Sunday, March 7, 2010

Fort Langley Historic Half

Well it certainly is historic... for its epic climbing! 1400ft up and then 1400ft down... that's bound to chew up your legs!

Me, Colin and Rhys went together. Colin opted not to race, just wanting to "keep training" and also a bit worried about getting injured (I should have maybe thought about that too, as I have now a very irritated ITband!). So Rhys used his entry.

It was a beautiful day! Here we are getting ready... Rhys had some issues ...

Wait I'm not ready yet...

Almost got it...

This is pretty tough..!

Whoa! I blew another pin!

Tada! Ready to go!

And we set out. I wasn't expecting too much (this is what I said outloud atleast... secretly of course I was hoping for some racing miracles!), as my mileage is pretty moderate, and I am still very cautious with my leg with intensity. The last time I raced a half I was gearing up for a marathon and only training the one sport, so big difference.

The first couple of kilometers were a touch fast, which is always the case. I shouldn't be leading this group...

Then the first short but very steep hill at kilometer 5, slows things down and you get into a more sustainable groove. 20min for the first 5k, exactly! Yes! Good split and feeling good at that pace. Then from about 8k through 12k is more steady climbing and I ran through 10k at exactly 40:24, still very pleased with that time and feeling great. In fact I felt my strongest from 12-17k, my 15k split was 60min and small change, very happy, feeling strong and still keeping it together mentally for the last hill that I knew was coming soon... A very big climb, which seems to never end, 1k up, then you turn a corner and ohh, there's more hill to climb! The whole race I was trying so hard to work hard on the downhills, to make up for the lost time...

Well I was that very loud, panting, snotting, grunting runner, people around me thinking: "Ewww, if that's what it looks like to run faster... I'd rather not!" or "You'd think this girl was going to break a record, the way she is carrying on!"

Oh well, I may have shouted out a bit aggressively a few times for people to move over, but the sidewalk was narrow (with high car tarffic on the road!) and these ladies were trotting along 3 abreast! Next time I think I'll bring a cowbell.... you can never have enough COWBELL!!

Anyways, the wheels fell off after that last brutal downhill. 19-21k were very slow, atleast 1min slower. I had mentally prepared for 3 big hills, I wasn't thinking about the last couple k's, which were a gradual uphill. When I looked at my watch and it was past 1:26, I was super down, and I still had to run UP the street to the finish line.

Here I am feeling initially vrey upset about my 1:27...


But now I am fine about it, it was a super tough course, and my running is in a good spot right now. Minus my terrible IT band ... this week I'm going for in for some needling.

Thanks to Colin for cheering and taking pictures, though I think now he is itching to race himself!

PS. Apparently Rhys, had a few bad moments where he had to walk... but he blamed it on his race bib: "Darn, I blew another pin!" or was it a blown hamstring on the Historic Hills of Fort Langley??

1 comment:

Nancy Marley-Clarke said...

Very funny! Loved the cowbell reference.