Road trip delay: woke Friday to heavy Spring SNOW – 7 inches…much more than the inch forecast.
Weekend bucket list destination: Bataan Memorial Death March on the White Sands Missile Range.
Sunday’s marathon has been on my wish list for a year – signed up opening day. More than a weekend 26.2 – this is a military March, replicating the WWII trek US & Philippine POWs took in 1942.
We honor these men; we remember their service. 3 remaining Bataan survivors would attend tomorrow’s opening day ceremonies – including 98-year old Ben Skardon.
Invisible Symbols – The Ben Skardon Story
Started my journey mid-week, self-tutoring on everything Bataan via YouTube videos. Unfortunately, much of WWII history studied in school is limited to Europe & Pearl Harbor. Battles in Asia generally only receive a single paragraph in the best of textbooks. My Grandfather served in the Pacific.
The Bataan Memorial Death March honors a special group of World War II heroes. These brave soldiers were responsible for the defense of the islands of Luzon, Corregidor and the harbor defense forts of the Philippines.
The conditions they encountered and the aftermath of the battle were unique. They fought in a malaria-infested region, surviving on half or quarter rations with little or no medical help. They fought with outdated equipment and virtually no air power.
On April 9, 1942, tens of thousands of American and Filipino soldiers were surrendered to Japanese forces. The Americans were Army, Army Air Corps, Navy and Marines. Among those seized were members of the 200th Coast Artillery, New Mexico National Guard.
They were marched for days in the scorching heat through the Philippine jungles. Thousands died. Those who survived faced the hardships of a prisoner of war camp. Others were wounded or killed when unmarked ships transporting prisoners of war to Japan were sunk by U.S. air and naval forces.
they were beaten and starved as they marched. Those who fell were bayoneted. Some of those who fell were beheaded by Japanese officers who were practicing with their samurai swords from horseback. The Japanese culture at that time reflected the view that any warrior who surrendered had no honor; thus was not to be treated like a human being.
To avoid Friday night metro traffic, didn’t leave Boulder ‘til 7 – overnight’d in Trinidad, 15 miles from the New Mexico border.
7am Saturday start – 6 hour drive remaining; boring all-highway trek.
Gas tank odometer bottomed ZERO 10 miles outside of Santa Fe. Would have never fueled in tiny Eldorado had I not been desperate but rewarded heartily with homemade green chile chicken tamales. surprise breakfast YUM – the gods were a smilin’ 🙂
BIG weather change.
Freezing rain iced my windshield first 2 hours of New Mexico – but from there, high mountain desert. Sunshiny skies, temps jacked up almost 50 degrees. Shed my sweatshirt, opened the windows & took in desert – no stopping ‘til the Mexico border.
Reached White Sands Missile Range 2pm. Whole lotta folks arriving today. Hour-half (long 90 minutes) to get processed. Without a military ID ‘speed pass’, just gotta take it in stride. Security of our bases is paramount – no argument here.
Parked, asked for directions. Quickly jetted to the PDC (fast learned military folk only talk acronyms – LOL>), listened to two Bataan survivors recall their experiences. It just got real.
Bib pick-up at Bldg 501, soaked in the atmosphere. Crazy proud to be an American!
- road trip delay — Friday SNOW — much more than the inch forecast
- Bataan Death March Statue
- without a military ID ‘speed pass’, just gotta take it in stride
- propane powered rocket
- on base — crazy PROUD to be an American!
- 98-year old Bataan survivor, Ben Skardon
New Mexico Car Karaoke, 10-hour road trip
Nearly 1 foot of snow falls on Boulder, more expected through morning
The slow-moving winter storm that developed late Sunday had dropped nearly a foot of snow on Boulder by Monday night, with more accumulation expected overnight and Tuesday morning.
National Weather Service forecasters were calling for several inches of additional snow Monday night into Tuesday, with perhaps another inch after 6 a.m. Tuesday.
LOVE LOVE this time of year – brisk morning temps, pink sunrises…and SNOW. Weather ya’ll know is unpredictable – so a Monday/Tuesday storm, while pretty to watch, does not always mean will still be there for weekend play. Colorado high-altitude sunshine burns snow off roads & west-facing trails within a day or 2 (luckily, ground cover stays deep).
Chose an easy hike in Lyons for Saturday – snow increases the difficulty factor. Don’t log in a lot of miles winter hiking…but the landscape/those views are SPECTACULAR. Precip-free drive on 36 toward Estes, hung a left on Longmont Dam Road (County Road 80). Popped the Jeep into 4WD. LOVE LOVE having a vehicle alternative to the Prius 🙂
Relatively late hike start – quarter past 8 – but found ourselves alone this day. Snow.
Leash-free hiking for Sno’ Ro – good day to be dog. Little guy does a good job of staying close on long hikes but always on wildlife alert, better if hiking with another dog.
Followed a plowed trail to the Ranger Station. Unexpectedly easy hike to the dam. Living in the middle of nowhere, new post-retirement goal: Park Ranger 🙂
The St Vrain gurgled from upstream reservoir release. Sucked in high altitude air, wind bit at my cheeks, listened to the river. Quiet. Gotta do this more often, absolutely nothing better.
Deep snow proved a good deterrent for Ro. Sinking to his neck, Ro loped back on trail, glanced behind (checking in on Dad), then greyhound-galloped ahead again. All smiles.
Briefly stopped at Button Rock Dam, water exploding from Ray Price Reservoir into the St Vrain. Thick winter ice formed ’round the pipe release – WOW! Crazy beautiful.
Trudged thru waist-deep snow, switch-backing up remnants of the summer trail ‘til we reached the top. Wind blew strong. Little tree coverage overlooking the Reservoir, which traps snow melt for Longmont & Lyons local water supply. Hugged half the reservoir lip before returning to logging roads, hoping to loop back to the trailhead.
Had earlier averted a herd of deer; Ro picked up their scent but didn’t see them, deep snow further deterred his interest. Hiking down from the Reservoir, 4 deer darted across the road & up the mountain face. No stopping Ro – argh. Thinking the rock face would hold back my pup, I didn’t call him back ‘til he had cleared 500ft+ in elevation. Deer continued to climb. Ro looked around – continue up, or listen to Dad & head down.
Overall – GREAT winter hike. Highly recommended.
Sunday a.m. — Morning run, Ro’s annual vet appointment (yeah, on a Sunday), church, then popped 2 previously prepped dips into the oven for today’s Super Bowl gathering at Ash’s house. Wings, jalapeño poppers, man dip (chili, cream cheese, sharp cheddar) & chicken enchilada dip (whole lotta ingredients).
Two of past 3 years, Denver’s made the Big Game. Long, defensive haul — 24-10 victory for our Broncos. SUPER BOWL 50 CHAMPIONS!
- layered up, getting my snow hike on
- water spray & ice – WOW!
- today’s hike destination: Ray Price Reservoir
Button Rock Dam, Lyons
Yesterday’s snowfall still blanketed the road but woke Saturday to sunshine.
Signed up for today’s Cause and Effect Marathon only two weeks ago – responding to a FaceBook post from Stacy, another Colorado-based Maniac. Would be my first of 18 scheduled marathons in Colorado this year (& my 50th marathon, yep 5-0). [Technically, my ‘Colorado’ state run (50 State Quest) will happen May 1st in Fort Collins (already declared my final 3 state runs).]
#2016whyIrun
The Cause: Achilles International (https://www.achillesinternational.org/).
The Effect: We get cold and tired to benefit athletes with disabilities.
Small handful of runners on today’s impromptu course (location moved mid-week due to snow maintenance issues). Cold, snowy start to marathon season – my first Centennial State 26.2, my first 26.2 of 2016.
Queued behind a line in the snow & started the first of 13 out-n-backs in fresh Colorado powder. Donned shades, ski cap, 2 shirts & a light jacket. Sunshine bounced off today’s snowscaped course. Crossed a wooden bridge, the South Platte gurgled & popped under thick ice below. If you’re a fan of winter – this was your day. FAAAANNNNTASTIC!
Generally not a fan of multiple out-n-backs; however, today appreciated the frequency of familiar faces. Briefly stopped at mile 16 & downed a cup of hot broth – super small race but organized by runners for runners. Nicely done, thanks Bill!
Feet cold & fingers numbing, I crossed the tape just under 5 hours. One of my top 10 worst times – but surprising, a 1st Place finish. Pretty sure I’ll remain a one-hit wonder (assuming I can’t find any blizzard runs) — but tonite I celebrate!
CAUSE AND EFFECT MARATHON
HERE’S HOW OUR RUNNERS DID!
Haga K R Louisville CO 4:59:30
Matt at Adams County Regional Park • Cause and Effect Marathon. 15 degree starting temp. This is marathon #3 in 90 days.
Niels • Strava • All money went for a good cause. 13 out and back ‘laps’ that ran a little long. Completely snow covered trails the entire time. Good because it was soft, challenging because it made it hard to get any kind of push off. My TomTom is still off about .01 per mile…..which equates to a 1/4 mile over this distance. 27.1 total today was a very good day. I love these underground small local little marathons. Hip Hip Hooray to the RD for organizing.
- cold, snowy start to marathon season
- queued behind a line drawn in the snow
- beanie, gloves, shades & lotta layers (dropped the jacket after mile 4)
- first Top 3 finish
- post-race thaw in marathoner warming hut