Up early thanks to summer solstice & Alaska’s midnight sun. Packed bags, checked out of hotel & drove to the designated marathon bus pickup on 10th street by 6:30am.
Lot going on in my head listening to other runners on the bus. No Alaskans – most everyone flew in for today’s race. All states were represented except Mississippi & Rhode Island. (This stat was announced over and over and over – HA!)
Bused to Bartlett High near the mountains. Today’s run on both road & trail would be void of peeps until approx 4 miles from downtown Anchorage. From mountains to ocean (Anchorage is actually on the water – who knew? :))
Felt a bit tight from my previous day’s ice climb but mentally was ready to run! Star Spangled Banner preceded by Alaska’s state song, then bang we’re off! The course initially followed road. I quickly tagged a runner running my pace & stayed close for more than 8 miles. Race route diverged to trail. Picked up my pace initially then dropped off.
Felt good for 12 miles – averaged 8:08 minutes/mile, then started tightening up.
And of course gotta mention the mosquitoes – Alaska’s unofficial state bird 🙁
Not just a mosquito – SWARMS of mosquitoes. Water station volunteers sprayed down runners with repellent. Started dreading all off-road running. Mosquitoes in my mouth, under my goggles, in my ears – smaller than those in the lower 48 but so so many. Have been spoiled living in Colorado where the Front Range is virtually mosquito-free because of our elevation & arid climate (standing water is a luxury & uncommon after May/June snow melt).
Hit the wall near mile 20. All of the ‘I told you so’ folks can now say ‘I told you so’. No I didn’t taper. No I didn’t relax days before my race. Yes I went ice climbing. And yes, I paid for it.
Would I do things differently? Maybe. But boy did I enjoy ice climbing! Super fun!
My worse race time of the year but I DID finish & complete my marathon goal. Hobbled over the finish line & was directed to the medic tent. Downed 3 oranges while my right knee was wrapped for a possible ligament tear (similar injury that sidelined me in April). UPDATE: Only a ligament strain, no tear. No running for 6-8 weeks.
Walked around a little, decided I wasn’t gonna die so located my rental & drove downtown for lunch. A deep tissue massage at Sheraton’s Ice Spa an hour later helped make everything better. (Thanks Volker!)
On January 12th I started this journey at the Quicker Quaker 5K in Lafayette, Colorado — running in 8 degree temps & snow flurries. Fast forward 6 months. Finished 9 races including 4 half marathons, a 10K with 54,000 participants — and a full 26.2 mile marathon in Anchorage, Alaska. Super empowering!
Thanks to many friends & family who encouraged me during my training. Very appreciative of everyone’s support.
Congrats on completing your Alaskan marathon!!! You inspire me everyday with your awesomely amazing goals, even more so with your actual completion of said goals! Most people have all these great ideas and wishes and dreams of what they want to do, but such a small percentage actually complete them, so go you!
What’s next? It’s summer & the mountains are calling. Expect to see a flood of hike pics thru October.
6/22/13 HAGA, K R 4:55:28 477 Louisville, CO, USA
- bused to Bartlett High-Anchorage for Marathon start
- tatted up & ready to run 26.2 miles
- 2013 Marathon SUCCESS!
- bearded, fit & rockin’ a farmer’s tan
- ligament injury (again) but MARATHON FINISHER!
I started this series in January to monitor my marathon progression – journaling biweekly to keep me accountable. 3 days before my Alaska marathon, I’m posting my last ‘Believe-to-Achieve’.
Although I didn’t follow any ‘established’ plan, over the past 6 months I developed a consistent routine listening to my body. A race a month minimum – check. Traversed ~ 750 miles, done.
That said, had not yet run a full 26 miles – even in training. Sunday (June 9th) was my day.
Attended church, then exchanged Sunday shoes for running shoes – goal: 26.5 miles.
16 miles in, seriously needed a bathroom break. Gotta figure this out – not sure what I’m gonna do on race day 🙁 At mile 23, stopped & puked. Yeah, this story is not a pretty story – but it’s honest. Unlike race events, local trails do not include water stations. Found myself dehydrated in our warmer summer weather.
Legs ached; felt like a rusty bike chain. Running one fist clenched, I kept moving. Hardest restart I’ve done in a while.
Home. 26.5 miles – check, done.
(And of course Ro still needed to be walked. Argh.)
Lost 4 pounds over my marathon weekend (hiked 2 peaks in RMNP & ran 26.5 miles). 4 pounds is a lotta weight – like a contestant on the Biggest Loser. Scheduled a deep tissue massage on Monday. Exactly what I needed.
Grizzlies, moose, mosquitoes – bring it. I’m ready. Nothing stopping me now!
Movie of the Week
Into the Wild (2007) – still my favourite movie of all-time, first viewing of 2013 – timely, considering my weekend destination. Key difference: I plan on returning from Alaska, no Magic Bus death pour moi.
Runner Log
Fri May 24th – 5.25 miles
Mon May 27th – RACE DAY (Bolder Boulder 10K)
Wed May 29th – 10.5 miles
Thu May 30th – 5.25 miles
Sat June 1st – RACE DAY (Taste of Louisville Half 13.1 miles)
Wed June 5th – 6 miles
Thu June 6th – 3.25 miles
Fri June 7th – 1.5 miles
Sun June 9th – 26.5 miles
Wed June 12th – 1.5 miles
Thu June 13th – 6.5 miles
Sat June 15th – 7.25 miles
Sun June 16th – 6.75 miles
YTD total – 747 miles
Just 5 days ago ran my fastest 10K at the BolderBoulder – next up, the Taste of Louisville Half Marathon.
Far fewer folks running this race than Monday’s 54,000+ participants in Boulder. That said, really enjoy supporting my local hometown – and most of this race was run on trail (better on the knee than road racing).
Goal today was to stick to marathon pacing (& simmer my competitive juices). Followed a lady matching my stride for 3 miles – but then she dropped off. Ho hum. Next was ‘coughing’ guy who stayed just wing-span behind me ‘til mile 6. Small hill, he finally lost the lung or took an oxygen break. At mile 8, followed a guy my age who consistently out-kicked me uphill, but whom I later passed at the 10 mile water station.
Mile 12 – Aquarius Hill. Why a huge hill so near the end? Ugh. Saw it coming but kept thinking the race route would loop around the hill – not straight UP. Double ugh. Made peace with the situation and focused on running UP – not walking like many of the competitors ahead of me. Can’t say I ran much faster than their walk – did this more as a mental victory.
Last half-mile finished on Main Street (literally right into the Taste of Louisville). Because this last section was flat, I caught a glimpse of the ‘Finish Line’ early. Sucked up air & decided to sprint — picking up serious pace. Passed tens of confused runners wondering where the heck I’d been hiding all this time.
Crowd cheered my fast finish & the race announcer called out my name – that was kinda cool 🙂
Finish Time: 1:53.37 – 49th overall, 7th in my age group
3 races over 13 days – taking a break.
Watching Rockies/Padres game Friday night, climbing RMNP’s Hallett Peak Saturday morning.











