Showing posts with label Running in California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Running in California. Show all posts

Sunday, July 24, 2022

Coastal Trail Runs San Francisco One (Half) Day 2022: back to the good mill!

As I start writing this post a week has passed, I keep feeling bad about being so behind in blogging compared to my original weekly pace which I kept from 2007 to 2018. Another victim of running injury as well as the pandemic. Of course, aiming at a same-day race report for a 12 hour is really challenging. I still had to drive back home after running from 9 am to 9 pm. I made it back just before 11 pm after waking up at 5 am, that wasn't leaving much time. Then I had to spend most of my Sunday to prepare for a remote workshop with a client in South Africa at 6 am on Monday. And a busy week, then a busy family weekend with the rare opportunity to have the three boys in town! And there you are, 2 weeks later!


All that doesn't leave much time to go into details, not that I expect too many people eagerly waiting for my report, with such a low participation and the lack of excitement of a 1-mile flat course. Not to mention that results have been published on the website and many pictures on Facebook or Instagram already. Clearly, there was much more excitement following Bad Water 135-mile from Monday to Wednesday, Hard Rock 100 on Friday-Saturday and Tahoe Rim Trail 100 this Saturday-Sunday. Just to name 3 key events from this peak of the ultra season.

The effort to get back to blogging regularly and timely pairs with the big effort of coming back from injury. Everything seems much harder, hopefully just an uphill ride back to a better plateau. To keep testing where I stand, I registered for the 12-hour one week before. This event wasn't part of our Grand Prix which I've been focusing again this year, running 4 of the 5 events in the first 6 months. It felt good not to have much pressure and just see what I could do again against the clock in a timed event for a change. My main goal was to see how long I could run at 9 min/mile, toward a bolder goal of logging 80 miles. This pace should feel sustainable by now and correspond to easy maths: 10 miles every 90 minutes, 20 miles every 3 hours, 40 miles for 6, etc.

I liked the fact that all events, 24, 12 and 6-hour, started at 9 am. That allowed to see a few familiar faces before the start, like George Rehmet, current President of the National RRCA (Road Running Clubs of America), and Todd Glieden stopped by. George was on the 6-hour and Todd on the 24-hour. Two other representatives from our Quicksilver Ultra Racing Team: Jim Magill, 75, on the 12 and Dan Aspromonte, 66, on the 24. With me, spreading over three age groups, albeit mature ones as we say, we'd welcome new and younger blood! ;-) Selfies by Todd and George respectively:



To my surprise for such an event, there were two youths toeing the line at the front, one teen and one much younger. As usual, they crushed it right off the bat so I settled behind, trying hard not to go faster than 8 min/mile. For some reason, the first half mile felt really easy, almost like we were flying at time. Oops, I realized what was going on after the 3rd turn getting us on the other side of the loop back toward the Presidio and Golden Gate: some serious wind coming from the Pacific! While it didn't feel too hard in the first loops, running against the wind quickly felt like a good half-mile steady climb. Quite an important change with regard to hitting my aggressive 80-mile goal, but I decided to forge ahead, actually logging many sub-9-minute miles. For one thing, I'm back to running many more training miles in the 7 to 7:30 minutes range, and a few sub 7 occasionally. Still far from the 6-minute mark but some progress nevertheless. Then I felt like my Garmin GPS was off. I had in mind 1.02 mile for the certified course lap but it felt like I was logging more on every lap. Of course, with others on the course, you can't optimize every turn, especially when some run in the opposite direction. Only after the race did I realize that the official distance was 1.0275, closer to 1.03. The difference of 1% represents only 5 seconds for a 9 min/mile pace, but they had up. Anyway, by the 10th lap, I was 3 minute below my 90-minute goal, assuming 1 mile/lap. So it was more like 4 minutes under plan. And that was in wind gusts reported to peak 35 mph throughout the day!

I still felt good and strong I'd say until 4 hours but, except for 2 bathroom stops at the somehow off course/remote porta-potty, I kept running under 9 min/mile pace until mile 38 and that got me to 40 laps in 6 hours. At this point, you may think, all good then, right? Well, not so fast (pun intended), I knew that this wasn't sustainable given all the circumstances, both physically and mentally. 80 miles was out of question, what was important was now to keep moving forward.

Still in reasonably high spirit in the early afternoon as I even attempted the famous Shiran Kochavi jump! ;-) (Photo credit, purchased, from Foggy Bay Photos). Let's be put on the record that this is an extremely rare event for me...


A highlight after this somber realization of goal miss was to see my son Greg at the corner near the start, who had stopped on his bike ride to Marin Headlands. It was 3:30 pm, 6.5 hours in the race. I waived back and passed him thinking that he will be there at the next lap and counting on him to prepare me a bowl of (instant hot water) mashed potatoes. But, 1 mile later, quite a disappointment not to see him... oops! In addition to a Vespa CV-25 pouch every 3 hours (plus 2 before the start), I had taken 3 GUs and a couple of mini can of Cokes for the first 40 miles, and was eager to get some solid food for a change but didn't want to stop for several minutes to prepare it myself.

Thankfully, I've 3 boys and Max stopped by on his bike as well. Max crewed me for (way too) many hours at the 100-mile Nationals in February and, this time, I made an explicit wish for that bowl. Which Max had ready for me on the next lap. I ate the bowl while running, pushed by the wind, that gave me a boost, and like my struggles, both physically and mentally at once! It was 5 pm, 8 hours in, mile 52.

Back from his long ride, Greg checked on me, this time at 6:30 pm (9.5 hours in, mile 60), just in time to prepare a second bowl of mashed potatoes. A bit of a boost but, with 2.5 hours left, and now way off the 9 min/mile goal with 11 or 12-minute miles, I wasn't sure what I was still fighting for. 


After the 6-hour runners had left the scene and 10 hours in the race, it seemed like the field had considerably shrank on the course, but for a few stud. Here is an update, 8 hours in:

Among them was Melissa Guillen, 38, who lapped me on my 62nd lap, looking really strong. I
complimented her for her pace and form and asked her which lap she was on; she replied 63, encouraged me to keep up with her but I thanked him and told her she could have the win. With 90 minutes to go, I had lost the stamina. Yet, I kept moving and jogging except on lap 65 where I walked 300 yards along Jim on his own shuffling. When I grow up, I want to shuffle that consistently and that long! At 75, Jim would end up taking 3rd Men and 6th overall with 42 laps (41.1 miles). Respect!

The last hour --for us at least, the others had 13 to go!-- was filled with gorgeous views of the sunset over the Golden Gate Bridge and the City by the Bay (I missed the best shots before grabbing my phone for the last lap).



At that point I wasn't even pushing, just logging lap after lap to kill the time if I may say, albeit a very bad thought on a timed event. After eventually picking up the pace in the last 30 minutes, I closed lap 68 with 5 minutes to spare so not enough for an extra one. At 1.0275 mile per lap, not quite 70 miles but pretty close (69.87). And 70.96 miles on my GPS, a 1.5% variance.

A few minutes later, just before Race Director, Wendell, called the 12 hours, Melissa finished one more lap, her... 69th! Since she had lapped me a couple more times after my 62nd lap, she must have not been on her 63rd. Anyway it was cool to hear from her that I had motivated her to push the envelope, sane competition!


Now, one thing that I omitted to say is that one driving force keeping me moving through the afternoon and evening was the competition with Yaz Saito who remained a few laps behind me during the whole 12 hours. At 55, he finished with 64 laps (65.8 miles), there was some competition in the M50-59 age group! Speaking of age, if the event had been sanctioned, Shirley Fee would have set an impressive W80-84 American record with her 41.1 miles, especially in such windy conditions (there isn't even one W80+ record in the National database yet; and note that the database is in kilometers, not miles).

Short of more competition and meeting my aggressive goals of both distance and pace consistency, it felt good to take the overall win. Here is a podium picture with Yaz and Melissa.

Overall, it's a 12.5% miss on the most optimistic objective. Although not proud about it, I'd attribute at least 5% to the windy conditions. Still a few percentage points to regain on the conditioning side but going in the right direction of recovery and rebuilding. Finally, yet so much to work on, especially on the leg muscles but probably on the breathing too after 1 or 2 COVID episodes (February 2020 maybe and June 2022 assuredly) and certainly on the mental/mind side too.

Hydration wise, I'm super pleased with my consistent intake, almost back to the old days with one Ultimate Direction bottle of GU2O (aka GU Energy Brew) and one bottle of water every 15 miles, complemented with one S!Caps per hour. Nutrition wise, I might have pushed the OFM (Optimized Fat Metabolism) a bit on the high side by taking only 4 GUs, 2 cups of mashed potatoes, a few pieces of watermelon and 3 mini Cokes (cute cans!). About 1,000-1,200 calories intake for a 7,000 effort, thankfully the Vespa maths filled the rest of the equation! (2 pouches before the start then 1 every 3 hours.)



Special thanks to the small but efficient group of volunteers manning the aid station throughout the day and the night, and Wendell and Leng for consistently keeping track of our laps despite the wind gusts. This place is really exposed when the wind kicks in, loved how they tilted the tents to resist the wind. Here is a video of Wendell at the (windy) office (hint: nope, this isn't on a boat! ;-) ). Not a dull life!!


That was my 179th ultra race but only 4th 12-hour (other timed events: 1 6-hour and 8 24-hour). This is really a different type of ultra running, this sport has so many variations! Not counting the twists thrown at us by the weather elements... I look forward to keeping learning on these formats... time permitting!

The most boring Relive movie I ever produced (click on the image below, or this link)!

And, to conclude, a few more pictures from Foggy Bay Photos, just to prove that I wasn't jumping at every lap otherwise... ;-). Foggy Bay has been the appropriate name for most of the run this time!

Bye and see you on the trails again soon all!












Sunday, April 30, 2017

Running in Los Angeles, California: Hollywood's Griffith Park

Here is one of the most iconic urban hills with its giant letters which everyone has seen many times:
Way more popular than our local San Bruno Mountain with the South San Francisco letters, isn't it?!

Probably less people know about the detailed geography of the surrounding park, however. At least it was the case for me and that gave me an incentive to get a couple of hilly runs to explore, and an opportunity to share about it, in case you are not familiar with this urban park.

As a matter if fact, urban may not be appropriate with regard to such megalopolis, Los Angeles: 4 million people in the city itself and more than 13 millions in the agglomeration, that's not large, that's huge! And that make me appreciate even more our human scale Silicon Valley... We were staying for 2 nights in Hollywood this weekend, meeting friends visiting from France and, first fact, Hollywood isn't a city, just a LA neighborhood. But West Hollywood is a city, albeit quite a small one in contrast. See the convoluted boundaries of the city of Los Angeles, it even has holes in it (e.g. Beverly Hills, West Hollywood, San Fernando)! And it stretches pretty thin in the South to get to the Pacific Ocean and claim the Terminal Island...
The Hollywood Hills are home to Griffith Park, a great patch of nature in this otherwise dense concrete area. Here is where Griffith Park is located in the LA area/basin:
Of course, the park, and especially the Griffith Observatory, gained quite some notoriety last year with La La Land. And I don't know if that's the origin, but this is quite a popular place, judging by the number of people I've seen. I first ran through the park on Friday evening, and was amazed by the number of people not only hiking up to the observatory, but beyond and higher as a matter of fact. And I went back on Saturday morning at 7 am and, this time, was blown away by the crowd of early birds! They were quite a few healthy locals I think and a large group of 30 or so buoyant Chinese but, they might have well been locals as well given the rich diversity of the California population.

There is a great detailed map on line which is useful given the convoluted nature of the trails.

Or you can do as I did, explore without planning. There are trail signs and directions here and there, which are useful if you know the names of the local peaks, each with a name: Mt. Lee (1,690 ft) with the famous antenna above the Hollywood sign, Mt. Hollywood (1,625 ft) straight above the Observatory, Mt. Chapel (1,614 ft) on which I scrambled with difficulty, Mt. Bell (1,582 ft) which I went around on the North side, Glendale Peak (1,184 ft) on the East side of the Park.

Quite tame elevations by any standards but several short steep grades to reach these hilltops for some good pre-Miwok hill work (I ran 15.5 on Friday, finishing at night, and 9.5 early Saturday morning).

No race report this time, I took the time to take pictures and even visit the Griffith Observatory which is quite a place to visit and learn about our solar system while getting amazing views over Los Angeles (when the sky is clear at least, which was the case this weekend, exceptionally, thanks to strong winds on Friday).

Overall, a large park given the lack of green spaces in this megalopolis, but it made me realize once more how luck we are in Silicon Valley with so many much larger hilly parks all around the Bay Area! Granted, without the craziness of Hollywood's entertainment, we have much more discreet wealthy people over here, no buses driving around to hunt celebrities, phew! ;-)

With that, enjoy a virtual visit below, and see some of you on similar hilly fire roads at Miwok 100K in a week!




The fist steep uphill toward the Observatory
More than these two trails actually climb to the Observatory (in addition to a road open to cars)
 Switch back fire roads leading to the Observatory
 The Griffith Observatory and 3 domes
 View over Los Angeles and its financial district

One of the observatory's exhibits which fascinated me the most: a spectrohelioscope which allows you to see the Sun's photosphere live!


The Astronomer Monument and Sundial on the esplanade of the observatory, with Mt. Hollywood in the background:
 Mt. Lee and the Hollywood sign from the Observatory:
The Berlin Forest, just a few hundreds yards from the Observatory, in honor of LA's sister city, an international tie established in 1967, just 50 years ago!

 View of the Observatory and LA from the top of Mt. Hollywood:

 The survey monument marker at the top of Mt. Hollywood:
 View over the North side of the Park, toward Glendale and Burbank:
 At the top of Mt. Chapel:



 Another way to enjoy the Park, horse riding from the Sunset Ranch stables
 Sunset behind Mt. Lee

 A gift from the Rotary Club of Los Angeles, a bench at the top of Mt. Hollywood
"I slept and I dreamed that life is all joy. I woke and I saw that life is all service. I served and I saw that service is joy." -- Kahlil Gibran
 The Dante's View, on the way back from the top of Mt. Hollywood:

 Early morning view over the Observatory and downtown Los Angeles


 Mt. Lee in the morning light:


 Crowd at the top of Mt. Hollywood at 7 am!