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National Marathon DC

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Location:

UT,

Member Since:

Dec 31, 2007

Gender:

Female

Goal Type:

Marathon Finish

Running Accomplishments:

I ran my first marathon as a teenager in 1981 with my Dad (The Coronado Marathon). Since then I've run St, George (3x) Utah Valley (3x) Ogden (1 full, 2 halves) Park City (1 x) Boston Marathon (1x) Washington DC (1x) Moab Half Marathon (6x) ,Ye Old Freedom Festival 5 & 10K (a million x) and many others.

But I'm all done with that now.  I'm officially a jogger.

Short-Term Running Goals:

My running goal is to keep on keepin' on.

 

Long-Term Running Goals:

Jog into the sunset.

Personal:

I like being outside.

Favorite Blogs:

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Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Saucony ProGrid V Lifetime Miles: 479.51
Saucony Ride Lifetime Miles: 841.34
Saucony Tangent Lifetime Miles: 150.93
Saucony Ride Lifetime Miles: 307.50
Race: National Marathon DC (27.5 Miles) 04:41:30, Place overall: 2255, Place in age division: 72
Slow milesFast milesTotal Distance
26.201.3027.50

They said when we crossed the finish, that there was a 20 minute disparity between gun and chip time? Here are my splits/time off Garmin the 4:23:something

9:30/9:27/9:11/9:00/9:36/10:05/10:11/

10:17/10:03/11:06/9:17/9:30/9:31/10:07/10:00/10:19/9:30/

10:02/10:01/10:16/10:19/11:06/10:23/10:35/10:54/9:40

First of all, we made the mistake of having my sister try to drive us to RFK stadium instead of taking the metro in at 6. So we got stuck in traffic 24 blocks from the start and had to get out of the car at 6:30 and run 1.3 miles to the stadium (or more). I've never run a marathon warm up before. It was hectic to find the start line, cars stuck in all directions and people streaming in from the metro. I made Cath come to my corral since she was forfeiting her pace to keep a safe pace with me and protect her stress fracture. The sun was rising just as we started moving toward the start line, it was very cold but the sky was clear. Running toward the Capitol building and down the mall was pretty cool. I love to be able to run down the road, we turned the corner at the bottom of the Mall and suddenly Catherine was searching for a POP. We tucked into a Starbucks and the small drama began to unfold there at mile 5. We ran a little while more, Cath's stomach in knots. We made about 3-4 stops, standing in lines for every POP we saw until mile 13 where I thought it might be wise for Cath to consider running the half marathon. But she's no quitter, and there's no stopping her and by the time she was arguing with me instead of turning white and looking for a bathroom she was feeling better. I had thrown away my gloves at mile 6 but it was so cold after stopping at the bathrooms that I had to pick up someone else's discarded gloves and I kept them on until mile 22. The course through 13 was picturesque DC and the majority of the runners were halfing....I would only suggest this marathon as a half. At th mile 13 the roads diverged and a pitiful amount of people carried on in the other direction after we'd looped back to RFK stadium. As we ran out toward Anacostia I remembered the scariest time I've ever had in DC when my sister's car was impounded and we had to go into this really skanky part of town to get her car out of impound. Guess where the race route ran....right past the impound lot, and deeper into the heart of crazy. Soon after we turned off the mall, under the bridge there were no 'motivation' or 'drink stations' just policemen. At first there was about a policeman every quarter mile. On the other side of the bridge we ran a pretty little waterway that is famous for floating dead bodies to the surface. Nevertheless, two Anacostia marching bands played vibrantly on either side of the trail. After the most ridiculous set of circles and turn around we finally ran into the very heart of darkness. The last drink station was on the parkway, and as we hit the neighborhoods where bars were on every window and door, the policeman became closer and closer together; Like 20 feet apart for about 2 miles. We passed a Baptist church that had about 70 people out front...all young people attending a funeral. It gave the impression it was a gang banger funeral. The cops in the area were no longer responding to the runners 'thanks for being here' they were focused on the funeral. A runner stopped to stretch up ahead of me, and the cop said "you can keep going" to which the runner replied, I'm just stretching. Then the cop said, well do it up there a ways if you can . I looked back at Cath who was taking it easy a little behind me and started to freak out a little that stray bullets would start flying from the direction of the funeral in progress. Then from about mile 21-24 there were no stations. No gel, no oranges, no portapotties, nada. Finally at mile 24 and again at 25 we had some more water/power aid. We finished running strong, a little tired and hamstrings aching but overall I felt pretty great. In retrospect, I think it was pretty cool I got to run through one of the most insane parts of SE DC with police every 10 feet. When else can you see that up close? We The course had a surprising amount of uphill for DC and the finishers chute was literally about .3 miles of incline which was pretty cool. They start kicking people off the course at 5:15. And we were both just happy to not be the last people straggling through Anacostia.

Comments
From Teena Marie on Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 00:40:25 from 67.2.71.182

Wow!!!! Talk about seeing things during a marathon!!!! :)

You did AWESOME!!!

Now rest up and baby that hamstring.

Congratulations! :)

From MCKENZIE on Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 00:43:42 from 75.169.116.122

Congrats Luz! I love that you picked up someones discarded gloves and made them you own. That made me smile :) Yay for you!

From Smooth on Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 00:56:34 from 67.2.100.119

Luz!!! what an adventurous marathon! I am so glad you and Cath stayed together and kept each other safe from stray bullets! :). Seriously not your typical marathon, running to the start line, picking up and keeping discarded gloves, police every 10 feet, no aid stations for miles and an uphill finish chute! CRAZY!!!

GOOD JOB! Your diamond and titanium ism shinned thru even in the darkest seediest place of D.C. SOOOO PROUD of you! :) :) :)

From Walter on Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 02:33:00 from 24.10.169.110

Great report, I want to do that some day. (write that long) just kidding you know I meant the race.

From Bec on Sun, Mar 27, 2011 at 13:52:46 from 173.79.188.226

Sadly, I was looking at the ground a lot of the race. I caught that we were in a bad part of town but I didn't realize it was that bad. The funeral did make me feel a little uneasy because of all of the cops. I also noticed all of the runners around me were not really chipper anymore. The walkway... had no idea that is where there are bodies found floating in the water. Running sure can take us places we would never go on our own.

Thanks for the detailed report and good job out there!

From LuzyLew on Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 15:10:26 from 208.187.197.42

Thank you for the the race comments. It was an exciting and fun weekend. For Cath and I this was truly a sight seeing tour more than a 'marathon'. I am so glad Cath and I could travel from our respective dities to be able to run this together. Cath stayed with me last year at Utah Valley when I had the same kinds of problems (not the stress fracture, the stomach kind). I was sad she didn't feel great the first 13 miles of the run, but I was deeply grateful for all the things we saw, did, and talked about. My brother in law's family was on the last corner of the mall around mile 17 and it was fun to get cheered on and high five friends & family. I am so grateful to have such a good running friend in Cath. The whole weekend with my sis and nephews was wonderful. But I have a lot to say about how stupidly this race is organized and the insanity of the last 13 miles (for fast or slower runners). They should keep the race to a half marathon until they have a better route, support (fruit in the 20's), and they should clearly state that the METRO is the only form of transportation to the race start (and they should open it before 6:00 a.m. on that day) or like Boston, not even allow people to drive within a mile of the RFK Stadium. Also, bag drop is like .2 from the start for corrals 6-10 and inside a building where one must go through a medal detector. AFter running 1.3 miles to the start I had no time to drop my bag and lost my favorite pair of sweat pants :(

From LuzyLew on Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 15:15:14 from 208.187.197.42

PS Walter--when you run fast, you have far fewer observations about a race and what more can be said except I won 2nd place? When I focus on the actual running, there is nothing to say because usually I saw nothing and my only comments were in regard to what went on inside my head for 26 miles--which is usually "run faster". My guess is Bec probably is in that boat too. So I'm glad I could provide the retrospective 'entertainment'.

From marion on Mon, Mar 28, 2011 at 19:32:03 from 71.213.111.80

COOL!! You ran a gang banger marathon of death! AWESOME! I am so glad that you didn't get shot ;) Way to go sister! Maybe this years RHPC 1/2 should have a police gang theme ;) Oh and just so you know, RHPC now stands for Red Hot PASTY chicks! I need a tan ;D

From Kelli on Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 13:25:56 from 71.219.97.85

WHAT AN ADVENTURE, I like Marion's description there!

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