.

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Mags

30 Saturday May 2015

Posted by Ed Mahoney in Running

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Tags

Bolder Boulder race photos, Magnolia Road, Mags, Snowmass, trail map

Jennifer ParisThis is Jen’s first run on 8000 foot high Magnolia Road.  Being my second run, I’ve taken to calling her Mags.  The road, not Jen.  You have to run or bike Mags.  Fresh and cool mountain air.  Long, rolling hills.  Stunning views.  First time I can think of that a road motivated me to read a book – Running with the Buffaloes.  The book tells the story of Mark Wetmore coaching the CU Buffs to the NCAA National meet in Cross Country.  Magnolia Road was their regular Sunday run.  Wetmore said the only thing better would have been if they lived up on Mags and trained down in Boulder.

I’m up here a second time training for Snowmass.  This time with half my relay team, Steve, Keith and Jen.  Next weekend, Steve will launch our relay at 4pm Friday afternoon.  Eight of us will run through the night and Steve’s daughter Allison will cross the finish line around noon Saturday.  When we aren’t running, the team will be camped at 7,900 feet in Snowmass Village among close to 200 other relay teams.  Eating.  Drinking.  Celebrating the Colorado outdoor lifestyle.

Course Map SnowmassEach of us will run three legs.  The green loop is 3.5 miles with a 500 foot rise in elevation.  The yellow loop is 4 miles with only a 300 foot gain in elevation.  The red loop is the biggie at 6.7 miles with an 1100 foot climb over the first 3.5 miles.  This is why we’re training on Mags.  The rest of the team has been running regularly on the trails outside of Lyons.  We’ll be ready.  The most difficult aspect to this run might be the sleep deprivation.  My runs are scheduled for 9pm, 3am and 10am.  I’ll be sporting a head lamp to ensure I don’t run off a cliff.  None of us are expecting to set any records.  It should be a fun time.  Great way to kick off the summer.

race photoI got my photos from the Bolder Boulder.  They are free this year.  Of course, they come stamped with a Right Guard logo, which I cropped out.  I’m okay with the sponsorship though.  Saves me a good $50.  I’m less happy with my form after viewing the photos.  I know my running form has improved dramatically over the last two years.  Race photos offer an excellent opportunity to view foot falls and form.  I’ve placed emphasis on shortening my stride and landing more on the front of my feet.  These photos illustrate good form at the start but that my left foot in particular falls apart once I’m sufficiently fatigued.  Makes sense that is the foot that generally suffers from planters fasciitis.  Not sure where this pic is on the course but probably the first half as my feet look positioned properly still.  Not showing you the bad photos near the end of the race.

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