2 DNFs in the same month? Timed-out at this year’s Bighorn. Even an Olympic-quick kick from the last aid station, wouldn’t have extended today’s trek. Long by 90 minutes. Right ankle throbbed, foot now numb. Whole group of folks waiting for ATVs to haul them outta Cow Camp. Would walk the last 6 ½ miles with 2 new friends. No belt buckle today but no fail. Finished on my own terms.
2:15 alarm. Morning came early. Clothes laid out, teeth brushed. Goodbyes to the front desk clerk, school bus passed on my walk to Holiday Inn. First stop: Tongue River High School, Dayton WY. Added 2 busses to our convoy, next up: Jaws Trailhead, Bighorn National Forest (Wyoming’s Rockies). Nodded off the next hour. Rocked awake once we hit dirt. Overcast/pitch dark, bus driver pointed to the trailhead path. 52 mile Start.
Long line of runners, dusky single-track trail. Eyes ahead, muddled chatter/short conversations between runners. Jockeyed back-n-forth first mile. Nervous excitement. Two runners came ’round thru the grass – was audibly spooked, thought they were moose (big Momma/2 calves delayed us leaving our bus). Log jam ‘round the first mud hole. Carefully chose my path, keeping feet dry/shoes clean. In hindsight, BIG laugh.
Elk Camp, first aid station. Spring Marsh, our second. Temps cool, felt GREAT. 8 miles complete; maybe, just maybe [gonna happen]. Weather near perfect, on track with electrolytes, stomach a-ok. Mind dialed in, pace steady. All ’bout managing Cutoff. Schedule seemed aggressively early-stacked. First drop bag at mile 18. Hoping at arrive by 9am, full hour ahead. I’d need those 60 minutes to hit Dry Creek Ridge by 3.
MUD. Shoe-sucking MUD. Black sewage-smelling MUD. River of MUD. Miles & miles of MUD.
One step forward, half-step back, one step wide, forward & repeat. Folks that managed best, carried hiking poles. Elevation map super deceiving; MUD negated any/all DOWNHILL time savings. SLOW 25-minute pace, worse than a walk. 7 miles between Spring Marsh & Cathedral Rock. Checked my Garmin, still not there. Out of fluids. Ultimately reached the aid station, 2 short miles from Footbridge. Because of trail conditions, volunteers not able to set up as expected.
DEEP MUD thick over the shoes. Up past the ankles, Newtons covered. Wet feet, bulging big toe blister. I don’t blister, have callused/gnarled runner’s feet. Body’s never hydrated enough to spare the liquid. first Drop Bag at the next Aid Station, stay Positive. Fresh shoes/socks, food.
“20 minutes ‘til cut-off. Every runner must go by the check-out tent before heading back out.”
20 minutes? Are you frickin’ kidding me? Where did the time go? Arrived at Sally’s Footbridge. Volunteer had my drop bag waiting. Another volunteer brought water to wash feet. Medic asked if I needed anything. “Think I have a large blister.” Shoe off, foot washed, medic lances the blister, wraps my toe, ready ready to go. Crazy blur of amazing helpful individuals. Absolutely WOW’d. Is this how the Elites feel? Staggered out/time pushed, swallowed couple strips of ‘drop bag’ turkey bacon. Emotional roller-coaster, mentally regrouping. Excited, elevated, confused, disappointed. Eat. Swallow. Breathe. Need to consume calories or I’ll bonk like Dirty 30. Breathe. Ok. I’m ok. Fresh shirt, dry feet. I’m ok. One foot in front of the other (thanks Sarah). I’ve got this.
2000ft UP. Long stretch of MUD, path slick from previous night’s rain/light hail. Reached for low-hanging limbs, held tight, pulled myself forward. Now DOWN. More black sticky MUD. Used both hands to recover my left shoe, lost in the slew. Wet sloppy disgusting mess. This is crazy. Seemingly impossible, absolutely crazy.
Passed my first 100-mile racer. Pacer trying to keep her upbeat. She started the night before, WOW. I’d see her again later, ATV-carted from Dry Creek. Slogging, pushing, sliding. One step forward, slide, reach for foliage, repeat. MUD, day’s only constant. Right foot throbbed. Ankle swelled inside my shoe, loosened the strings. Didn’t even remember the blister (thanks medic).
Met 2 runners coming my direction, facing me. Wrong turn taken top of the hill; I looped left, should’ve gone right. ARGH. Mud splattered, mentally worn, mind going DARK. No vehicles, no ATVs, no cell phone, no way out. Horse-only option for ranger radio’d emergencies. Never saw a horse, never saw a ranger. Myth. Bodies left in the deep woods to decay. Head demons; they’re real.
8 miles more. Outta liquids again. Bear Camp, WHERE are you? Arrived; refilled both hydration bottles. Ankle sore/low pulsing throb, but shooting pain gone, foot now numb. Long day.
Most beautiful stretch of trail ahead. Green meadow, alpine flowers, minimal mud. Clouds parted, SUNSHINE. This WILL NOT break me. Quiet, digging deep. Out here by myself.
First signs of life, mile outside Cow Camp. Human handwriting on a paper sign. I’m ok. Steady hop/drag gait. Ok. Long step with my left, dragging the dead-weight right. Mind wandered. Envisioned myself an amputee, dragging my prosthetic close quick-step behind.
Young girl ran up from Cow Camp. Did I need anything? Head shook YES but my mouth provided no words. Do I need water? Do I want chips? Do I want crackers? Would I like Gatorade?
I stopped, looked UP. “I want to sit down.”
Cow Camp was like a Civil War field hospital. Lotta broken soldiers. Guy laying on the ground, covered with a blanket. He’s most critical. When an ATV arrives, he’s first to Dry Creek. Young girl came by again after her rounds, attending the wounded. Water & Goldfish [crackers], please. Do I want a bowl? Would I like them on a plate? I just stared. She returned with a bowl.
2 more runners arrived, Jackson & Missy. Remembered them from earlier (wrong way UP Mud Hill). Happy UPBEAT attitudes. “We’re going on”, they announced. Girl told them to tell her dad (check-out tent). I stood up. “I’m going to Dry Creek.” We were 3.
Missy was a chatter. Grew up in Minnesota, married/divorced, has lived in Sheridan 2 years, loves her job, real estate here is too expensive, has a cat, wants a dog, likes to hike, first marathon was Grandma’s (Duluth MN). Do I talk too much?
I stopped, smiled. Nope. Appreciated the companionship, lotta hours alone. Color back in my cheeks. NO more MUD.
Awesome end to mentally/physically challenging day. Walked it out with 2 Boston Marathon qualifiers. Didn’t medal today, didn’t earn a belt buckle but I also didn’t quit. Trailhead pose goodbye, Bighorn done/over. BIG smile.
DNS 2017, DNF 2018…third time a charm? I’m buying poles 🙂
- 11 ½ hours – most time ever on my feet
- 34 ½ miles – longest distance ever completed
- all ’bout managing Cutoff
- Dry Fork by 3
- TOUGH BIGHORN day — miles, time & elevation PRs, most/longest EVER
- trailhead pose goodbye
6 days ago hadn’t heard of Creede. Spirit broken after failing to finish last Saturday. It’s not that I didn’t finish, it’s that I quit. Let conditions of the day – heat, altitude, nausea, crowd – break me. Additionally, opened the door/the possibility of ending my streak, 54 months marathoning. Bright side: Dirty 30 highlighted holes in my training, tweaks I could make before Bighorn.
15 marathons past 5 months, 1000 miles complete. Stronger than 2015, the year I went Maniac ‘Platinum’. HUGE miss in this year’s Bighorn quest? Failed to run BIGGER in my own backyard. Knocked off a lotta East Coast targets but only ONE trail – and nothing over 7000ft, even in training. Insert: Creede. Small mining town 6 hours from my front door stoop.
Marathon field < 50, mix of dirt & Colorado asphalt. High altitude [9000ft+] without the technical bouldering of Dirty 30. Thanks 50 Stater-Beth for sharing your race calendar (post-run Vermont). Wasn’t looking for a BONUS race then. No crystal ball, didn’t know.
Direct from work, journeyed solo outta Boulder. 3 hours tonite, 3 hours predawn – too fatigued for a drive straight-shot. Bedded in Salida, up again at 2:45am. Race dressed, key on the dresser, door locked behind. Rolled into Creede 5:35am, 10 minutes to spare (bib pick-up/registration). 99. Same EXACT bib # as last Saturday. What are the chances? Cursed or redemption?
School bus boarded at 6. Cold morning shiver, mercury would soar 40+ degrees by race end. Stopped 20 minutes outside of Silverton. Out-n-back course. Dawn burst o’er the surrounding peaks, bright & blinding. Beautiful part of Colorado enveloped by canyon.
7am Mountain time. Start Line drawn in the dirt, headwaters of the Rio Grande (same Rio Grande, Texas to Mexico). Sported an ultra-vest (no cup event): bottle of water, bottle of electrolytes. Slight grade first couple miles, remainder of the day flat – ultimately descending into town, 8800ft elevation. Mountain time 😊
Popped on Highway 149 [Mile 5]. Notta fan of running highway; that said, notta lotta early morning traffic Silverton-Creede either. Perspective. Added an extra .75 (third-quarters mile) – ARGH – went left, later righted by a race cyclist. But, not my first rodeo. Would drop back on dirt mile 18, joined by Halfers bussed to marker 13.
5th overall at the Half. Aided by cool temps/steady pace, led the middle pack.
Good portion of the day ran with last year’s women’s winner (she’d finish 3rd today). Both of us fueled at 18. Despite her encouragement, walked most the next mile. Hot sun overhead, expended lotta energy first Half. Nice gal. …and I was sixth.
No water again ‘til 25. Empty. Guy in a truck honked encouragement – I yelled WATER. Vehicle stopped, guy handed over his open bottle. Random act of human kindness. Shared half-bottle with a college gal I’d chatted up miles 21/22.
Joined Runoff’s 6k event at their turnaround (mile-half from Finish). Appeared having been lost in a desert (I looked a hot mess – HA!), family jogging with their dog (mom/dad/3 boys) shared a Nalgene bottle. Again, thankful for the kindness of strangers ❤
Stop, start. Stop, start. 90 degrees, summer ablaze even on the Western Slope. Long 20 minute mile, drug the last one out. Dusty path littered with mine rock & sage led to Creede Ballpark. Finished in an irrigated field of green. June marathon complete, tag.
Laid back & over-sunned listening to a folk band. Veggie burger & a soda, small town festival. Good energy, happy vibe.
Not the greatest of courses – lotta highway, lack of race support/water – but the people here are good. Pure hearts. Just carry a full [backpack] bladder if visiting on a hot day 😊 Tick, tick, tick. 7 days, Bighorn.
RUNOFF RUNOFF
Rio Grande Restoration Project
and Headwaters Alliance
CREEDE, CO
Saturday, June 9, 2018
MARATHON OVERALL RESULTS
PLACE NAME GEN AGE BIB CITY/STATE TIME PACE
1 JACKSON COLE M 22 43 ALAMOSA CO 3:27:29 7:56
2 KYLE CLARK M 35 2 MORRISON CO 3:39:16 8:23
3 GRANTLEY SHOWALTER M 24 8 ALAMOSA CO 3:52:00 8:52
4 NOEL PRANDONI F 22 89 SANTA FE NM 3:57:23 9:04
5 KATELYN SNYDER F 26 16 FORT DEFIANCE AZ 4:44:59 10:53
6 SHAUNA GUTIERREZ F 27 124 ALAMOSA CO 5:03:36 11:36
7 ASHLEY MCCARTY F 39 67 DIBOLL TX 5:07:40 11:45
8 K R HAGA M 51 99 LOUISVILLE CO 5:17:38 12:08
- Welcome to Creede
- bib pick-up/registration
- headwaters of the mighty Rio Grande
- mining town past
- Centennial State FINISH
- San Juan Mountains
- Summer HOT 🔥
summer trippin’ to Creede
Not all stories have a Cinderella finish but ALL add fabric to the journey.
Saturday’s ultra in Colorado’s Golden Gate Park a short hour-15 from home. Coordinated bib pick-up Wednesday, short drive from the American Mountaineering Center (formerly Golden High School, venue for the nite’s Trails in Motion Film Festival). Easy peasy, check done.
50k Start times: 6am, 7am & 8am.
Past couple 50Ks have finished 6 hours or under – only my first trail trek in Moab did I exceed 8 hours. However after listening to the chatter (preceded by a flurry of emails), opted for the early early Saturday option. Would also help avoid [a] good portion of the day’s summer heat.
3am wake-up, walked Ro, packed my ultra vest. Neighbor dropped me near the Start, approximately 4 miles of the Visitors Center (thanks Larry). Prepacked 2 drop bags: one for mile 17.4, other at the Finish line. First Colorado run of 2018. Warm, thin-air trail, elevation 9500ft. Good prep for Bighorn. Late add to the calendar, ensure a June marathon finish (extend streak to 55 months).
Beautiful scenic start. Colorful Colorado. Most eye catching of 2018.
Single track trail. Aspen & canyon walls, up-n-down day bouldering. Toughest trail run of my life. Looking back, the whole thing’s a blur. More hike than run. All UP, all DOWN, not much in between. Couple switchbacks, few stretches of Aspen, whole lotta boulder. Elevation gain similar a 14er hike.
Nervous start but digged the temps – upper 40’s, my kinda weather. Despite being my third race in 6 days, legs/mind felt strong at the first Aid Station. No delay, no dillydally. Refilled my water bottle, kept moving.
Start to Aid Station #1 (5.0 miles) — Enjoy a flat 0.25 mile run up the dirt road before reaching single-track trail. At mile 1.95 begin a steady, single-track climb through a cool, lush valley, crossing the stream 11 times. At mile 3.4 leave the stream and begin a 0.4 mile lung-burning climb. This section is steep but short. Keep pushing; it will be over before you know it. At mile 4.0, turn right at the junction for a short 0.2 mile climb to the top. The descent is rocky but fast. Take a moment to enjoy the great view of Mt. Evans to the south. Descend the 4 or so switch backs to Aid Station #1 at mile 5. Fuel up here for a steady 1,000 foot climb over the next 3 miles.
Long 7 miles between aid stations. Multiple climbs kicked my butt. All UP, all DOWN, crazy steep. Lotta pressure from behind, folks running the downhills blind. Lotta wasted time, dropping off trail/hugging a tree, letting the faster runner pass. Sunshine, jump in temp, altitude sickness. Altitude sickness? Me? NEVER an issue hiking ANY Colorado peak, yet today: headache & nausea. Body jarred, rushing over rock. Lead legs now, quick feet gone. 5 miles from my Drop Bag – salty snacks & Imodium awaiting, couldn’t stomach day’s Aid Station offerings (lotta sweet, little salt, no protein). Walked, rehydrated, kept moving. Short electrolytes.
Aid Station #1 to Aid Station #2 (6.9 miles) — Climb the Buffalo trail (double-track dirt road) for 1.2 miles to the metal gate. Take advantage of the rest rooms here if you need them. You are heading west, .5 miles up the Snowshoe Hare trail to the Aspen Meadows Camp Ground. Take a hard right at the bottom of the hill. If you cross the stream across the road you have gone too far. Continue the steady climb up to Mule deer trail. Take a moment to enjoy the great views of the divide. Turn left on Coyote which begins one of the toughest climbs of the race. Aid Station 2 is just .1 mile ahead on Mountain Base Road. This is a great place for crew, friends and family to meet you.
Puke fest, mental breakdown. NOW here come the elites (8am start), argh. AMAZING athletes. Even MORE time wasted, standing aside waiting for runners to pass than slogging/hiking/walking. No pace, nothing steady. Temps heating up. Complete mental blowup, super disappointing. 2 of the athletes on my Twitter feed raced past, flying over rock. WOW!
Aid Station #2 to Aid Station #3 (4.9 miles) — This climb up Coyote is tough, but the reward is worth it. Breath taking views of the divide to the west – so be sure to turn around and enjoy them when you get to the top of this 1.4 mile climb. The top is a rock scramble, so follow the cairns and trail markings, keep your head up and you will stay on the trail. Over the next 2 miles you will descend 1,100 ft…this section is technical – travel at a comfortable speed, keep your eyes ahead and pick up your feet! No Diggers! After the long, fast descent you will come up onto a junction on your left that traverses over to Horseshoe. Cross the foot bridge and turn right for .1 miles to Aid Station #3 and your drop bags at Fraser Meadows Trailhead.
120 marathons under my belt. Today however, felt like the ultimate impostor. Far beyond my skill level. Too technical, too quick. Too much elevation, too much everything. Felt heavy, large, overweight. No sugar-coating today’s result. Tough one.
Aid Station 3 arrival. No mas. Flagged down an official & called it. Less than 5 hours in, DNF.
Too many runners, too tight a trail. Just couldn’t imagine another 15 miles. 380 participants on a single-track hiking path; far too crowded, notta lotta fun. Crazy beautiful/technical course. For me however, not a good fit.
Dear Dirty 30’ers,
I hope you are recovering well and relishing in your accomplishment. Regardless of which distance you raced at the Dirty 30 this past weekend, the challenge was real and the courses were tough.
KEENAN HAGA #99 STATUS: DNF
START 6:08:12 AM
AID 1 Time: 7:15:49 AM Split: 1:07:36.66
AID 2 Time: 9:02:44 AM Split: 1:46:54.98
AID 3 Time: 10:57:18 AM Split: 1:54:33.99
50k Overall Results
- 15 50k Jackson Brill M 19 * 4:35:52.1 8:52
- 24 50k Chris Mocko M 32 * 4:46:15.7 9:12
- 18 50k Brian Condon M 31 * 4:51:33.9 9:23
- 69 50k Seth Demoor M 32 4:51:49.8 9:23
- 1096 50k Dylan Marx M 26 4:57:56.3 9:35
- 203 50k Jonathan Rea M 26 5:07:26.3 9:53
- 1092 50k Adam Loomis M 26 5:10:47.6 10:00
- 21 50k Timothy Olson M 34 5:11:30.4 10:01

















