Saturday, December 31, 2022

2022 Reads

 I read a lot more pages than I ran miles! What I read in 2022:

  1. This Is the Night Our House Will Catch Fire by Nick Flynn (Goodreads counted this for 2021)
  2. Unthinkable by Brad Parks
  3. Good Riddance by Elinor Lipman
  4. Lady Clementine by Marie Benedict
  5. Apples Never Fall by Liana Moriaty
  6. Nancy Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook by Nancy Clark
  7. The Devil Wears Black by L.J. Shen
  8. Win at All Costs: Inside Nike Running and Its Culture of Deception by Matt Hart
  9. Say Nothing by Brad Parks
  10. The Cat Who Saved Books by Sosuke Natsukawa
  11. Bewilderment by Richard Powers
  12. The Science of Running by Steve Magness
  13. The Night She Disappeared by Lisa Jewell
  14. The Third Wife by Lisa Jewell
  15. Interference by Brad Parks
  16. Daniel's Running Formula by Jack Daniels
  17. Wish You Were Here by Jodi Picoult
  18. People We Meet on Vacation by Emily Henry
  19. Angel Falls by Kristin Hannah
  20. No Exit by Taylor Adams
  21. Finlay Donovan is Killing It by Elle Cosimano
  22. The Santa Suit by Mary Kay Andrews
  23. The Girls in the Garden by Lisa Jewell
  24. Luster by Raven Leilani
  25. Closer Than You Know by Brad Parks
  26. Greenwich Park by Katherine Faulkner
  27. The Five Dysfunctions of a Team: A Leadership Fable by Patrick Lencioni
  28. How to Change: The Science of Getting from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be by Katy Milkman
  29. A Summer Affair by Elin Hilderbrand
  30. The Last Time I Lied by Riley Sager
  31. The Music of Bees by Eileen Garvin
  32. The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls
  33. Thin Ice (Alaska Wild #1) by Paige Shelton
  34. Reminders of Him by Colleen Hoover
  35. The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
  36. The Whispers by Heidi Perks
  37. The Words We Keep by Erin Stewart
  38. Cold Wind (Alaska Wild #2) by Paige Shelton
  39. Dark Roads by Chevy Stevens
  40. Best Friends Forever by Jennifer Weiner
  41. Half Broke Horses by Jeannette Walls
  42. Book Lover by Emily Henry
  43. Under the Tulip Tree by Michelle Shocklee
  44. Mary Jane by Jessica Anya Blau
  45. It Ends with Us by Colleen Hoover
  46. The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon
  47. Honor by Thrity Umrigar
  48. The Candy House by Jennifer Egan
  49. Cat's Cradle by Kurt Vonnegut Jr.
  50. The Kids Are Gonna Ask by Gretchen Anthony
  51. November 9 by Colleen Hoover
  52. The Last Time I Saw You but Elizabeth Berg
  53. The Night Shift by Alex Finlay
  54. Confess by Colleen Hoover
  55. Count the Nights by Stars by Michelle Shocklee
  56. Little Secrets by Jennifer Hillier
  57. Turtles All the Way Down by John Green
  58. The Sanatorium by Sara Pearse
  59. A Good Girl's Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson
  60. In Bloom by Fern Michaels
  61. Dopamine Nation: Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence by Anna Lembke
  62. Us Against You by Fredrik Backman
  63. When She Dreams by Amanda Quick
  64. Good Girl, Bad Blood by Holly Jackson
  65. The Maid by Nita Prose
  66. Troublemaker: Surviving Hollywood and Scientology by Leah Remini
  67. Goodnight Nobody by Jennifer Weiner
  68. A Flicker in the Dark by Stacy Willingham
  69. The Wife, the Maid, and the Mistress by Ariel Lawhon
  70. We Are Not Like Them by Christine Pride
  71. More Than You'll Ever Know by Katie Gutierrez
  72. Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness by Susannah Cahalan
  73. How to Walk Away by Katherine Center
  74. The Giver by Lois Lowry
  75. The Younger Wife by Sally Hepworth
  76. A Star is Bored by Byron Lane
  77. The Woman They Could Not Silence: One Woman, Her Incredible Fight for Freedom, and the Men Who Tried to Make Her Disappear by Kate Moore
  78. The Measure by Nikki Erlick
  79. Pretty Little Liars by Sara Shepard
  80. The Love of My Life by Rose Walsh
  81. Nothing More To Tell by Karen M. McManus
  82. The Secret Race: Inside the Hidden World of the Tour de France by Tyler Hamilton and Daniel Coyle
  83. Overdue: Reckoning with the Public Library by Amanda Oliver
  84. Without Merit by Colleen Hoover
  85. The Dinner List by Rebeccal Serle
  86. The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner
  87. Carrie Soto Is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid
  88. Pretty Little Liars #2: Flawless by Sarah Shepard
  89. One of Us Is Next by Karen M. McManus
  90. Devolution: A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre by Max Brooks
  91. As Good As Dead by Holly Jackson
  92. Gilt by Jamie Brenner
  93. The Counselors by Jessica Goodman
  94. Ugly Love by Colleen Hoover
  95. The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn
  96. When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi
  97. The Paris Apartment by Lucy Foley
  98. Hell of a Book by Jason Mott
  99. Divergent by Veronica Rogth
  100. Geekerella by Ashley Poston
  101. The Accomplice by Lisa Lutz
  102. Legend by Marie Lu
  103. What Happened to the Bennetts by Lisa Scottoline
  104. Insurgent by Veronica Roth
  105. The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley
  106. Allegiant by Veronica Roth
  107. Running Man by Charlie Engle
  108. Fairy Tale by Stephen King
  109. Bringing Out the Best in People by Aubrey C. Daniels
  110. The Lies We Tell by Katie Zhao
  111. It Starts With Us by Colleen Hoover
  112. The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris
  113. Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of Life Interrupted by Suleika Jaouad
  114. The Amazing Adventures of Mr. Tinker: A Time Travel Novel by Paul Ibbetson
  115. The House in the Cerulean Sea by T. J. Klune
I also read half the Bible; I'm doing a 2-year reading plan. I've read it in 1 year before but it felt a little rushed.
I counted one in 2022 that Goodreads
counted for 2021 (started it in 2021,
finished in 2022)

The average book length surprised me











2022 Running Year in Review

Quick stats:

  • Miles run: 4,241.7
  • Teams/Support: rabbitELITE, UCAN, Nike, Miles from Mentor
  • Races run: 14
  • Races won (OA female): 8
  • Races won (masters female): 12
  • PRs:
  • Records:
    • Missouri state road racing record for 20k for females age 41
    • Missouri state road racing record for 25k for females age 41
    • Kansas state road racing record for 50k overall female
    • Prairie Spirit 50k female course record
    • Missouri state road racing record for 10k for females age 41
  • Highlights:
    • Being inducted into the OMRR Hall of Fame
    • 11th fastest North American female in the 50k in 2022
    • 6th best North American female performance in the 6 hour in 2022
    • Running in the professional field at the Boston Marathon
    • Zero injuries!

I ran this race sick because I won't
ever have this opportunity again!
Longer impression:

My running evolves every year, and I'm not sure how to concisely sum this one up! Consistency in training was my strong suit, and I continued to enjoy masters running. I really appreciate having masters records and titles to chase, though in most races I enter I'm still hunting an overall female win.

I was happy enough with all of my races considering the circumstances, except for my marathons. While disappointing to have two rough marathons this year, I am still thankful for the experiences and I know that if/when I run another good marathon I will appreciate it more. I am definitely more amazed at all of the good or just slightly off marathons I had before this year now. I had good shorter races and good ultras, so I can't really blame the distance or the pace for my marathon bombs.

I treasure all of my training with my local group, Miles from Mentor. Really every workout is a memorable one with them! I did the big 10 miles at MP+1:00 then 10 miles at MP workout that I've heard about for a couple of years for the first time this year, though I did 4 more miles after the 10 at MP for 24 on the day. My 4 hour training run was also pretty memorable, since I've never done that before! Even the speed workouts and track reps that aren't my forte were extremely fun this year. The every day easy runs always include inside jokes, fun facts, laughs, a lot of randomness, and a ton of endorphins. Running friends truly enhance my life.

I continued coaching several of my running buddies this year, and I love seeing their break throughs! Casey ran a long-awaited huge half PR at Bass Pro (1:21:58, also breaking my age 38 state record) and moved her marathon PR down a notch in Chicago (2:50:59). Colin blazed a 2:41:20 in the Des Moines marathon, even running most of it solo. Amy knocked out super impressive mileage and an age 50 state record in the 25k. Ann ran her second fastest marathon a week after having COVID, and we know she has a faster one in her, because a week off COVID! Spencer PRed with 2:58:24 at GO St Louis and was ready to run a 1:18ish half at Bass Pro but was derailed by illness. Sierra is now training for Boston, Sarah is conquering PA school, and Elise is practicing having two children, with the arrival of a new baby boy on Dec. 22!

I love running just as much as, or maybe more than, ever before. I don't know if I'll ever improve my current PRs, but that doesn't really change anything; I'll be running just as much, because performances are not what get me out there every day. I genuinely love every bit of training, and my marathons especially this year reminded me how valuable training is to me - I loved the process more than I can express, even though I was highly disappointed in my marathons. You'll find me running a ton and giving my all - and whatever that gets me on race day I will try to be happy with...even if I just know I have a better one in me, haha!

Many of the Miles from Mentor regulars

You can read my race recaps here:

Post-50k endorphins
You can read my monthly recaps here:

Casey & Rebecca gave the best speeches at the
OMRR Hall of Fame induction

You can read my previous yearly recaps here:
Twin Cities Pro treatment


Delightful December

December 2022 in review!

Total mileage for the month: 341.8
  • Nov. 28-Dec. 4: 90.4
  • Dec. 5-11: 87.4
  • Dec. 12-18: 85.5
  • Dec. 19-25: 54.7 
  • Dec. 26-Jan. 1: 68.0
Races:
  • Dec. 17: Run for the Ranch 6 hour during which I covered 42.275 miles (13 x 3.275 loops), for 1st overall female, an automatic PR, and the 6th best 6 hour performance in North America for a female in 2022.
Workouts:
  • Dec. 2: 6 x 300 m on the track with 1:00-1:30 recovery jogs in the middle of a 7.5 mile run. I ran them all in 1:01 and was proud of that consistency, but this workout sure hit differently! One of my running buddies was training for a mile race, and I did a lot of the workouts because a speed block between marathon/50k training blocks is good for me.
  • Dec. 6: 4 x 600 m-ish on the road at 1 mile effort (5:30ish pace) + 1 mile threshold-ish (5:58) with 3:00-4:00 jogs between each, then moderate (7:00ish) to 10 because I was short on time. This workout sure illustrated how huge the difference between 5:30 and 6:00 pace is for me. I would 100% rather run a 6:00 mile than run 2:00 at 5:30 pace, hah!
  • Dec. 9: 4 x (4 x 200 m) on the track with 0:40 walking/standing between reps and 800 m jog between sets in 0:38, 40, 39, 40, 38, 40, 39, 40, 39, 40, 40, 39, 39, 40, 40, 39 - a good speed workout for this endurance monster!
  • Dec. 13: 6 x 400 m on the track at hard. I ran this with Sarah and Sierra, and our reward for getting out there in rain, wind, and feels like 33* was not taking split times! We worked hard, felt good about it, and decided to never again take splits on atrocious weather days.
  • Dec. 25: I attempted to help my 20-year-old niece on her 3 mile tempo progression. 6:50 pace sure felt like 6:00 one week after my ultra on dirt roads in 7*, and I stayed with her for about 2.5 miles but didn't progress the last half mile. I then ran her to the end of her long run and added on to get to 12, picking it back up to 7:09/feels like 6:09 for mile 11 for a bit of a split tempo workout.
  • Dec. 28: 6 x 1:00 on/1:00 off, jog to hill, 1 x 1:00 uphill (did not look at paces). My hamstrings were screaming at me so I cut this workout short. I felt fine the week after my ultra, but running faster on Dec. 25 didn't seem to agree with me - possibly along with holiday travel, altered sleep schedules, and holiday eating - and I felt pretty poor Dec. 26-28. Live and learn!
  • Strides: Dec. 1, 8, 12.
  • Doubles: Dec. 6 and 9.
  • Favorite workout: Oddly enough, the 200s on Dec. 9. I felt really great that day!
I think we were going for #delightfuldecember

Long/Medium Long Runs:
  • Dec. 3: 30.2 miles (7:58). I decided I was going to run for 4 hours and I did! It went really well and I even felt good at the end. The relaxed pace helped and I think I nailed my fueling. Four of my running buddies started the run with me, and Colin did 27 miles, but because he got a little late start I had his company until my final 1.5 miles. I ran this on Frisco, so it wasn't even the farthest I've run on that trail, thanks to the Frisco 50k! It was, however, my longest training run ever by a 4 miles and my second longest time on feet ever (my first marathon in 2003 took me 4:05!) - though it moved into third longest time on feet after Dec. 17.
  • Dec. 10: 15.1 miles (7:36), that started at 10:00 a.m. due to an early morning of pouring rain. I moved the group run to 10:00 a.m. simply because my weather app said that's when the rain would be passed, but then realized it was great practice for my Dec. 17 10:00 a.m. race start time.
  • Dec. 17: 42.575 miles (8:11) for the Run for the Ranch 6 hour and a new PR for the farthest I've ever run, and an automatic PR in my first 6 hour event.
  • Dec. 22: 14 miles (8:05), really just because my running buddies were running long on this Thursday before the winter storm hit. It was quite nice when we started this run but the temp dropped and wind picked up dramatically while we were out - though nothing compared to Dec. 23 when the wind chill was -28*!
  • Dec. 25: 12.3 miles (7:38) with 4 moderate miles that felt very hard, to help my niece with her long run.
  • Dec. 28: 12 miles (8:07), and I didn't do a long run on Dec. 31 because I didn't feel up for it. I felt really great coming off my 6-hour, but then the week after Christmas I did not feel so hot so I backed off.
  • Favorite long run: Dec. 3, because I'd have never thought 30 miles would feel so easy!
#drencheddecember after the Dec. 13 
track workout - also #darkdecember
Christmas morning run!
Running Highlights:
  • Run for the Ranch and hitting a new yearly mileage PR!
Christmas Eve run - wind chill of -11*
Life Highlights:
  • We spent a day and a half each with each side of the family for Christmas.
Major Christmas Eve

Ibbetson Christmas Day

Books:
  • Allegiant by Veronica Roth
  • Running Man by Charlie Engle
  • Fairy Tale by Stephen King
  • Bringing Out the Best in People by Aubrey C. Daniels
  • The Lies We Tell by Katie Zhao
  • It Starts With Us by Colleen Hoover
  • The Tattooist of Auschwitz by Heather Morris
  • Between Two Kingdoms: A Memoir of Life Interrupted by Suleika Jaouad
  • The Amazing Adventures of Mr. Tinker: A Time Travel Novel by Paul Ibbetson
  • The House in the Cerulean Sea by T. J. Klune
Theme for the month:
  • If success is measured is fun, I'm one of the best runners there is. I had a blast doing whatever I felt like this month, which included track workouts with friends and a 6 hour race!

Monday, December 19, 2022

Run for the Ranch 6 hour: The Aftermath

The short version with links to the other detail posts is here.

I had checked the North America ultra standings prior to the race so knew if I hit my goal of 13 laps I'd be #5 overall - but oh-so-close to #3 and #4 so I wished partial laps could count. I have since learned that most time-based races like this switch to a small loop for the final hour or so, so that people can get the most of the time allotted (noted for future reference!). Another woman ran 44 miles on the same day I ran mine, so I ended up #6. I liked the course for my race but it wasn't flat, and the powerful wind really did not help things. As per usual when I accomplish a goal, I am thrilled with it, but I know I have a better one in me!

I plan to stick with the marathon and 50k for now though. I would like to run a 50 miler when I turn 50 (October 2030), and of course this race made me think very strongly about doing it sooner...because "it's only 7.4 more miles!". I could have run 7.4 slow miles after those 42.6, and I didn't really specifically train for this race. I have made a lot of running claims that didn't come to fruition, including "I'm never running an ultra" and "I'm never going farther than a 50k" (there was also "Once I break 3:00 in the marathon I'll be happy with that time forever." - we all know how well that worked out!) - so no promises.

The biggest surprise for me was that the end miles felt just like the end of a positive split marathon. I thought I'd be going to some new places, but it all felt awfully familiar. I knew I could keep going, but that the pace wasn't going to be what I'd been running. I fully expected to slow down in this race, and because of that it wasn't bothersome when it was happening - unlike in marathons when I slow down I am very bothered! I was a little disheartened that I slowed down before 30 miles, since I'd finished my 30 mile training run so strong, but maybe that day was just a bit better than race day.

I didn't do an actual training cycle for this race, but rather mostly figured I'd piggy back upon years of mileage and marathon builds. I'd been running speed work with my friend who won the Run for the Ranch 1 mile, so my workouts were very not ultra-specific, hah! I'm guessing those things caused me to slow down sooner than I would have if I'd had more focus on this race, but I also greatly enjoyed the feeling of doing "whatever".

The other surprise was that the next day I just felt like I'd run a marathon - actually I was much less sore than I have been after many of my marathons. I thought that my 50ks didn't beat me up too much because they were on rails to trails crushed gravel, but this race was on the road and it didn't beat me up any more. I credit the Alphaflys for a lot of that, but I also think I respond better to long runs and mileage than most. In a marathon it's not the distance that gets me, it's the pace over the distance - even when I have run crappy marathons I knew I'd finish them, just slower than I wanted. A big reason I ran this race to begin with was that running for 6 hours at a relatively slow pace seemed easier than running a fast marathon at the moment.

I already mentioned that I had zero chaffing, courtesy of great rabbit attire. I got two relatively minor blisters under my toes, but that happens to me in marathons too. My body was tired but I didn't feel any unusual or uneven pain. One reason I thought this specific race was the best to dip my toe into the 6 hour world at was because I didn't think I'd have any trouble stopping if I had any unusual pain, since I had very little invested (it was about 7 miles from my house - I have run the race course on long runs)! Fortunately, that didn't happen, but I would have called it if I'd thought I was getting injured at any point. If I travel to a race or invest a lot in some other manner I don't see pulling out happening, even when it probably should.

I think I did okay with my nutrition. I took in 1000 calories, which wouldn't fuel for every mile over 20 but with the slower pace I wasn't burning as much glycogen. Maybe it wasn't enough, but I was pushing what my stomach was used to already so I think much more would have caused other issues. If I had planned this further in advance, I'd have trained my stomach to handle more and to handle some real food. What I took settled well and I had no stomach or GI issues. I took either a bottle or a gel at the end of every lap. I had 2 bottles of UCAN energy + protein (90 calories each), 2 bottles of coconut water (45 calories each, with electrolytes), 6 UCAN Edge gels (70 calories each, all superstarch), 1 SIS gel (210 calories, sugary, tastes awful), and 1 Maurten gel (100 calories, sugary). I didn't take any caffeine, which is atypical for me, but with a 10:00 a.m. start time most of the race was in the afternoon and I knew it would wreck my sleep if I used any.

To sum it up: I am thankful that God gave me this opportunity to try something new and to push my limits! Now the hardest part: some days off.

But it hurts so good!


Run for the Ranch 6 hour: Laps 9-13

The short version is here, and laps 1-8 are described in detail here.

Lap 9 - After a little dip during lap 8, I was doing okay again. I felt like I needed to back off the effort some in order to make it 5 more laps, and running solo probably helped me at that point because I could go with my own ebb and flow. I knew I'd be at 29.5 when I finished lap 9, so even though I'd been having some doubts I knew I was going to keep going because I was sure not willing to run "only" 29.5 at 50 seconds/mile slower than my 50k pace. I was probably feeling my lack of an actual training cycle for this event - remember, I did 20 miles 3 weeks out and 30 miles 2 weeks out, but I hadn't done a whole slew of 20+ milers since my Twin Cities training cycle, or back-to-back long runs since early 2022 (plus I was doing track workouts during the 5 weeks leading up to this race, lol!). Julie was out running the course, and found me walking up the little hill about a mile out from the finish area and ran back with me. I asked her about Eric, and unfortunately he'd called it for the day due to stomach issues. From mile 29 on, my miles were all 8:37-9:25 and averaged about 9:00; I wasn't moving quickly but I never stopped plugging away.

Funny fact: driving to race I heard the song Save Your Tears on the radio, and while many songs cycled through my head when I was running solo, the lyric I sang to myself most often was "Save your tears for another day..." Not an encouraging one, but I never really felt discouraged. I didn't ever feel like I was knocking it out of the park, but I did always feel like I was doing it.

Just keep runnin'!

Lap 10 - Throughout lap 10 I was excited because I knew when I finished it I'd have a new mileage PR. The course marshals at the corner where Missy and Rebecca were cheering started getting into the race and saying something to me each lap, such as asking what the farthest I'd run before then was. My friends cheering was also amazing, and it was so kind of them to come out for a couple of hours in the brutal weather. I was so pumped up by my new PR when I came through lap 10, I thought that 9.9 more miles seemed completely reasonable. I had points in the race where I thought "Geez, I hope I make 32", "36 would be fine", and "39.3 is a marathon plus a half, that would be really good!", but I was always in a good place when I passed the finish area so never truly considered stopping. I was monitoring the course clock at each lap, and I still had about 1:36:20 left when I finished lap 10, so I knew even if I averaged 10 minute pace for the last 3 laps I'd get them in.

We ran through this and could see the elapsed
time at the end of each lap

Lap 11 - The course was really thinning out by this point, with most of the marathoners finished. I was doing well considering. I think laps 9-10 were my most difficult, then 11-13 were a little slower but felt better. I walked up the little hill during laps 9 and 10, but never needed to after that. I started thinking about how I felt better at that point than I did with 10 miles to go in Boston, so that was comforting since I knew I'd gritted through worse. The wind was extremely annoying but expected each lap. The aid station volunteers and course marshals felt like old friends at that point. I found humor in the teenagers chasing each other, the other kids who didn't know what gels were, the amazing volunteer at the 180* turn with two puffs on her hat, and the aid station that was scraping ice off their table with a windshield ice scraper. When I passed the clock I had well over an hour left, so I knew I was going to make my 13 lap goal.

Lap 12 - On this lap I mostly kept thinking "I'm doing it!!!" I felt confident about completing 6 more miles, then 5, then 4. I was very insistent that I was not stopping at 39.3. I knew I would not have time for 3 more laps, so I didn't push because it was going to be 42.6 miles either way. I mostly felt like I was in the final 10k of a marathon that I was bonking - and I've had plenty of practice with that over the years! It's a feeling I'm familiar with; I can't run fast, but I can keep running.

Lap 13 - I knew I was going to do it, so this was kind of a victory lap. I also knew I had plenty of time to complete the last lap so didn't strain. I passed each volunteer and aid station for the final time. I thanked each of them profusely, and remarked that it was a really, really long time to stand outside. I updated the OMRR members who asked my distance. I lapped another woman who was in the 6 hour, and she said, "You are absolutely remarkable". I called back, "You are remarkable; you are running for 6 hours!" (she went on to be the second female finisher). About halfway through the lap, I suddenly had to pee pretty badly. I hadn't gone since lap 4. I went back and forth about whether or not to stop, and decided to hit the porta potty at the final aid station that was just a step off the road. I knew I had enough time cushion, and also that there was no way I'd have time for a 14th lap, so I went ahead and stopped to go. I was worried that I'd pee myself when I stopped running if I didn't!

Not actually the finish because the
photograph didn't stay all 6 hours

The finish - In my head this was a huge deal, but in reality it was anticlimactic. Well, I did see two marathoners heading into the finish ahead of me and decided I was going to outkick them, which I did - even though it counted for nothing except feeding my competitive spirit. Colin was waiting along with his friend Amy, and he was the only one around who knew how far I'd run. He ran the same distance, but faster - not fast enough to have time for a 14th lap either though. He and I won overall male and female, but no one really knew that either. The spectators had pretty much all gone home and even the timing guy was inside his trailer. I was bursting with endorphins but also started getting cold in the bitter wind real quick.

Colin and I grabbed our aid station supplies and headed to the indoor area. What I wanted most was to take off my shoes! I did so, and also went to the bathroom to take off my sweaty sports bra and inner layer shirt. I raced in last years rabbitELITE jacket because it's the warmest rabbit top I have, with this years thin tech short sleeve under it. I had ZERO chaffing anywhere from my clothing, which seems like a major accomplishment. I scrubbed my hands that were sticky from gels and milky from UCAN. I put on a sweatshirt, but then thought I needed my rabbit uniform on for photos, so I put my rabbit thin long sleeve on over the sweatshirt. It looked kind of ridiculous.

After I changed I wasn't sure what came next. What do people do after running for 6 hours?? Colin was also standing around aimlessly, and we both said we weren't sure what to do. I tried some leg swings halfheartedly, and drank some chicken broth with a few noodles in it. Once we got our awards, I made Colin take photos with me, which continued to feed my excitement. I couldn't really believe we'd done it - we'd run 42.6 miles! This wasn't a goal I even had until about a month ago, but it sure felt good to accomplish it, though it's kind of still sinking in. I'm starting to understand why this ultra thing is addicting!

This is how it started
The progression

He humored me

This one is my favorite!

The story continues here.

Run for the Ranch 6 hour: Laps 1-8

The short version is here, and pre-race is here.

The half, full, marathon relay, and 6 hour races all started together. Eric, Colin, Spencer, and I immediately settled in together as planned. Spencer had won the 1 mile that took place 45 minutes before the other races, and wanted to do 13 miles total so planned to run 3 laps with us. I was super excited and a race environment makes me want to race, but clearly no one needs to be racing a quarter mile into a 6 hour race. I aimed for that "run all day pace" feeling since we were, pretty much, running all day. I didn't look at my watch during the event, but early on Eric kept us updated on our splits. I think he was more concerned about going out too fast than Colin and I were, since he'd done 39.3 miles before with 26.2 being smooth and 13.1 being rough, per his report. Since I had no idea what I was doing, I didn't have that healthy fear. The paces we would run all seemed so much easier than any other race paces I'd done, it didn't seem like 7:30 was really any different from 8:00.

Lap 1 - This one consisted of non-stop chatter. We talked about a little bit of everything, laughed, complained about the hairpin turn, and wished away the headwind on the long stretch going west. It felt like just a normal easy pace long run. We were joined by a man who was running the marathon, looking to negative split a 3:20 - after he left us, we didn't pass him back, so hopefully he did it!

Looking happy...

...yet...

...very cold

Lap 2 - This was pretty much a repeat of lap 1, except without marathon guy. Lots of talking and I felt invincible. I was also trying to pose for photos when I saw Julie taking them.

Wahoo

Lap 3 - Another lots of talking and super relaxed lap. Spencer finished when he hit 10 miles and wished us well. I told him to tell the Miles from Mentor message group that we were in good spirits. Only 30-some miles to go!

Power of the pack

Lap 4 - We had been dropping the pace just a tad as the race progressed - which is typical of an easy long run, but maybe not something we should have been doing in this race. My splits for miles 11-13 were 7:35, 7:39, 7:14. The 7:14 was because I jumped into a porta potty very quickly during the 7:39 mile (so that one was probably more like 7:19) then reeled the guys back in. I tried to take my time catching back up, but I was anxious to rejoin the group because it's always harder solo. Eric was monitoring our splits, and kept telling us we were a little fast, but no one did anything about it. I think we passed the half marathon point in 1:43.

After a few laps, I learned the
professional photographer's location

Ultra fun

Lap 5 - On this lap, I noticed a decrease in conversation, so I brought up my proposed game: we pick a theme word for every lap, and try to use it as many times as we can during that lap. I got the idea from the book Running Man when they had a theme word every day they were running across the Sahara Desert. I'd already talked to Colin about it and he wasn't interested, so I told Eric his vote would be the tie breaker. He said he didn't think he was going to be talking much more and that he wasn't feeling very well. I encouraged him that it could turn around any moment, and I offered him UCAN if his nutrition wasn't settling well. My word game was vetoed, and Eric stopped at the end of this lap. 

Lap 6 - By now, the field was thinning out with a lot of half runners finished. We lapped runners from all of the different events, and I never knew who we were racing, who we were passing, or who we were lapping - but I had a pretty good idea that we were leading the 6 hour race. I felt bad that Eric had pulled out but thought he would possibly sit out a lap then join back in; when I mentioned that to Colin he said, "That's an option??!". I've run many, many training miles with Colin, some of them on the same road the race was on, so it just felt like a normal training day at that point. I didn't think much about what was ahead, which I think served me well.

Lapping a marathoner

Lap 7 - On lap 7, our friends Missy and Rebecca showed up, and they were all-star cheerleaders! Colin and I continued a little faster than we should have, clocking 7:29, 7:19, 7:30, 7:28, 7:17, 7:20 for miles 17-22. I'd wanted no faster than 7:45 and preferably 8:00, but since I wasn't looking at my watch and we no longer had Eric monitoring splits I didn't realize we'd sped up. At about mile 22 we climbed the hill of the loop, and Colin pulled a little ahead of me. He is better on hills than I am, but he then continued putting distance on me. I didn't feel comfortable speeding up so I let him go. I was staying right around 7:30 - he had some 7:00ish miles in there! The clock was on 2:58 when I passed through for lap 7, so I told myself "you only have to do 6 laps in the time you just did 7". Nothing to it, right? Halfway there, time-wise.

Lap 8 - I was solo now, and the wind kept picking up. The marathon point felt like a good milestone, though during this lap was the first time I started having some doubts. To hit my goal, I had to finish a marathon then run 16.3 more miles...seems a little crazy, eh? I started thinking I should feel better than I did, considering I was running 1:15ish/mile slower than if I had been racing a marathon. I started thinking that I felt better during the 30 mile training run than I felt during this race (which was accurate, but probably not encouraging). I felt like I was running a little low on fuel, and started wondering if I wasn't taking enough to account for the cold weather, since you burn more glycogen when it's cold. I took a SIS gel, which has over 200 calories and is sugary sweet immediate carbs, at the end of that lap. Those are really hard for me to choke down, but I think it helped! I crossed the finish for the marathon at 3:23:59-3:24:00. That mark gave me a boost (plus reminded me that I ran plenty of marathons over that time in my 20s!), and I was off to chase my next milestone, a new distance PR.

The story continues here.

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Run for the Ranch 6 hour: Pre-Race

The short version is here, and this posts starts the long version!

In early November, I started thinking about running one of the events at Run for the Ranch (R4TR). The race is put on by my local running club, Ozark Mountain Ridge Runners. I like to support OMRR, and the event location is less than 10 minutes from my house. The race has 4 different distances: a 1 mile, a half marathon, a full marathon, and a 6 hour race. I had reasons for doing each of them...the 1 mile state record is very attainable since there aren't many certified mile road races, it's been awhile since I've raced a half, I could use a sub-3 marathon this year, and I'd never run for 6 hours.

Then I got COVID and decided I wasn't doing any of them! But I ended up bouncing back quickly and after running 20 miles on Nov. 26 (because I was doing a mileage challenge that week), I decided that I was going to run for 4 hours on Dec. 3. If I could accomplish it and still wanted to run the 6 hour, I'd do it. Both things happened, and I was pretty amazed at how good I felt after running for 4 hours, which got me 30.2 miles. The other race options at R4TR seemed really fast, but running slowly for a long time seemed doable. I was also excited to try something different, with zero expectations (though not completely, because I looked at the 2022 ultra rankings before the event). I knew I'd likely have a lot of thoughts about what I should have done after the event, but much like with my first 50k, ignorance was bliss!

I didn't have any specific training for this race aside from the 4 hour run two weeks before it, but I figured I'd had 3 years of running 4000+ miles a year so that should count for a lot. I also rationalized that the way I gutted out both of my 2022 marathons had to have been good training - seems like I'm really good at running 7:15-8:15 pace when my body has nothing to give [spoiler: the end of this one would be slower than that]! Between the Twin Cities Marathon and this race I did one 20 miler the 30 miler, and on all of the others weekends I was running 14-18 milers so I wasn't unprepared - just not as prepared as if I'd focused on this race in advance (even before a marathon I do multiple 20+ milers, and before a 50k I do a lot of back-to-back longs runs). I didn't do any long race specific workouts; actually I did a speed block with my friend who was training for the one mile at this race.

I managed to talk my running buddy Colin into most of my 4 hour training run and this 6 hours event. He ran the Dogwood 50k (technical trail) last month, so had a recent run with 4:20 on feet, and I kept telling him that meant he was better prepared than me. Neither of us really knew what we were doing though. I talked to my friend Julie a couple of weeks before the race and found out her husband Eric was also running it, with similar pacing ideas as me and Colin. Eric had run it before, covering 39.3 miles, so had a better idea of what he was in for.
With Colin, Eric, & 6 gels in my
tights side pockets

Before the event, I asked the race director several questions, and he was kind enough to help me with all of them. He also told me I could set up a table by the course with my drinks and nutrition, a personal aid station of sorts. I took advantage of that and set up a TV table with my nutrition, a change of shoes, and extra clothes. Colin and Eric also placed supplies by the table, but the photo below is of just mine. My fueling plan was to take a gel or bottle every lap, plus water at the race aid stations as needed. I also laid out some UCAN bars in case I was run/walking at some point and wanted them.
Running forever takes a lot of stuff

On race day, after I set up my aid station, I sat in my warm car until 10 minutes before the start, when I got out to pee in a porta-potty that I was parked 20 feet away from. I then got back into my car until 5 minutes before the start. The wind chill was 13* at the start, with a brisk west wind of 20 mph. It was weird doing zero warm up, aside from foam rolling before I left my house and walking to the starting line, and it also made for a much colder bit waiting for the gun to go off!

I planned to run by effort, and fully expected I'd slow down sometime after 25-30 miles. I don't think anyone negative splits ultras this long. I also figured that Colin, Eric, and I would probably go through rough patches at different points, but as long as one person felt okay at any given time, we'd keep each other going. When I ran my 30 mile training run, I didn't feel that good at mile 15, but then at 20 I felt like I could go forever, the last 10 miles were a breeze, and I didn't fade one bit. That experience was helpful to think back on. I figured I'd go through similar phases in this race, and knew that things could always turn around from a bad patch. I also knew that there was a lot I didn't know - but I had 6 hours to learn it!

The story continues here.

Run for the Ranch 6 hour: Finally, a PR in 2022!

The short:
Even marathon pace seems fast and intimidating in my head right now, but running slowly forever seemed like something I could do! Enter the Run for the Ranch 6 hour race. It entailed running a 3.275 mile loop as many times as you could or wanted to within a 6 hour time frame, and the most loops won. If two people ran the same number of laps, the one who did it faster won. I'd never run a 6 hour before, so as long as I surpassed 50k for distance, which I felt very confident about, I was in for a PR.

It's good to have training buddies
 who are just as crazy as you

8 laps was a marathon, 12 laps was 39.3 miles, etc. Only full laps counted, so if you wanted to run over 40 miles officially you had to run 42.575 miles. I kind of felt like, "Who wants to stop at 39.3??" and set my goal at 13 laps - plus I thought 42 miles would be neat since I am 42 years old. I really had no idea how my body would respond to running for 6 hours, but I did a 4 hour (30.2 mile) training run 2 weeks before the race that made it seem reasonable. I'm sure true ultra runners are laughing at my random goals and rationales!

I managed those 13 laps for 42.575 miles and 1st overall female on December 17. This ranks me #6 on the North America female 6 hour list for 2022, so not too shabby for my first go at this - especially in a wind chill of 13* on a course wide open to the 20 mph wind. However, I realized that if all ground covered in the full 6 hours (instead of only full laps) counted I could have been #4. #5 only ran 0.025 farther than me and #4 did 0.625 farther, which I know I could have covered in the time remaining, especially because if every bit had counted I would have pushed more on the final 2 laps and wouldn't have stopped to pee at the final aid station. I have since learned that a lot of timed races have a smaller loop in the final hour for this reason. I am also #2 for women age 40-49, behind world record holder Camille Herron.

The things I had to do to get a PR in 2022! I was fortune to run about half of the miles with my running buddy Colin, who also ran 42.575 miles, but faster than me. His performance is #17 for men's 6 hours this year, but he could have been #9 if partial laps counted or there was a shorter loop option at the end.

I've been running for over 30 years now, so it's not terribly often that I get to try new things. I am thankful for this opportunity less than a 10 minute drive from my house! It's pretty incredible what God made our bodies capable of. Ozark Mountain Ridge Runners did a great job putting on this event, and if you ask me volunteering at an aid station for 6 hours in that weather sounds a lot harder than running in it for 6 hours.

Official results are here (search for my bib 3012).

My Strava activity is here.

North America ultra rankings are here.

Details:

Overall male and female!