7th state conquered |
When I decided to run 50 marathons in 50 states (thanks Dean
Karnazes), I knew that for California I HAD to run Big Sur, one of the top 10
marathons worth traveling for, where “you can race through stunning scenery
in a far-flung locale”. I would’ve loved to run Long Beach, city I know
like the palm of my hand, and where I have run every inch of it, but the
spectacular views that Big Sur offers are second to none. Forbes is right when describes it: “California’s
most beautiful drive is the route for this foot race. You’ll hug the coast on
Highway One from Big Sur all the way down to Carmel. The hills and the
headwinds are difficult, but the gorgeous views of the Pacific Ocean serve as
inspiration to keep going. This point-to-point course sells out year after
year, so…” to be able to conquer this hilly terrain I registered on opening
day, 9 months before, mid July 2011. It was sold out in a month.
I had a couple of marathons to run before Big Sur: Dunedin,
NZ, and Houston, TX. So, my formal marathon training for Big Sur would be a
13-week training immediately after Houston (Jan 15). My decision of training
really hard was due to Big Sur marathon profile. Steep hills (up and down) plus
headwinds. I was not planning on PRing but just on being able to handle the
course with grace. I planned to take a camera with me during the race (I never
do this) and take as many pictures I could. It would be a run for fun and
beauty. But my training dictated different. It was the perfect training, in
both, quantity and quality, achieving amazing PRs in every distance I raced
during the 13 weeks. From the 2-miler to the 20-miler, all my races were beyond
fantastic. Then, “run-just-for-fun”, was radically changed to
“run-the-best-race-I-can-run.” No camera, no photos, but race.
I was very nervous. Though I live surrounded by steep hills,
Big Sur hills intimidated me, especially, the 2-mile uphill, 500 ft climb from
mile 10 to 12. I read tons of reviews, and 90% of people agreed that the hills
were hard. 10% of reviewers mentioned that were not really the hills but the
wind. The race director mentioned both. I learned the profile by heart. I mimic
the hills running them even steeper. If Big Sur 10 to 12 miles hill was 4.8% I
practiced 2-mile hills at 6%. I
practiced, practiced, and practiced.
On 4/27 I was completely ready for the “battle”, and boarded
my airplane, Seattle-Monterey. I stayed at my dear friend Helena’s home. Helena
made this trip memorable. We went to the expo where I stayed the minimum
possible time (not fond of spending neither money, nor time at Expos). There
were only two things I needed: 1) My bib and bus ticket to Big Sur 2) Meet up
with Bart Yasso as planned. After 1) I went for 2) and there he was and
exclaimed: Lizzie! We hugged and he told me: “Lizzie, you have broken
all your PRs this season, you’ll PR, you’ll do fantastic”. I gave Helena my
camera to get a picture with Bart, and he told her: Yes, we have a lot of
pictures together!
With Legend Bart Yasso. |
Helena and I quickly walked the expo, and had to stop in
2 additional stands. The piano: One of the superb things Big Sur has is the
pianist at mile 13 playing the most amazing music on a grand piano. I stopped
and told him: I will enjoy your music on Sunday for sure, but I am not
planning on stopping to take a picture with you, so let’s do it now.
With 13-mile pianist. In the back you can see the majestic grand piano and the pianist performing during the race. |
Next stop was for that delicious liquid that girls like so
much: wine, from Ventana’s vineyard. They didn’t have cups but handled me the
bottle that had left about half a glass. I drank the wine in a not ladylike
way, but that was OK. Helena, as a good girl scout, built her own paper cup
with a Ventana flyer.
On Saturday, a sunny day, 50F/10C, at 9am we drove the
course. I normally don’t like to see a course beforehand, but I really wanted
to have my own pictures. I am a photo-geek, and not having pictures of that
scenery would’ve disappointed me. It was beautiful. The views were amazing. I
took some pictures from the car, but there was one spot where I wanted to get
out. And… the truth was in my face. The wind! There were a couple of runners
also driving the course, and they were more than concerned; they were from
Florida… yes, you know what it means. They have no hills at all. Good luck.
We stopped and go. Helena was so amazing and patient. We
drove hills down and up and up and down. I was in a continuous OMG attitude. We
got to Big Sur, and now we drove the course in the way it was to be run. I
checked the points of concern, of easiness, the 500-ft climb in a shot, the
500-ft decline in another shot, more uphills, more downhills, an American flag
completely horizontal for the high winds, and I only had to summarize it as “The
course is indeed HORRIBLY HILLY and the wind is HORRIFIC.... Horrific with
capital HHHHHH!!!! Cliffs, coast... you know, translates to wind... But
regardless, it's the most spectacular course I've
ever seen.”
Helena hosted other two Washingtonians who arrived from Port
Townsend on Saturday afternoon, Scott a runner, and John a hiker/skier. We had
a wonderful dinner at home, amenable conversation, and ridiculous laughter. I
retired early, 9am, our bus to Big Sur would depart at 4 am, race start time
6:45 am.
Though it took me one hour to fall asleep I had a good
night. Got up at 2:50 to have my coffee, prepare the oatmeal that I would take
with me, and got ready. Average temperatures at Big Sur at 4ish am are in the
low 40’s, so throw away clothes are indispensable. I had two bottom layers,
sweat and windbreaker pants, and three top layers, 2 fleece sweaters plus a
coat with fleece inside. Two pair of gloves. Scott and I boarded the bus and had a good talk for
about 15 miles. Then, we both felt seasick, shut up, and rested until we got to
Big Sur.
The excitement was obvious when we got to Big Sur. We went
immediately to the porta-potties. After that we had hard time to find a spot on
the sidewalks to sit. Every inch was already taken, and not all the buses had
yet arrived. It was 46F/8C and I only needed one sweater and the coat, so I have a
sweater to spare. I offered it to a girl that was shivering. Some people were
not warm enough. I don’t understand this, as this is a must in all marathons
where you have to wait for the start of the race a couple of hours at night in
the cold. I assumed they learned the lesson.
I ate my oatmeal about 5 am. Chatting with Scott made the
time fly. I wasn’t even thinking of the race; no race jitters whatsoever
because I was very distracted with our conversation. At 6:15 they started
calling people to the start line, starting with wave 3 (self-seeded). I would seed
myself in wave 2. We made a second line to the bathrooms at 6:15 thinking we
would have quite a line, but no, only took 5 minutes. And as a “typical girl”
after that, I made the line again, what the heck. Scott waited. At 6:30 I got
my GU and went to my wave area. There was Bart on the “scaffolding” with the
race director. He saw me and said Lizzie! Good luck, he blew me kisses and extended his body down to reach my hand. 5 minutes of fame, and Scott
mentioned “ How cool was that!”
Scott & I in a long wait for the start |
As I am over analytical, I had studied everything I could
about that course and had a strategy that I had practiced to perfection: To run
by effort. Now was the time to execute it on race day:
·
75-78% miles 1 & 2
·
80-85% from mile 3 to 10, hold that HR as much as I can
through miles 10-12
·
85-88% through miles 12- 18
·
See if I can sustain 90% from mile 18 to 24
·
Whatever is left for the last 2 miles.
Here is how the strategy worked in each of the sections:
Strategy: 75-78% miles 1 & 2
The first two miles were downhill. People were flying.
The race director highly recommends to pace yourself for the first half
of the race. You don’t know what is coming; and if you think you know what is
coming because you’ve studied the profile and have driven the course (i.e: Me),
you don’t know what it means; and if you know what it means is because you’ve
run it before, and you are not flying these miles.
My HR was at 77% and I kept it for 2 miles. I got an
expected pace for the effort for the first mile, but it’s beyond me what
happened at mile 2. I noticed I was going slower, but I was at 77%, so I
decided not to over think it and kept the effort. I had 24 miles ahead of me to
be worried for.
Splits;
1- 10:09 - 77%
2- 11:08 - 77% (???)
2- 11:08 - 77% (???)
Strategy: 80-85% from mile 3 to 10
Miles 3 to 6 were very easy. Per race director this is where
most people have their faster times, it’s fairly easy to go for a faster pace,
and there is the reminder: Pace yourself for the first half of the race. You
don’t know what is coming. At mile 6 we were starting to feel the heat. The
shade of Big Sur trees is gone and is sunny. It’s around 53F/12C. I tossed a
pair of gloves, and my hand warmers. I am concerned, if this is at mile 6, I’ll
be fried at the end. At mile 7 I see a grey cloud coming toward us from the
hills, it looked like a huge mosquito cloud. When I got to it, it’s dense fog,
I feel a nice breeze that cools me down. I am thankful until… the nice breeze
became a savage wind of 30mph. And it’s cold, and I asked “why did I toss a
pair of gloves?” Worse, “why did I toss my hand warmers?”
I get to mile 7 with 2 cows welcoming it (Las Vacas de
Helena). We’re running by beautiful cows’ pasture that I knew it was there
only because I saw it the day before. On race day, you could see nothing. It was
completely foggy. In my battle with the wind and fog, I see a familiar face
passing by me, I recognize him: Dino!!!!!!!
He turned and he said Hi!. We met in Seattle a couple of years ago. He
is the one that led and inspired me to 50 marathons in 50 states. We talked
about this being the 7th, only 43 to go. And he said: “You picked
the right one for California.” My reply, indeed I did. He said “Good
luck, and BTW, I love your style”, referring to my “stars and stripe”
marathon uniform. Thanks Dino… And he took off. One of the
fittest men in the world: Dean Karnazes.
My splits during this section were:
3- 9:02 - 84%
4- 9:52 - 84%
5- 9:39 - 85%
6- 9:50 - 86%
7- 9:59 - 85% - first wind battle
8- 10:07 - 87%
9- 11:00 - 84% - huge wind battle. I intentionally kept the lower effort.
10- 9:26 - 88% (The 2-mile hill from 10-12 really starts before mile 10).
4- 9:52 - 84%
5- 9:39 - 85%
6- 9:50 - 86%
7- 9:59 - 85% - first wind battle
8- 10:07 - 87%
9- 11:00 - 84% - huge wind battle. I intentionally kept the lower effort.
10- 9:26 - 88% (The 2-mile hill from 10-12 really starts before mile 10).
I got to the beautiful expected feared 2-mile climb at mile
10, a climb of 500 ft (4.8%) It was foggy. I simply told myself: 2 miles
Lizzie, just 2 miles. That’s it. I started climbing and though I elevated the
effort more than I wanted, I never felt aerobically tired, so I decided to keep
it there, 90%. I was very, very focus on the uphill and the wind. For mile 11
to 12 I drafted behind 2 big guys (not fat but tall and with wide back and
shoulders). They were running together, so they build me a nice wall for me to
draft. I was literally on their toes, to the point I had sometimes to step back
because I was going to be all over them. They probably hated me. It worked
well. Though I was in 90% it didn't feel bad. I ran those 2 hills with good
form, and never felt exhausted or desperate. When I arrived to mile 12 I
screamed like King Kong at the top of the Empire State. It was like conquering
the summit, thinking the rest of the hills was not going to be bad at all and
that I would chew each of them. If I was wrong.
11- 11:06 - 90%
12- 11:18 - 92%
Strategy: 85-88% through miles 12- 18
Mile 13 is a brutal downhill, the same 500 ft we climbed,
now 500 ft down, but I was not scared at all. I knew I had power. I had worked
legs extensions for three months to be ready for these kind of hills. I learned
how to run downhill fast and leaning forward. I was ready. I flew the decline, 8:12 min/mile. I was
happy. There was no much to see, it was very foggy. Then the fog started to go
away and Bixby Bridge was there. At its very center is the very half of the
race. Goosebumps. The amazing music, the grand-piano, the pianist in his
tuxedo, the ocean can be seen now, at my left, it seems unreal, sub-real, but
is real, is all mine, and I am in heaven.
I continued my journey. At mile 16 I am in good shape. There
was a climb, but I have kept overall a 10 min/mile for a 4:2ish race. At mile
17ish I felt a school of fish behind me. It was the 4:30 pacer with tons of
people in a cluster. I didn’t mind. I was not even tired. My legs were fine. I
was in complete synch. I knew I had what I needed to pass them later. But then,
just then, the headwind slashes back and I started losing ground.
13- 8:12 - 91%
14- 9:28 - 89%
15- 10:08 - 86%
16- 10:29 - 85%
14- 9:28 - 89%
15- 10:08 - 86%
16- 10:29 - 85%
17- 10:42 - 84%
18- 11:15 - 83%
18- 11:15 - 83%
Past mile 13. Bixby Bridge in the background. |
The answer to the strategy was no. I still was 8 miles away.
I would not be able to keep that HR with that wind. I could not afford to bunk
at mile 22-23, so I decided to keep the effort close to what I had had
throughout the race. At mile 19, there was an uphill that couldn’t even be
noticed in the profile. And that’s when I realized what the 10% of the
reviewers said: The enemy is not the hill, is the wind. The headwind at
this spot was a constant 40 mph. BRUTAL. It made any hill
"un-runable". I looked right and left and everybody was walking. I
decided to spend less energy walking than trying to jog that particular hill.
If I would've known about this mile 19 wind, I would've stayed with the 4:30
pacer and her mass of people and draft at the back, but I let them go because I was feeling good and
confident I would pick up the pace and pass them later. But it is all would've,
should've, could've. Crystal balls were not part of my marathon training kit.
It was hill after hill after hill with wind, and wind, and
wind. I had given up battling hills after the 19 one. So every time one came, I
just swallowed it, kept going, and pushed downhill. Hamstrings and calves
started to be sore about mile 20 but found a table with Bengay and put a ton on
the back of my legs; it helped a lot. Mile 22 was horrific. At mile 23 we were
spoiled with the famous strawberry ladies, and tons of fruits. I grabbed 5 and
ate them along a mile, little by little, pretty much only extracting the juice.
It was getting really hot but I was not going to drink more water. We probably
were now in 60F/16C. When I finished this section, I was ready for the last two miles and my final
strategy.
19- 11:49 - 85% (brutal wind)
20- 11:53 - 84%
21- 11:11 - 81% (I was distracted here)
22- 12:23 - 85%
23- 10:37 - 87%
24- 11:27 - 85%
20- 11:53 - 84%
21- 11:11 - 81% (I was distracted here)
22- 12:23 - 85%
23- 10:37 - 87%
24- 11:27 - 85%
Yes, it was hard. |
Strategy: Whatever is left for the last 2 miles
I knew there was an uphill at mile 25 that looked no big
deal the day before, but today was going to look like a mountain, but I knew I
had the marathon in my pocket. I had some stuff left in my tank. I crank it up
and raced those 2 miles with power, though my speed was never the same I have
at that HR. It was 2 min/mile slower. At mile 26 I saw John (hiker/skier) with
his camera waiting for me. This was so sweet of him. I saw him running by the
sidewalk to catch these mementos. It made me feel so grateful that there was a
man that I had only known for 24 hours, running after an injury to take
pictures of his new friend. Then I saw Helena, she was there with a camera as
well. I blew her a kiss. And there was the finish line, I felt as glorious and
victorious as any marathoner is while crossing that magic line. And Bart was
there, and hugged me tight and told me “great race. PR!”
25- 10:48 - 85%
26- 10:24 - 92%
26.2- 2:05 - 95% (10:00 min/mile)
26- 10:24 - 92%
26.2- 2:05 - 95% (10:00 min/mile)
With Bart: You PRd Lizzie! |
Afterthoughts
I couldn’t be happier. Because during this training season
my Half was 1:56, and 20-mile race was 3:10 with tired legs, my expectations
were in the 4:20ish. But as I said in my last blog: “There’s No Formula ButRace Day.” Race day is the real thing. I had the 4:20ish pace up to mile 18 and
was feeling strong and sure that I was going to pick up the pace, but the wind
chewed me after that.
I never had sore quads what tells me I definitely know how
to run downhill. They were pretty steep. Never felt too tired or spent, but
with all and all it was hard to battle the wind. I am really happy I ran by
effort because if I would've tried to hit paces that would've killed me
earlier. For fueling I had what I had practiced for the whole training season.
I got Gatorade about mile 4 and 8 (or whatever those stations were), skipping
the ones in between. At mile 12 (summit!!!) I got a salt stick, got GU about
16-17, and at 21 another salt stick, just in case. 1/3 banana offered at mile
14ish, and the strawberries at mile 23. These fruits were just a treat.
I don't usually buy pictures of the races (I'd be ruined) but I think the official photos covered my Big Sur story pretty good, so I will invest on them. In the meantime here are the proof pix; they will be replaced them when I have the originals.
Recovery & Thanks
Scott (who ran a fantastic 3:35), John, Helena, and I had a
wonderful celebration at Helena’s home with a lot of wonderful food, more nice
conversations, and more ridiculous laughter. It was a fantastic team, two
runners and two crewmembers to drive us and spoil us.
I flew back home same Sunday afternoon, got home at midnight, slept 6 hours, and went to work on Monday. I
felt a little bit sore, not much. Slept 7 hours and got at 4:45 am on Tuesday
for a 5 mile run with my friend Michelle. After the run I was really tired. I
decided to skip my Wednesday run to be able to sleep in. I got up after 12
hours of sleep and felt brand new. No soreness whatsoever. I concluded that I
ran with very good form as I didn’t have back or hip pain during or after the
race.
Thanks to all my friends that shared the training journey
with me, but special thanks go to my running partner Michelle, who was
instrumental during my endurance build-up; to Helena for being such an amazing
host offering her kindness and warm home, meals, and friendship; and last but
not least, actually, first than anybody else, to my adorable Hubby Randy, who
patiently accepted me being away in the mornings, afternoons, and weekends for the past 3 months to
run and be prepared for the conquer of California.
To run a good Big Sur
requires hard training. There are many words that describe it, but for me there
are only two, Big Sur: Spectacularly Relentless or Relentlessly Spectacular?
6 comments:
Lizzie, you ran a spectacular race after months of perfect training. Could not be happier for you!
Lizzie, you ran a spectacular race after months of hard training. Could not be happier for you!
You are not only a marathon runner, you are a scientist about it.
What a report!
It almost makes me want to run another! (Almost...)
Oh LL! Spectacular! You inspire me so! I, too, hate winds... even worse than hills. But this one is my CA pick. Dean and Bart -- oh you lucky gal!
Lizzie, you did all the hard work, all I did was show up to run with you! Looking forward to lots more of that, too. We'll still be hobbling around in the dark when we are 75!
Michelle
Lizzie Lee I thought I had commented on this but I hadn't. What a race. And the Bart! And Dean! Girl you are incredible - such hard work and it's all paid off!
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