Memorial Day weekend: unofficial kickoff to summer – and for the past 3 years, summer’s meant summer running.
Set my 10K PR in 2014 at the Bolder Boulder, last year marathoned in Burlington Vermont. Continuing the streak this Sunday in the Inland Northwest at the Coeur d’Alene Marathon.
Direct flight to Spokane, hotel 40 minutes away in scenic Idaho. Huge towering pines. Massive river-fed natural lake. 3 days of mental download, relaxation 🙂
When I originally booked this race months ago, was supposed to travel with a friend – that fell thru so…splurged & booked a room at the Resort which hosts Sunday’s marathon.
Hotel check in, bib pick-up – done in 15 minutes. Nice!
Popped on a jacket & explored the city’s downtown center (Sherman Street). Walked dockside, down the world’s longest floating boardwalk (3300 ft long) – past shops & restaurants, a fleet of recreational watercraft, up n over a floating bridge, then spontaneously purchased a cruise ticket 8 minutes before the ship set sail. Good timing.
90 minute excursion. Saturated in the smell of evergreen, sat on top & took in the lake’s cool breeze. Solo trip. No talk, no FaceBook – unplugged, first day summer vacation.
Disembarked, took in 2 parks, watched the sunset from my tower window.
First day of summer, complete. Running 26.2 tomorrow a.m. New adventure, new experience – first marathon since May 1st, time to get back on the horse. No regrets life.
- summer begins in Spokane
- marina view from my hotel
- U-S-A wavin’ PROUD!
- what’s a lake vacation without a lake cruise, right?
- the Coeur d’Alene Resort, my fancy pre-race digs (for a night)
- late afternoon shore walk
- the 2-1/4 mile Mudgy Moose Trail along Lake Coeur d’Alene & through Downtown Coeur d’Alene features five life-size bronze statues positioned at locations where Mudgy pauses in his search for Millie
- McEuen Park, tomorrow’s marathon start
- Memorial Day remembrance
Lake Coeur d’Alene cruise
The Red Hot is located northwest of Moab, Utah just west of Arches National Park. Red Hot runners will have majestic views of the La Sal Mountains to the southeast and breathtaking views of Canyonlands National Park to the west. The course is beautiful but challenging this is why..it attracts elite runners like Ian Torrence, Karl Meltzer, Rob Krar, Anton Krupicka, Dakota Jones and many more!
We are a week away from race day an I would like to update on a couple of important issues for day of race. Moab has been experiencing a cold winter with a substantial amount of snow. Be prepared for possible ice and snow on the course especially in northfacing sections, but most of the course is exposed to the sun. With this said there can be a slight possibility the last aid station before the finish line could be 3 miles further from its intended location. I say slight chance because our jeep club has added wenching spikes at the infamous “waterfall” to pull their vehicles up this section. Our last aid station will radio their position to the Gold Bar aid station (55k a/s 4, 33k a/s 2). But it is the runners responsibility to be self-supportive between all aid stations and prepared for any changes during event. This is trail running not a road marathon!
Cutoff Time 55k: 12:00pm at aid station 3 (mile 17). Any runners who do not make this cutoff will be considered a DNF. You may not proceed beyond this time due to rules and safety of the runner. A course sweep will be pulling markings from Gold Bar/Golden Spike. You do not want to be on the SPIKE with no markings and eventually no light!
First trail race, my first ultra. Quick kiss goodbye [pup Ro], Friday half-day work-day, 6 hours of highway…destination: Moab UT. Bib pick-up, carbo-load dinner at Pasta Jay’s – 55K tomorrow a.m.
10 miles north of town, located Gemini Bridges trailhead right off State Hwy 191. Watched the sun rise over the red rock desert landscape. Quiet, so much colour. Cold morning, surroundings still covered in snow from an unexpected mid-week storm. ½ mile walk to the trailhead on frozen red mud – mental note: gonna get sloppy as morning sunshine wakes the ground.
7:30 instructions, 8am start. Shorts, double-shirted, SJ Ultra Vest 2.0 (first time racing with a hydration pack). Different crowd queue vs. my weekend Marathon Maniac posse. Trail ultras attract lotta Ironman athletes, participant age skews younger.
Quarter-mile of frozen mud, then UP – today’s run included 4500ft+ of vertical gain. Deep snowpack, ice, groomed snow, frozen mud, swampy slog, trail sand – before the first of 2 big sandstone climbs.
Conditions migrated from run to hike/climb – literally. Looked down on Canyonlands Nat’l Park, like peering into the Grand Canyon. WOW!
FOCUS – Aid Station 3 (mile 17) by Noon. Coming down from the 1st bluff summit, steady, increased pace for 4 miles – conflicted inside, would my first ‘DNF’ be so bad?
Despite 50+ marathon finishes, today I was a poser – not a trail athlete. This race was way beyond my current skill level. HUGE difference from road marathoning – add the longer 55K distance (34+ miles) and yeah, today felt near impossible.
SUCCESS – Aid Station 3, 10 minutes to spare. Refilled my hydration pack, nabbed a PB&J sandwich. Another mile down, dodged off-road 4x4s making their initial climb of the day (roads were closed to vehicles ‘til noon cut-off).
18 miles of run, hike, climb – mount 2 loomed ahead. Reached the supply dump at Aid Station 4 & our loose team of 6 emerged. Me, guy from Fort Collins, 2 young women (both sported Ironman tats) & a Japanese couple, Tokichi & Kaho.
I drifted off trail 5x – 4 of those times it was Tokichi who called out. Absolutely no good at locating pink-n-black ribbons tied to snow-drenched trees in a state forest. Felt more like geocaching than marathoning.
Ran short of food, then water – I’m telling ya: COMPLETELY UNPREPARED. Again, Tokichi & Kaho came through. Mysterious powder (labeled ‘68’) to help with nausea; these two were a walking supply tent.
Last wall climb – my fingers cracked, bloodied from ice & barehand holds. Downhill trotted final 3 miles, stopped to dry heave every 4-5 minutes. Not an inspiring cinematic day. Wrapped the last canyon corner, FINISH ahead – teared up…couldn’t believe I was done.
9 hours, 2 mountains, ran/hiked/climbed in snow, ice, wind, sand & mud. Nothing left. Back-propped against a rock, nestled with a bowl of chili & waited for Tokichi & Kaho to cross – amazing couple, my Red Hot ultra trail heroes.
Whatta life experience – adventure I won’t soon forget.
Moab’s Red Hot 55K
Moab, UT Feb 13, 2016
K R Haga 8:49:31 (278 of 289)
- kiss goodbye, 6-hour road trip to Utah
- pre-race sunrise in Moab
- 8am start on frozen red clay
- snow & ice climb
- last stretch of red dirt before trail hike UP
- 10 miles of sandstone
- first summit, 2800ft climb — Canyonlands Nat’l Park overlook
- start of 2nd climb, mile 18 — reached Aid Station 3 cutoff, 10 minutes to spare
- 2nd sandstone summit
- first ultra FINISH: 34+ miles of snow, ice, red clay, mud & sandstone — tough mental, physical day
- Tokichi & Kaho — kept me on trail, nourished & hydrated for 15+ miles
- post-race stash: shirt, cap & pint glass — but no medal?
- while Dad trail ran Utah, Ro hiked local with bro Marty
Moab Red Hot 55K
Let’s just say, this wern’t my first rodeo – AND when talking ‘bout Cheyenne Frontier Days, won’t be my last either.
Because of my marathon schedule, attended Frontier Days on opening weekend this year (running San Fran next Sunday). Crowds were down slightly…but only slightly – still “the Daddy of ‘em All”, still America’s largest outdoor rodeo.
Being my third year, have learned the drill – FOOD, then rodeo. 2013: bison burger topped with elk brats; 2014: elk burger plus a bite of Ash’s camel patty. This year settled on rattlesnake bratwurst, an order of spiral fries – YUM! – & fresh squeezed lemonade (of course). Frontier Days is as much about the FOOD as it is about buckin’ broncs 🙂
Bought a seat in Cheyenne’s new ‘South 40’ section. Closer to entertainment (trick riders & pageant winners) but further from the real action (this year’s pics are not as sharp). Live and learn.
Bronc buckin’, bull riding, steer wrestlin’ & calf roping – yep, LOVE this stuff. Next year, tickets to both weekends 🙂
Finished the day in Indian Village; watched a Native American hoop dance. Sharing this clip should be less controversial than last year’s calf roping memento. LOL> LOVE native music – another FAAANNNTASTIC day!
- Miss Wyoming x 2
- trick riding
- bronc buckin’
- bull riding
- steer wrestlin’
- team roping
- day’s leader — clean ride, scored 84
- LOVE Frontier Days — back again next year!
Native American Hoop Dance