Thursday, 24 September 2015

2015 Surf Coast Century: a fugue

Dude: Fuck.
Walter: What'd he say? Where's the hand-off?
Dude: There is no fucking hand-off, Walter! At a wooden bridge we throw the money out of the car!
Walter: Huh?
Dude: We throw the money out of the moving car!
Walter: We can't do that, Dude. That fucks up our plan.

 - a scene from The Big Lebowski.

I'd planned it all. Down to the minute, in fact. On paper and without being in the actual race itself, it seemed like the right thing to do. Firstly, my one-man support crew, Dylan, would need to know roughly when to be at the aid stations. Secondly, if I was going to be in with a chance of beating my stretch target of sub-11 hours, I'd need to know how I should be pacing each leg. The problem was, the plan didn't account for me starting to feel like rubbish at the 30km mark of a 100km ultra. My first 100km ultra.

But now, here I was, always frustratingly close to my planned time at each checkpoint, but only achieving this by hanging on by a thread. I might have been on time, but I wasn't supposed to be feeling this bad. It was fucking up the plan.

The  Plan1

I've given a lot of thought into how to write up my experience at the Surf Coast Century without turning it into a tome that rivals Don Quixote or Les Miserables in number of pages. And since I'm no Cervantes and Hugo, I need to be a bit more economical, otherwise the title of this post would be TL;DR. I eventually settled on a template I'd apply to each leg. Therefore, if you find the first section tiresome, you can stop there, knowing it's not going to get any better.

Leg 1 (0-21km)
Official title: Coastline Crusade
Unofficial title: Slips and sinkholes
Leg split (incl. time in aid station): 2:11:24 (49th best time)
Elapsed time: 2:11:24
Position at end of leg: 49th
Highlight: Picture running along a pristine beach, with the rising sun lighting the sheer cliffs to your left. To your right is the expanse of Bass Strait, including the occasional set of waves rolling in as the early morning surfers ponder these strange creatures heading eastwards to Torquay. What do you think the highlight was?

At the start line
(Photo credit: Dylan Perera)

Life's Good
(Photo credit: Supersport Images)

Lowlight: Somewhere in the second kilometre, stepping onto a sand-covered rock, both feet whipping out from under me and crashing ribs-first onto the (thankfully smooth) rock.
Comic relief: The untold number of pioneers who tried to avoid the ankle deep water when the tide reached the cliffs by plotting a new course, and found themselves instead waist deep (or deeper) in the surf.
Over-riding emotion at the time: Joy. It was such a beautiful setting and I ran much of the leg with fellow Dandenongs Trail Runner Scott, and the kilometres flew by.
Over-riding emotion now: Regret, I suppose. Regret that I was on a schedule on this stunning leg and only stopped to smell the roses fleetingly.

Leg 2 (21-49km)
Official title: Ironbark Basin
Unofficial title: The Turning of the Screw
Leg split: 2:57:41 (28th best time)
Elapsed time: 5:09:05
Position at end of leg: 33rd
Highlight: I really enjoyed the winding single track through the Ironbark Basin. It's not that it was exceptionally picturesque, but I was always within range of some runner doing one distance or the other and it got the competitive juices flowing.
Lowlight: For whatever reason, starting to feel flat at the 30km mark. I was hitting the splits I needed to, but in the plan, I was still feeling good at this stage. Reality was beginning to have a say about that.
Comic relief: I think I got a bit over-zealous on the foot-wash contraption you had to use to protect the native flora from whatever nasties your shoes might have picked up. My shoes were covered in a thick lather of soapy suds coming through the intermediary aid station/spectator area and it seemed that everyone was wondering what the hell these new 'foamy' shoes were, because they were all looking at my feet!
Over-riding emotion at the time: It was probably anxiety. I had reached Torquay about 5 mins behind schedule, the number of rock sections on Leg 1 slowing me down more than I expected. And then with me starting to feel ordinary with 70km to go, I was getting really concerned with how the rest of the race would go.
Over-riding emotion now: Amusement. I started to feel ordinary at 30km... Try explaining that to a non-runner! "Well, you know, the first 30km were fine, then it started to get hard. I can't explain why." "Um," the response might come, "it's because you had just run 30km..."

Early on in Leg 2, when I still felt good
(Photo credit: Supersport Images)

Leg 3 (49-77km)
Official title: Currawong Falls
Unofficial title: Cimdins Falls (Apart)
Leg split: 3:17:33 (20th best time)
Elapsed time: 8:26:38
Position at end of leg: 27th
Highlight: Seeing my family at the 70km aid station and almost bursting into tears because it was the only good thing to happen to me for the last 3 hours.

My youngest son Will trying to provide illegal assistance at the 70km aid station
(Photo credit: Dylan Perera)

Lowlight: Telling myself I wish I hadn't signed up to raise money for Oscars100 for this run. Honestly, I was so sore and fed up with trying to hang on to this shred of hope that I'd go sub-11 hours that I wished I'd never raised a cent. That way I could just pull out at 70km. Maybe I'd fake some bullshit injury. I could see myself in full Jon Belushi in The Blues Brothers mode - "I fell on my ribs... I rolled my ankle... My hamstring is about to tear... A snake bit me... You gotta believe me... It wasn't my fault!!!" But no, instead I had to keep going. And it was such a chore.

Pain, earlier.
(Photo credit: Supersport Images)

Comic relief: There wasn't much humour to be had, but in hindsight, my sooking to Scott at around 65km about how hard done by I was feeling was pretty funny, in a pathetic kind of way.
Over-riding emotion at the time: Too many to mention. Let's just go with despondency, shame, exhaustion and bitterness. Looking at my performance stats from this leg, you might think I'm laying on the false modesty a bit thick, but at the time I had no idea how I was going in relation to the rest of the field (the solo field being pretty sparse at that point). And to be honest, I didn't have the energy to even think about whether I was doing better than other runners. I'd never felt so alone and fed up on a run. I hated it.

Arriving at 77km aid station. Leg 3 finally over.
(Photo credit: Franck Verez)

Over-riding emotion now: Confusion. This leg confuses the hell out of me. And that's because I can't work out whether setting a stretch goal like I did is worth it or not. I would have enjoyed this leg so much more if I had just planned on a sub-12 hour finish, something which I thought I could achieve on most days if everything went well. But instead, since I was so close to my planned splits, I had to push for this stupid sub-11 stretch. It completely ruined the enjoyment factor, but [spoiler alert] ended up contributing to a greater post-race sense of pride. There's no getting around it - for me, on that day, it was one or the other. Enjoy Leg 3, or hate it and go sub-11 hours. And I still have no idea which is the better outcome.

Leg 4 (77-100km)
Official title: Lookouts and Lighthouses
Unofficial title: With a Little Help From My Friends
Leg split: 2:30:00 (11th best time)
Elapsed time: 10:56:38
Position at the end of the race: 22nd
Highlight: See 'Elapsed time', above. Special mention to the amazing support I got out on course from my family, Dylan and my friend Franck and his wife Isabelle. They gave me the inspiration I needed to keep going.

5km-ish to go. Smiling on hard packed sand.
(Photo credit: Franck Verez)

4km-ish to go. Not smiling on soft sand.
(Photo credit: Franck Verez)

Lowlight: Losing my cool at Dylan. He'd come down to the beach at Urquhart Bluff to tell me that I was still on track for sub-11 hours. He told me there was only around 6km to go but my GPS watch indicated it was more like 8km. In response to his encouragement I spat back that I wasn't on track and he didn't know what he was talking about (of course, he was the one who was right). Dylan was an absolute superstar all day, without him I would never have achieved what I did, and to speak to him like that was terribly poor form.
Comic relief: at about 81km, after a bit of a sustained climb up a dirt road, you turn right and are faced with a hill that's about 250m long at about 15%. It's not a big hill in the scheme of things, but it was unexpected and, well, I had 81km in the legs. "For fuck's sake!", I cried out and I'm almost certain I heard the relay runner about 50m behind me laugh.

Forcing out a smile for the camera. At least it was downhill.
(Photo credit: Supersport Images)

Over-riding emotion at the time: Determination. At the Aireys Inlet aid station (15km to go) Dylan told me I could still get that sub-11 hour time. Told me the plan was still on. I didn't want to accept that and told him I couldn't, but he wasn't having it. He said he'd check in on me at a few places before the finish, to "make sure I was still running". And as much as I didn't want to, I ran. Even when I was convinced it was a lost cause (even after I'd told him he was wrong at Urquhart Bluff), I ran. Dylan found me again with 21 minutes left before 11 hours and told me I had between 3-4km to go. You better believe I ran then.
Over-riding emotion(s) now: Pride and gratitude. The last 23km, in my first ever 100km, was my best leg. Only 10 people ran this leg faster than me all day and I even managed to pass five relay runners on their one and only leg. And a big part of that was down to Dylan, for telling me to believe in myself and giving me a kick up the arse when I needed it. And for that, I'm very grateful. 

And then it was over. I'd finished. In no time at all, Nicole had filled up my 1L stein and I was enjoying a beer with Regan Welburn, a running friend who had smashed the course to finish in 6th place. I stayed at the finish line for about an hour, cheering friends and strangers over the line and soaking in the atmosphere. The biggest cheer of the day went to the guy who finished 3 seconds within the 12 hour, 1L stein cut off. Amazing scenes.

Finished!
(Photo credit: Supersport Images)

...and finished again
(Photo credits: Dylan Perera)

So, what was I complaining about at the top of this piece? The plan worked, didn't it? Yeah, it did in the end, at least for this particular race. But I suffered more than I ever have to achieve it. The first words I said to my wife after I crossed the finish line were "I never want to do anything like this again". To be fair, she immediately replied, "You said the same thing after Buffalo." 

But maybe this time I mean it. The truth is, for the most part, I didn't have fun out there (and I know this despite the fact that my brain is already at work, reconstructing an alternative version of the events of that day, tinkering with my memory). I felt too keenly the burden of expectations. My expectations and those of others. I'll spend the next few weeks thinking about the reasons why I run, because if it's purely for fun, then I don't see myself running another 100km ultra. If I run for a sense of achievement, would I not be better off returning to road running, with its quantitative focus on times? Friendship? I've got the DTR social runs for that. If it's just for the scenery, well, I can take up bushwalking. But then I look at that finish line picture.......

I thought I had everything planned. Maybe I was wrong.

------------
This plan underwent intense scrutiny late on Friday night after I learned that support crews could leave items at the intermediary checkpoints, rather than providing assistance only at the major aid stations. I'd initially measured all my nutrition (Tailwind) into 750ml servings, two of which would go into a 1.5L bladder. Now, an easier option of 2x500ml bottles at every aid station (major and minor) was possible. So Dylan and I went through the equivalent of that puzzle where you have a 5L jug and a 3L jug and you need to make 4L. We got there in the end and the bottles worked a treat.

Suunto Movescount file: http://www.movescount.com/moves/move77162773

Thursday, 3 September 2015

Adventures in Wonderland


"Tut, tut, child!" said the Duchess. "Everything's got a moral, if only you can find it."
        - Lewis Carroll, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland

So, what was the moral of the inaugural Wonderland Run? Well, more on that later, but firstly, for the uninitiated, the Wonderland Run is the latest trail run/community event/social media extravaganza put on by Big Long Run, aka Rohan Day and his band of merry men and women. That is, the people who brought us the Two Bays Trail Run and, until recently, the Roller Coaster Run (now with Mountain Sports). For Wonderland, Rohan was ably inspired and assisted by the well known and respected trail runner (amongst other things) Matt Bell.

 The incomparable Rohan Day (Mad Hatter) and Matt Bell (White Rabbit)
([Amazing] Photo credit: Tamsin Bearsley)

You can get the details of the run on the website here, but essentially, this was the inaugural running of the event and comprised two main races: a 36km and a 20km trail run through the Grampians (Gariwerd) National Park, based in the regional town of Halls Gap. And boy, did the town get behind this run! Cafes, restaurants, caravan parks, adventure gear stores, all got in on the action and welcomed around 400 runners and their families to their town.

I was sharing a house with a group of fellow Dandenongs Trail Runners and my long time friend Ruth. We'd all arrived on the Saturday, just in time to see DTR Narelle take out first place in the '6 months pregnant' category of Saturday's 8km 'flat' run, in a time that the majority of the Australian populace would only manage on a bike. The Saturday run is just another example of the Big Long Run team just getting it right. It really did seem to set the mood for the weekend and the fact that it was only 8km meant that people of all ages could get involved. 

After a low key Saturday night at the house, making pizzas, watching footy and drinking a couple of beers (you can see I take my pre-race nutrition seriously), race day dawned. It was warmer than I had anticipated, but after a lot of thought I still decided to wear my thermal top. I jogged the 2km to the start line as a warm up and as luck would have it, I bumped into fellow DTRs Cameron and Richard on the way.

DTR ready to go!
(Photo credit: Peter Mitchell)

The warm up had only increased my confusion about whether to wear the thermal or leave it with the rest of my mandatory gear which was being transported to the Mt Rosea carpark. I decided to wear it, concerned about the potential temperature difference between Halls Gap (240m altitude) and the higher reaches of the course (800-1000m).

The last thing to do was to drop my two 500ml bottles in the special needs box to go to the 21km aid station. Now, where was that box? I found Matt Bell, who advised me that it had already left! No matter, Matt said, he'd arrange for them to be taken there anyway. Legend! (Try that at your next road event, or even trail event, and see how far you get!)

Before I knew it, we were off and I settled into a reasonably easy rhythm as we started the first climb to the Wonderland carpark and, beyond that, The Pinnacle. (The race took its name from the Wonderland trail, one of the many trails that are found in the National Park.) 

And just after reaching the aid station at the Wonderland carpark, I witnessed something I never thought I would: deliberate, unrepentant, course cutting. 

Soon after exiting the carpark, you take a left on a trail instead of going straight. The five guys ahead of me went straight and the guy behind me called out "left turn guys". I thought to myself how it would be easy to miss the sign, so I held back and prepared to let them through ahead of me. All of them slowed down, then one of them muttered "this way's quicker" and they all kept going! I announced that they could cut the course if they wanted, but I was going left, and I led the rest of the group down the correct trail. 

And you know what? They missed out on one of the best sections of the course, squeezing through rock formations, climbing up steps, being completely immersed in the environment. And you know what else? It couldn't have been that much quicker to go the other way, because when we merged with the other trail, it was just behind the Gang of Five. I again informed them that they'd cut the course and should go back, but they were apathetic, and continued ahead. I was fuming! This is NOT what trail running was all about.

Part of what the cheats missed out on
(Photo credit: Matilda Iglesias)

As I was stewing on this, I was also stewing underneath that damned thermal top. It became too much and I decided to stop and take it off. A few people went past as I peeled off my layers, but it didn't take long and I pressed on towards the Pinnacle, over some rocky and increasingly technical terrain. Once we'd reached the magnificent views from the Pinnacle, there was some nice running down to the Sundial carpark aid station. This particular aid station was marshalled by the famous Mama Two Bays, and they didn't disappoint - you could hear them from more than a kilometre away! I went through Sundial with another DTR keeping me company (Bryan, who was doing the 20km), and then the courses split, with Bryan starting his descent and me heading towards the start of the climb to Mt Rosea.

Approaching the Sundial aid station with Bryan right behind me
(Photo credit: Kate Ablett)

Once you got above 800m, the weather changed dramatically. We were up in the clouds and the rocks we were running across were wet and slippery (as I found out when I tried to overtake a runner and my feet went out from under me and I crashed to the ground). Deciding that discretion was the better part of valour, I settled into a hike with a like-minded runner named Troy, only running every so often when it was safe to do so. This was without doubt the most technical terrain I'd encountered in a race. And if the climb was hard, the first kilometre of the descent was just as bad, with the slippery rocks slowing us down and requiring us to use our hands to shimmy down some of the course.

Rock scrambling on Mt Rosea
(Photo credit: David Hughes)

But the technical stuff soon gave way to a more familiar type of trail and I commenced the 6km descent to the Borough Huts aid station at 21km. I was running at just under 5:00/km pace, wanting to keep a bit in reserve for the final 15km of the race. I soon got to the bottom of the descent and the very welcome sight of another fantastic aid station, complete with a tea party offering cakes and biscuits as well as your more usual runners' fare.

I grabbed my bottles (thanks again, Matt) and headed off for the final 'flat' 15km around Lake Bellfield then back into Halls Gap. I'd ran most of the course on a family holiday here in December and knew (a) what a grind this section was and (b) the location of five horribly steep pinches on a fire trail on the eastern side of the lake. I settled into a sustainable pace exiting the aid station and passed a couple of guys before being passed myself by Tash Fraser, 2nd placed woman in this year's Two Bays ultra. 

On the way to Lake Bellfield
(Photo credit: Matilda Iglesias)

Tash built up a lead of a couple of hundred metres going around the side of the lake and I thought that was that, because she was running strongly (or at least, she was relative to me!). But when we reached the pinches, which hit you one after the other like a set of waves, I noticed myself slowly reeling her in (we were both also passing several others, who had perhaps not realised how hard this section is, relative to how it looks on the profile).

The Wonderland 36km profile.
[The nasty red pinches barely discernible in the foreground]
(Image credit: Les Corson)

I passed through the Brambuk aid station with about 5km to go only 10-20 seconds behind Tash and managed to pass her on one of the small rises on the trail, with maybe 3km to go. Knowing there weren't any hills from then on and that Tash would be running strongly on the flat, I gritted my teeth and pushed hard. I rounded Delley's Bridge at the northern end of the course and from there it was a completely flat bike trail for about 1.5km to the finish line. 

Running hard towards the finish line, I was greeted by three incredibly enthusiastic girls, cheering each runner home. It was a terrific way to conclude the race and I crossed the line in 4:09 with a massive smile on my face.

Finished!
(Photo credit: Tamsin Bearsley)

Ruth, Chris and Narelle were all there with very kind words, as was trail running good guy Ashley Bennett. I asked Ash how he went and he responded "pretty good" and then at Rohan's prompting, stood on the top step of the podium to be presented with his first place prize! So yeah, "pretty good". And here I must pause to note that Ashley stuck around to the end of the race and handed his winner's prize of a voucher for a new pair of shoes to the final person who crossed the line. An absolute class act and that's why Ash is generally regarded as one of the nicest, most humble guys in our trail running community. 

It was whilst I was giving my housemates a debrief that Narelle mentioned that fellow DTR Les had rolled his ankle and pulled from the race. He was over by the first aid tent, ankle strapped, rugged up in warm clothing, talking to another DTR, Andre, who in contrast had destroyed the course with a typical display of mental and physical strength, to finish 9th overall. 

I went over and provided condolences to Les, who was using this event as one of the final lead in races to his shot at redemption in this October's Melbourne marathon. It was August last year that a trail event had done in his other ankle and derailed his marathon plans and now he was experiencing a wicked sense of deja vu. You can read more about Les's Wonderland experience here.

It's occurred to me that I haven't really done justice to the course. For the record, the first half of the course is spectacular, both the views and the trails. The second half is less of a feast for the eyes, but it certainly has its moments (see below) and is a real mental and physical test after putting yourself through the wringer climbing up to 1,000m and back down again. And true to form, the volunteers and aid stations are the best in the business - as with any Big Long Run event. A sincere thanks to the vollies (with a special mention to the incredible photographers) for helping make it such a special day. Put simply, this is a 'must run' event for any trail runner in Victoria. If you're interstate, put it on your list, too, and come see how a trail run should be organised.

Andre rocking it on the 'unspectacular' (cough cough) part of the course
(Photo credit: Lorraine Aitken)

We spent a few hours milling around the finish line, cheering both friends and strangers across the line. It's probably the longest I've ever spent at the finish line post-race and I loved every minute of it. After deliberating with the DTR crew and one of the runners who was with me at the time, I decided I'd report the course cutters to the race organisers. Maybe nothing will come of it, and maybe nothing should (they didn't gain any time, after all), but it came down to principles - they were told they were cutting the course and they didn't care.


Together again
(Photo credit: Cheryl Martin)

And so, the inaugural edition of the Wonderland Run was over. From my point of view, the event was a resounding success. Rohan, Matt and anyone involved in putting the race together should be very proud of themselves. Let's hope the 2016 edition is as well supported as the 2015 race (I'm sure the local businesses would agree!). On a personal level, I was very happy with how I ran (I'm sure the course recce in December helped), but as always, since I'll never challenge the fast guys and girls, it's more about the experience than the finishing position. 

That's all well and good, but are we any closer to finding the moral of Wonderland? I don't think there is one, but I don't say that to disappoint the Duchess. What I mean is, we'll each find our own moral in this tale, and in the many other stories you can find on the Wonderland Facebook page. I can almost imagine an extended Tea Party, with all the characters from Carroll's novel trying to make their voices heard:

"Course cutting must be eradicated!" asserted the Mad Hatter. 
"Trail runners don't dob in other trail runners!", countered the Dormouse. 
"Start steady, finish strong!", advised the Mock Turtle. 
"Don't get to the finish thinking, 'if only I'd gone harder up Rosea!'", muttered the White Rabbit, looking at his watch. 
"Avoid trail running in the lead up to road races!" warned the Dodo. 
"Running trails like this remind you why you run in the first place!" cried the Caterpillar. 
"Don't forget how quickly you warm up when running!", reminded the March Hare. 
"Nothing beats spending time with like-minded friends!", winked the Cheshire Cat. 
"There's nothing wrong with a little bit of healthy competition!", shouted the Queen of Hearts. 

"Isn't trail running wonderful?", Alice thought to herself, smiling. 


----

My Suunto Movescount file: http://www.movescount.com/moves/move74725284

For two great videos of the run, check out the efforts of Marcus Pain and Peter Southton

Visit the Wonderland Facebook page for more excellent photos, many of them taken by Matilda Iglesias of MiCreations. A special mention also to Tamsin and Andrew Bearsley, who took and posted whole bunch of excellent photos.

Saturday, 18 April 2015

Buffalo Stampede Ultra SkyMarathon: A Memento

Saturday 11 April 2015

9:20pm. Pizza never tasted so good

8:40pm. Finish showering. I think enough dirt came off me to fill one of those golf buggy sand buckets. Everything hurts.

8:10pm. We start the 700m walk along the river back to the house we are staying at. I say 'walk', but that's probably not how an observer would describe it.

7:55pm. "I think I'd like that beer now please, Nicole."

It's over

7:50pm. Successfully pull myself together. I thank Paul, Franck and Nicole for all of their excellent support. Each played a key role in getting me to the finish line.


7:45pm. <incoherent rambling>

7:44pm, 75.8km. I cross the finish line in 78th place out of about 150. Embrace Nicole. Salty discharge forms around eyes. Don't think it's sweat.

7:40pm, 75.1km. Caravan park guests banging on pots and pans, hooting and cheering as I run past. "Looking strong!" Can't wipe the smile from my face.

7:25pm, 72.5km. A very slow, very painful descent later, I finally hit a runnable gradient. I feel like I'm flying. In reality, I'm doing 5:40/km pace.

6:58pm, 70.7km. Start of the Mystic descent. Reasonably certain my toenails are being prised off my toes with every step.

6:51pm, 69.8km. "I told you not to wait for me! Go!", Franck says as he gets to the top of Mick's Track. I decide to take his advice on board this time and start the final uphill section towards the summit of Mystic, not looking back.

6:48pm, 69.8km. Literally howl "Yeeeesssss!!!" It was guttural, primal. I'd done it. I decide to wait for Franck.

6:48pm, 69.79km. Realise I'm 10m from the top.

6:31pm, 69.3km. Franck and I hit the bottom of Mick's Track. About half a kilometre at an average gradient of 43% (give it a moment - let that sink in). In the dark. This is going to be... character building. Franck tells me to go ahead. And I do, slowly. Very slowly. 5 steps, rest. 4 steps, slip back a step. Repeat. I get to a break in the climb, an access road. Someone is there, lost. I find the reflective course marker, alert him to it and push onwards. I don't know how it would be possible to get up this climb without sticks. A truly epic 17 minutes.

Ultra winner Tom Owens near the top of Mick's Track 
(Photo credit: Franck Verez)

6:18pm, 68.3km. Some good banter with a friend of Connie's at the base of Clear Spot. It's great to share a laugh with and hear some positive words from spectators at this point in the race. It's also great to be finished with that f$&%ing descent. Headlamp is switched on at the Bakers Gully aid station. 


6:17pm, 68.2km. 27 minutes, it turns out. For 1.8km. 15:00/km pace. Downhill. Ha. 

What I did NOT look like on the Clear Spot descent
(Photo credit: Buffalo Stampede Facebook page)

6:04pm, 67.5k. Franck, me and Connie. The Three Amigos, slipping and sliding (sometimes on our bums) down this treacherous descent. We've been going for close to 15 minutes and we're only half way down... How long can this take?


5:50pm, 66.5km. I start the descent and that's when it happens - toe pain. Over the course of the run, my toes must have taken a battering and now on this gradient, every step results in a sharp stab of pain in my toes. Franck and I slowly make our way back to Connie.

5:40pm, 66.1km. Just before the Clear Spot summit, we catch up to Connie, part of the Trail Chix running community. We share a few words of encouragement (just 10km to go!). Once we reach the summit, Connie forges ahead whilst I get a final refill from Paul and re-patch my blisters. I thank Paul for about the 50th time today and tell him I'll see him at the finish line.

5:20pm, 64.6km. I ask Franck if that crest up ahead is the top of Clear Spot. He looks at me funny, maybe with pity. "No, not even close. Have you checked your altimeter?" No I hadn't. I check it. 715m. Clear Spot is 1,020m. Right then - just a lazy 300m elevation to go.

5:15pm, 64.2km. A few metres from the top, a friendly face, coming back down the wall. "Nick!" It's my friend Franck, a regular to these trails and very experienced ultra runner who is staying with us tonight and promised to see me out on the trails. I immediately thank him for telling me to not even contemplate this event without using sticks. They've been invaluable on this Wall (about 400m at 37%, depending on where the official 'start' is).

5:06pm, 63.9km... Warner's Wall. Ok, you bastard, here I am.



Warner's Wall
(Photo credits: Franck Verez)

5:00pm, 63.3km. I've caught and passed them all, just before reaching...

4:35pm, 60.2km. I arrive at the Buckland aid station and can see four runners ahead. Paul tells me I'm looking better than most people he's seen come through - I'm running whereas everyone else is "running". This is a great mental boost - I might be hurting, but others ahead of me are hurting more. I have a quick chat to one of the first aid guys whilst Paul attends to my bottles and then run off towards those ahead of me.

4:01pm, 54.9km. Yep, I did. That hill just kept on going. But I'm over the top of it now and I've got about five kilometres of running ahead of me before the Buckland aid station. I think back to my earlier pledge coming through this part of the course and smile as I run freely past a few people who are struggling a bit.

3:26pm, 51.5km. I leave the Eurobin Creek picnic area, with a nagging feeling that I'd underestimated how hard this climb over Keating Ridge was going to be when I proposed the time I'd be at the next aid station in my race schedule.

3:20pm, 51.4km. "You look completely different compared to at the top." That's Nicole's assessment when I arrive at the base of the Big Walk at Eurobin aid station. I'm not surprised - my legs are really starting to feel it . Still 24km and a whole bunch of climbing to go. I'm in 89th position. My parting words to my beloved wife: "Bring one of the beers and a bottle opener to the finish line." 

3:06pm, 49.5km. "I've sprained my ankle before but I'm not going let this one stop me from finishing. Thanks for helping." And I push on.

3:01pm, 49.5km. <Trip, roll, pop>. "I've done my ankle." Fortunately for me, it was the guy 10 metres in front of me. I help him (his name is Oliver) to strap his ankle with a bandage and ask if he needs me to help him to the aid station. 

2:44pm, 46.9km. Ok, I'm about 5km into the run down the Big Walk and my legs are starting to hurt a little now... 

Heading down the Big Walk
(Photo credit: Aurora Images)

1:54pm, 41.5km. I'm
back at the Chalet, having completed the marathon course. I feel really good at this point, apart from the blister on my left heel. I drop into a chair and patch it up properly whilst Paul and Nicole help out with bottles and food.  Almost 7 hours in and I'm feeling good, feeling strong. Nicole confirms this, saying I look remarkably good this far into the race. With that, I'm off, telling them I'll see them at the bottom. 


Still feeling pretty good at the second pass of the Chalet

1:30pm, 39.4km. I pass someone else. This guy. (Or girl. I didn't check.) 




1:16pm, 37.6km. I arrive at the Chalwell Galleries for a bit of fun. The course requires you to squeeze through a hole in the granite, step down some bolted-in ladder rungs and then shimmy through a narrow gap in the rock. Very cool. I've also just passed my longest ever duration out on a run. Into the unknown...






12:36pm, 34.2km. The Big Walk is done. I'm at the Chalet and meet Paul. He tells me that I've made up some ground - people I was 15 minutes behind at Eurobin are only a few minutes ahead of me now. I check my heel - yep, there's a blister. Unbeknownst to Paul, I'd put a first aid kit in one of the bags I gave him, but it's in his car. No matter - there's a first aid tent over there. But no one's manning it! I rifle through their supplies and find some gauze but no tape. A spectator comes to my aid with some tape and I quickly patch it up. By this stage my wife Nicole has also arrived and it's great to see her. I head off on the 7km loop at the top of Buffalo. 

11:51am, 30.2km. Tom Owens flies past in the lead, with DTR member Ash (a spectator today) running behind him, giving him some updates. I say "Hi" and "well done", scarcely believing Tom is about 15km ahead of me! 



Heading up the Big Walk
(Photo credit: Aurora Images)

11:25am, 27.8km. Despite the awareness of a blister forming on my heel, I'm really enjoying the Big Walk. I'm taking it easy, conserving the energy I know I'll need later in the race. That said, I'm still passing people on the way up, one of them Garth, another Jamie from DTR. I run a little, walk a little, resisting the urge to run a bit more.  


About 3km into the Big Walk

10:45am, 24.4km. I start the Big Walk - a 10km climb up the side of Mount Buffalo. My race plan is to take it slow and not get caught up in the KOM competition that times your performance from the bottom to the top and back again. A 10km climb is something very new to me and I want to enjoy it. 

10:40am, 24.4km. The descent from Keating Ridge was uneventful and I arrive at the Eurobin aid station at the foot of Mount Buffalo. I exchange my bottles for a 1.5L bladder, have a quick chat to Paul and I'm off. I'm in 103rd place at this point (although I don't know this until after the results are published).  

9:49am, 17.9km. I enter the Mount Buffalo National Park to start the climb over Keating Ridge. I decide to walk almost from the start, ignoring the people running past me. "It's not about running through this section on the way out," I think to myself, "but I WILL be running through here on the way back."

9:32am, 15.5km. Through Buckland aid station. I take some pictures but they don't do the scenery justice. 


 Departing the Buckland Valley aid station

9:05am, 11.4km. I slip and slide down Warner's Wall, literally falling over three times, sticks flying. So embarrassing. I have red dirt stains everywhere - hands, legs, DTR singlet, shorts. Really looking forward to going up this at the 64km mark...

9:03am, 11.0km. I bump into DTR and SCTR regular Siqi on the way down from Clear Spot, who tells me the next few km are flat after the next descent. It's just that the next descent is the infamous "Warner's Wall"



Start of the descent from Clear Spot

8:49am, 9.3km. That climb up to Clear Spot just keeps... on... going. It takes 40 minutes for 1.8km. On its slopes I draw level with someone who asks me about my blog! My first brush with fame! (Delusions of grandeur? Moi?). His name is Garth and we chat for a bit, with me sharing the good news that my Suunto GPX file is telling me the top is only 300m away. Coming down this hill later on will be interesting, I think to myself,  but I'm pretty sure it won't be too bad. We get to the top and my support crew member Paul is there, with some more Tailwind ready to go


Early stages of the Clear Spot climb
(Photo credit: Aurora Images)


8:12am, 7.5km. Mick's Track finally over, I run past the aid station at Bakers Gully and prepare myself for the second climb: Clear Spot. The photographer perfectly captures my reaction upon seeing the climb:


First glimpse of Clear Spot
(Photo credit: Aurora Images) 


8:00am, 6.2km. This isn't a hill, it's a cliff face! Still, at least I'm keeping my feet, that's three people I've seen fall over, but at least I'm still uprigh... Oh. Never mind. 


The pros descending Mick's Track
(Photo credit: Franck Verez) 

7:56am, 6.0km. We have to go down THAT?!?! 

7:55am, 5.9km. I can see a turn-off ahead. That must be this "Mick's Track" that everyone talks about.

7:42am, 4.7km. We emerge from the trees and we're approaching the helipad at the top of Mystic. The first climb done! That actually wasn't so bad - not sure what the fuss is about, to be honest. I mean, if the other side of this hill is anything like this, it should be relatively easy to climb later on.

7:20am, 3.4km. The serious stuff starts. The climb to Mystic. The first of seven climbs. I settle into an easy rhythm and get out the sticks.

7:03am, 0.5km. I have a chat with my friend and runner extraordinare, Vanessa. We talk about how fast people are running. That's ok, we say - the goal is to be running fast at the end of 75kms, not at the start.

7:00am, 0.0km. Go!

6:59:57am. 3,2,1...

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Suunto Movescount file: http://www.movescount.com/moves/move58806486



Thursday, 26 March 2015

Roller Coaster Run 2015 race report

"Nick, you're aware this is a race, right? Do you want me to go up there and bring you back a pastry or something?"
"Yeah, that would be lovely... Oh alright Rohan, I guess I should get moving."

And so I set off on my second loop of the course, feeling good but not really knowing what was going to be in store for me.

Wait, let me back up a little bit.

The Roller Coaster Run is the brainchild of Michael Clarke and Rohan Day, the same organisers of one of Australia's biggest (by number of competitors) trail runs - the Two Bays Trail Run. Held in the Dandenong Ranges to the east of Melbourne, it comprises a 22km loop which can either be traversed once or twice, with the second loop in reverse for the first time this year.

Oh, and there's about 1,000m of elevation gain per loop.

All quiet at the start/finish area before dawn
(Photo credit: Erwin Jansen, dandyrunner.com)

I signed up for the two loop 'ultra', figuring it would be a good lead up race three weeks out from the 75km Buffalo Stampede Ultra SkyMarathon. This was not only due to the suitable course, but the also the brilliant atmosphere that makes Rohan Day's events so special. I had run the one loop and two loop races before and volunteered last year, so this was the fourth consecutive year I was fronting up to Mt. Dandenong.

Of course, being a member of the Dandenongs Trail Runners, I had also run these trails on countless occasions, so I knew exactly what I was in for. Hills, and lots of 'em.

After catching up with my fellow DTRs before the race, and kind of interrupting the pre-race briefing to take a group photo (sorry Clarkey, it wasn't my decision!), I'd set off at an easy pace, with a goal of a 3hr first loop and a negative split.

DTR on home turf
(Photo credit: Cameron Baillie)

'Easy' in this context meant walking any of the serious hills and cruising the flats and downhills. I was joined by DTR member Peter Southton, who was hoping to complete the first loop in around 2:45-3:00 and then do whatever it took to get to the line.


 Peter and I on the first loop, on Kyeema Track (top, around 2km) and Bradley Track (bottom, around 8km)
(Photo credits: Erwin Jansen, dandyrunner.com)










I really enjoyed having Peter as company and we both had some good banter with other runners, several of whom were commenting on my use of running/hiking sticks on the steeper climbs and descents. I've been using them for a couple of months now, practising for Buffalo where I hope they will really come in handy.

Practising with the sticks up Dodds Track (6km)
(Photo credit: Cameron Baillie)

I had some time checks written down, but it soon became apparent that despite taking it easy, we were going to get to the half way point much faster than three hours. A five minute advantage at the bottom of the punishing Dodds Track climb (5.3km) became a 10 minute advantage at the bottom of the steep Ridge Track (11km) descent, which became a 15 minute advantage at the base of Link Track (17km), which marks the start of the last 5km uphill grind to the line. But there was no apparent reason to slow down, so we kept the same pace until we'd reached the half way point in 2:41. 

It was after having my second cup of Coke and just generally taking it easy, that Rohan reminded me that I wasn't out there for a Saturday stroll. So, Peter and I got going again.

Right from the start of the second loop, I knew I was having a good day. I flew down the steep descent at the start of the loop, enjoying my new-found confidence on the downhills. There was one very slippery descent on Trig Track to go until we got to the Kalorama aid station and the sticks were definitely my friend there, helping to stabilise me as I scythed my way through the poor souls dragging themselves up it, two steps forward, slipping half a step back. I hung back a bit at the bottom and waited for Peter and we both started passing people on the way down the mountain.

Approaching Kalorama aid station (24km) on the second loop
(Photo credit: Cameron Baillie)

[I'd just like to pause here and thank DTR member Cameron Baillie, for giving up his Saturday morning to come out and give us his support and take many great photos, some of which I've posted here.] 

At the base of Link Track (~27km), Peter told me to push on if I wanted to. I thanked him for his company and said I was feeling good so would forge on and see him at the finish line. There began two hours of trail running which I will never forget. 

My strategy to go out easy was starting to pay dividends. As each kilometre went by, I seemed to pass a couple of people who were beginning to find the going pretty tough. I was managing sub- 5min/km on the flatter parts of the course (yes, there are some!) and even when I was walking up the harder hills, I was doing it much quicker than the other people out on course. I get an enormous psychological benefit if I'm the one doing the passing, rather than being passed, in the second half of an ultra, so I was really pleased with how I was going.  

As I hit the southern most part of the course and approached the climb up Ridge Track, a volunteer told me I was looking fresh. This was close to four hours after I started and hearing that made me feel even better. I passed another person going up the steep pinch up Ridge Track, three more on the undulating Banksia, two more on the short Bradley uphill, five more up the School Track grind. As I was descending Range Rd, trail running good-guy Jon Lim (volunteering on the day) said to me "You look like you just started running!"

I have never felt that good so far into a run. Me and my sticks garnered some more comments on the technical descent on Dodds Track, but this time, they were asking me to hand them over! From the base of Dodds Track, the next 3km is a climb up Channel 10 and Zig Zag tracks. It was on Channel 10 that I caught DTR-founder and running legend Peter Mitchell. Peter had dried blood and dirt caked onto his leg from a nasty fall at the 7km mark and after he shared a few encouraging words with me (as always), I decided that the lure of a negative split was too much, so I pressed on towards Zig Zag.

Life's good just before hitting Channel 10 Track (39km)
(Photo credit: Erwin Jansen, dandyrunner.com)

I wasn't looking forward to Zig Zag (860m at 17% average gradient), but it was much easier than I thought it would be, passing another 5 people and getting the (by now) common "you make it look easy with those sticks" comment. At the bottom of the final pinch to Sky High I found Rohan, Clarkey and Tony Langelaan (a better runner than I'll ever be, who always volunteers at this event). I turned the corner and started running up the hill and got a "He's still running!" from Rohan. When I shouted out that a negative split was on, I got a cheer, followed by a quick "That means you didn't work hard enough on the first loop!" from Mr. Race Director.

On my way up, I passed the last of the one loop runners, who I recognised from earlier in the race on Edgar track. I gave her a quick word of encouragement and pushed on towards the line, crossing in 5:06, for a 15 minute negative split. I'd passed 46 people on the second lap without being passed once, which after my disastrous pacing effort at Two Bays was just what I needed before Buffalo. The next hour or so was spent catching up with family and friends, and seeing my first lap running partner Peter cross the line in sub- 6 hours - this from a man who told me he just wanted to beat the 7 hour cut-off. DTR members had again covered themselves in glory, with victories, podiums, PBs and other assorted triumphs.

 The finish line in all its glory
(Photo credit: Erwin Jansen, dandyrunner.com)

And so it was over for another year. This event has really grown on me and the addition of the reversed second loop has just added to its appeal. Of course, when you've got organisers like Rohan Day, Michael Clarke and Kate Ablett, backed up by the best volunteers in the business (and they were sensational, as ever), it's always going to be a special day. On a running front, I've done everything I can to get me prepared for the Buffalo Stampede. Let's hope it's enough.

Suunto Movescount file: http://www.movescount.com/moves/move56565424


Post script: having re-read my piece, I've realised I could be accused of giving myself a smug pat on the back. In response, I would say: (1) this is one of the few races that went even better than I'd planned, so yeah, I'm pretty happy, (2) there were still 38 people who finished faster than me, so I have no delusions about my ability and (3) it's more than likely that Buffalo will knock me down a peg or two!