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At 2:20AM my iPhone alarm went off. Tim's 2:00AM alarm never went off. This added to the pre race excitement. I was packed and ready to roll out of bed and go. Tim jumped in the shower while I ate a slice of pizza along with a peanut butter sandwich. We managed to make it out of the hotel and into Tim's truck at 3AM sharp, still plenty of time to make it to Leadville for a 4AM start. I'm not a big believer in getting to the race early. Five minutes before is just fine with me. We left Brian and Daley back at the room while Tim's crew met us at the race start. The plan was for me to use Tim's crew till Twin Lakes outbound at which time I'd meet up with Brian and Daley. I wanted Daley and Brian to be fresh deep into the race. It was a good plan.
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At 4AM the temperatures were about 40F, a little chilly. I was dressed in my underarmor bottoms and top along with a stocking cap, gloves and a light wind breaker. I knew that we'd be heating up fast so I dressed light, at least for me. Most people were in shorts already, something that I'm not comfortable doing in low temps. Nervous excitement is everywhere at the race start. I'm usually more nervous than excited, which is a good thing when it comes to the Leadville 100. This is not a race to be underestimated or taken lightly. Temperature swings, erratic weather patterns, altitude and terrain make it a very challenging race. There is no substitute for preparation.
The first 13.1 miles were non eventful. I came in at 2:23 which was about 10 minutes slower than I wanted to, primarily due to the congestion and number of racers this year. It was 6:23AM and the sun was rising upon Turqouis Lake. I made a mental note of the timing as this would be the approximate timing of my return, if the running gods permitted. So I ran through the aid station, gave Patrick a high 5 and headed up the 2.5 mile climb through the gnarly wooded terrain up to the fire road that would take us up to the top of the Power Line before a 5 mile descent to the base of the mountain. I was in front of Tim, Greg, Marge and Francisco at this point and passed Nancy on the climb. Ken was out in front leading the pack...a lead that he'd maintain to capture the elusive Leadman title. The ascent up the mountain was pretty easy as was the descent. I made up time heading into Fish Hatchery arriving at 8:35AM. I changed out of my clothes, sucked down some water and repacked my camelbak for the trek to Twin Lakes which was 17 miles from Fish. On the way we'd pass through Half Pipe.
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The descent down the back side of Hope into Winfield is fairly steep with scree fields to navigate with out turning an ankle or doing face plant. The single track down was super crowded. I was more than happy to lower my shoulder into a pacer that thought he had the right of way coming up Hope as I was descending...jack ass. He was walking almost two abreast on the single track blocking the way. It felt good to give him a nice hard shoulder. It got my adrenaline going allowing me to pick up my pace and run the descent. This section of the race changed, an important note to make. Instead of running down to the road as in years past, the trail banks right towards Winfield and serpentines its way to about 1/2 mile to the road from Winfield Station. This was a bit of a wrench thrown into my race plan and was a surprise. It seemed to take forever to navigate this section of the course. I was pissed and anyone near me was hearing about it. At this juncture the 12 hour goal was shot and I was fighting for a 1 hour buffer. Making the way into Winfield Station was a complete cluster F***! The race directors should be shot for this mistake. They are lucky that a runner didn't get run over. It was extremely congested and dangerous for racers and volunteers. I met up with Tim here who was into the aid station about 5-10 minutes before me. Needless to say there was no cola at the aid station and only soup, which I sucked down and reloaded my camel bak with water. I was in and out of this aid station. I asked around to see if there was anyone willing to pace me back up Hope. It was such a disaster with mass confusion at Winfield I just said F*** it and ran out and down the road till I hit the trail head back up the mountain. Tim and his pacer Steph were still at Winfield. I figured that they'd catch me on the way back up Hope.
The Ascent up the backside uf Hope was about a 4.5 miles of which the first 2 were some what runnable...rollers. Then the last 2.5 miles is nothing short of a bitch of a climb. It is very steep and I was prepared from having ascended this trail at least 10 times over the past several years. Both Greg and Francisco passed by on their descent. I wished them well and continued with my own death march. Once again, head down and the focus was on the 3-4 feet of earth in front of me. I started feeling it on this stretch of the course, which is pretty consistent with years past. The cumulative distance, altitude, heat and terrain were beginning to takes its toll on me. I was worried about making it into Twin, protecting my hour buffer that I still had. As I summited Hope I was in a very bad place. My core hurt. My quads were like lead weights. Worst of all my nutrition had gotten off track somewhere and I was nauseous and sick. I took a seat and the volunteers asked if I needed anything and I just said "no, I'm fine, just beat up and need to collect my thoughts." As I was starting the involuntary reflux of dry heaving I was scrabbling in my mind to figure what was causing the nausea. Usually glycogen deficiency causes you to get light headed and super tired/lethargic. Too much sugar and it can cause you to get sick to your stomach. I hadn't over consumed any sugars so i checked this off of the list of causes for my nausea. I knew that I was hydrated pretty well also, so this left sodium. I had a cup of soup at Winfield, however, the push up both sides of Hope left me a little deficient. I stood up and hobbled over to the aid counter and asked for some soup. Their reply, "sure you can have some but we don't have any more cups." Hmmm, how the f*** do you run out of cups? I was pretty tired of drinking my gatorade so I dumped out the rest of it and they filled up my 20 ounce bottle with chicken noodle soup. I returned to my seat and tried to sip it but couldn't. It was about 5-10 minutes after I had reached the top of Hope that Tim and Steph ran into the aid station, looking pretty strong. I was in full bonk mode and tried not to show it. I was negotiating in my mind all of the reasons for dropping out of the race. I didn't think that I was going to make the cut of at this point and was battling some heavy duty demons. I needed an exorcism. I got my exorcism with the help of Tim's pacer, Steph. She told me to just drink my soup and then she scored a cheese stick. She was pretty excited about this find. I couldn't gave two shits about the cheese stick, but she was excited so i thought that maybe she was onto something. She talked to me about the benefits of the slow burn of protein and that's when it dawned on me that i had consumed little to no protein so far in the race. I ate the cheesestick and told them not to wait for me and that I'd catch up with them, all the while I was thinking F*** this I'm done! Steph however was able to convince me to get up and at least try to run with them. Running was the last thing on my mind. I just wanted to make it to Twin, collect my hard fought DNF and pack it in. I knew that Daley and Brian were waiting for me and I started feeling guilty that I flew these guys out to Leadville to only quit. My mind wandered from my nausea induced self pity party to thinking about the cutoff time at Twin Lakes. My nausea dissipated and I began to run down the mountain. I began passing other runners and had made it to the other side of the BONK! For those that have made it through a bonk, know the runners high that accompanies the other side of it.
I was able to catch Steph and Tim and we were killing it going down the mountain, passing scores of runners. It was now dusk and getting hard to see, which I failed to ever contemplate and was without my headlamp. It was about 2.5 miles down the mountain that Tim caught a toe and had a vicious fall. He hit a tree and bounced off a large rock. Shit! Not Good! Anybody else, other than Marge Hickman, would've called it a day. Tim and Marge, I have to say, are two of the toughest monkies that I know. Steph and I gathered around Tim and he was complaining about his ribs and kidney. At this point the runners that we had passed were now passing us. I told everyone that everything was ok and we had everything under control. One eager runner who didn't listen stuck his head lamp in Tim's face and said "hey man are you ok? Is there anything i can do for you?" In Tim Engel charm school fashion he replied "yeah, get that f****g headlamp out of my face you F***!" I knew that Tim was ok to still run. Steph scrounged up two headlamps and gave them to us, while she ran without one. An angel. We made our way to Twin Lakes and only had a 35 minute buffer now. Damn, there would be no rest from here till the finish line. With that close of a buffer between the cut offs meant that we were going to have to stay focused.
I was able to catch Steph and Tim and we were killing it going down the mountain, passing scores of runners. It was now dusk and getting hard to see, which I failed to ever contemplate and was without my headlamp. It was about 2.5 miles down the mountain that Tim caught a toe and had a vicious fall. He hit a tree and bounced off a large rock. Shit! Not Good! Anybody else, other than Marge Hickman, would've called it a day. Tim and Marge, I have to say, are two of the toughest monkies that I know. Steph and I gathered around Tim and he was complaining about his ribs and kidney. At this point the runners that we had passed were now passing us. I told everyone that everything was ok and we had everything under control. One eager runner who didn't listen stuck his head lamp in Tim's face and said "hey man are you ok? Is there anything i can do for you?" In Tim Engel charm school fashion he replied "yeah, get that f****g headlamp out of my face you F***!" I knew that Tim was ok to still run. Steph scrounged up two headlamps and gave them to us, while she ran without one. An angel. We made our way to Twin Lakes and only had a 35 minute buffer now. Damn, there would be no rest from here till the finish line. With that close of a buffer between the cut offs meant that we were going to have to stay focused.
Daley and Brian were well prepared when I made it back into Twin Lakes. I could see the anxiousness in both of them to get me in and out of Twin. Time was no longer our friend. Daley and Brian changed out my wet socks and sneakers like I was a two year old. A pair of dry Swiftwick merino wools felt good after the last river crossing back into Twin. I fueled up and loaded on the cold weather gear for our trek back to Fish. I didn't wait for Tim, so Daley and I headed out of Twin to be met by a 3.5 mile climb up the side of Mt Albert. The good news was that after the first 3.5 miles the rest of it is either downhill or relatively flat all of the way back into Fish. Daley's legs were fresh and he kept me going at a nice steady pace. By the time we made it to half moon we had built back a 1 hour buffer with the next cutoff!!! Happy Days...but not for long. After we made our way out of Half Moon, without any cola, we headed towards Half Pipe. Daley asked all of the people through this aid area for cola as well but there was none. I'd just have to wait till we got to Fish, where Brian would be waiting with pizza, pasta, gatorade, water and coke. As usual the walk form Half Pipe to Fish takes forever and I swear that the temps dropped 20 degrees. I got chilled, but we kept moving forward. This was probably my best time for this part of the course compared to years past. We made it into Fish and had lost time though. We had eaten into our 1 hour cutoff buffer and now only had 40-45 minutes again. This is not much buffer when you have a 4.5 mile steep climb up Power Line. When I got into Fish Brian gave me my Syracuse heavy jacket and put on my rain pants over my underarmor tights. I couldn't hold heat and knew that I was getting into trouble. The soup that they had at Fish tasted like bad water. Again, no soup...WTF??? Thankfully we had our own Cola. Brian and Daley got me in and out of Fish albeit I think I was there for 10 minutes, leaving only a 30-35 minute buffer. It was put up or shut up time. Off to Power Line, the turning point in the race for many.
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UNBROKEN......... |
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Brian and Daley, we did it Brothers! You guys are the Best!
Cheers!
PT
It must have taken hours to write this! Just kidding...AWESOME story of your second Leadville 100 finish!!! Wish I had been there:)
ReplyDeleteYou were with me every step of the way....
Deleteawwww:) So sweet! You mean you could hear my little voice whispering "don't be a pussypants" in your ear when you wnated to quit?! My work here is done...
ReplyDeletePT-
ReplyDeleteThanks for the kind words! Next year Bad Dog 100! Congrats on your finish! Wish I would of made it all the way, but I learned what not to do, and where I need to improve. So it' on like Donkey Kong for next year!