Sunday, June 28, 2009

Shaker Seven Road Race Enfield, New Hampshire










Today we headed up to the Shaker Seven Road Race in Enfield, New Hampshire. Enfield is located eight miles south of Dartmouth College. The seven mile race starts at the Shaker Museum located on the shore of Mascoma Lake and loops around a large section of the lake (mostly rustic dirt roads) before crossing back over the Main Street bridge and back to the Village. New Hampshire is the home to several of the nineteen Shaker communities established in the 18th and 19th centuries which at one time had more than 20,000 converts. The last New Hampshire Shaker (Ethel Hudson of the Canterbury, N.H. community) died in 1992 but the communities have been preserved as museums through a combination of land trusts and public fundraising.
We ran a pretty aggressive and hilly 12 miler on Saturday which combined with last week’s Mt. Washington race didn’t leave me in the mood for racing so I decided to run this one as a tempo workout at 7 minute mile pace. Cathy is unable to do anything but go all out so I wished her well at the start and she was out of sight not long after the gun went off. I’ve been having some left hip soreness so was cautious in the early going and passed the first three miles in 21:25 (7:08 pace). I was able to find a group to run and chat with which made it a nice workout. There were a few hills in the 4 and 5 mile sections of the course but then the course flattened out nicely as it passed through “downtown” Enfield. I ran those miles in 6:53 and 7:14 then the course passed over a bridge connecting the two shore lines at a narrow point of the lake before traveling along Rt. 4A back to the Shaker Village. I saw a few slightly balding runners in front of me (you never do know for sure who is 50+ ) so I picked it up a bit and ran the last two miles in 6:13 and 6:21 to finish in 48:09. This was 15th overall and 1st in the 50-59 age bracket. I’ve actually won my age division twice this year (the other Hampton ½ in February) something I never did in high school—having won just one pre-season cross country race in 1977 when several of the real runners on our team were injured. The finish of the race was a thing of beauty as it looped off of Rt. 4A into the Village right next to the Great Stone Dwelling (see picture above). This building, constructed in 1837 was the Church’s primary residence and the central gathering place of the Enfield Shakers. Cathy finished in 46:06 and was the first woman overall. Several other Striders also made the trip to Enfield including Jim Ecke of Merrimack and Andrea Pierce of Hollis. The race had plenty of volunteers, more than enough water stops and the runners encountered very little traffic during the race. In the unlikely event I have not completely destroyed my knees over the next year, I will be back.

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Ryan Runs Europe




My blog rarely ventures outside of New England and most of the time focuses on my mundane running exploits. These expolits now seem exponentially mundane when you read about Ryan Johns. Ryan is a recent Columbia University architecture graduate and a friend and teammate of my son Anthony on the Columbia University cross country and track teams. Anthony has related many stories over the last few years about the adventuresome Ryan, but this summer Ryan has outdone himself as he runs from Amsterdan to Athens…. carrying just the bare necessities on his back (see photo of his gear above). He has no hotel reservations, no money for lodging, just 6 lbs. of gear and is depending simply on the hospitality of strangers. He has kept a fascinating blog of his trip with the use of a small hand held device (the reason you will find frequent typos). He has posted many wonderful photos. Ryan’s trip (he is running about 20 miles each day) will take approximately four months as he makes his way through seven countries and 2300 miles. As I type this blog entry tonight, Ryan is in France making his way toward the German border then to Switzerland. Here is his blog which I encourage you to read and follow along on this incredible journey. http://www.ryanlukejohns.com/runseurope/

Saturday, June 20, 2009

49th Annual Mt. Washington Road Race












I'm not sure I'll have time tonight to post much about today's race but I thought I would still post a few pictures. This was my first Mt. Washington Road Race and it was much more difficult than I expected. I stupidly dropped my camera at one point and lost more than a minute and had been running ahead of pace up to that point. I ran 1:29:06 and our GCS Seniors team finished 1st out of 12 teams. Cathy finished just behind me in 1:29:22 (2nd NH woman) but I caught her early at the two mile mark where she started walking and told me she was "dropping out" and was going to walk back to the car at the bottom. I told her she should at least walk up to the summit. About 10 minutes later I realized I had the car key so it would be a long wait until I arrived back from the summit after the race if she decided to head back down. Then, not more than 200 meters from the finish I heard someone yell her name and looked back and there she was furiously closing in on me like a scene out of 1968 thriller Night of the Living Dead. Here you can see her trying to sneak up behind me (she's wearing the white cap/red singlet) as I casually check my watch, not knowing I was being stalked. http://www.scottmasonphoto.com/gallery/8630550_UdQTV#569391878_GvmMx-M-LB




The auto road was enveloped in fog for most of the early parts of the race and it was difficult seeing more than 100 meters ahead but as we approached the summit the view was breathtaking with sunny skies and what meteorologists call "undercast" meaning the top of the cloud cover was below the summit. According to the race officials this view was rare and akin to the view from an airplane with 130 mile visibility in all directions and a floor of clouds. Temperatures were 55F with just 5.9MPH winds from the southeast. The top picture was taken by fellow Strider Brian Sanborn whose wife Genia was also running. The second picture above is a shot of the Mt. Washington summit from the center of North Conway at about 6:30 A.M. as we drove to race. The third shot is (I think) a shot of nearby the Mt. Adams summit peaking through the clouds. More later including other Strider results.

Monday, June 8, 2009

10th Annual Rhody 5k- The Bunny Suit Works-Set New PR




This will unfortunately be a short entry as I’m buried in work and have five superior court hearings this week. On Sunday we traveled 1 ½ hours south to Lincoln, Rhode Island for the 10th Annual Rhody 5k. This race is one of the races on this year’s USATF New England Grand Prix race circuit. As usual we were late (my fault) and arrived just 20 minutes before the start but fortunately the women’s start was 30 minutes later than the mens so Cathy was able to grab my number and timing chip as I headed straight for the starting line barefoot with shoes and socks in hand (great race prep). We were joined in Rhode Island by 30 fellow Gate City Striders. Just kidding about the bunny suit, but did set a new PR.

The course reminded me a lot of running at Pease Air Force Base, very flat and circular ending on the Lincoln Greyhound Dog Track (no moving rabbit to chase unfortunately). I had not run a 5k since Thanksgiving and had done no speed work whatsoever since early March so I had no idea how I would run. My goal was to break 20 minutes. I have been trying to get ready for Mt. Washington on June 20 so had done two fairly hard hilly runs totaling close to 20 miles on Friday evening in Mont Vernon/New Boston and on Mack Hill in Amherst on Saturday morning. When the gun went off I felt better than expected so tried to keep pace with fellow Striders Jim Hansen and Steve Wolfe. Jim, Steve and I ran as a group for the first mile. I passed the first mile in 6:07 and was concerned I had gone out too fast. We then passed mile two in 6:03. This was Steve’s first race back after a hip injury that has severely limited his training over the last month so he was holding back as I'm not in his league and normally I can’t even see him after the first mile. The conditions were the warmest so far this year and took a toll on me as we closed in on mile three as Steve and I ran fairly close together but then he put the hammer down and made a strong move at about the 2.6 mile mark that I couldn't match. I ran the last mile in 5:55 and my overall time of 18:48 was a PR (post high school/college) by almost one minute.

Cathy ran 19:10 which was a strong finish and also a PR for her although at least for a day or so I can give up my title as the slowest runner in our house (although Anthony returns home tomorrow from a week of running in Mammoth Lakes California to put us all in our place--he ran a 14:39 this winter indoors at the Heps at Harvard). I can’t even remember the last time I finished in front of Cathy. Other strong Strider performances were Ethan Crain (15:35), Joe Rogers (17:07) Mike Wade (18:15) and Jim Hansen (19:31) on the men’s side and on the women’s side Karen Long (19:52), Karen Pattalena (20:05) and Tammy Gaffey (20:29) . I apologize for not listing all 30 Striders as well as team results which I would do tonight if I had time.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Pack Monadnock 10 Miler



The Pack Monadnock 10 miler organized by the Gate City Striders has been a popular race for many years in southern New Hampshire but one that I had always successfully found excuses to avoid. Pack (2300 ft) is located within Miller State Park in Temple, N.H. and is the highest point in Hillsborough County. It is surrounded by Temple Mountain directly to the south , North Pack Monadnock (2276 ft.) two miles to the north and its big brother Mt. Monadnock (3165 ft.) eleven miles to the west.

I have served as a race volunteer on several occasions but the thought of running eight very hilly miles through the back roads of Wilton and Temple with the last two miles straight up a 2300 ft. mountain didn’t seem overly appealing. However, my perspective has changed over the last year (aided by the loss of 35 lbs) and since I have Mt. Washington on the horizon in three weeks (“Just One Hill”) http://www.mountwashingtonroadrace.com/ it seemed time to grow up and finally step to the line and run Pack. Cathy decided to take this week off after two difficult races. This would also be my first post Boston race.

I enjoyed the race much more than I expected as the first 8 miles were mostly beautiful rolling back roads lined by old stone walls as the point to point course progressed from Wilton-Lyndborough Cooperative High School westerly toward Pack Monadnock.

Due to my recent left knee troubles I ran the first few miles conservatively but felt strong and picked up the pace after the half way mark. I ran several miles with fellow Strider Trevor Ward and joined up with ultra-marathoner Jim Robinson from Derry (one of our former Flash coaches) at the 7 mile mark. Jim’s son Mike was a Flash All-American in 2005 and was a major contributor to our National Championship victory. He easily pulled away from us long before we reached the last sections of the course. After meandering along back roads the course takes a left back onto a long gradual uphill stretch of Rt. 101 then after a ½ mile climb swings 90 degrees into Miller State Park. From this point its straight uphill. Fortunately I didn’t need to walk as I thought I would but kept plowing along and finished in 1:21:24 for 58th overall. It was beautiful and sunny at the top and one of the shots above is taken from the fire tower (I’m petrified of heights so it wasn’t an easy shot as you can see in the picture my left hand clinging to the railing while snapping the picture). Next stop, Mt. Washington June 20.

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