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Ragnar SoCal ’14 — team afterNUUN run with TSFM ambassadors

Ragnar SoCal ’14 — team afterNUUN run with TSFM ambassadors

I love to run, obviously, and I generally enjoy people—also somewhat obvious, I guess—so it’s probably not an earth-shattering surprise that I dig long-distance relays like Ragnar. Naturally, there are a veritable shit ton of variables, so many wonderful opportunities for things to go disastrously and horribly wrong, that come with the territory of putting together 12 strangers (or folks who, in general, don’t sleep with each other in passenger vans) in two vans, to cover around a couple hundred miles of running over a 24+-hour period, but from the two, now three, times I’ve participated in a Ragnar relay, the adventure is just that—an adventure.

 

Ragnar SoCal was an almost-200 mile run from Huntington Beach, CA, down to San Diego, and as I wrote about earlier, a flurry of awesome organizations graciously sponsored our team, which was comprised of social media ambassadors for The San Francisco Marathon:

  • The San Francisco Marathon — our vans and gear for the weekend. [PS, get yourself out here come July to run with me :) ($10 off registration costs for any event by using DSC10TSFM2014A26 … hollllaaaaa)]
  • Nuun Hydration — weekend-long hydration wonders (and the fine folks who graciously comped our race entry)
  • FitSok — the ever-important socks
  • Zensah compression — squeezin’ our bits between legs to recover quickly before running again… and again…
  • Gametiime — our ‘between-legs’ attire. Sidenote, they’re recently launched nation-wide, so you should definitely check them out. I have found tons of races through their site
  • and last but not least, Skechers — our official kicks for the races

Though I can’t recall precisely when I committed to doing the relay, I know it was a long time ago, I think maybe even in December or early January, right after we moved here from Chicago. I remember receiving a somewhat random text message from a number I didn’t know, asking me if I wanted to be on a relay team in southern California… “ok, that should work. And uh, who is this?” (And yea, that was Chris). Just as it has been my other experiences with running Ragnar, training for it over the past few months wasn’t a priority. That sounds pretty douchey to admit, but this time around, my mind was pretty squarely focused on Oakland in mid-March, and I figured (read: hoped) that I’d still have some semblance of residual marathon fitness that’d do something for me for a relay.

 

That said, when I initially committed to the relay, I realized that I was playing with fire a bit, since it was only two weeks post-Oakland, which was my A-race, so when I said “yea, absolutely! I can run a relay! 13 miles? 20 miles? Whatever you want! At around a 10k pace and with sleep deprivation? No problem!” I obviously had no way of knowing how I’d feel come relay day. Fortunately, my marathon recovery has been swift, so I felt pretty confident going into the relay weekend that I hadn’t lost any significant amounts of fitness in the two weeks post-marathon (which sounds ridiculous to admit, but hey, I think like this sometimes).

 

With my mother-in-law in town from IL, and thus, my childcare coordinated (THANK YOU!), I flew down to Orange County with the lovely Paulette from SJ mid-morning on Thursday before meeting up with our team captain Chris; Wes, whom I will probably refer to as Ethan throughout this post because for some inexplicable reason, I just really want to call him Ethan; Alisyn, and Matt at the airport.

 

It’s really this pretty funny thing because, for the most part, I didn’t personally know hardly any of my relay teammates. I think this is probably pretty common for relays, but I wasn’t really concerned about it. Many of them I had met after living here only a week, when a gaggle of TSFM ambassadors met-up for some trailz in Marin and an adult beverage afterward in SF, but to me, the thing about runners is that, by and large, they’re cool. I realize that that’s probably a somewhat preposterous and sweeping generalization to proclaim, but I really do feel that way. I’m hoping that, since most of my readers are runners, at least one of you is nodding your head in agreement…

 

Anyway, once we piled into our single mini-van, family-of-six style, and fetched the other grocery-getter that would be our weekend ride, we kicked off the weekend with some lunch in the Anaheim area, checked into the hotel, sorted our sponsor stash, and ultimately decided to run to Downtown Disney for dinner, once our other out-of-town runners, Keith and Bruce, arrived. Staying two miles away from Disney was a lovely surprise, and yeah… al fresco dining in April is a pretty novel idea. (My midwesterners: I did it for you). I think I can still play my “I just moved to California” card here because I had no idea that we were staying, or starting, anywhere near Anaheim, so when someone suggested running to Disney, you can imagine my surprise… and confusion.

 

sponsor swag-sorting in Anaheim
sponsor swag-sorting in Anaheim (source: Chris)

 

and we also had to go to Target for a productive hour of shopping for relay essentials. Wes, Keith, me, and Chris. (source: an employee who probably felt bad for us weirdos)
and we also had to go to Target for a productive hour of shopping for relay essentials. Wes, Keith, me, and Chris. (source: an employee who probably felt bad for us weirdos)

 

running to Disney with Wes and Alisyn (front) and Paulette's jazzy hands
running to Disney with Wes and Alisyn (front) and Paulette’s jazzy hands (source: Keith)

 

some of the team. L-R, Alisyn, Wes, Paulette, me, Chris, Keith, and Matt
some of the team. L-R, Alisyn, Wes, Paulette, me, Chris, Keith, and Matt (source: Alisyn)

 

al fresco in April at Disney. NBD
al fresco in April at Disney. NBD (source: hmm… our server?)

 

post-dinner, strolling through CA Adventures. The group: Matt (petting Aliysn), Keith, Paulette, me, Bruce, Wes, Alisyn, and Chris
post-dinner, strolling through CA Adventures. The group: Matt (petting Aliysn), Keith, Paulette, me, Bruce, Wes, Alisyn, and Chris (source: Bruce’s wife)

 

An enjoyable dinner (vegan pizza FTW) and a shuttle back to the hotel later, wherein the driver decided not to charge us because apparently none of us realized that a shuttle warranted this novel, 21st-century thing called payment (honest mistake), we were back at the hotel and just beginning the waiting game until our late start on Friday at 12:45pm. Of course, gathering a bunch of runners together, who typically run in the morning, who have nothing to do until nearly the afternoon, just meant that Chris, Keith, and I could do another little shake-out run around Anaheim in the morning before getting ready to roll. Post-shakeout, Ethan Wes and I set-up shop in the hotel room with our very fancy breakfast of champions, and shortly thereafter, Keith, Ethan Wes, Chris, and I made our way over to Huntington Beach to get ready for our relay start—and to finally meet our other two vanmates, Kristina (from southern California) and Jordan (whom had driven down from Berkeley). Finally meeting Kristina and Jordan was super—instant runner love all around (I’m telling you, runners are special people, and instant connections are common)–and after a flurry of obligatory pictures for all the sponsors who supported us for the duration of the weekend, we all spread out along the beachfront trail, waiting for Keith to come flying by on his first leg.

 

Thanks to TSFM, Zensah, Skechers, and Nuun for the lovely weekend.
Thanks to TSFM, Zensah, Fitsok, Skechers, and Nuun for the lovely weekend.

 

purrrrrrrty
purrrrrrrty

 

I heart gametiime
I heart gametiime; thanks for the love, guys.

 

In the interim, once we all met and hugged, we had the standard pre-Ragnar start stuff to do—the obligatory safety meeting, the opportunity to pick-up bibs and flags and Ragnar tech shirts—and more waiting around. We sufficiently blinged out our van with hashtags, sponsor names, and Nuun and TSFM magnets (some of which are now surely found scattered over various interstates in southern California).

 

Before we knew it, Keith was off on leg #1. While many things about this Ragnar were the same as Ragnar Madison-Chicago, the biggest difference was the landscape: lots of coastal running. It made for some gorgeous pictures and surely some really nice running eye candy, if you were lucky enough to run alongside it; it made me pine for the Chicago LFT.

 

man, what a shitty view
man, what a shitty view

 

go, Keith, gooooooooo
go, Keith, gooooooooo

 

Keith to Kristina,  done!
Keith to Kristina, done!

 

This relay experience, though my third, was also my first time driving or navigating, for which I can only claim partial success. Once our van was up and at ’em, things seemed to be moving pretty quickly. Even when we got to our destinations (mostly) on time—more on that in a sec—it never felt like we had a ton of down time. Before we knew it, Keith was in and handed off to Kristina, who handed off to Jordan, who handed off to Wes, who handed off to me, and suddenly, I was standing in the parking lot of the Angels stadium in Orange, CA, becoming BFFs with some incredibly nice volunteers (seriously, probably some of the nicest strangers I’ve talked to) while I waited for Wes.

 

Kristina to jordan, their first legs
Kristina to Jordan, their first legs
Hanging with Jordan, Kristina, Keith, and Chris in the parking lot of the Angels stadium
Hanging with Jordan, Kristina, Keith, and Chris in the parking lot of the Angels stadium

 

Leg 1 – Orange, CA; 6.46miles (740, 822, 736, 45, 936, 827, 712)

A late start time—I think the penultimate one of the day—meant a lot of sola running for most of the initial miles of each leg. According to Ragnar, my first leg was the most mileage and the most challenging, so I thought that perhaps, for once, I’d be able to figure out how to effectively pace myself for this relay and not go out ballz-to-the-wall hard and die a slow, painful death on my subsequent legs, as I have been wont to do in M2C ’12 & ’13.

 

Ethan Wes flew in to the Angels parking lot, and so I began my tour of some residential areas of Orange, CA, including some neighborhoods, some downtown-y area, a cemetery, roughly a cajillion stoplights (and luckily, I had just missed a train by about 20 seconds). The stoplights made the run more of a fartlek than anything—and watching my pace on my watch climb from low/mid-7s to 9-10s+ just rocks, beeteedubs—but eventually, about a couple miles in, I started to find some brothers and sisters in humanity. I’d try to genuinely engage the other runners, and even offered to run with a guy who really looked like he was struggling in the unadulterated sun (he rejected me, sad face), so I was on my own for a while.

 

Wes-me, exchange 1
Wes-me, exchange 1

I eventually caught up to a guy, Stan, from LA, who’s in the throes of training for 70.3 Kona, and it was nice to run with him for a while (and also save him from missing a turn). Selfishly, it was also awesome to have him to chat with over a thousand stoplights and over the final 2, 3ish miles because, true to form for my relay experiences, my guts decided that running in a new-to-me location, where I had absolutely no sense of direction, would be the perfect time to feel the need to shit right here and now… but with the company of my new-found friend, I could think less of my need to “evacuate” and more about my new buddy’s training experiences, his goals, and that sort of thing. Stan, if you’re out there, thank you, from both me and my bowels. He really was pretty cool though. Anyway, before I knew it, it was “one mile to go,” and that meant a bathroom, and, surprise to me, indoor plumbing at a community center. WINNING. A helicopter-arms-style handoff to Chris, and bam—one leg down.

 

Flying in
Flying in
More flying
More flying
Helicopter arms, as promised; see also: crazy face
Helicopter arms, as promised; see also: crazy face

 

Shortly after I finished running and reveling in indoor plumbing, I did a hasty and partial strip-down into possibly clean clothing and drove our van over to the first major exchange zone, where we got to see van 2 for the first time that day and finally meet/see our other two teammates, Meg and Miriam, who had come in later in the day from southern CA and Napa, respectively. I knew that we weren’t as pressed for time to pick-up Chris, since he’d be handing off to Matt/van 2, but I didn’t want to miss seeing him come in, and I wanted to have as much QT as possible with van 2. Relays, at least Ragnars, are super fun in many respects, but probably the shittiest thing about them is the relative non-existent opportunity to spend any time with, or even see, your teammates who aren’t in your van. I really like my van 2 peeps but had very little QT with them. I think that means we all need to hang out for real super soon 🙂

 

the Ragnar ladies, sans Jordan, who was pottying. Lady pic fail. Kristina, Miriam, Paulette, me, Meg, and Alisyn
the Ragnar ladies, sans Jordan, who was pottying. Lady pic fail. Kristina, Miriam, Paulette, me, Meg, and Alisyn

 

Once Chris flew in, we made our way over to Dana Point, pretty near the second major exchange zone, for more (vegan) pizza and to just chill/hang-out/think about snoozing until it was our turn for parte dos, the nighttime legs, my personal fav. Since moving out here, or more generally speaking, I guess within the past year or so, most of my running is between the hours of 3:45-6am, so I’ve gotten pretty comfortable running in the pre-dawn or somewhat absolute darkness. It still is a little unnerving to do it in an unfamiliar area, but it’s also really exciting (for me) and just reeeeeeeeeeally fuckin’ lovely and perfect.

 

time for some vampire running
time for some vampire running

Before we knew it, we were up again, and Keith got things goin’ by running the longest leg of the entire relay. This middle stretch for our #1, 2, and 3 runners was a little jacked because of Camp Pendleton and a last-minute course change, so once Kristina finished her leg, we had to get a card with a time printed on it, drive 30 minutes, and then drop Jordan off for her to begin her second leg. That was a Ragnar first for me, but all things considered, it seemed to go over pretty smoothly. And, true to form by this point, we were ragin’ to run, and before long, Jordan came in super hot, and off went Ethan Wes, and Chris pacing him, into the night, with yours truly behind the wheel again.

 

Leg Two – Oceanside, CA (6.22 miles, 730, 40, 30, 30, 45 (climb), 37, 6:42 for .22)

My second leg was almost the same distance as my first and allegedly on an easier route. The first one actually wasn’t bad at all, save for the thousands of stoplights and a fair number of turns, and according to the RagMag, this one was going to have fewer turns and an enough-to-keep-things-interesting hill near the end of the leg. Jordan and I, I think the only ones awake by now, were hanging at the exchange, waiting for Ethan Wes and Chris to come in, and of course, everyone looks androgynous in the dark and with reflective gear on. Neither of us could pinpoint an exact time when the guys left, so we had a rough estimate about when to expect them and hoped that’d be sufficient. By this point in the morning, around 2am, the temps were damn near perfect for running—high 40s/low 50s—but just standing around in sweats (if that) made it a bit brisk. I repeatedly thought I saw the guys approaching, would start to strip from my sweats, and then figure out it wasn’t them. Do that a couple more times… Jordan tells me yeah, it’s not them… oh shit it’s them! Take off your sweats! Get into the chute! Go! Go! Go!… and we’re off. Chris had helped pace Wes to run mid-7s, significantly faster than he thought he’d be able to do (YOU GO, Ethan!!), so their hot and unexpected arrival made things a bit more adrenaline-filled than usual for me.

 

My Oceanside leg was pretty uneventful and actually, kinda ugly. The name connotes that we were by the side of the ocean, but I’m pretty sure I just ran through some commercial areas of town—strip mall after strip mall—and even a little industrial area. I eventually started seeing and chasing the little red blinky lights on runners ahead of me and was able to chat with them before passing. I’m so happy to support other runners because really, pace is not what impresses me most, so I don’t really understand the standoffish-ness I get from other runners when I try to be super encouraging and supportive of them. I’m not patronizing you when I’m passing you, I promise; I wouldn’t do that. I genuinely think you effin’ rock because a) you’re running and b) it’s like, 2am.

 

With about 1.5 to 2 miles left, I began the seemingly-forever-long climb that the course map had hinted at, a highway overpass hill-type-of-thing that was about .5 or .75-ish miles long, and with a camber so sharp I felt like my left leg was actually longer than my right as I tried to peg-leg it up the ascent. It was definitely doable; the grade wasn’t that bad, so it made for a slow-and-steady type of ascent, and left me pleasantly surprised to see that I had climbed that at a slow-end MP effort. That’s a +1 for running by feel, folks. Not long after the climb, I was descending and picking up the pace even more (and catching up to more runners), allowing me to finish this leg and effortlessly handoff to Chris not only faster but also feeling stronger than I had in my first leg just a handful of hours earlier. Maybe there was something to figuring out how to pace a relay after all.

 

Chris’ parte dos was going to be quite short—fewer than three miles—so he kinda-joked-but-mostly-seriously-said that he wanted to beat the van, and unless he had a thousand stoplights, I knew that he would. Jordan and I conferred on the maps and got us to where we were supposed to go and just waited… and waited… and waited. Texts from our Van 2 mates said that Chris had beat us to the exchange, as we expected he would, and that Matt was already off on his leg and that van 2 was about to leave the exchange to go meet Matt. By now, our van had been at the exchange for a good 30 minutes or so and had canvassed the entire area but still couldn’t find Chris anywhere. After a while, we thought for sure that he was fucking with us, so we were beginning to think that it was some sort of twisted “let’s play hide and seek at 4 o’clock in the morning” game that only Chris would think was funny… until we saw van 2 pull up into the exchange. A lightbulb quickly went off between Jordan, Ethan Wes, and me—as well as a string of four letter words and instructions from me to DO NOT LOOK AT VAN TWO! DON’T LET ON THAT WE LEFT CHRIS AT THE WRONG EXCHANGE ZONE!–and we made our way back to the exchange where he actually was… and had been waiting for us, in a running-soaked singlet and shorts, at 4am, for about 40 minutes. Moral of the story: read, and re-read, and re-read course maps. And don’t think that your team captain wants to play hide-and-seek in an exchange zone at 4am because, chances are, he doesn’t. Um, Chris? We love you?

 

And just like that, we were already mostly done with our turns of the relay. We took care of business at a local gas station, manned by possibly the world’s nicest attendant who was cool and didn’t charge me anything for the hot water for my tea that I had brought with me from home because I’m bizarre like that, and off we went to the next major exchange zone, which was seemingly in a office park’s parking lot and already JAMMED with tons of relay vans. By this point in the morning, we had really begun to catch up to humanity, to other teams who had begun their relays hours before us, so suddenly, we had to start considering how traffic might affect our ability to get us from point A to point B.

 

We had a few hours here of downtime, probably the most we had had during the relay, but no sleeping was to be had for me. I was actually feeling pretty awake and pretty charged—thank you, tea, at 4am—ready to knock out the rest of the relay, so while I can say that I “rested my eyes,” I can also assure you that I heard every single conversation and bird chirping around me for the 20 or so minutes that I attempted to get some shut-eye. This would mark my one and only relay that I had stayed awake for the entire time—not something I’d brag about, but probably something I can attribute to my toddler for conditioning me to function on sub-ideal sleep. 🙂

 

Soon enough, our #1, Keith, began his journey, and along the drive, we saw tons and tons of runners that we knew he’d eventually pick up, and each exchange zone we drove to, for the rest of our final legs, was thicker and denser with more teams. The upside, though, was that the portapotties finally began having toilet paper again, so that was a win. Once again, some solid running from Keith, and then Kristina (who also had STAIRS on her legs… which, NBD for people who have lived and run here all their lives, but coming from the midwest, anytime I have to run stairs during a LR through a trail or park system, I seriously begin to question life), and then more speedy goodness from Jordan and Wes, all to the quite lovely backdrop of some coastal running along PCH, on a beautiful morning in San Diego, and here we were, my final leg, the shortest of my three and if all went according to plan, my fastest. I wanted to see if I had finally figured out how to pace a relay properly so that I didn’t feel like death by the end.

 

just another gorge morning somewhere in SD
just another gorge morning somewhere in SD. very cool that this lil’ pic collage of mine also made the Ragnar race weekend blog, woohoo!

 

right after Kristina to Jordan's third handoff. Note the Everest behind Jordan that she just summitted.
right after Kristina to Jordan’s third handoff. Note the Everest behind Jordan that she just summitted.

 

Jordan to Wes' third leg. Love love love Wes' thumbs-up and flying :)
Jordan to Wes’ third leg. Love love love Wes’ thumbs-up and flying 🙂

 

Leg Three – San Diego (3.94 miles, 721, 634, 708, 656 for .94)

Wes’ final leg was punctuated by some impressive hillz and a thousand stoplights, which only meant that I got to cheer for the other runners in the chute for a long time. Seriously, cheering for other runners during a race is second only to running for me; I probably get as ridiculously endocannibinoid-fueled when I cheer as I do when I run.

 

in my next life, I'm a cheerleader
in my next life, I’m a cheerleader

 

Before long, Wes arrived, and off I went. I noticed that another runner just a handful of strides in front of me, already haulin’ ass, had missed the first turn (which was literally still within the exchange zone), so I started to yell at him to get his attention—by yelling things that made sense like hey! You missed your turn!; Ragnar! Turn around! You missed your turn!; and eventually dude! You’re going the wrong fuckin’ way! Other teams, parked in the parking lot at the exchange zone, saw me running after him and also started to yell at this dude, but it was worthless. He had headphones in, and apparently he was listening to the voice of God or something equally fascinating and life-altering because he had no effin clue what was going on. I don’t race, or even train that much, with music on, nor do I necessarily care when people do; however, this kinda pissed me off.

 

I didn’t care so much that I had veered off course, only by about .4 mile total, to try to be the Good Samaritan to fetch this guy and get him where he was supposed to be; I was just pissed that he was that fuckin’ irresponsible and so totally oblivious to his own personal safety that a girl (me), running literally steps behind him, and downright YELLING AT THE TOP OF MY LUNGS (or as much as I could muster while effectively sprinting to catch up to him), resulted in little-to-no response from him. If anything, he only slightly looked over his shoulder at me once, and likely saw that a girl half his age and size was on his heels, and that somehow jeopardized his Manhood card, so he decided to speed up and completely ignore the fact that he was going in the wrong effin’ direction. Whatever man. I tried.

 

Soooooooo…. once I did eventually turn around and begin the official course of my third leg, the other runners, all congregating at the stoplight that Oblivious Dude missed, commended me on my efforts, and the adrenaline was already coursin’ hot and heavy through me, so I decided to just go with it. Without question, this was my prettiest leg of the three I ran; San Diego is just unabashedly gorgeous. It also helped that almost all of my third run was downhill and short—just over a 5k—so I wanted to try to get this at or near 5k effort, depending on the obvious factors of how I felt and how many stoplights would sabotage me. It was a blast to hammer through these final three miles, and I got such a huge pick-up from seeing another non-Relay runner father, pushing his two kids—a toddler and an infant so young that he/she was still in an infant carseat carrier—in a BOB Duallie ascending one of the hills that I was flying down. Solid fistpump and “you rock, man” to another parent runner there, for sure.

 

More neighborhoods, more commercial/highway hills running, and eventually, an arrival into a park area, adjacent to the ocean, where I’d hand off to Chris. I had passed tons of people by now and was feeling really strong, with my watch telling me I was going around mid-6s on the downs and non-stoplight portions of the run; it was on these stretches that I began to wonder what a sub-6 mile feels like and mentally wrote that down on my “running to do” list. On the final throes of the run, I seemed to be entering a park area where lots of runners and cyclists did their Saturday LRs because tons of people were running/riding against me, cat-calling and high-fiving, and it was just a nice little lovefest. I was especially floored to see so many women (non Ragnar runners) give me the time of day as we ran against each other—usually in the form of “yea girl! You look good!” or something similar—because my experience has often been that women don’t go out of their way to support other women mid-race; in fact, I can probably count on one hand the number of women to whom I said some sort of encouraging remark, and who then reciprocated to me, during this relay. I find this very puzzling. Judgment is overrated, ladies. Let’s move on.

 

At any rate, my third and final exchange with Chris ended on a very slight downhill, which was a total fuckin’ blast to finish my fastest leg on, and I had just barely squeaked in a sub-7 effort on the leg with all the stoplights (and the .4 mile bonus at the beginning). I felt tired—the good tired—and felt like I had finally learned how to properly pace and race a relay for me, in a way that I could still put in an honest effort on each leg but also get progressively faster over time. Mission accomplished.

 

flying doesn't get old
flying doesn’t get old (source: Jordan)

 

aaaaaaaaaand I'm done
aaaaaaaaaand I’m done (source: Jordan)

 

with Kristina, post-third leg. Note our matching 'run happy' hats :)
with Kristina, post-third leg. Note our matching ‘run happy’ hats 🙂 (source: um…)

 

With Chris off, and me again behind the wheel, I knew with almost 100% certainty that he’d beat us to the next exchange again, even with all his hill-climbing and the duration of his run. Traffic wasn’t necessarily bad by this point, but each exchange lot was getting progressively busier. Once we finally did get to the exchange—after driving through some to.die.for hills and views—we had been walking outside the van, toward the exchange area, for maaaaaaybe two minutes before Chris magically appeared in front of us and thanked us for not stranding him (again) …and then we were DONE!

 

and he's off...
and he’s off… (source: um…?)

 

'hey, thanks for not abandoning me this time around.' 'oh, ya know, it's cool.'
‘hey, thanks for not abandoning me this time around.’ ‘oh, ya know, it’s cool.’ (source: uh…?)

 

For the rest of the afternoon, we hung out at or near the finish line area, waiting for Van 2 to bring it on home. The finish area was by a big convention center, and on the water, so things got pretty congested pretty quickly, though it was initially quite chill when our van arrived.

 

we also decided some stairs cross-training was in order
we also decided some stairs cross-training was in order
waiting for van 2 near the finish line
waiting for van 2 near the finish line

 

Van 2 blazed through their final legs and before long, some of our Van 2 mates decided to jump out of the van, since they were wasting away in traffic, so they could accompany the rest of us as we ran across the finish line with Alisyn. Much like Madison-Chicago, SD’s finish area was a bit of a clusterfuck between relay traffic, parking instructions, and (I’m guessing) typical Saturday-morning-in-beautiful-SD-by-a-convention-center-and-waterfront traffic. Fortunately, it was merely minutes after Alisyn and those of us present crossed the finish line that the rest of our van 2 mates arrived, and so we swiftly began a flurry of team pics, beer-ing, and sharing tales of some of the ridiculousness or accidental entertainment we had laid witness to, or contributed toward, on our legs over the past 24 hours.

Alisyn bringing us home, flanked by Paulette and Jordan
Alisyn bringing us home, flanked by Paulette and Jordan (source: um…)

 

DONE, son! (+ awesome photobomb)
DONE, son! (+ awesome photobomb) [source: a stranger]
beer-ing (or faking) it up
beer-ing (or faking) it up (source: stranger)

 

We later learned that our team had actually fared pretty well in both our division (mixed) and in the open team competition, which was pretty cool and not something that any of us were (seriously) pursuing: an overall time of 26:40:57, enough for 8th in the Regular Open Mixed Division and 24th overall.

 

And then, just like that, just a mere 26 hours later, we finished our RagnarSoCal adventure as a TSFM ambassador team. When I think about my recent races, it downright befuddles me when I think about how quickly time seems to pass by when I run (and particularly during marathons, when I’m out there for over three hours), yet when I think about my relay experience with this group of people who, save for Chris, for all intents and purposes, I really didn’t personally know very well—aside from what I had gleaned from social media over the past couple months—honest to freakin’ god, I have to wonder if there was some sort of hole in the galaxy’s time continuum because that was the fastest 26 hours of my life.

 

I guess, in a way, much like marathons, a lot of things happen over the course of a relay that amount to lots of small punctuations in my mind, little seemingly-inconsequential moments or conversations among teammates that, collectively, make the race much more than a race but a real lived and shared experience. I totally get that that sounds like hippy-dippy runner shit—my god, how Northern California is rubbing off on me—so maybe it’s a post-relay high that I’m still riding, or maybe it’s through rose-tinted glasses that I’m recalling my relay weekend, but so rarely do I have the opportunity for uninterrupted, unadulterated, quality time, wherein I’m not responsible for anyone or anything, that when I do have an opportunity like what Ragnar gave me—an opportunity to really and truly just get to know other people and, in the process, establish some new friendships and cultivate those pre-existing—that I just eat it up. I went into the weekend with few expectations for my performance and, like I said, with no fear that somehow my teammates and I wouldn’t jibe. At the same time, I didn’t expect to come out of the relay weekend necessarily feeling like I had finally or firmly established some friends—and not just “California-based friends,” but legit friends—that when it happened, it was both so humbling and so very richly and deeply gratifying that I’m at a (rare) loss of words about how to convey it.

 

Much like my Oakland experience, then, when I think about my third relay, I promise you that I won’t be able to tell you anything of substance about my runs or my times or anything like that. What will stand out most to me was that one conversation that Keith and I had, or the time that, on a whim, we all ran to Disney and got some rare inter-van QT, or when Jordan and I were the only ones awake and talkin’ big dreams and goals or when Paulette and I were figuring out what makes the most sense for her to run this year, given her dreams or whatever; it’s too much to list here and probably too personal, if not also a tad obnoxious.

 

Two of my three relays I’ve run have resulted in some extremely valuable-to-me friendships, not just “running friends” but again, legit friends, folks whom I talk to almost every single day, folks who collectively make me a better person and folks to whom I turn when I need to be supported or validated or even just ridiculously or stupidly entertained, when I can’t do that for myself. 🙂 In fact, I guess I could argue that prefixing my “friends” label with “old” or “new” or “California” or whatever cheapens the relationship and experience a bit and, consequently, isn’t worth doing. Friends are friends are friends.

 

That that happened for me again on this relay, that a bunch of seemingly inconsequential moments in time, together with some bouts of running, collectively and ultimately resulted in some newly-emerging or newly-deepening friendships, was a complete and welcome surprise, but as someone who still every day feels a longing for the familiarity of “old” friends and “old” home, being presented with “new” friends in “new” home couldn’t have come at a better time.

Oakland Marathon 2014 training: 7 weeks out

Oakland Marathon 2014 training: 7 weeks out

7 weeks out – week 5 – week of January 27, 2014

OakMarathonLogo

Yeah, uh, 7 weeks out, not 8. Apparently someone can’t read an Excel spreadsheet too well, so all my numbers have been off so far. #facepalm

Anyway, few things were on my mind with my runs this week except a) being mindful of effort, given my intention of running-but-not-racing-but-doing-a-half on Sunday, the day following my LR, and b) getting through peak week #1. Pfitzinger’s 70/12 is a tad different from others in that instead of building-building-building to a training apex, and then having runners topple down the huge taper tower and barrel toward race day, you basically keep the mileage somewhat consistently high but hit your maximum volume a few times in the 12-week cycle. (I’m not sure if he does this for his other plans that are longer in duration, but I’d imagine so).

That said, this week was my first time I would intend on hitting my 70-mile maximum, and due to some scheduling shuffling, I included the Kaiser half in San Francisco–a bit of a rundezvous with Austin, as well as some nice quality time with Stone, and Chicago Bootlegger galpal Meredith, who was in SF for work–in the mix. I knew that this week would be taxing, but I also felt like if done well, it could be great feedback 25% into the cycle.

Also! Super fun! Late in the week, I found out I was selected to be a race ambassador for the Zooma women’s half marathon in Napa in late June. I never ran the Zooma series in Chicago, but when I saw announcements on twitter for Napa, I thought ‘what the hell.’ Most,if not all, women’s-only races are inherently quite different from those of the co-ed flavor, and I thought that this could be a great opportunity for me to meet other runners in the Bay/NorCal area. I was really surprised (and quite honored) that I was selected, but I’m super stoked to meet everyone and go to Napa (about two hours away) in June. 🙂  Discount code coming soon!

ZOOMA-Napa-logo-FINALI also wrote a guest entry this week for TSFM’s blog about the importance of setting, articulating, and then going after crazy-ass goals, and then I had a good little hyperventilation sesh with myself as I publicly admitted to the interwebz what I’m chasing this spring (and long-term). Oh baby.

Finally! If you’re in the Bay or NorCal area, or even if you just want to travel here for some runs (heeeeeey), you could TOTALLY use my discount codes and actually probably have these races fit right into your training plan this spring/summer!

  • Run the 408k – 8k – Sunday, March 2 – San Jose – $4.08 off with code 408hookup
  • ZOOMA women’s half marathon – 13.1 – Saturday, June 28 – Napa – discount code forthcoming 🙂
  • The San Francisco Marathon – 26.2, the first 13.1, the second 13.1, or the 5k – Sunday, July 27 –  $10 off with  code DSC10TSFM2014A26

Alright! Training!

Monday, January 27

p: rest/XT

a: rest. Like a boss. + PUs + glute med work

I can’t recall anything I did last Monday. It was the day after the Shoreline to Stanford Dish 20 that I ran with the RunAddicts group, and I felt pretty well but noticed a little stiffness in one of my left toes and a bit of high calf/low hamstring tightness on my right side following the run. Nothing was particularly bad, nor did it bother me on subsequent runs this week; I was just cognizant of it.

Tuesday, January 28

p: GA + speed: 8 mi with 10x100m strides

a: MLR 15: 8.05 mi in the a.m.; 7.64 in the p.m. + PUs + glute med work + RYBQ 10×10 strength routine, 2 rounds

C’s work schedule allowed me to do this run a bit later than usual, and since I was supposed to have my first two-a-day this week, I opted to break-up the MLR–not something I’d normally do, but the opportunity presented itself. The a.m. run was weirdly warm; for perspective, it’s usually between 38-45 when I run, and it was mid-to-high 50s, if memory serves. Running south on Capitol gave me the opportunity to dreamily watch the sun rise over the hills like a big weirdo and attempt to try to capture the beauty of it on my (very dirty… thank you, toddler) phone camera. In addition, my watch was being a B (yup, I anthropomorphize technology) and didn’t capture my splits: not a big deal.

Capitol, facing south
Capitol, facing south

The p.m. run, around 3pm (read: nearly 40 degrees warmer than what I’m used to right now, ha), was lovely and vitamin-D infused. I returned to the PCP and ran on the west side for a jiffy before picking up the east side and the track. My legs wanted to move, but we had a little talk and decided to take things down a notch. By the end of this run, it also looked like I pissed myself because I was wearing gray spandex. Noted.

west side of PCP
west side of PCP

a.m. average: 8:20 (splits disappeared)

p.m. average: 7:51 (7:53, 42, 49, 8:01, 20, 7:51, 41, 27 for .64)

Also, finally got my ass back into doing the RYBQ 10×10 routine. I felt like I could have taken three showers on Tuesday; that’s my contribution to the drought here.

Wednesday, January 29

p: MLR 15

a: recovery 5.05 (9:26 average; 9:48, 12, 21, 39, 12) + PUs + GM work

Another weirdly warm morning, probably the warmest pre-dawn that I’ve had here. Also had the joy of running in some rain/mist action for the first 1-1.5 miles. I was trying to keep things comfortable; mission accomplished.

Thursday, January 30

p: recovery 5

a: GA + speed, 7.19 miles with 8x100m strides (8:15 average, 8:57, 7:55, 8:13, 23, 12, 05, 01, 39 for .19) + PUs + GM work

Began this run planning to do 8 miles with 10×100 m strides but realized in my last 13 minutes of the run that my mental math faculties that morning were horrendous and that I’d have to stop at 7. NBD. Another wet morning here–which is WONDERFUL–but it made for slick sidewalks and some trepidation on my part to attempt any strides/speed for fears of wiping out. Things get slippery when wet here, folks. I try to avoid anything shiny (think pavement, sewer grates, and the like)…but everything is seemingly shiny when wet, or at least appears to be so between 4-6 a.m. Running in the rain is kinda novel though, so the fun factor mostly outweighed the fear Thursday morning. 🙂

Friday, January 31

p: lactate threshold 11 mi with 5 @ 15k/HMRP; recovery 4 in the p.m.

a: GA + speed, 8.1 with 10x100m strides (8:22 average; 8:40, 12, 39, 21, 16, 23, 25, 7:53) + PUs + abbreviated GM work

Tale of two runs. Part one, going south on Capitol, felt horrible–bloaty, heavy, just good and caca. Swung by home halfway through and then picked up the east side of PCP for the back half and hopped on the cinder-y track in nearly complete darkness, save for the bit of light from my headlamp and the stars. Running in the dark like that took me back to middle-of-the-night legs during Ragnar; initially, it is a bit unnerving, but it is also really cool and wonderfully serene. Besides a cat who didn’t move from its spot the entire time I was on the track, I saw a dude walking on the path, but a quick yell and wave to him, and his reciprocation, indicated he probably wasn’t going to knife me. And, really, truth be told, I was more averse to mountain lions coming down from the hills to play than I was with folks just out strollin’ in the pre-dawn hours. The back half of this run 100% turned the entirety of the run around for me.

Saturday, February 1 – hellllllo, February!

p: GA + speed, 7 mi w 6x100m strides

a: LR 17 with Meredith! on the Guadalupe River Trail (8:03 average; 8:31, 23, 00, 10, 10, 09, 18, 09, 06, 06, 13, 06, 03, 7:58, 45, 30, 14)

So very happy to have Meredith in town and that she willingly drove about 70 minutes super early on a Saturday morning to come down to SJ to run with me. After lots of plan flip-flopping–doing her Daniels’ workout, doing my 20, just doing 16 or 17–we eventually decided we’d do 17 and just run and not clockwatch or worry about hitting GMP or anything. My original plan was to do 20, but I ultimately decided to flip-flop my LRs from last week and this week, and given the Kaiser half on Sunday anyway, that seemed to be the most practical. I intentionally wanted to go into Kaiser tired, but 17 and 20, in the grand scheme of LR mileage, are comparable, and the difference, negligible, at best.

Anyway! Back we went to N SJ, to the GRT, where we ran north to Alviso, south to downtown, and then back north to the River Oaks area. Despite a few pit and fueling stops, this run was just wonderful and lovely–sun shining, a friend from home, no expectations, just awesome. We got to talking about goals for this year (and learned we share many!), and I think that inspired us to pick it up on the final 3-4 of the run. I had fun chasing Mere’s backside down the GRT 🙂

with Mere in SJ!
with Mere in SJ!

I felt really, really good during and after this run. The weird calf and toe things were inconsequential by now, and if anything, gave me some bio feedback that I need to spend some QT with my foam roller, a rolling pin, and a massage therapist.  We followed this run with Denny’s with C and A and eventually went into SF, where we would meet-up with Stone and Austin and friends for dinner and fun before Kaiser on Sunday morning.

they were 'cold' ;)
they were ‘cold’ 😉

 

yay, friends!
yay, friends!

Sunday, February 2 — heeeey, Groundhog’s Day!

p: LR 20

a: Kaiser half marathon (13.1) + 2.2 mi warm-up + 2.15 cool-down [race– 7:30 average; botched my watch and lost my splits. lowest was 7 on the descents; highest was an 8:43-8 on my pit stop. Most were in the 7:1x-2x range with a couple :3x, if memory serves]

Second road race ever in CA and first as a resident… what say whaaaaat. Stayed at Stone’s overnight (thank you, hostess with the mostest) and ran over to the race start with her and Foxy in the rain. I keep bringing up this drought that’s rockin’ the Bay right now, and naturally, Murphy’s Law apparently dictated that SF get more rain in the 12 hours preceding the race, and nearly all day, on the day of the race, than the Bay Area has gotten since I moved here in late December… and, oh yeah, some wind too, just to round things out. 🙂 Definitely not complaining–bitching about the weather is just silly–but it was just an uncontrollable variable to the race.

wet and trashy pre-race with Foxy and Stone
wet and trashy pre-race with Foxy and Stone

Anyway, I went into this race tired but ready to run as well as I could that day, going almost exclusively on feel. After running the first few miles with Austin, Stone, Foxy, and another Erin, I eventually settled into a 7:1x-2x range but slowly began to feel uncomfortable. I didn’t think I was going super hard–I would describe it as “comfortably hard,” post LR-day–but I just felt a little off. I rocked some PRPs, so I ruled out any gastrointestinal issues, but eventually, around mile 9.65, I made the executive decision to duck out for a second to tend to the Big D along the Great Highway. It didn’t take very long, no doubt because the public bathroom was locked and I just had to quickly commune with nature, and as you would expect, I felt much, much better afterward. (You’re welcome)

In addition, the race through the Panhandle and Golden Gate Park follows a lot of TSFM’s course, which is awesome, and has a ton of descents and few ascents, making this a great course for a half PR. Once we got dumped onto the Great Highway though, we ran smack into a hearty headwind for around 3-4 miles (I think), which, while irritating, actually made me smile a bit because I felt like I was on the lakefront. 🙂

I saw Foxy and Stone ahead of me for much of the course and knew that they were going to PR–making me so very happy for them (I tend to celebrate friends’ PRs like they’re my own)–and literally steps before the finish line, I heard, and then saw, Meredith on the sidelines, freezing her toosh off from the nearly non-stop rain and wind, cheering. You might recall that Meredith and some other Bootleggers were on the Chicago Marathon course around mile 24 or 25 and change; seriously, there are few people I look forward to seeing more than this lovely cat that late in a race. 🙂

Ultimately, I squeaked in just under 1:40, my soft and unofficial goal for the race, and I’m quite pleased with it. The other halfs with potty breaks were in the mid-to-high 1:40s, so this  went considerably better… and on fatigued legs… and in sub-ideal weather… so I’m calling it a win. The race could definitely stand to be improved–hello, the shitshow and security nightmare that is gear check–but I’d do likely do it again.

For me anyway, the race was pretty inconsequential in the grand scheme of my last 24 hours; at the risk of sounding obnoxiously treacly, I was just really happy for the QT with my friends from Portland, SF, and Chicago 🙂

about 10-15 seconds from the finish, I think
about 10-15 seconds from the finish, I think

 

final streeeetch
final streeeetch

 

soaked and chilled post-race w Stone, Mere (spectator amazingness), and a sleeping Foxy... thanks for these pics, M!
soaked and chilled post-race w Stone, Mere (spectator amazingness), and a sleeping Foxy… thanks for these pics, M!

 

can't believe I haven't seen him since Eugene!
can’t believe I haven’t seen him since Eugene!

 

And there we have it, folks! Another week down, another week closer to Oakland, and finally, some race feedback to work from. Though it only happened once this week, I’m glad I got some strength stuff in the books, and all things considered, I’m floored with how Kaiser went down. We are movin’ right along.

Weekly Mileage

p: 70

a: 70.48

Have you had to make a mid-race bathroom stop? How were your runs this week? Are you getting stoked for your target race(s)?!