Go slow to go fast.

North Fork 50K

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Location:

Westminster,CO,USA

Member Since:

Nov 11, 2009

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Other

Running Accomplishments:

Finally started learning how to run in '09 after totally botching it up for the 14 years prior and dealing with chronic IT injury...have had zero IT band pain since fall of '09 and have run way more than ever before in my life...loving it.

PR's

Road Mile: 4:44 - Pearl St Mile August 2011 

2K: 6:32 - Uni HIll 2K 2011

3K: 10:07 - West end 3K 2011

5K - 16:53 - Turkey Leg 5K 2011

10K - 38:38 - Butte to Butte Eugene OR 2003 

Half - Never raced a half

Road Marathon - 2:57:19 - 11/12/2011 - solo.

Trail Marathon - 4:48 - Kings peak August 2011

55K - 4:59:54 - Moab red hot 55K 2011

Short-Term Running Goals:

Be healthy, run injury-free, listen to my body.

Sub 16 min 5K

Sub 34 min 10K

Sub 2:40 Marathon

    2012 Tentative Schedule

  1.  Quicker Quaker 5K January
  2. Boston Marathon - April
  3. ??

Long-Term Running Goals:

Get stronger, faster and more fit as a runner and biker to allow for bigger adventures as the years go on.

Still be running in my 80's.  

Personal:

I'm married to Nan Kennard and she kicks my butt at running.  She has beat me handily in every race we have done together except for a downhill mile we did once.  She is my running inspiration.  I'd like to run a marathon with her someday and actually keep up.  

My Personal Blog

My Family Blog

My Business Blog 

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Bare Feet Lifetime Miles: 282.68
Cycling 2011 Lifetime Miles: 291.40
Altra Instinct July '10 Lifetime Miles: 637.35
Altra Instinct Sep '11 Lifetime Miles: 481.45
Altra Lone Peak Lifetime Miles: 157.50
Altra Instinct Black Lifetime Miles: 69.00
Altra Adam Lifetime Miles: 27.50
Race: North Fork 50K (31.3 Miles) 05:39:15, Place overall: 10, Place in age division: 1
Easy MilesMarathon Pace MilesThreshold MilesVO2 Max MilesTotal Distance
22.000.0010.000.0032.00

 

 ***warning, kind of a long report***

 

It was a beauty of a day in the Colorado Mountains today near Pine....well...3 hours of it was exceptionally beautiful...the other couple hours I can't testify of specifically because my mind was not appreciating it at the time.  More on that below...but here's my race report:

Started at the front this time

I regretted starting at the back of the pack in my first 50K, so I flip-flopped and started right in the front this time.  I'm glad I did.  I warmed up really slow for about 3/4 mile before the race also which felt good.

My goal going into this race was to do it in 5 hours.  It was an arbitrary goal based on a training run with Cody in Logan a couple weeks ago where I felt good for 17.5 miles at 9:20/mile pace.  That run had as much total climbing as this race, so I figured, why not shoot for a 9:30/mile pace at this race and see what happens?  (I can give you several reasons why not in hindsight, but I'm glad I shot high in the end).

20 Miles of purely joyful single track in mostly shade

That pretty much sums up the first 20 miles of the race. I was LOVING being out there, and thoroughly enjoying the trail and the mountains.  Made a few acquaintances with people on the trail, which was nice, but mostly ran alone the entire time.

I settled in by myself just behind the lead group of about 10-12 runners.  Most of those were doing the 50 Mile course and so not in my race.  Apparently the 50 miler had deeper competition, since a bunch of them were going out very strong.    I wanted to do my own comfortable pace and within a mile and half they were mostly out of sight.  But I was ahead of and out of sight of the remainder of the runners.

Once I got to the top of the first climb I decided to take advantage of my weight and open it up on the down hill.  After a while I caught the lead 50 mile woman who was running a really strong pace.  I didn't pass her, and I actually eased up a bit and let her go a little ahead...I really didn't want to go out too fast and zap all my energy.

I passed right through the first aid station, didn't need anything.  I was carrying a 20 and 10 oz. handheld bottle, which ended up working perfect for me.  We just got a 10 oz nathan bottle with a strap, and I liked using that because it has a nozzle which just squirts water out when you squeeze the bottle without having to open the top.  I highly recommend that type of bottle cap, so much easier to use.

At the 2nd aid station at mile 9.9, the female 50 miler was leaving as I got there and I took 20 seconds just to fill my 10 oz and headed out.  I was carrying a clif shot and 10 power gel gummy things, which was plenty for the time being.

Here are my splits:

Aid 1 - 4.53 Miles - 42:44 - 9:25/mi - 1100 feet up

Aid 2 - 9.83 miles into race -  5.30 Mile from last aid - 42:48 - 8:04/mi - 300 feet up - 1000 Feet down

My pace at this point was in the 8:40/mile range, which I knew was faster than I was shooting for.  I'm not completely sure how to judge my overall pace in mountain runs, and I felt like I needed to take advantage of gaining time while I felt good...maybe the wrong feeling to follow, I'm not sure actually in hindsight.  I'm still trying to determine that.

20 seconds in Aid 2

Aid 3 - 5.63 Miles - 58:35 - 10:24/mi - 1000 feet up in 2.5 miles - then 300 feet down over 3 miles

I took it pretty easy going up this uphill, I was steady though.  I ran the whole thing, then I opened up my speed going down a bit, not as fast as the first big down hill though.  I caught up to Steve who was in the 50K about mile 13 and we chatted, then I proceeded forth.  Neither of us knew how many other 50K runners were ahead of us, but we were pretty sure it wasn't many (found out later from Steve that it was none, so apparently I took the lead of the race at this point.  Wish I would have known that, I would have probably eased up a bit.  Although, I really wasn't racing to win, I was just shooting for an overall time goal at this point.)

I was in Aid 3 for 1:31 refilling both bottles and eating some watermelon.

Aid 4 - 19.54 miles into the race -  4.08 Miles from last aid - 37:19 - 9:09/mi - 700 foot descent for 3.25 and then up 100 to the aid station

I was in Aid 4 for 3 minutes, I had to jog back to my drop bag and deposit my shirt so it wouldn't be dangling behind my pants.  My overall average at this point was up to about 9:11/mile.  I figured I still had a shot of averaging 9:30/mile overall, this would get me at the finish in about 4:55 if I could pull that off.  I had one more 1000 ft climb, some down hill, then a 3-400 foot climb, and downhill to the finish.   The first two 10 mile sections were pretty similar, and I figured that was pretty good figuring.

Then within a half mile after aid 4 all my figuring started to be rapidly thrown out as invalid.

Half mile up the trail I realized that I left my Vespa pouch on the water jug at the aid station.  Since that was a critical element of my race nutrition plan, I was somewhat dismayed and annoyed at myself for this.  This started a trigger of mental events that led me pretty much to mental worthlessness.  It was a strange and difficult experience.

This next section of the course annihilated me.  But I'm pretty sure I helped the course out a lot with a bunch of self-annihilation.

The mind is a funny thing I found out, and mine happens to be pretty stubborn and annoying at times like these.  Here is what was going on with my mind at this point:

  1. Mind: That sucks that you forgot that VESPA pouch...stupid.
  2. Me: I'll just run back and get it...no...that's lame, would add a mile and cost me tons of energy.
  3. Mind: You really screwed up not taking that vespa.
  4. Me: It will be fine, I've got plenty of gel, salt and water.
  5. Mind: Nope, its totally going to screw up your race.
  6. Me: huh....we'll see I guess
  7. Mind: You're tired.  You only got 4.5 hours of sleep last night and 5 the night before...you can't expect to keep running fast on so little sleep.  You may as well quit now...you're way too tired.
  8. Me: Yeah....I do feel pretty tired all of a sudden (strange how I felt fantastic half a mile ago).
  9. Mind: This is getting hot, and tiring.  Why are we still running, this isn't fun anymore?  Let's just stop.
  10. At about Mile 22 I succumbed to this one, stopped and stretched for 2 minutes, got passed by a dude.
  11. Mind: This really sucks...and we still have 9 more miles of this...I really wish we could just quit at this point:

OK you get the picture.  It was a battle with my mind, , and my mind's demands grew stronger and stronger and would not let up,  and I lost that battle unfortunately.  I suffered pretty bad between these aid stations, and walked up the hill a lot, and lost huge time on my average.  And that was also a very handy little tool in my minds arsenal to dig at me with and discourage me with.

Aid 5 - I don't know...Not good.  stopped to stretch in the middle there somewhere.  Suffered through the 1100 foot climb.  Walked a lot.

At this aid station they had Ice, which was REALLY nice.  I was really sick of warm water at that point.  It felt good.  But it also felt kind of weird and messed with me a bit.  The ice and cold in my system was kind of a shock.

Suffer Fest 2010!

If someone would have notified me that Suffer Fest 2010 was starting today at precisely 10:15 AM, I'm pretty sure I would have stayed home and sat that one out. (Glad they didn't tell me that, because overall I loved the race...but did not enjoy the suffer fest portion.)

At mile 25 I was running down hill slowly and any slight uphill rise I was now walking.  My mind was out of it.  I didn't want to be out there anymore...I had definitely lost all competitive drive.  I just wanted to be done running, and went through my options of quitting.  Fortunately there weren't any quitting options, because I would have taken them.  I'm glad I didn't.

But I did feel perfectly justified at this point when I found a shady grove of trees off the side of the road and proceeded to crawl in and lay down on the ground.  My main justification to myself was that Killian Jornet was passed by Geoff Roes in the Western States 100 as he was laying in the river for who knows how long, and he still pulled off a 3rd place finish.  Perhaps a quick rest was just what I needed!  (it certainly was all the excuse I needed at that point)

Ahhhh.  Done.  Not running anymore.  Running sucks.  Why was I still trying to run?  Haven't I run far enough for one day?  Running is not fun for me right now...I've had enough fun for one day.  So I'll just lay here and that will be nicer.

It was nicer for the moment.  I was glad to not be running any more.  I was stretching, and relaxing.  But soon, my logic (and pride) kicked into gear and told me that I really didn't want to throw away a perfectly fine race out of complete mental weakness and that I would not be happy with myself for caving in to my mind completely.

A couple people (one guy, one gal, in the 50K) passed me unawares as I was laying there vegging.   I got up and got moving again after being in there for almost 4 minutes.  I did feel a little better.  But I walked for a couple minutes, and the backs of my hammies were kind of tight when I walked, so it was actually more comfortable to run again and I did.  It wasn't fun though, I assure you of that.  It was mentally painful.  It wasn't really physically painful, mostly mental.  It was really strange.

Why??? What's up with that?  Why couldn't I just kick my mind into gear and keep loving the run?  I was still in beautiful country, single track, gorgeous day.  But I couldn't convince myself it was fun anymore for the life of me.  Weird.  So I just focused on putting one foot in front of the other as best I could.

Finally after summiting the climb and running a LONG plateau, I hit the last aid station and it was virtually 3 miles of down hill from there.  I was able to pick up my pace to 7:30's and was FINALLY recovering energy and feeling pretty decent again.  Still not fantastic, but much better.  It was nice to be moving somewhat quickly again.

Finished!  Nice, very glad to stop running.

It was fun running in the last half mile to the finish with all my kids!  I couldn't keep up with Abe though...I tried...but by that point I was ready to stop and was content with my 8 min mile pace on the flat trail to the finish.

Total time: 5:39:15 - 10:52/mile average - 4800 feet ascent - 4800 feet descent.

Turns out I was 10th overall and 1st in my age group of 30-39.  I was pretty pleased with that result after the major breakdown I had. 

I didn't hit my goal of sub 5 hours, but I did hit my goal of being in the top 10, so that's cool I guess.

In thinking back now, I realize that I could have won that thing possibly.  OK, ok, 10th place is a far cry from first, but it is certainly possible that if I could have staved off the bonk somehow I could have taken won.  I was in the lead at Mile 20 and feeling good before my mistake and the ensuing mental drama.  I ended up losing by about 22 minutes to the first guy who came in at 5:17.  So take out the 6 minute nap stop, the 3 minute stretch stop, and remove the bonk and I think I really could have done it closer to 5 hours.  Which is kind of cool to think of.  I could see how running with the attempt to actually win a race would add another element of fun into the mix.  But I wasn't attempting to win this race at any point today, I was jut focused on hitting a time goal, which happened to be faster than the eventual winning time.

Even though running completely sucked for about 5-6 miles today...I'm over that.  I'm grateful for the the 20 miles of pure running bliss and the opportunity to put my body and mind to the test and see what I'm made of.  Definitely some room for improvement, which is great.  I'm happy that I shot for a high goal, even though I missed it, because I think I'm better for it.  It was a cool experience to attempt it.  And you miss all the shots you don't take right?

As far as the North Fork 50 race, I give it two big thumbs up!  A fantastic trail system and location for a race, a very runnable and very smooth, fun course, and well put on.  Great food and atmosphere afterward etc.  Great La Sportiva race shirts.  I'm guessing I'll be back next year to try to beat my time by an hour.  I'm pretty sure I could run that course in under 4:45 with another year of experience.  It would be fun to do it  (or maybe it would hurt even worse the last 10 miles...either way it would be less time in the pain cave I suppose).

Here are some shots running into the finish with the kids.   It was REALLY nice to see them at that point.

 

Ali catching up

 

 

The kids loving the finish sprint

 

 

Me loving being so close to the finish

 

 

This guy absolutely smashed the 50 Miler in about 7 1/2 hours...he looked spent from the fast pace on a hot afternoon.

 

Inov-8 Roclite 295 Miles: 32.00
Night Sleep Time: 4.50Nap Time: 0.00Total Sleep Time: 4.50Weight: 0.00
Comments
From Cody on Sat, Jul 17, 2010 at 22:45:38 from 174.52.244.185

What a great, then bad, then great, then I guess it is ok race! Nice detail on the sufferfest. Makes me want to go out and run a 50K. Ok, not so much. I think you are right about the hour shave next year. A bit more consistent training and experience with the pain cave and you are there. Good work!

From Bryce on Sun, Jul 18, 2010 at 16:50:59 from 174.52.190.220

That was a great report. Its always good to read about both sides of racing, the great, and the ugly pain and metal games that sometimes come. Way to go for it! seriously, that takes guts to go out that hard and try to hang on, usually equals big pain, but big reward. Is this your second ultra? geeeze, with a little more experience you'll be on the podium often. It was good to read your analysis of what went wrong and to hear how certain you were it could be improved, again, takes guts to look at it realisticly rather than make excuses. That was a great race even with the mishaps. Congrats

From Burt on Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 01:43:43 from 68.225.214.248

Good read, Aaron. Well written. I've gone through the same mental battles, but usually it's only for 10 mile runs. I like the first picture where it's like - Ali, get out of the way!! :)

From Scott Wesemann on Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 10:37:23 from 66.239.250.209

That was a great report Aaron. Congrats on a strong race even though you had your issues to fight through. That is a really fast time for that many miles and that elevation gain/loss.

From jun on Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 13:48:58 from 66.239.250.209

Dude, seriously cool write-up. I'm impressed and amazed. I think you'll go under 5 hours next year, for sure.

Hey, why don't you plan on me coming out for that? Not sure if I'll do the 50k or 50mile, but I'd like to bring the family out and take a whole weekend. Sounds like an awesome race.

There is so much to be learned from those low moments. I had a similar experience at Sapper Joe this year and I learned an absolute TON. You'll see the payoff in the next race, for sure. Congrats man.

From Aaron Kennard on Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 22:11:03 from 174.51.250.151

Thanks guys. To those of you who have done 50K's and 50 milers, your feedback here is appreciated. I only ate between 5-600 calories the entire race. I think, based on past endurance events, mostly biking, but also my first 50K, that that probably wasn't sufficient and might have been a big factor in my breakdown. Any thoughts on the right amount to consume for 50K event?

Also, it started to get really hot at about mile 20, and I didn't increase my salt intake. I only took 5 scaps during the race. But I think I may have been better off with a couple per hour the last couple hours in the heat, any thoughts on that?

bryce - don't get your hopes up on me podium finishing just yet...that was a pretty non-competitive 50K. If Cody and Jon were there I'm pretty sure it would have been won in under 4:30. But thanks for the confidence!

jun - that would be awesome if you came out for it next year. You can stay with us if you do or we can camp up there. It is a great one, I will definitely want to do the 50K or 50 next year.

From jun on Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at 22:58:05 from 97.126.226.89

Well, you should really be taking in about 250 - 300 calories an hour, or two gels.

When it starts to get warm I alternate between one and two Scaps an hour. When it starts to get really hot I take two an hour at the same time.

You'll figure out what works for you as you do more longer runs. That is just what works for me.

From Scott Ensign on Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 01:19:13 from 67.40.113.148

wow, you are tearing up these races on limited training (only 582 running miles on the year??). the cross training, garage sweeping, and core work must be helping. and imagine what you can do when you start piling up the training miles. you are going to be the guy to beat soon! anyway way to fight through the pain and finish a tough race with a great time, awesome!!

From Danny on Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 01:58:23 from 24.19.35.209

Way to go Aaron! That's really interesting about the mental game being so tough, while the physical still seemed to be working. Keep doing this stuff and learn all the secrets before we jump into our 50 miler in September. Congrats again!

From Aaron Kennard on Tue, Jul 20, 2010 at 13:41:59 from 174.51.250.151

jun - that's been my approach to it in the past. I should probably stick with that, doing at least a few hundred calories an hour. The reason I didn't in this case was because using VESPA changes the approach a bit, using a bit less calories and slowly intaking them throughout. I think one main problem was I didn't increase calories when I missed the 2nd vespa. But also, I don't think I'm sold on the fewer calorie/vespa thing in the first place. I'm pretty sure at this point I bonked because I didn't have enough calories.

Scott - I think the floor sweeping has been the best thing...I highly recommend it!

Danny - Thanks...I'm pretty sure I'll have it all figured out by september...wait, no...nevermind...probably not. But we'll see I guess. The more I think about it though, the more I realize it was a mental/physical combo, and if I had done differently on my nutrition, it would have greatly facilitated me in the mental battle I believe.

From Bryce on Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 01:29:55 from 174.52.190.220

Aaron, sounds like you have a good plan already but I'll throw in my 2 cents. I agree with Jun, I'm pretty solid on 200 p/hr, sometimes more if my stomache can take it, especially during more high intensity runs, e.g. 50K verses slower paced 50 mile. Any less than that and I get bonky pretty fast. 2 scaps an hour is standard for me, keeps cramps at bay but also settles my stomache alot.

From Lucky Skunk on Wed, Jul 21, 2010 at 02:19:53 from 67.166.117.14

Love the commentary Aaron! I've had the exact same conversation with myself every marathon I've done (I know, this is way cooler than a marathon, but it's all I've got). Anyway, I was just going to say that I've appreciated the voice getting a little softer with each race. So maybe there is something to the "experience" factor. Way to go!!!!!

P.s. I love the pics--Looks like Crispin was really enjoying it!

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