After cramming 6 marathons and an ultra into 2 years, I have my first DNF. The doctor treating my attention obsessed ankle reaffirmed my running interdiction. His diagnosis, without imagery (read useless), theorizes a tear. He ousted me to the dreaded orthopedic field for confirmation, mri, and possible torture. I entertained running Umstead against medical advice up to the night before the race. The small self-preservation section of my brain is usually fully employed with flossing, sun block, and avoiding Kardashian and Jersey shore news, but this time the archipallium stepped in to protect me from me.
Runners gone wild. Jay Spadie with aerodynamic smiley pasties. They worked he finished very fast. |
I came to the race pretty spent. Thursday night I slept at a hotel with a lap pool and put 30 minutes into arms only drills and 30 minutes into the weight machines. Friday night I did an additional 40 minutes of just core work. I arrived at Umstead Saturday morning with purposely unprotected nipples and wearing bike shorts with an eleven pound chamois in the seat. Too deterred by the cold sprinkle to run naked, I had discovered a way to safely attend one of NC's best races of the year, without participating. I pinned my number 68 and lined up in the back of the pack. After everyone cleared the start, I took one giant step for injured kind and reported my DNF to the officials.
Like many women, Susan is devoted to trying out the season's new kicks, at her first opportunity. |
Best dressed 2012. |
My sexy face pose, complete with mud mole and brain bucket. |
My blood sugar was starting to react to all the biking miles and I wanted to see what the finish looks like from the front of the pack so I headed back to the lodge to see the leaders and grab a burrito. I crossed the finish line after 28 miles on my bike in second place! The winner, Mark Manz, beat me by over 5 minutes and I was wearing tires. I did get to see Dan Bedard, Bart Bechard, Kenneth Becker, and Barefoot Josh Sutcliffe get wood at the finish. Please insert your own running viagra joke here. Looks like you needed an 8:21 pace for the males this year. My personal established streak of mediocrity essentially ensured that someone with a wooden bat would still be have been eating Moe's when I finished, had I been healthy.
Dan Bedard: may be fast, but a mediocre puppeteer. |
Bart Bechard.trying to give his pet bat a drink. |
Rocky theme music performed at the Turkey Creek, Reedy intersection by both of Durham's 2 young marathon fans. |
Brandy Burns volunteered her time as a course monitor and saloon strumpet. |
Scott had challenged Umstead to a grudge match before getting sick following Uhwarrie. He wanted to break 4 hours and had overtrained specifically for this race. I was really rooting for him as I felt he was only in slightly better shape than me at UMR. My plan for this race was to stick with him then try to outkick him or push him down on the final stretch. After pulling from Umstead, I considered Scott my pinch runner in this race. He looked great. He shaved over an hour off last year's time and kept his effort level at relaxed while doing it. I paced him for awhile, with the idea of talking him through the finish, but he was conversational and very comfortable on his own. He looked like he was out on a weekend long run. He finished right around 4:30 and I suspect had enough in the tank to mow the lawn when he got home.
Jack and Carolyn. |
While Scott loped toward his finish, I went off in search of my other training partner Susan Gregory. Umstead was her first attempt at a trail marathon. She had just PR'd in Jacksonville and had decided a month is too long between marathons. I have a special place in my heart for crazy and wanted to see how Umstead was treating her. We rendezvoused after the spiral ascent on Reedy. Susan looked a little tired, but determined. You could tell she was going to finish, but might need a nap along the way. By this time she was mainlining coca-cola from the aid stations out of a water bottle. I admired Susan's stamina, she showed more grit than Rooster Cogburn and better depth perception. I finished my bicycle adventure pacing her up Reedy, down Cedar Creek and back and up to the finish. She finished very near my time last year at my first Umstead and was already calculating next year's performance before she had her finishers mug topped off. Great job Susan.
3rd place Erik Johnson's after finish plate appears to be missing only cotton candy and syrup. |
Susan limped off to the lodge for a quick blood plasma refill and calf replacement. I had had enough Trek gluteal pressure point massage, so I cautiously wiped the bike off my butt and joined the spectators at the finish. Carolyn Quarterman faithfully cheered on the final finishers and I joined her rooting on those trying to beat the 6 hour limit.
The coveted wooden chiroptera. |
Jim and Jade finish together. |
At this race I had the opportunity to watch the leaders cross the line. I saw Jim Wei finish after running the 10 miles to the race from home. I saw Kristen Laduke finish her very first marathon at Umstead and under the cutoff. I saw Barefoot Josh and Scott cut more than 60 minutes off of last years effort. I saw selfless rain soaked volunteerism. I saw Bill Squier keep his Umstead streak alive. For 6 brief hours, I saw people transform into runners. I am going to return grateful. And smarter (read cross-training). And taller with better hair.
This post took a while to complete and reads like Mr. Rochester will make an appearance at any time (Jane Eyre for those of you with real college degrees). I am still adjusting to my new blood sugar trends. I am unable to replicate my running hours with just core work, upper body, and biking. As a result I am not quite as insulin sensitive as I have been for the last 3 years. Although I am keeping a tight rein on my carbohydrate intake, this still results in more insulin used, and until I completely figure it out a few more swings. This challenges me time wise by requiring a little more sleep to combat fatigue. And, the resulting more frequent BS changes make me just slightly more emotionally stable than a recently quit smoking, bipolar, menstruating bear with a popcorn kernel stuck in its tooth, waiting in line at the bear DMV which has a tv stuck on Judge Judy.
Monday March 12 I meet another Ortho and hopefully finally get a pic of my tendon for the refrigerator. Happy trails and PLEASE cross train.
Monday March 12 I meet another Ortho and hopefully finally get a pic of my tendon for the refrigerator. Happy trails and PLEASE cross train.
Sockfoot Josh. |
I rode almost 42 miles and still no finisher mug. :( I paparazzied this pic from Dan Bedard's beer holder. |
Cedar Creek was up. |
The infamous ectoparasite mob in force. |
diatribeSix
I think it is tine for an intervention.... Your an addict!
ReplyDeleteRace (or non-race) report winnar!! That report was so chock full of awesome, I can't decide what I liked best. However, this really resonated with me:
ReplyDelete"You are choosing accomplishment over pain."
Yes. Exactly.
Fingers crossed for a good MRI result tomorrow.
I made it on your blog?! I feel like I've now MADE IT as a runner. Hello world!!
ReplyDeleteSeriously a million & one thank yous for helping me finish. It wouldn't have been the same without you.
You were awesome Bubbles. Great first trail marathon. I miss our philosophical long runs past haunted cabin row.
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