Showing posts with label Big 20. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Big 20. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

PRR - Peachy Road of Remembrance: Peachtree Road Race (7/4/16)

Mile 5 or so


Race: Peachtree Road Race
Location: Atlanta, GA
Distance: 10K
Goal Time: 39:00
Actual Time: 41:29

Tuesday morning, Urvi and I sat on the MARTA train heading back to the Airport.  I watched the industrial areas south of Atlanta whisk by.  The occasional graffiti atop a car parts warehouse interspersed small patches of urban jungle overgrown by kudzu.  I was thinking about my life and where I’d come from and to where I was going…

***
As many of you know, my reintroduction to road running was October 2009’s Maine Half Marathon.  Since that time I have achieved many things.  I have run 10 marathons, from my first Bay State to my own holy grail – Boston Marathon – not once, but twice.  Through it I’ve made fantastic friends that share a sense of competition and adventure.  And, I’ve met my beautiful wife.

But my original introduction to running was a generation before and 1180 miles south.  I lived in Midtown Atlanta and at ten years old decided that I was going to run the Peachtree Road Race.  I don’t know what my training was like but I remember running with my mother.  I ran several of the little training races put on by the Atlanta Track Club in Piedmont Park.  (I also ran the InmanPark Festival’s 5k, where I won my first age-group award.)  The Peachtree has always been integral to my my life and my running.

1984 Peachtree Road Race
The Peachtree was not only important to me, it was integral to the Atlanta running and non-running communities.  The Peachtree was (and still is) the gold standard of road races in Atlanta.  Its history (starting in 1970) mirrors the history of running and road racing in the US.  From 110 fast runners in 1970 to 60,000 elite, sub elite, recreationally competitive, recreational and first timers in 2016. This year had 250,000 spectators also.  As an Atlanta native, all that I have done in running was incomplete until I returned to the Empire State of the South and ran the Peachtree.

***
I don’t know what I ran the Peachtree in 1984 or in 1986. I know they were both around an hour.  58 minutes?  But I had bigger, faster goals for 2016. 

But alas, goals are but broken skeletons laid waste by the 3-H club of the Peachtree Road Race – Heat, Humidity and Hills.

The day before, the race organizers announced that the heat and humidity placed the race under cautionary “Yellow” conditions.  They suggested running slower and modifying your goals for the heat (77 at the start) and humidity (75%). 

Our hotel was only three quarters of a mile from the start.  I figured it was would be a nice warm up.  But as soon as I left the hotel, I realized it would be rough.  I was “warm” pretty quickly.  By the time I got to the start line, my shirt was already soaked. 

I was in the seeded corral and we were going to start with the elite men right at 7:30.  I had a game plan and decided not to deviate from it despite the “yellow” conditions.  I ran the first mile right at 6:15 and then sprinted a bit to keep the next two miles between 6:10 and 6:15.  The 5k mark was close to the apartment I lived in when I was in kindergarten (the Benihana is still there 37 years later).  I hit the halfway point at 19:14.  I was right on target.

This is when the third H really comes into play. HILLS.



The next two miles are basically uphill with some respites here and there.  Cardiac Hill carries you up to 3.65 miles (and the Piedmont Hospital).  I started losing pace as soon as Cardiac started.  But once we got to the top, I was comfortable going downhill again.  I managed to do the mile and a half from 3 to 4.5 at 7:10; that was okay, but not what I wanted.  I knew I’d have to get faster if I would really get it.

Then it goes back uphill to the Peachtree/West Peachtree fork.  By the time we reached the High Museum and mile 5, I looked at my watch – 32:45.  I can still get a PR if I run the last 1.2 miles in less than 7:10.  Oh wait…that’s under six minute/mile – I’m not doing that. I still tried to put in everything I had and try to get down to 6 minute miles.

But that wasn’t happening.  It was a little more uphill to 10th Street. 

We took the left off Peachtree and onto 10th Street.  I knew how far it was and how much I had left in the tank; a lot of the former and very little of the latter. 


Throughout my run, the heat kept climbing.  By 8:30 the heat was so bad, the organizers changed the conditions from “Yellow” to “Red.”  (“Black” would be the next step and stop the race.)  Urvi and Sonia each ran half of their race under “Red.”

It never got to Red while I was running, but Yellow was bad enough.  The run down 10th Street was one different for me.  Usually, I’m passing people who are burnt out at the finish in the last quarter mile.  Today, I was the burnt one.

Sonia still managed a Personal Best!  Urvi had a personal worst.  And, I had a personal moment.

As an Atlanta native, I can call myself a runner again.  This second time around, I finished the Peachtree!

Sonia, me and Urvi in Piedmont Park after the Race
***
I hadn’t been back to Atlanta – other than my Grandmother’s death – since the early 90s. Everything was familiar, yet alien.  Memories from the sights of the houses in Inman Park to the distinct squeal/whine of the MARTA train ignited nerve cells for brief seconds.    And I was carried into hazy memories that were almost like a past life.  Also I was brought into a new Atlanta I never knew. 

Throughout the trip, I took Urvi around to experience my Atlanta and the new Atlanta.  I took her to the Varsity in all its glory and shame.  We visited my old apartment building (long since razed) in Midtown, and had a beer on the deck of Henry's Tavern that now inhabits the building Charles Walker used to run his theater lighting company from.  We walked around Inman Park and saw my two old apartments and visited the restaurant in Little Five Points, the Porter on the site that was Mellow Mushroom

Peachtree Center Station

What'll ya have? What'll ya have?
But we also rode the new Atlanta Streetcar and sampled the new Atlanta beer scene.  We stayed in the new New Buckhead (after the boom of the Nineties and the bust of Aughts).  Urvi and I went to Treehouse in Peachtree Hills, and Sonia took us to the hip Cypress Street in Midtown.  And, we saw Mauricio at a pub in Lenox.


New Atlanta Streetcar

Mauricio, Me and Urvi
As I sat on the MARTA heading back to the airport and watching the warehouses and train tracks and kudzu, I contemplated the race, the city, the past, the future.  Barring work travel or weddings, this would probably be my last trip to Atlanta.  My family is long moved on from the city and "My Atlanta" is now nothing but snippets of memories that are almost black and white 8mm scenes – obscured behind smoky clouds of time. 

This was probably my good bye to my native city.  It’s not sad but it is a deep sense of fleeting nostalgia.  I’m happy to have returned and to have done it with Urvi.  I’m happy to have experienced the Atlanta of the past 30 years that I never knew.  I’m so happy to have said good bye by running with Urvi and Sonia and 60,000 of my next closest friends. Good bye, Atlanta and thanks for one last trip down Peachtree.

King Center

Wednesday, August 6, 2014

Portlandia: Beaches, Beacons, Beers and Bikes (8/1 - 8/3/14)




Somewhere between the music of Sibelius



and satirical sketch comedy



lies - Portland, Maine - PORTLANDIA

Numbers, Beer Camp and a Flying Tomato - 8/1/14
Ride:  North Station, Portland, Cape Elizabeth, Mujoy Hill, Thompsons Point
Distance: 22.2 miles

Urvi and I rode out of Cambridge and over the North Bank Bridge to catch the Downeaster up to Portland. We grabbed lunch on the train.  For me it was a steak sandwich and a Shipyard Export.

Casco Bay Bridge

Once in Portland we had to ride out to Cape Elizabeth to pick up our numbers and Tee-Shirts for the Beach to Beacon 10K.  The goal was to go over the Casco Bay Bridge into South Portland.  Approaching the bridge on the onramp was unnerving to say the least.  However once we actually were on the bridge, there was a wide shoulder and you felt perfectly safe.

Riding through South Portland and Cape Elizabeth was nothing special (except the tomato).  Just felt like the suburbs.  At Cape Elizabeth High School, we picked up numbers for us, Matt & Eva, and Scott & Julie.

Urvi and a Tomato
We had a lovely ride back to Portland, along the harbor road and the Eastern Promenade Trail to our airbnb in Munjoy Hill.  I had another snack of whatever I could eat and a tallboy Sierra Nevada Torpedo IPA to prep for Sierra Nevada Beer Camp.

After getting settled and a shower, we headed back out on the bikes and back to the Amtrak station where the Thompson's Point venue was for Beer Camp.  As we rode in, there were signs for: Valet Bike Parking.  I started following these.  The Maine Bike Coalition had set up the valet parking and greeted us with cowbells blaring.

Beer Camp was a classic beer fest.  80 or so breweries (I probably only got to about 20).  Food trucks and brass band completed the hipster vibe to the event.  While I had tastings of quite a few good beers (and some bad ones including an IPA that tasted like feet), four stood out: Oxbow Grizacca - a well balanced saison, Black Hog Ginga Ninja - a ginger beer IPA,mmmm, 603 White Peaks White IPA - a great mashable of witte and IPA, and Peak Organic King Crimson - an imperial red ale.   Urvi and I topped off the night with Italian sausage and pizza before heading back to Munjoy Hill.

Brewing up Urvi




Beach to Beacon - 8/2/14

Race: Beach to Beacon 10K
Goal Time: 40:18
Actual Time: 40:36

After the tough 6th mile, there was one last steep uphill before the finish line as we entered Fort William Park and approached the beacon.  I took the hill and charged the inside steepest part (a little lesson from Contador, if you want to crush it take the steep part).  Then around the turn I was coming into the finish, but there was no finish line.  I looked at my watch: 5.87 miles...oops I still have a 600 yards to go...

The Year of the 10K continues.  I've done both the James Joyce Ramble and the BAA 10K; and, Lone Gull lurks on the near horizon. As one of the Big 20, Beach to Beacon was a race I had always wanted to do.  It's a world renown 10k with some of the top runners racing through suburban Portland.  Urvi and I rode our bikes to the finish line to catch the shuttle to the start line.  (The same guys with the same cowbells were there to valet park them for us!) It was convenient and well organized.  (apparently, if you drove and parked that was not the case). The shuttle drove us across town to the start line at Crescent Beach.  I caught up with Eva and Matt in the start corral.

On the start, Matt and I ran an easy first mile.  As we ran through the first water stop, I decided it was time to try to hammer it.  For the next two miles I hovered near 6:20 and my goal of near 40 minutes.

As a 8,000 person race, it was a blast to run with that many people and so many fans.  While the race continued it got a little harder. But the fans got deeper and the cowbells more numerous.  I had two more reasonably good miles with numbers 4 and 5.  Then came the sixth mile.

The sixth mile is by far the hardest in the race.  There are two longish hills.  I kept trying to tell myself to just turn myself inside out for only 8 more minutes... now 7.  But the second hill just left me running slowly.   Once I crested that I felt okay.  After a little down hill, you make the right into Fort William Park.  I was able to recover from my blast up the park entrance hill (maybe I could have done the same with the long hill?).  I was able to coast in and even put in a good finish into the park.

It was a good race for me personally and I thought a great event.  Unlike Falmouth - which I may never do a again - I'd love to make this a tradition.

On the ride back to Portland took us to the Bug Light in South Portland and back over the Casco Bay Bridge.  Between the race and dinner, I had a Green Flash Hop Head Red and Matt, Scott and I split a Schlitz High Gravity Very Smooth Lager (don't say beer; say Bull!)

Julie and Scott

The whole B2B crew

For dinner, the six of us headed to Novare Res, where I had Lobster Roll and Bahn Mi Sandwich.  Also had Slaapmutske Triple Nightcap, DeDolle Boskeun and my favorite beer from Maine - Oxbow FPA.

Slaapmutske


La Fleche de Casco - 8/3/14

Trip: Bike Ride
Distance: 28.92 miles
Sights: Casco Bay, Back Cove, Freeport, Brunswick


Create Maps or search from 80 million at MapMyRun

Sunday morning, Urvi and I planned to ride up to Brunswick to take the train back to Boston.  After a quick run for me and a attempted swim for Urvi (where she saw Meb running with a group), we headed out on the road to Brunswick.  Some of it was along the coast and through pretty

Casco Bay and Rail bridge

Casco Bay from Congress Street

Urvi on the bike path in Falmouth

Eartha: World's Largest Globe

We stopped at Eartha: the world's largest globe in Yarmouth; the Big Indian in South Freeport and tried to get lunch on the Freeport Town Pier but it was going to be an hour wait... an hour!


You know what this road needs?  A really large oversized Indian statue

Freeport Town Wharf


Urvi at the Wharf

We stopped for lunch at the Gritty's in Freeport Center where I had another lobster roll and Gritty's incorrectly named Maine's Best IPA.  We rolled into Brunswick with enough time to stop at Ebenezer's new brew pub. Ebenezer's own brewery - Lively Brewery were on tap. First I had the delicious tripel - Holy Candy; and then the flagship Saison LaCharite.  

Ebenezers's Brew Pub
  

Taps in blown glass
We then caught the train back to Boston.  Aboard I hand a lunch of an Italian sub and finished the Maine beer tour with Baxter Stowaway IPA.

En Route from North Station to home:
Zachim and North Bank Bridge from the Charles River Dam locks


Tuesday, March 25, 2014

I won the lottery!: Beach to Beacon (3/25/14)

Got into another BIG 20 goal race!  Beach to Beacon...

Dear Jesse,


CONGRATULATIONS! You have won a guaranteed entry!


You are now a confirmed registrant for the 17th Annual TD Beach to Beacon 10k Road Race on August 2, 2014 in Cape Elizabeth, Maine....

The Kings and Queens of Beer - me, Urvi, Julie, Eva, Matt and Scott will be taking on Maine in four months.

Monday, August 12, 2013

Whales, Dolphins and Seals, oh my!: Falmouth Road Race (8/11/13)

Approaching the last big hill
Photo by Amie Gauthier

BIG 20

Race: Falmouth Road Race
Distance: 7 miles
Location: Falmouth, MA
Goal Time: 49:00
Actual Time: 48:16

I put together the Big 20; 20 non-marathons I want to run in my life.  Massachusetts has probably the most famous marathon.  But it also has one of the large non-marathon races - Falmouth Road Race.

The Race starts in the Falmouth village of Wood's Hole is home to Marine Biological Laboratory.  The research and teaching facility has been a top level research center since its founding in 1988.  Students and researchers study, among other things, my favorite - aquatic mammals.

Blue Whales: Mile 0 - 2.5

I, along with Dan, Lino and Scott, started in the second corral.  At many races you spend the first half mile weaving through people who aren't going the speed you want to go.  I decided even before the race started to not get involved in the bobbing and weaving.  Dan and I started out easy while Scott and Lino took off...

It was refreshing to climb the beautiful hill at Nobska Lighthouse early in the race.  The Cape Cod Marathon runs up the hill at Mile 22 and it's when you start to jump off into the tough stages.

After we came down the hill, I caught up with Scott and was going to run behind him for a little bit.  But soon he had to go left to avoid someone; and I had to go right.  As I went right, I passed him.  Oh well, just keep running.

Bottlenose Dolphins: Mile 2.5 - 5

The middle third of the race is beautiful as it stretches down the beach and past the point where Chris Spinney mistakenly told me the wind ended at the Marathon.  I got a high-five from Jason who was cheering.

Harbor Seals: Mile 5 - 7

I still felt good when we turned off the beach and back toward town.  I got my last bit of shade around mile 5.   At mile 5 and a half I was high fiving a row of children when one of them moved weird to and got his face right in the line.  Yep, I smacked some random kid right across the face.  I just told myself: don't look back; just keep running.

The end of the race is a beautiful downhill with the beach stretching out in front of you.  But to get to the downhill, you have to run up what Ruthanne would call: a snotty little hill.  Having climbed that hill in the Cape Cod Marathon I knew it wasn't a real bad hill.  But it is in the first 10% of the marathon and the last 95% of the Falmouth Road Race.  While my head knew it wasn't hard, my legs begged to differ.  Soon enough,  I was pulling off to the right to get out of people's way if they wanted to attack the hill.

I sprinted down the hill and finished 45 seconds below my goal.  (200th - Age Group; 379th - overall).

Another of the Big 20 finished! We celebrated at the Silver Shores Shanty with a Shipyard Monkey Fist IPA.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Boiling in Utica: Boilermaker 15K (7/8/12)

BIG 20

Race: Boilermaker 15K
Location: Utica, NY
Goal Time: 1:02:45
Actual Time: 1:06:07  (PR!!)

This was not my best race.

However, the race is fun!  It's like joining a Pub Series race with the party at the end with a big city race.

14,000 runners with 6,000 volunteers and the people of Utica packed onto the streets to cheer everybody from the world class runners to the next door neighbor.

I'd definitely put this on the bucket list...