Saturday, April 6, 2013

McKay Hollow Madness - a 25km trail race


     Each year for the past 7 years a small band of die-hard trail runners gathers at 6am in mid-March on top of Monte Sano Mountain in the Monte Sano State Park, Huntsville, AL for the running  of the McKay Hollow Madness 25km Trail Race.  No trophies. No medals.  You just get a t-shirt – IF you finish.  Unfortunately many don’t.  


     McKay is a grueling race. The map above is far from accurate but it gives you an idea of the run.   The close up below shows the last ¾ of a mile or so. If you look near the label “Blue Spring” you will see the dashed line of the trail.  Follow it as we moved north up McKay Hollow and up the escarpment to the finish (small red flag).  The topo elevation lines are 20’. You will notice that there are places where the lines are so closes together that it is difficult to differentiate them.  For that last ¼ of a mile or so, we are literally climbing up the side of the mountain.  The elevation change is 700’ to 1480’. That’s a 680’ climb in less than 0.25 mile.

     This year it had been snowing or raining all week. It was a combination of the two when I arrived at my daughter’s home the day before the race.  When I arrived at the shelter house, that served as race headquarters and had been draped with tarps to keep in some of the heat from the fireplaces and propane heaters, it was in the mid-40s and raining heavily. 
    I must admit to being a wimp when it comes to cold. I already had a cheap pair of Walmart compression tights under my good race compressions.  On top I had a compression shirt, long-sleeve tech and long-sleeve tech warm-up.  On the way to the starting line I put on a pair of warm-up trousers and a fleece jacket.   I left the jacket with the volunteers at the 5 mile check station.  If you’ve read many of my posts you know that I’m a serious advocate of trail poles and I wasn’t going to do this race without them.  Last year they had been invaluable and saved me from serious falls several times.  They would be even more important this year.
     Despite giving a rather low-tech appearance, the race is really very well organized and run.  There are check-points at 5 and 10 miles.  If you don’t arrive within the time limit you will be pulled from the race and given a ride back to the finish-line.  The race started on time and we headed off through the rain toward the north side of the mountain where we would start our first descent.   There would be at least three major descents. That means there would be at least three major climbs from between 7-900’ to as high as 1550’.  None of them, thankfully, is as steep as the last climb on the map above.  Of course there were many ups and downs. 
     My trail poles (the Lexi for which I paid 80 Francs – about $100 – in Switzerland in 2009) have paid for themselves many times and did so again.  We run for close to a mile on gravel and asphalt roads then suddenly take a sharp turn and a very steep descent.  The descent is difficult in dry weather. It was still raining hard.  Throughout the race the rain and fog made visibility so poor I felt like my glasses were steamed up.  Thing is . . . I wasn’t wearing glasses. 
     Just before we arrived at the first descent a woman behind asked me about my trail poles.  I told her that I wouldn’t run trails without them because they provided safety and stability. They might slow me down a bit, but I’m not fast in the first place. I’m more interested in getting to the finish line in one piece.  She seemed interested when a man, also right behind me, said “I thought about bringing my poles but I was afraid someone might make fun of me.”  He laughed.  I couldn’t see him so I don’t know whether he was teasing me or serious. I didn’t care. Moments after his statement we made the sharp right turn onto the single-track trail.  This is where the race gets serious and one of the more dangerous spots.  In good weather it is dangerous because we’re all still running in a group. The sudden switch to single-track trail and the closeness of others makes tripping over other people a serious problem. 
     I was not prepared for what I saw when I made the turn.  As I looked down the mountain all I could see right before me were bodies mostly lying on the ground. Some were still, but most were sliding out of control in the mud.  There was crying and cussing.   I dug my poles into the thick mud as I felt my feet begin to slip.  I looked around.  I could get off the trail.  I knew that the leaves were probably just as slippery but I’d get away from the mass of fallen humanity that would eventually bring me down if I stayed on the path.  As I stepped off the trail those behind me started sliding out of control by me. I have a technique that I’ve developed over the years to control my speed on a steep slope and allow me to move quickly.  I switched the  grip on my poles and started my zig-zag descent. As I avoided the bodies – asking “are you okay?” as I went by – I heard the lady who had been asking me about my poles yell “Go Mr. Sticks!” and laugh.  She and the others we sitting behind me in the mud.
     From that point on it was nothing but rain and mud. Mud and rain.  There are several points on the trail where you have to climb over or crawl under large boulders, traverse narrow muddy ledges high above the valley floor below and ford swift rushing streams.  I was amazed that I arrived at the 5 mile check-point 35 minutes ahead of the clock, and at the 10 mile check-point 30 minutes ahead. Of course last year I was almost 50 minutes ahead at the 10 mile check-point.  Just past the 10 mile check-point I encountered a young woman going the wrong way.  We were on what had once been an old logging road. It was still a muddy mess and looked more like a stream than a trail, but it had been gravel at one point so the mud wasn’t as deep.  I asked the woman if she needed help.  She said “no, I’m making up distance.”  It wasn’t until she caught up with me a short while later that she explained that she had missed a turn at the beginning of the course and inadvertently cut off 0.3 mile. The old logging road seemed to be the safest and easiest place to run the missing 0.3 mile.  I told her that no one would have thought less of her if she had just accepted her mistake, but she said that it would bother her.  She was having a lot of trouble.  Even though I have no doubt at all that she would be one who would fly past me on any other day, she had lots of trouble keeping up.  I’d keep an eye on her when she would fall far behind.  Normally this wouldn’t be any problem but I knew that I was losing time especially as we got into long stretches where the mud was over our shoes.  Because of the rain I had stopped early and double-knotted my shoestrings. Now I was worried about what that would do to time if I had a shoe sucked off by the mud – which was happening frequently during this race. 
     About 3-4 miles out from finish we had to cross a swift stream that fell very steeply down the mountain. The bottom of the stream consisted of large limestone slabs which, covered with mud, were extremely slippery.  On the far side we had to make our way up a 4-5’ wall of mud.  If you fell at this point, or in the stream, you would likely find yourself a couple hundred feet down the mountain and in a world of hurt.  I could see the slip and slide marks of those who had gone before us.  Just past the point at which you get out of the stream was a very narrow ledge of solid mud that tilted toward the stream several feet below. It was there that I made a bad mistake.  I could hear that the young woman was just reaching the stream.  I knew that she was tired, struggling and unfamiliar with trail running.  I was concerned about her getting safely across the stream.  One thing about trail racing, even in the best of weather, you must constantly concentrate on what you’re doing.  I didn’t.  While I was crossing the narrow ledge I allowed my concentration to shift to the struggling young woman.  I went down hard against my left should. (That’s the one with the worst arthritis spur)  The pain was extreme but in that flash I knew that if I didn’t want to end up very quickly at the bottom of the mountain I needed to act. I rolled over so that I was sitting on my butt and planted my poles below me.  This was why I use $100 poles. They took my entire weight and for a moment I lay suspended just above the stream. 
     Then we hit McKay Hollow.  A portion of the hollow has a nickname which I believe is “Mud Mile”. McKay Hollow is horribly muddy in good weather. Last year it was bad. This year was worse.  After having already run almost 15 miles you slog through sometimes ankle-deep mud.  Then just when you think you’re about done in from the mud you look up the almost perpendicular mountain wall that is your way out of the valley and to the finish line.  That’s where, on the map above, the 20’ elevation lines are so close together that they look like they’re one wide line.   I was tired from the mud but I was glad that my legs didn’t hurt and the arthritis in my hips and knees was behaving.  On the way up the escarpment I kept looking back to make sure that the young woman was safe.  The climb out was dangerous and, even having run Eagle Rock in the Ozarks, this was the only time I’ve done such a climb where I was actually a bit frightened – for myself and for the young woman behind me.
     I could hear the people cheering for me at the top of the mountain.  They can see you coming up the mountain before you can see them.  The rain and fog was still so heavy that I couldn’t make out my family waiting for me until I was almost upon them.   Just before you get to the top of the mountain there is a waterfall that you must cross.  You cross just feet from where the water plunges into space on its way to the valley floor almost 700’ below.  The area had been so dry there was almost no water going over the waterfall but the rocks were slick.  One last obstacle.  I looked back to be sure that the young woman was still okay.  She was a lot farther behind me but she wasn’t giving up.  The climb was taking everything she had.  I was standing there watching her, thinking that I had crossed the finish line, when someone said “hey, you need to get across the finish line.”  I couldn’t see it for the rain and fog.  The race took me 30 minutes longer this year and there were only a handful of people behind me. But that's okay. I finished, which always makes me happy - especially at McKay Hollow! 
     I  was looking for the beer (which is being proven to be a very good recovery drink) when the young woman crossed the finish line.  She almost collapsed on the steps of the shelter house.  There were physician’s nearby so I just asked what she thought about her first trail race. She’s definitely a trail racer and I know I’ll see her next year. “That was fun,” she said. 
     It was fun, despite the rain and mud.  Those are to be expected occasionally in a trail race.  McKay Hollow Madness is a tough race in the best of conditions, but it is a wonderful challenge for those who love to do trails.  I’m just hoping that some year before I can’t do it any long, the weather will be good enough to enjoy what must be marvelous panoramic views. Of course, I guess I could go back during nice weather and just enjoy the trail.  My daughter and her family live at the foot of the mountain a few miles away from the park.
     If you love a challenging trail race you want to consider McKay Hollow.  It’s put on by the Huntsville Running Club. Just Google ‘McKay Hollow Madness’.  Be sure to prepare by doing plenty of miles on the hardest trails you can find.  I don’t know about this year, but last year only about 70-80% of us finished.  I trained by doing a  lot of upper body strength training at my club, miles and miles on a Stepmaster and  a treadmill that can do a 40% grade (lots of time on a 15% grade), then as many runs a week as possible of 10-20 miles on the hardest trails near me.  For people in the Evansville area, I recommend Audubon State Park. You have to run some of the trails 2-3 times but you can get over 10 miles without too much trouble. It has some real butt-buster trails and there’s almost no place flat.  The other recommendation is The Two Lake Loop at Hoosier National Forest’s Celina-Indian Lake.  You can do  13-30 miles depending on how you do the loop.  They have a race there in June which they tout as being the most difficult trail race in the mid-west. It isn’t as rugged as McKay - I did it last year in only 20 minutes longer than a street race of the same length - but the hills are long and it is tough.  Audubon is good for training the constant steep hills and Two Lake Loop is best for distance endurance.
GREAT RUNNING! 
Russ


Saturday, February 9, 2013

The Goofy - Key West Challenge


What a week.  What a runner's high!! What a confidence builder.  54 miles of racing, 27 miles of trail running, and >80 miles of cycling all packed into 22 fabulous day!!!  It was great!
In my previous blog I talked about preparing for the Goofy Challenge - a 63km back-to-back. Well, the training paid off. I left for Disney on a Saturday. My trusty little 5x8 trailer served me well. I spent 9 days at my Disney Vacation Club resort and 12 in my trailer. Of those 12 nights 3 of them were in rest stops. 
My actual challenge – i.e. the challenge to which I agreed to raise money for American Heart Association – was for the back-to-back, a ½ marathon and 50 miles of cycling in 8 days.  I had the last week of the taper-down which allowed me a 31 mile week with 13 miles on Saturday.  I spent all day Saturday driving and checked into Suwannee River State Park on Sunday.  
Sunday had its ups and downs but overall was a great day. It rained all night and was raining when  I arrived at Suwannee River State Park about 7:30am.  I couldn’t get into my campsite until 1pm because there were still people there.  I offered to help them pack but the ranger didn’t like that idea. They did have a place where I could park and use my trailer without electricity.  By 9:30 I was on the trail.  This is a portion of the Florida National Scenic Trail.  This section goes from a point near Florida State 90 (just a bit north of I-10) to the Georgia state line.   I decided that I wasn’t going to let the rain spoil my fun.  Besides, I needed this run.  I needed to escape.  This day would have been my 45th wedding anniversary. Anniversaries and my wife’s birthday are really hard for me. As most of you know, running is my escape and grief therapy.  Trail runs are especially good because they require constant concentration on what you’re doing.
About a mile into the run I went past an Agricultural Inspection Station.  It was on a back road where the road crossed the Suwannee River.  I couldn’t help but stop and ask the officer why they had an inspection station there.  She was so bored that she thanked me for letting her tell me the history of the agricultural inspection stations.  As she spoke I noticed that she was wearing a typical police gun belt with a pistol.  She told how, in the 19th century the farmers, who used the Suwannee to move produce, asked the government to have inspection stations where they made the exchanges with Georgia boats to help avoid being swindled. That’s why it was originally put here.  They were originally manned by civilian gov’t workers until the drug cartels stated using back roads and rivers to move drugs north and some of these civilian workers were killed.  Since then the “Agricultural Inspection Officers” are trained police.  Reading between the lines, she’s there to watch for drugs.
     I had turned off my Garmin while I was talking to the officer and forgot to turn it back on until I had covered almost 2 ½ miles according to the markers.  Using map markings and trail markers I ended up doing between 13 and 15 miles.  The trail ran along the Withlacoochee  and Suwannee Rivers.  It was really lots of fun despite the constant rain.  I was really tempted to cross the GA line just to say I did and then run south to the Stephen Foster Park but my training schedule said I wasn’t supposed to do over 13 miles. I didn’t want to overdo training less than a week before the big race so I decided to run it some other time.
     All of these state trails, Appalachian  Trail, etc., made me decide that one of my retirement goals is going to be to do a portion of such trails in as many states as possible. Obviously I can’t really set a distance goal because, for example, 37 miles in Florida takes a whole lot less time than 37 miles through the Ozark Mountains or up the Appalachian Trail. I have a life-time senior pass for National Forests and Parks. That gives me ½ price on camp sites, etc.  There’s a National Forest or Park in every state, so I might start there.
     I decided that I’d be covering enough ground walking through the Disney theme parks that I’d only do a few fun miles in the evenings.  (Out of curiosity I used my Garmin one day at Disney and found that I generally cover at least 7-9 miles.)  On Monday and Tuesday I went to the parks and on Wednesday I went to Typhoon Lagoon where I swam with the sharks and got beaten up in a wave pool. While the wave doesn’t look that big in pictures, when you’re neck-deep in water and there’s this massive wall of water at least 6’ or more above your head tossing bodies around like ping pong balls, it really looks big and you wonder what in the hell you were thinking to be there.  I couldn’t believe that I stayed there for so long allowing that wave to toss me around. And people call trail runners crazy?!   
My daughter arrived on Wednesday evening and we spent much of Thursday at the race expo. It was typical Disney – i.e. extremely well organized and lots of vendors.  Somehow, when I called and changed my registration to the Goofy, the person cancelled my daughter’s marathon registration.  They not only cancelled it but somehow removed her from the database. According to the terrific man who quickly fixed everything, there should have been no way she was removed from the database.  On Friday I did my usual carb loading and hydration ritual.  Oatmeal for breakfast, an Ensure and banana at 10am, large salad and P&J for lunch, Ensure and banana at mid-afternoon and high-carb dinner. We went to the Rainforest CafĂ© for dinner and I was in bed by 6pm.
My alarm went off at 2am Saturday morning and by 3:15am I was at the staging area. The race went very smoothly and I felt good.  I did it in 2:33:31.  That was actually faster than I planned but I felt good and didn’t believe it would cause any problems in the next 26 miles. It was hard to keep my pace down starting in corral B.  I ran between the 2 hour and 2:15 pacers for most of the race.  I dropped behind when we hit an off ramp that is so steeply sloped that I walked it.  The ramp is infamous and everyone hates it. It aggravates the arthritis in my hips something fierce!  It was just beginning to get light as we passed the Polynesian Resort at mile 8. The heat wasn’t bad but the humidity was something like 80%. The race directors were worried about the heat since most runners had trained under much cooler conditions. Going through the hydration stations, I always took two Powerade cups and a water.  I would drink the Powerade and pour the water over me. This doubled my fluid intake on the course and didn’t slow me down. 
I started rehydrating as soon as I crossed the finish line and was eating before I got to the “family reunion” area about two blocks from the finish line.  I had to replace 1,400 calories in carbs and proteins in the next six hours plus try to store up some carbs for the next part of the race, which means I had to consume at least 3,000 cal.  Actually it isn’t easy to get 3,000 good calories in less than 6 hours. I had a massage at 1pm and was in bed by 6pm.  The massage was terrific.  Disney resorts keep a staff of licensed therapists with different specialties. The woman who worked on me specializes in sports therapy and was called in especially to take care of runners.  
I arrived at the staging area at 3:10am on Sunday morning. The 26 mile portion of the race was lots of fun. I really enjoyed it.  Jeff Galloway, Frank Shorter and Keith Bradley were there. Jeff Galloway signed my Wine and Dine bib. We ran through the Magic Kingdom, Disney Speedway, Animal Kingdom, ESPN Sports Complex, Disney Hollywood and EPCOT. I’m glad that I’m not sensitive about my age. We ran through the Atlanta Braves training area and stadium. They had a sensor as you entered the stadium so they knew who you were. As I ran by home base the announcer said “And Russell Vance, 66 years young.”  Evidently they do that for anyone over 65.  However, one of the greatest experiences of this race was that I GOT TO CARRY THE OLYMPIC TORCH!!!!   A young English women, who carried the torch in the Olympics, was running with it and allowed other runners to carry it for short distances. It weighs a ton!  I carried it across the Magic Kingdom parking lot.  Definitely a magic moment!!  Unfortunately there was no way to get a picture. 
In all honesty I was really a bit concerned about the back-to-back.  As I’ve said before, it wasn’t the 63km that concerned me but the back-to-back. Thankfully my training program did its job and I really felt good as I crossed the finish line. There were 6,000 Goofy (back-to-back) runners out of the almost 80,000 runners.  I think I told the story about my daughter stopping within feet of the finish line to have a picture taken at the Princess Marathon, well . . . . .   My daughter, Kelly, ran the last leg of the race with me. As we came around the corner and could see the finish line I saw Mickey standing there.  I knew what was going to happen.  We had to stop to get a picture. In the picture I do look like I’m ready to bolt, but I wasn’t setting any records so I’ll admit it was a fun thing to do. My time for the entire 39.3 mile Goofy Challenge was 8:31. That’s far, far from fast but the rules permitted 10:30 so I was thrilled.  I grabbed a beer as soon as we got back and Kelly and I went to the swimming pool to cool off.  I know a lot of people think I’m crazy, but I really did enjoy the running and would do it again in a heart beat.
I knocked around Disney until Wednesday.  I did daily runs but I kept them to 5 miles. It took all day Wednesday to make the trip to Key West.  My challenge included doing a bicycle ride up US-1, but I couldn’t make the trip because the pedestrian/cycle bridge between the first two islands was closed.  However, I didn’t find any problem doing the miles promised. In the old town portion of Key West bicycles rule the roads. I had logged the miles easily on the Key West island by Thursday evening and over 80 miles by the time I left.
The Key West ½ Marathon was as low budget/low tech as Disney was high budget/high tech. That’s not being derogatory. It was well organized, well executed and lots of fun!  The pick-up and “expo” was on part of the old historic wharf between two restaurants. Since we were on an island we had to share the road with traffic, but there were lots of volunteers and it wasn’t a problem. I would definitely recommend this race. 
I would have loved to have spent a lot more time in the old Key West but had to leave on Monday.  I wasn’t retired when I made the reservations so I wasn’t thinking like a retired person. Nevertheless, I left and drove through to a rest stop just south of the Lake City, FL. The next day I drove to Red Top Mountain State Park in Georgia, spent a day running trails and then home.
A wonderful 22 days of running and sun!   I had a great time.  I pushed myself to the max and came away feeling great.  You don’t know until you try.  More proof for my new favorite saying, which is embroidered on a winter running cap, “Someday I’m not going to be able to do this. Today is NOT that day!” 
Great running!
Russ