The night before a race, I have a routine that I follow, but Friday the routine felt off-kilter somehow, I couldn’t put my finger on what wasn’t right. I kept telling myself that the following day’s race was just like every other race I’ve run except for it would be in the woods with not as many people.
Saturday morning, I dressed in race garb grabbed my cooler, packed with post-race fuel, my gym bag which held dry clothes and my trail running shoes, directions to the race and headed to my car. I had an hour’s ride to strategize the day’s run, but about fifteen minutes into the drive I gave up strategizing and chose to set a goal of finishing in an upright position.
Throughout the drive, I checked the directions several times, but I still got lost. As I made wrong turns, u-turns and checked and rechecked and rechecked my rechecking, I watched the clock with mounting dismay. The start time for the race was staggered from 7:15 AM to 8:05 AM and the group I was assigned to with was to start at 7:35 AM.
At 7:40 AM, I was still in my car looking for the correct dirt road and I fou
At 7:45 AM, I pulled onto the right road parked my car, grabbed my hydration pack and jogged to the start line, already ten minutes behind my assigned starting group. In the middle of a speedy course briefing by the race director, a more seasoned trail runner interrupted him and said, “I know the route, I’ll get her started.” And off I went. Down a steep hill, a right at the bottom of the hill thru stands of vegetation way taller than me and then out into a field where there were cows…yeah, cows.
I
Forty-five minutes in, I was passed from behind by a group that had started later than me. Didn’t bother me at all. They encouraged me and kept going, I said thanks and kept plodding along at my own pace.
Fifty minutes in, the group I would’ve started with had I been on time, passed me on their way back in. I asked if I was almost there, one yelled over her shoulder, “you know you’re close when the traffic from the highway is louder and you see houses on the top of the rise to your right.”
I set a goal of making it to the turn-around (the race was out and back) in one hour, but fell short by eight minutes. However, my heart skipped a few beats when I saw the houses on the rise to my right, signaling I was close to the turnaround.
After the turnaround, I decided to take it easy on the return trip. I pulled
a plastic Ziploc bag with my camera in it out of my hydration pack and ran with it in my right hand stopping to take pictures of different things on the path I’d observed as I came in.
Like the cactus with the pretty pink buds and the tree roots that forced me to pick my feet up and pay attention to the ground that was directly in front of me, not allowing me to look any further than what was immediately in my way. Or, the massive drop off I had to climb up (then scoot down on my rear on the way back).
The trip back was easier because not only did I know that I was over half-way done, but I also was more familiar with the terrain having run it once before and I knew I was headed in a homeward direction.
I finished in a little over two hours and thirty minutes. I’m pretty proud of that. On a paved road in more controlled circumstances, I would take an hour or so off that time, but that’s on the road. I’m totally proud of what I did on the trail and look forward to my next trail race!
