South

Marathon’d one-third of America in 2014 & never flew a red-eye.  This year already have 4 scheduled thru March.  Price a guy pays to reach East Coast races (& use minimal vacation days) 🙂

Left Denver at 1:20am, arriving in Miami just after 7am EST.  Shared costs with fellow Maniac Stacy this trip, who met me at the airport in a rental (Stacy flew red-eye into nearby Fort Lauderdale).  Super fun sharing my 48-hour tropical get-away with another marathoner – generally lotta solo travel in my 50 State Quest.

Grabbed juice & water, then headed Downtown for an early lunch at Havana 1957 – in Miami, a Cubano is the must-eat.

A Cubano is a variation of a ham and cheese originally created in cafes catering to Cuban workers in the early Cuban immigrant communities of Florida.  The sandwich is made with ham, roasted pork, Swiss cheese, pickles, mustard, and sometimes salami on Cuban bread.

Checked into a downtown apartment near tomorrow’s race Start (used Airbnb, cheaper than a traditional hotel), then trekked a mile to meet our scheduled afternoon tour.  Kayaking in Biscayne Nat’l Park was Plan A (cancelled – big waves & strong ocean undertow), Airboat Tour was Plan B (unfortunately tour bus never showed – argh).

Easy to suffer a letdown when plans go awry (& operating on little sleep).  This is where travelling double really ROCKS.  Only 4 miles from the nearest public beach so ‘beach day’ it is.  Thanks Stacy.

Caught a few winks on the sand – re-centered & re-energized, now ready to explore.  Stacy spotted a market-size crab hiding in rocks near the marina shoreline.  HUGE!  Ventured further south thru Key Biscayne to Cape Florida State Park – more white-powder sand, pelicans AND a lighthouse.  FAAANNNTASTIC!  Ya’ll know I LOVE lighthouses.

Sometimes the best plans are travelling with no plans at all 🙂

Early to bed, early to rise – tomorrow is run day…but not before downing a plate of squid.  I AM a fan of the ocean.  YUM!

 

 

Hadn’t 26 2’d in 5 weeks (even in training), so doubt creeps into the mind before that first long run.  Focused on hill training in December until I caught a bug on the 23rd, laid me up through New Year’s.  Not fun.

New year, new goals, lotta adrenaline.

Spell it: M-I-S-S, I-S-S, I-P-P-I   Weather: Sunshine & 26 degrees.  FAAANNNNTASTIC!

Arrived in a disposable thermal wrap (recycled from last month’s race) & enjoyed a bluesy guitar National Anthem before race start. Mississippi Blues Marathon in Jackson MS – marathon #18, first of 2015.

Overheard this run was a bit hilly, so pleasantly surprised to be pacing strong on the initial 3 mile loop.  Kept tight with the 3:50 pace group, hill after hill after hill after hill.  Yeah, the hills just kept coming.  Mile 4, 6, 10, 12, 15, 17, 18, 20, 21, 23 & 25.

Lost pace on the steep climb up mighty mile 17…but I never walked.

Grabbed water at mile 26 & saw a pace sign.  4:30, maybe 4:15 – heck no…it was the 4 hour pace guy.  My hilliest race to date & I might sub-4?  Seriously?  Pulled it together, ran & ran hard.  Only .2 miles to go.

Pacers always finish at or before their target time.  Sadly today, this pacer had a ‘fail’ I guess.

Crossed the Finish, missed sub-4 by 2 minutes.  Hadn’t entered Mississippi Blues with sub-4 in mind – even before I ran its many many hills – missing by 2 minutes only stung a little.  Not a fan of weekly hill training but I’m a HUGE fan of results.

Excellent way to kick off 2015 AND scored my favourite medal to date – depicting a Mississippi blues guitar.

 

Bib 656  K R HAGA Marathon » Louisville, CO Finished  04:02:22

Mississippi Blues Marathon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Blues harmonica jam

 

Kicked off my 2015 running calendar & ‘Hillbilly Spring’ in Jackson, Mississippi.  After multiple flights, arrived just before noon Friday, picked up my rental & drove 45 minutes west to Vicksburg.  Today’s destination: Vicksburg National Military Park – commemorating the historic siege of Vicksburg in 1863.

The Siege of Vicksburg (May 18 – July 4, 1863) was the final major military action in the Vicksburg Campaign of the American Civil War. In a series of maneuvers, Union Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and his Army of the Tennessee crossed the Mississippi River and drove the Confederate Army of Vicksburg led by Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton into the defensive lines surrounding the fortress city of Vicksburg, Mississippi.

 

The Confederate surrender following the siege at Vicksburg is sometimes considered, when combined with the defeat at Gettysburg by Maj. Gen. George G. Meade the previous day, the turning point of the war.  It cut off the states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas from the rest of the Confederacy, as well as communication with Confederate forces for the remainder of the war.

The Park is near overloaded with monuments – first Union mausoleums & pillars, then Confederate commemorations.  Most interesting stops – the U.S.S. Cairo [pronounced K-Ro by locals] & National Cemetery.

The iron-clad U.S.S. Cairo sunk in December 1863, 12 minutes after hitting rebel mines.  Discovered in 1956, the ship was raised years later & moved to its current location for public display.  Fitted for cannons – super interesting.

A ranger at the Visitors Center recommended I visit the Old Courthouse Museum in downtown Vicksburg, along with a few antebellum homes of the era.  The Old Courthouse Museum was relic jammed with Vicksburg past – mostly Confederate items, including Jeff Davis photos & furniture (President of the Confederate States).  Since Gone with the Wind, had held romantic notions regarding the Confederate flag.  In person however, I found the flag itself disturbing.  Additionally, found their exhibit ‘Negro Wedding’ offensive.  I love history but in this instance, some things are better buried in the past.

Visited 4 nearby antebellum homes in historic Vicksburg.  The interior tour of Cedar Grove was interesting but again, found the back history disturbing so ended the day there.  Done.

Sorry for the negativity folks.  I met many friendly people in Mississippi – probably just not a great fit for me personally.

Back in Jackson, [Mississippi Blues] bib pickup & pasta dinner with Marathon Maniac peeps.  Temps expected to dip under 30 overnight – deep freeze in the Deep South, perfect race day weather 🙂