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You are here: Home / News / mature runner / Events

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Thoughts On Technology-Aided World Records

June 27, 2023/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

The Mature Runner

By David Summerfield

I’m no longer trying to set world records. So now I can fully pontificate on those who achieve world records in a surprising way. It’s called “Wavelight.” Remember reading about the various marathon world record stunts which used laser-produced glowing red squares moving ahead of runners cast by a vehicle moving at exactly world-record pace? All you have to do is follow the red square, and you’ll end up in the Emerald City….errr, the finish line! Well, this latest invention installs LED lights set-up on a track oval every meter, with the lights turning on at the prescribed pace to achieve whatever you need! It could be for interval training on a track, or for elite world record attempts. They say the audience loves it – they can see if the lead pack or front-runner is going to set a WR. Here’s a little history of this newest innovation using the latest technology to the aid of runners.

Just Follow the Moving Lights! via reddit.com

I have to speak out on this recent development. The “Wavelight” system became official in 2020 when the World Athletics granted its approval for use in track meets. There has been an uproar, since world records are being set on such tracks – offering an obvious unfair advantage not available in previous world record attempts. A little history – Robotronix Europe and Sport Technologies developed the system, though it had been used before on tracks not worrying about international rules. Originally it was banned by the World Athletics (rule 144.3) – considering it “pacing by any kind of technical device”. Then in 2020, the WA added a new “rule 144.4” which allowed the moving lights around the track, because it was not considered assistance to pacing. Why? Because it was not an aid to runners but a “new service” for the spectators. (?) Wow. Suddenly the moving lights weren’t seen as an assistance “of any significance to the athletes”. It appears the track world was needing spectators, thus this was a financial decision! Oh, the purity of running just got smeared. Will all local tracks start saving up their funds to purchase a “spectator-enhancing” gimmick to spur on ticket sales? I hope not. It’s pretty hard to imagine the MSU’s athletic department requesting extra $$ in next year’s budget to install the Wavelight system. Okay, I might buy a ticket to one of their track meets just to see it in action…but on 2nd thought, I think not!

Wavelight during a track meet. Via trackandfieldnews.com

As an NCAA Div III track coach back in the ‘80’s, I attended a track and field workshop (I think in Kansas City) where Sebastian Coe (who held the WR in the 800 meter) was speaking, along with his dad and coach Peter Coe. Their British accents made their presentation all that much more riveting. Their topic revealed how Sebastian was able to establish the WR due to his dad’s grueling workouts based on uphill “fartleks”. I paid rapt attention, and included their advice with my distance runners. So I was crestfallen when I found out the president of the World Athletics Council was none other than Sebastian Coe. The organization started out as a governing body (IAAF – International Amateur Athletics Federation) for amateur running events in 1912. Being an amateur organization (receiving no money for running), and trying to keep the sport from being a way to earn money, used to be so important. Runners were banned from competing if the IAAF discovered money had changed hands.

Coe winning an 800 meter race. via historyofsports.org.

His WR 1:41.73 stood for 16 years. That race was held June 10th, at 11pm in Florence, Italy.

At a press conference 2 years ago, Coe concluded this new lighting technology was a useful information tool to help spectators better understand and appreciate the efforts of the athletes. GRRRR. I might be overreacting here. How about the invention of the stopwatch mounted on a regular ‘ole wristwatch? Aren’t they “technology” too? Just one more technological aid, I guess. And Timex watches have never been banned! My Timex definitely “aided” me in running faster, by knowing my exact splits so I could compare my progress toward setting a new PR on a run. Heck, I used it yesterday to establish a new PR on a 2 mile course up here in the Cathedral Mountain Ranch (3 miles past Nye, Montana). Of course it won’t be found in any published record book…but still deeply meaningful to me! That device on my left wrist spurred me on to dig deeper than before, and I reveled in the triumph when I got home. So, now there’s a 29:29.34 record to memorialize the effort: Dry Lake Trail to CMR Trail, to Elk Park Trail –

turnaround at the very top (highest point in CMR), and retrace back to the front door of 8 Dry Lake Trail.

You see, I wouldn’t be trying to break personal records if there were spectators around. That would be embarrassing. Running is not a spectator sport, or at least shouldn’t be … or….wait a minute, I’d love to watch an Olympic T&F meet! I’m glued to the screen anytime an elite marathon is on. So, I’m guilty. And knowing exactly (to the split second) where the about-to-be-broken WR pace is….again, I’m guilty. It would thrill me no end. So I’ve just debunked the whole premise of this article! Free reign to the latest technology! Bring it on! Where’s the limit? I suppose World Athletics might be checking elite runners to see if they’ve implanted some silicon chip in their bodies to overcome pain? Sigh. Just putting that in print almost guarantees it’ll happen some day. But not on my watch.

PS: Well, I just checked the internet, and this is already being done – all the tests on animals have perfected the procedure, and I’m sure human guinea pigs were used as well. What’s to keep well-meaning scientists (entrepreneurs…) from developing a clientele of willing innovators to hook humans up with chips in the brain, to turn-off the pain centers? My daily dose of Ibuprofin is so tame!

Brain Chip! Why not get hooked up to AI – why not be superhuman?? Via istockphoto.com

Two Types of Able-Bodied Runners Make The News

March 24, 2023/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

The Mature Runner

By David Summerfield

The following two stories have to do with runners depicted as “disabled” or “challenged” in one way or another. Ha! These runners are hardly; their training makes them head-and-shoulders above us more normal runners.

First, there’s Makenna Myler, an Asics sponsored runner, who has been paving the way for women to keep running all through their pregnancies. I will relay the facts as I have found them, and let you make your own conclusions! I found the article at “yahoo!life,” written by Korin Miller. The title caught my eye: “Don’t be afraid to challenge reality.” Makenna ran a 5:17 mile while 9 months pregnant (a few weeks before her due date). Here is the picture that came with the article.

Nine months pregnant, no problem – photo courtesy of Makenna Myler herself.

As a professional runner, Makenna ran the 10,000 meters at the 2020 Olympic Trials in Eugene, OR, and came in 14th. Her PR is 32:03 at that distance. She also has a 4:42.40 mile to her credit (as well as a 15:31 5km PR). She decided in 2020 to run a mile within a week of her due date. It turns out she loves running timed miles on the track to celebrate important events – like running a mile on her wedding day (she would become a “Myler” – her husband’s last name – so it seemed appropriate!). She had the blessing of her obstetrician, and kept training right up until the delivery. She had a bet with her husband, who said she couldn’t run a sub-8 minute mile under those conditions. So, she ran a 5:25 on a $100 bet. Then, three years later, and being 3 weeks before the due date (this time it was February 21st – and due on March 15th), she ran a 5:17 mile! I found a Runner’s World interview written on March 13th, by Kells McPhillips (and taken from an NPR interview) with these quotes from Makenna: “It’s kind of funny. The weight almost just catches up to you in a sense. Like, all of a sudden, it hits your body that, like, you’re carrying this much weight. You need to slow down, even though you can kind of start out at a similar cadence.”

She added that while her midsection wasn’t shaking too much, her hips, quads, and lower back had to work overtime to propel her from one step to the next. She knew from her first timed mile (the 5:25 in 2020 before her first birth) she would get a lot of criticism for doing this; being irresponsible, endangering the life of a newborn, etc.

“There’s so many people who think I’m an absolute idiot,” she said. “And this time around, it’s just been quite a laugh with what people have to say. The comments are just absolutely ridiculous. The best is, ‘if men could run while pregnant, they would be running a four-minute mile, so this isn’t impressive.’”

And this leads me into one more story for April where an elite marathon runner saw a handicapped runner fumble trying to get a drink at the 10km table and helped him hydrate, and then ran with him 28 more kilometers, to make sure he had the water he needed. The report I read stated that Jacqueline Nyetipei Kiplimo ran beside the unknown Chinese runner for 28km, and left him with 5km to go. She raced ahead trying to catch the front pack, which she did! The Chinese runner was listed as an elite runner, but in the “disabled” category.

Jacqueline Nyetipei Kiplimo races alongside a Chinese runner and helps him along the course. (Photo from Skeptics.StackExchange.com)

Doing a little research, I found out that the Kenyan runner (Kiplimo) actually did finish this race in 2nd place, earning $6,000. The winner took home $15,000. They were 68 seconds apart at the finish (winner Chepkemoi, also a Kenyan, came in at 2:36:54). This all took place at the International Zheng-Kai Marathon in China on March 28th, 2010. There was some controversy with the veracity of the news article, but apparently it was thoroughly researched and everything checked out fine.

According to the story, Kiplimo came upon the “disabled” Chinese runner at a water stop and noticed he was having trouble handling the water cup. So, Kiplimo helped him out, and they ran side-by-side until the 38km mark, at which Kiplimo put on the afterburners, and caught back-up to the women’s front pack, almost pulling off the win. Of course there’s a lot of online comments about this incident, but the picture above is all I need.

These two articles inspired me to not take anyone’s (especially my) apparent difficulties in running as normal and then do something about it, like change the reality one is looking at. I would never call myself a “disabled” runner, though I often feel like one. Looking at the Chinese runner holding down somewhere around a 2:40 marathon pace, he certainly wasn’t laboring under any reality that said he shouldn’t be there in an “elite” category.

Hmmm, that gives me an idea; why not create my own category; I’m in the “Over 75 Beartooth Foothills Super Category.” So what if the vast majority of those I pass on the trails are all deer? Yes, they look a bit askance at me, and often scatter as I approach, but mainly they just stand there and stare. They must know they’re witnessing a miracle happening, right in front of their eyes!

These are my spectator deer, witnessing the miracle of my accomplishments!

Ladakh Frozen Lake Half Marathon

February 26, 2023/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

The Mature Runner

By David Summerfield

Looks like I can’t help myself (again) – here’s yet another world record that just happened Feb. 20, 2023. This one shows to what extent others will go to make it into the ‘ole Guinness Book of World Records. Get this: this Feb. 20, 75 people showed up to run the inaugural “highest elevation half marathon on a frozen lake,” full well knowing they were assured by the Guinness people they’d make it into their record books. And they did take all the necessary steps to assure they’d make it. Evidently, the Everest Marathon is the “highest” marathon on the planet (starting out at 17,572’ and going down to 11,647’ at the Namche Bazaar). And their Everest Half Marathon starts at 14,419’ (at Dingboche) and also ends at the Namche Bazaar – 11,647’. So the Ladakh Frozen Lake Half had to figure something else out. To make sure their category would stand the test of time, this 1⁄2 marathon was completely run on a frozen lake at 13,862’, so, there’s the challenge. Yes, the Everest Half started out higher, but went down over 2,000’ lower than in Ladakh. You have to go find another frozen lake higher than 13,862’ if you want to get a record in the Guinness Book. But, I’m not really trying to tear down the accomplishment of a noble event. It does sound amazing, and sure, I’d like to do it someday … maybe. The “package” is similar to the Antarctic Marathon ($21,000 fee for a week-long expedition) and this one includes a mandatory 6-day stay at altitude to prevent elevation sickness. And the total package is 8-nights, 9 days at an advertised cost of Rs46,500, or $563.00. Everyone is required to wear “safety gear” (grippers for the ice). They say the average winter temperature is -22 Fahrenheit. Seems doable!

Frozen Pangong Tso Lake – bangla.latestly.com.

This event is held in the Union Territory of Ladakh, an area at the border of China and India. The lake (Pangong Tso) is salt water, and does freeze over in the winter. This event was started this year to help raise awareness about the area, to bring in much needed tourist dollars, and to help the local inhabitants have something fun and interesting to do in the middle of winter, which is obviously pretty harsh. The half-marathon started in Lukung and ended at Maan village. The organizers dubbed the race “The Last Run,” hoping to remind people that climate change is happening, and they are wanting to save the Himalayas.

So, can we do something of this sort for raising awareness in Montana about climate change? For this wintertime, it does seem like a stretch to discuss climate change (meaning the warming of the climate, the melting of the glaciers, rising sea levels). As I write, I’m overlooking the Beartooth Mountains above Nye, with a low of -27 last night as snow fell and flew around for a typical February 3-day storm. Most of us have already forgotten about last month’s record high temperatures, no precipitation, etc. So, all that’s happening is watching Mother Nature’s way of making up for lost time. But the scientist’s predictions keep getting proven every year – the glaciers are disappearing, the Antarctic ice is splitting up, and it does appear that the climate is changing. Hosting this far-flung frozen lake 1⁄2 marathon I’m sure was mainly spurred on by the tourist dollars will improve the financial condition of the area. They say it is also for promoting sustainable winter tourism. It did help to have the presence of the world press taking pictures, spreading the word about something unique to do – it’s exotic and something new for those with ready cash. Sigh. I know the Ridge Run in Bozeman helps the local economy, and it gives us all something quasi-exotic to do each summer. In Ladakh, climate change would ultimately keep the lake from freezing, so they might be right, it could become the “Last Run.” I can’t foresee the “Last Bridger Ridge Run”coming any time soon. I guess the way that could happen would be to have such devastating forest fires, that the event would be postponed indefinitely until Montana would stop having forest fires. That’s just something to think about 🙂

Stuti Bakshi wins and gets a world record timesofindia.com.

While writing this, the results just came in from the Ladakh 1⁄2 marathon held yesterday. It was won by a 30 year-old woman, Stuti Bakshi. She was the only woman from Gujarat in the event, which had 100 participants. And, being the 1st woman to cross the finish line, obviously she has a world record1 Out of the 100 participants, nine were women; four were from Ladakh, and the rest were from other parts of India. It was reported that she finished in 4 hours (sounds a little suspicious – maybe all finishers ended up with a “4 hour” finish time). Stuti reported strong headwinds, and then equally strong tailwinds. Pictures show a rather glare, smooth, shiny ice surface, but she said it was very uneven, never flat, and very hard to run on. Also, all the entrants did a “training run on Sunday, just to test out their equipment so they could make adjustments. Wouldn’t it be fun to have a ‘trial” Ridge Run the day before, just to make sure all your equipment (food, water, clothing, shoes) were ready to go, so you wouldn’t have to get up so early on race day?

And while we’re talking about “frozen lake” Marathons, googling it revealed there are such events all over the world. They don’t get any Guinness recognition, since they aren’t that high in elevation, but look into the Balkai Ice Marathon, in Eastern Siberia. They claim it is on the largest and deepest lake on the planet (larger than all the Great Lakes put together). This is a full marathon, and would be a good reason to enter Russia, right? The cost is only $875.00, with an elevation of 1440’. I guess the cold is the only challenge at this one. And you better enter right away, the race date is February 27th … oh, this newsletter doesn’t come out until March 1. Well, keep it in mind for next year 🙂 I’m not sure of the allure of running on a frozen lake, unless it’s just the novelty of it all, which means you’ve run out of interesting things to do (pun intended). With that, I hope you all can find fun adventures for March right here in Montana!

Lake Baikol Ice Marathon on a clear day! dailymail.co.uk.

Lake Baikol Ice Marathon, close-up of runners. rbth.com.

Mature Runner: Some Inspiration From Julia Hawkins

January 25, 2023/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

By David Summerfield

This article might just reveal too much about my overly strong desire to “stay in shape,” or at least be able to run a decent 100-meter dash! (my goodness, that’s a long way from doing marathons … sheeesh). This never-ending search for inspiration from World Record holders led me to Julia Hawkins. Now if you’re sick and tired of these kinds of articles, please let me know, or tell the editor Mira Brody to not put these articles into the BSWD newsletter any more – please!

What really got me about Julia Hawkins was her response to an interviewer after she had run a World Record 100 meter race in 62 seconds. (I mean, I can do that!) But wait, she’s a fit 105 year-old retired elementary school teacher from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The interviewer asked if she was worried about her competition that day. With delight she said “No, I wasn’t worried because the other runner wasn’t an athlete. And I am!” What bravura 🙂 And she was serious. Her grandkids talked her into entering a Masters Track & Field competition, and she agreed – at that time she was a “fit” 100-year old. She amazed everyone by running a 42 second 100 meter. Her goal was to run 100 meters in 100 seconds, and had no trouble. Then she entered the shot put event, and got back into the record books – by tossing a 2kg (4.5 pound) shot 2.77 meters (over 9 feet). She had so much fun, she was again talked into doing it at age 105. I finally discovered why it took her 62 seconds to run the 100. It was a cold, blustery day, and she went out there anyway, and ran 20 seconds slower, but also got into a new age category (105 and up). I’ve scoured the internet to find out if she has done it again at age 106, but all I can find is that on her 106th birthday (Feb 10, 2022) she wanted to go at it again. And we’re almost to her 107th birthday.

Julia Hawkins at 103 years at the National Senior Games from doyouremember.com.

This whole story has got me eyeing the nearest track to where I live, and it’s a cinder track in Absarokee (27 miles away), and the snow has melted off….so what am I waiting for? Living far from an urban community and their modern tracks, I have fun driving by the Absarokee Husky’s high school track. Of course it isn’t marked in any way – just a nice smoothish red cinder surface – I imagine it’s most likely a 440 yard track, so no world records could be made here too easily. Oh, that’s right, silly me, I’m not 105 yet – though somedays it feels as if I am.

Here’s the cinder track picture, taken Jan 22nd, looking totally unused since last spring’s track meets.

Of course I have to mention Julia’s diet – she eats a “balanced” diet of yogurt, soups and salads. And being from Louisiana, her most favorite food items are fried crabs and oysters. (Being from the Northern climes, crabs/oysters are definitely NOT on my list of favorite foods! If I were to be asked by some reporter after having set another world record on this track, I would have to say it’s my own recipe of mac & cheese – or a cheese enchilada from Fiesta Mexicana).

I didn’t mention Julia was very active in the Senior Olympics – bicycling. That kept her active, which she has always done. And she obviously thrives on competition. But as the 100 year bracket gets nearer, the competition does thin out a bit, so the chance of winning gets better and better. Do I really have to wait that long? Sheeesh. Thank goodness I’ve found that Fiesta Mexicana restaurants are all over the country, so I won’t waste away while the years go by 🙂

There’s that Fiesta Mexicana cheese enchilada and Corona, yum 🙂

Back to the Senior Olympics, I couldn’t stay away from their Montana nordic races until I moved away from Bozeman. And I can’t justify driving that far just to ski a 5km/10km x-country race. Hmmm, that does bring my genuine dedication to maintaining my fitness level into question (so I can excel in the 100m dash in 30 years!) Julia Hawkins’ point is that she is an athlete, and that means she works a lot, and thus is ready for world records any time. Well, I do “go out” on rigorous daily walks. I constantly push myself, to pound every ounce of fitness into this ‘old bod. So, I’ll be ready. Here’s a quote from Julia in Runner’s World: “I do a little running around each day—not a certain amount or time—but just to keep everything going….I don’t want to waste too many 100-yard dashes, because I only have so many left.” Oh, the joy of being a 105 year old. And here’s a great picture of the women’s 100 meter official start at the Louisiana Senior Games. I just love the image of these three 100+ women wanting to make history.

Start of 100m world record run pinterest.com Julia is on the right, looking oh so confident!

Welcome to a New Year of World Records Being Broken

December 28, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

The Mature Runner

By David Summerfield

Perhaps you’ve noticed I’m totally obsessed with all the various world records I’ve covered this past year. I don’t doubt it has something to do with my firmly held notion that I won’t be getting my name on any of the lists. And the lists grow every month. Just to make sure I’m not missing out on any “easy” world records out there, I went onto The Guiness World Record website, and quickly decided that it would be embarrassing to actually get my name published there. Besides all the “noble” records (like the Kipchoge or Koskei type), the rest were just publicity stunts. Yes, specific skills were required, which of course took lots of patience to develop. But the end result could hardly elicit admiration or serious consideration. Before getting to the more serious record-setters, here’s a quick look at the ludicrous records! Consider Ashrita Furman, a health food store manager in Queens. He has held (simultaneously) 120 Guinness World Records, and set over 300 records (which really means there are that many people out to break records, no matter what they be!). Examples: under very strict guidelines on April 3, 2005, he walked 11.3 kilometers balancing a cue stick on the tip of his finger.

The “balancing a cue stick” world record under the shadow of the Egyptian Pyramids “ashrita.com/about”, Photograph: Aladin Abdel Naby/Reuters.

Who possibly could have made that one up?? He says he’s not a natural athlete, but meditates, and wants to show others the benefits of the practice. His name “Ashrita” means “protected by God” in Sanskrit. It looks like he’s also doing the setting records on every continent thing: he “hula-hooped” the fastest mile at Ayers Rock (Uluru) in Australia, and then went the fastest mile on a pogo stick in Antarctica. I can’t stop there – he’s also standing on a Swiss Ball for the longest time at Stonehenge (England), skipping rope the most times in a minute while jumping on a pogo stick (he must love pogo sticks) at Angkor Wat (Cambodia), and bouncing the fastest mile on a “kangaroo ball” along the Great Wall of China. Seriously, the list includes over 100 more world records he’s achieved. Ashrita credits his meditation teacher, Sri Chinmoy for his remarkable endurance and strength. “I am not a natural athlete, but my teacher has shown me that if one can be in touch with one’s inner spirit, anything is possible.” Whew.

With that said, here are some admirable, more traditional records broken. Christine Hobson, a 69 year-old “grandmother” from England completed the Antarctic Ice Marathon last month (Dec 12-14th) and is officially the oldest woman to complete the marathon. Her time of 8:11:33 is within my range, but…oh, yes, I’m not a woman. The oldest men’s record goes to 84 year-old Roy Svenningsen from Canada – I wonder if I could do that in 9 years? He “ran” it in 11:41:58. Heck, I can do that…but then I found out the course, which is groomed with snowmobiles (like getting it ready for a good skate ski outing), and was like running on sand, the whole way. Ouch. That’s not for me!

I really enjoy the ingenuity of the human – there’s a growing demand to run marathons on every continent – hence now there are 2 different Antarctic marathons. This one requires a 3 day commitment, going to Punta Arenas in Chile to board a private jet, landing on the Union Glacier in the interior of Antarctica. In case you’re wanting to do something like that, you could also do the North Pole Marathon, organized by the same organization…but then the North Pole isn’t on a separate continent, so why do it?? Anyway, the Antarctic Ice Marathon is different from the original one, the Antarctica Marathon, held on King George Island. A few more facts to whet your appetite…the cost is a mere $21,500, which if paid in full when you register, you get a $1000 discount. Sweet. And this marathon is officially the most southerly marathon on the planet. And last month it garnered 57 contestants from 20 countries, so it’s not too crowded. Snowmobiles comprise the support vehicles, sorta like running around West Yellowstone in the winter. I guess you really have to want to do this! And it’s a circular course, 4 laps of about 10k each….just so you can say you’ve “run” on a snowmobile-groomed snowy path. The more I read Christine Hobson’s account, the more I realized she’s doing something pretty darn special. Here she is on the course:

This is courtesy of the YorkshireLive reporting by Jasmine Norden, reporter, picture by the Antarctic Ice Marathon.

So, get this – she retired and started a “fitness transformation”. Sound familiar, oh you retirees out there? Work is done, so you can spend time doing what you’ve been waiting for!! I like that. I’m planning on “retiring” starting this January 1st…. She actually has become an inspiration for me! Her record? She’s the oldest woman to run a marathon on the Antarctic Continent. There. Then I found out she’s run 117 marathons in her “retirement”. OK…. And she wants older women to dream big and achieve things they don’t think are possible. Richard, her husband, said the cold wasn’t the biggest challenge, it was the blowing snow – trying to run in a whiteout, while negotiating the snow and ice underfoot – sliding with every footstep. Then I found out this is her 7th Continent marathon. And her lips were so cracked from the wind, she had trouble eating breakfast the next morning. OK. Christine, you do become our hero, even though I can’t imagine doing what you’ve done. So, I can’t poke fun at what you’ve accomplished.

Christine Hobson at the finish line, photo credit by the Antarctic Ice Marathon.

It does look like a pretty nice day, and evidently, that is very misleading!! At every Aid Station, all noses were checked for frostbite – oh, it was -50C…there’s a clue! Retiring at 60, her continental marathons have been London, Marrakech, Buenos Aires, Niagara Falls, Tel Aviv and Singapore. Getting inspired yet? The more I read, yes I am!!

Runners participate in the Antarctic Ice Marathon, in Union Glacier, Antarctica, December 14, 2022. (Mark Conlon/Antarctic Ice Marathon/Handout via REUTERS)

But then, there are pictures like this one, showing what the whiteout conditions are like, and evidently, this is what happened those 8 hours Ms Hobson was on the course. Imagine those little blue flags every 4’ so you can see where to go…hmmm, on 2nd thought, maybe the $21,500 entry fee should just stay in my bank account for now! Happy dreaming about the “ultimate” running event for your 2023 calendar, and maybe leave Punta Arenas alone 🙂

Mature Runner: Okay, Here Comes The Next World Record….(again)

November 30, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

By David Summerfield

I keep wondering if the next time I google “New World Records Set” – nothing will come up. Today of course, it happened again. Many new running World Records have been set this year, and here’s the big one.

I have to bow down to Eliud Kipchoge. Let’s get it over with: he’s 37 years old, he’s 5’6”, and weighs 115 lbs. (He’s already in that class of athletes who are diminutive – in comparison to the rest of humanity). His discipline and strength of mind are over the top. He trains like it’s a business, and admits freely he works so hard to inspire people to go do the same. I think it’s sorta rubbing off on me (okay, in a rather teeny way). It can’t help but inspire anyone who has an ounce of drive to achieve anything. At this year’s Berlin Marathon (Sept 25), he went into it knowing “it would be a good day”. And having won his last 12 marathons with several world records, including 2 Olympic golds, he knows a good day from a bad day. From his interviews, it’s very clear he was totally convinced he would not only win, but lower his World Record….which he did by another 30 seconds. He also told the press he knew he wouldn’t go under 2 hours, which was only 69 seconds shy – but the fact that he knew that going into the race? This guy is totally in control of his running environment. So, he ran a 2:01:09, and looking at the videos, he ran the pace he practiced for many months at his high altitude training camp in Kenya, called the “Global Sports Communications Training Camp in Kaptagat.

Eliud Kipchoge’s WR – outsideonline.com

OK, the amazing stats in Berlin: His 1st 5k was run in 14:14 (yikes). At the 10k mark he did a 28:23….(only 30.2 kms left to go:-) The 1⁄2 marathon was done in 59:51. He was on pace to go under 2 hours again, in a real road race. He admitted to running a minute faster in the 1st half, but as he put it, “my feet were fast”, so he went for it. He had 2 of his favorite “rabbits” who he ran with for the 1st 25k, then it was running with his real competitors (the Ethiopian pair of Guye Adola and Andamlak Belihu) who dropped back (I mean….they couldn’t keep up) and the last 15k he was all alone, finishing almost 5 minutes in front of Kenyan Mark Korir (2:05:58) and Tadu Abate (2:06:28).

I have to also mention the woman’s winner – Ethiopia’s Tigist Assefa, who set a course record and ran a 2:15:37, the fourth fastest time in history (which was 18 minutes faster than her previous personal best and 1st marathon, earlier this year)…and she was only 12 seconds behind Paula Radcliffe’s 2:15:25 (London, 2003).

Tigist Assefa winning Berlin – Fana Broadcasting Corporate S.C.

Since she was an “unknown” – there is currently no info about her life, training, anything. That’s a shame. Perhaps now that she has run the 4th fastest marathon ever, she’ll be followed more closely by the Wikipedia people
🙂

And now onto my gleanings from Kipchoge’s many interviews, especially from “Olympics.com” – which revealed so much about the man, how he trains, and what he thinks about this whole running stuff. Interviewed the week before Berlin, he said “I am the best one…I am going to Berlin to run a very good race that will make everybody get inspired and love marathons.” And right after setting the WR, “There is still more in my legs and I hope the future is great. The mind is thinking wise, the body is still absorbing the trainings and racings.” He described how he had 4 hard months of intense long runs with fartleks…I also read he got up to 200k running per week (120 miles) with fartleks. OK, that’s what it takes I guess. (I skate-skied that much one week…) I realized Eliud focuses his whole being on his training, as you’ll understand with these quotes: “Marathon training is tiresome, cumbersome, and very long.” The four long months of training in his mind is just the physical part, and the week before the “Big Run” is when the mental game begins: “A human being is his mind. When your mind is okay, then your muscles are good. Now I’m trying my best to convince my mind that I’ve done a thorough training.

I have done enough. My legs and muscles are ready. And on the big day, it will be to implement all these things.” It seems so easy to visualize Kipchoge getting ready to race, knowing his physical training has gone well and is finished; and all that’s left is to set the mind on the goal. He practiced running at race pace (over 13.15 mph, or around a 4:36 mile) and found that if he only did 80% effort, with those spurts (fartleks) thrown in here and there, his body would be ready. His key was a long build-up over months, so the intensity would not cause injury. And these long weeks of running ended with only 1 week of tapering.

Speaking to the “Olympic.com” people, he thought about his future: “In front of my mind, I know one day I will call time on the sport…It’s good to see those that have been high with a huge following, retiring and venturing on other things. And that’s a big inspiration for me, that if you start something then it must have an end. But it needs to end when you have had a huge impact.” As he put it in another interview (I can’t find it again, sorry) – he said after his WR that his feat will reach 3 billion people, and that’s wonderful, just think of all the people being inspired to go do the same thing!

At Eliud’s high altitude training camp runblogrun.com

I know some of you might be interested to know every detail of his training program, so you too can run a sub 2 hour marathon…..ahem….but it is interesting to the rest of us too: go to “https://sportcoaching.co.nz/kipchoge-training-program-guide/” and get your Ugali and Managu ready to give your body what it needs 🙂 (Oh, those are staple foods in Kenya, a type of cornmeal mush and a leafy-green) Happy getting ready for YOUR next marathon!

My New Marathon Hero, Ed Whitlock

October 26, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

The Mature Runner

By David Summerfield

Due to Stacy and my trip to Canada this October, I had to find out about Canadian runners. We were mostly in Nova Scotia, which has its share of great runners, but I then realized Ed Whitlock (born in London) had emigrated to Quebec and then Milton, Ontario, and further research revealed what a wonderful person he was. He died in 2017, but reading some interviews with him, he instantly became my overall hero. He was known for his gentlemanly demeanor, gracious smile, and flowing white hair. But what got me hooked was his total lack of ego in the face of recording world records over the course of several decades.

(20 year old shoes work perfectly well! “perfectbodybywil.blogspot.com”)

In his youth he did compete a lot (shorter distances) and I couldn’t help but notice his height/weight (something I’ve become a little bit too obsessed with lately). He only weighed 112 pounds at 5’7”. Those statistics seem to be the preferred ones for fast times (see previous articles concerning record-breaking Kenyan and Ethiopian runners). As is the case with the normal lot, he put aside “serious” running for his professional career as an engineer, graduating from the Royal School of Mines, Imperial College. He landed in Ontario when he was 41, and only started marathon running when his youngest son had been training to run a marathon himself (his son had run everyday for over a year as his training). He talked his dad into running with him – Ed had tried to dissuade him – but surprised everyone by running a 2:31:23 marathon as a 48 year-old. Yikes. Yes, he enjoyed running fast times on the track throughout his life, but he got really serious about running when he retired. His stated goal was to be the 1st person over 70 to run a marathon under 3 hours. Ed made sure he could do that by running the Columbus (Ohio) Marathon way under 3 hours for the 1996-2000 years. He got his goal when he was 73 at the Scotiabank Toronto Riverbank Marathon by running a 2:54:48. And in Rotterdam the next year “…some of the world’s best marathon runners, Kenyans in their 20s and 30s, could not fathom why a person my age would be running a marathon and certainly not in that time. I did 2:58:40 that day and it blew their minds,” Whitlock wrote in a story for iRun magazine. “This needs to change,” he said. “Because if they can’t imagine themselves doing the same thing, it will never happen. Why don’t they think they can do the same thing?” I like this guy more and more!

(Ed Whitlock’s record “canadarunningseries.com” at age 85).

Here are some of my favorite quips from the National Post interview (Mar 13th, 2017):

“What do you think about when you’re running?” he was once asked. “When will this be over?” he replied. Another one: What makes a good marathon runner? Whitlock’s response: “Shine a light through their ear. If light comes out on the other side, odds are they’re up to the task.” Ed doesn’t use a GPS watch, and his training regimen was doing laps in the local Milton Evergreen Cemetery. He would just do laps until 3 hours were up, and that’s all he needed to do. Alan Brookes (Toronto Marathon race director) said most world record holders would be wearing free shoes from their sponsors. Not so for Ed. Alan noticed Ed’s shoes, and swore they must be 20 year-old shoes. He obviously was running for the pure joy of running, though he did admit to enjoying all the attention he got – but it stopped there. As he “slowed” down (sub 4 hour marathons in his mid-80’s), he adjusted his cemetery loops to just loops around a gravestone. “I like running in the cemetery,” Whitlock reasoned. “Compared to everyone else there, no matter how you look when you’re running, you look pretty good.”

(I’m looking pretty good…in comparison! (The Age of Simplicity “www.runnersworld.com”)

How to describe my new hero? Just don’t make a big fuss about what you do. Just do it, and be consistent about it all. When asked about what he eats, he just shrugged it off as not important. This implies there are no “Whitlock secrets” to running amazingly fast times for an octogenarian. From what I learned, he was obviously born with a good, sound body (I do believe we all are, to some extent). He trained in the rather “normal” way – doing faster-than-normal repeats in his 40’s (this was before he retreated to safe gravestones), some hill work (though all the pictures of him running in the cemetery show nothing but flat, grassy plots), and honing his pace (his engineering background came in handy – floating endless numbers in his head to keep that pace steady). He also chose marathons with very little to no elevation gain (hence Cleveland, Ohio, Rotterdam, and Toronto). But “google” him and see his age-group world records in all distances, from 800 meters and up.

Then I found an article (Ed Whitlock and the Age of Simplicity) written by Scott Douglas forRunners World (Feb 15, 2010). It’s a wonderfully revealing article about the real Ed Whitlock! Here are my favorite parts:

“Whitlock lives two and a half blocks from the cemetery, and does all of his training there. Speed work, daily maintenance runs, long runs of up to 3 hours, everything, meted out in loops that take no more than 5 minutes. He leaves his house with his day’s assignment decided and runs loops until his time is up. He doesn’t count loops or time them. He does look at his watch frequently and think, ‘What is taking so damn long?’ The day’s loop varies occasionally, sometimes dictated by the presence of grounds crew or gravediggers. He never runs the full perimeter loop. The last little section on the southwestern side of the cemetery would add another minute or so, but it includes a rise, perhaps 50 yards long, with the steepness of a handicap-accessibility ramp. ‘I choose not to tackle this hill,’ Whitlock explains. ‘I don’t like hills.’”

“When at the height of marathon training, Whitlock does cemetery loops for 3 hours a day, every day. He doesn’t do pick-ups or progression runs or marathon-pace work. He doesn’t even stop for water. Just 3 hours a day of what he calls ‘plodding’ or ‘jogging.’ ‘I run to race,’ he says. ‘I don’t do it primarily for my health or anything else.’”

“Living in Quebec in the ‘70’s, Brenda was at a school sports day when a teenager told her the running club was looking for a coach. ‘My wife said, “My husband used to run. He knows all about running,” Whitlock says with a laugh. ‘A, I don’t know anything about running. B, I have no ambition to be a coach. I’m too selfish. But I had been committed. When I went to practice, nobody showed any interest in me. I would just lean against the fence. I thought I might as well do some jogging around the track. This was quite a sight, because old men of 40 didn’t run in those days. I kept showing up and jogging around and ended up racing again because of that. It just kind of happened.’”

“Less than six months shy of his 70th birthday, Whitlock ran 2:54 at the 2000 Columbus Marathon. ‘I thought, “We’re okay now,” he says. “Maybe foolishly, I decided to try for sub-3 once I was 70 in London, Ontario. There were only about 300 people in the race, and I got hung out to run by myself the last half of the race.” Whitlock missed the mark with an agonizingly close 3:00:23. The 2- and 3-hour runs built on each other, and at the 2003 Toronto Marathon, at age 72, Whitlock met his goal with a 2:59:09. The following year, with several months of plodding buoying him, he returned to Toronto and ran 2:54:48. About that race, Whitlock, who is not given to rhapsody about life‘s endeavors, says, ‘That was a good day. It was never a struggle.’”

“Whitlock, who says, ‘I stay away from doctors, they’re bad people,’ last had a physical exam when he was 40. His uncle Arthur was Britain’s oldest man when he died in 2000 at age 108. Whitlock last took an aspirin during World War II.”

“‘Running should be a pastime,’ he says. ‘All sports should be a pastime. There shouldn’t be all this professional stuff. I believe that Paula Radcliffe is drug-free, but I do think she pushes the envelope of being a professional runner to the extreme. I don’t mean to single her out, but she’s living an artificial existence. She’s always away from home or sleeping in an altitude chamber. She has this entourage of people constantly around her poking and prodding. That’s so far away from what I do and how I would want to live. Monomania leads to terrible things.’”

(Famous World Record old shoes “timenote.info”)

All I can say at this point is….are there realistically any world records left to be achieved? It’s hard to come up with any for me. Darn. Maybe if I just keep on “doing my thing”, one will present itself, and I’ll get back to hone my body to do the impossible. And I hope I can find a handy cemetery nearby. I like the idea of just getting out there, no counting of miles, loops, or hours. Just jogging along. And I’ve accumulated enough “not worn-out enough Hokas” to last me several more decades. I’m all set. Don’t count me out, okay?

The Mature Runner: The Lure of a Fast 10,000 meter Run

September 26, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

As fall advances, and I read about all the cross-country races going on locally, I find myself reminiscing about running 10k’s on the track. Here’s the connection: back in the ‘80’s I was among other things (like a college French teacher) a NCAA Div III cross-country coach. Early every Saturday morning, I’d be with the team getting them to breakfast before the normal 10am start of the week’s race. I was also at the height of my so-called “running prowess”. My French class schedule allowed me to do my daily workout right before the team would arrive at the fieldhouse for their workouts, which I would do with them. It was an ideal double-workout. After a few years of getting the team ready for the week’s race, I was always wishing I could be out there running the race with them. That would look bad! So, there I was, having no ability to do a weekly race. Solution: I could get up super-early, and do my own race….before getting the team up and out to breakfast. The result was using whatever school-we-were-at track and do a timed 10k. I could put all the workout finesse I had honed through the week to work. This only happened the last season I was the cross-country coach. As a result, I started bringing down my PR from doing 10k’s out on the roads. I finally broke the 34 minute barrier, and ran a 33:24:40. I put it all on the line, not daring think of what would probably happen while I was running around the course 4 hours later urging on my runners. Yes, I was beat to the bone, but could never show it. And the last meet of the season, everything was set for another try for a new PR. The weather was ideal (no wind and cool), and the workouts had gone perfectly. I knew the spits I had to reach to end up with a new PR. I looked at my watch as I crossed the “finish line” and saw to my amazement, 33:24:23. Victorious, but a little empty since it was only by 17 100ths of a second. And….I’ve never been anywhere even close to that ever since.

And speaking of 10ks, I had to go online and find out what the wide world of running has accomplished since I last looked (so many years ago). I was shocked. The women’s 10k world record times went down below 31:00 (the last time I looked). But as of today, Ethiopian Letesenbet Gidey ran a 29:01.03 at the Ethiopian Olympic Trials in Hengelo, Netherlands (June 8, 2021). Her last lap was a 60:03. She traded off world records with Sitan Hassan who ran a 29:06.32 just 2 days before on the same track. So, I googled her to find out a little more….she is 5’5” and is listed at 110 pounds. Of course, she grew up on an Ethiopian farm, and when 13, refused to run as part of her local school’s PE program, which got her expelled from school. She was allowed back into school when she agreed to be part of the school PE program! Little did they know! We can’t leave Letesenbet without mentioning she broke 2 other WR in 2021: the 5000m in Valencia, Spain on October 7 in 14:06.62, and then again in Valencia, Spain on October 24th she ran a WR in the 1⁄2 marathon (road) in 62:52. Frankly, those times used to be WR times for men! Paavo Nurmi ran a WR 14:24 (5000m) in 1924 in Stockholm. And Emil Zátopek ran a 29:24 (10,000m) in 1949 in the Czech Republic.

Letesenbet Gidey Triumphant at 5,000m via tvmax-9.com.

And her 10k record via sportskeeda.com.

And now on to the current men’s records run by Joshua Cheptegei, from Uganda – 26 years old (5’6” and 115 lbs). Notice the similarity of Joshua’s specs with Letesenbet’s? Joshua is 1 inch taller, and 5 pounds heavier. (Looks like most of humanity is nowhere close to breaking long distance world records!) That track in Valencia, Spain also saw Joshua break his 10,000m record on the same day as Letesenbet’s (26:11:00). Wow. And his 5,000m WR came in Monaco on Aug 14, 2020 with a 12:35:36.

Joshua’s 10k record elmercurlo.com.

…and the 5,000m record via triamax.com.

I’m just bringing you up-to-date on the fast people to put my once-thought-to-be glorious DR (David’s Record) of 33:24:23 in proper perspective 🙂 Happy doing your thing this fall – happy dreaming of what you can do, or have done, or will do!!

The Mature Runner: A Tale of Heroes at the 2022 BRR

August 29, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters, Races /by Mira Brody

By David Summerfield

Since I’m not physically present at the race anymore, this is what I’ve gleaned from conversations. I can’t help but see everyone involved in the BRR as people determined to fulfill their inner drive to be heroes of some kind. This may seem an exaggeration, but everyone in some way is always challenged to dig deeply into the inner self, and struggle in some way – and that’s what the hero’s journey is all about.

This year several sweeps could not show up, so alternates had to show up. One was Darryl Baker, who spent all summer coordinating the hauling of 2 1⁄2 gallon jugs onto the ridge. And he helps set-up the finish line, and helps take it all down. One busy individual, as you all know. But on Aug 13th, he found himself following a runner from Oklahoma, who barely made the Sac summit under 75 minutes (the cut-off). Being told the next aid station was a downhill 5 miles, the runner decided to go on to Ross Pass. According to Darryl, this runner fell over a dozen times coming off Sac – yes, the boulder field is tricky, so this Oklahoman had his own “hero’s journey” – making it down alive to Ross Pass!

This is Darryl’s picture taken that day coming off of Sac.

Another hero was Dean Folda, who tirelessly (actually he did get tired out!) cooked all the burgers on Kurt Buchl’s BBQ for the crowd for so many hours. His brother James had been doing this for many years (with his family) and sadly passed away in April. He asked to take his brother’s place to honor him. A true hero doesn’t take any credit for his deeds – he’s always doing it for a higher good. And that sentiment goes for the horde of volunteers who put on this race, like Boz. He’s always the unsung hero every Ridge Run. He accomplishes the feats of a dozen volunteers. He’ll have to be the subject of the next post-BRR article.

I realized something very important was missing the day after the race. There was no article or results in the Bozeman Daily Chronicle, interviewing runners at the finish line. That had never happened before. Yes, there was one picture of Kristina Trygstad (who was the 1st woman down, and with just one male runner in front of her!) – but nothing else. So, I got her on the line, and had a great conversation – here is the fruit of our little talk:

Many of you know Kristina Trygstad-Saari as a member of a storied family of Ridge Runners, and more importantly of Norwegian (mom Anne) and Finnish (dad George) descent. Her mom holds the over 60’s and over ‘70’s records. Kristina held the overall women’s record of 3:40:37 (2019). But this year, the stars all lined up just right, and here’s the story.

Kristina coaches cross-country skiers in the winter (officially she’s the US Paralympics Nordic Skiing Coach & Manager), but keeps up her running year round. As soon as the trails get clear of ice and snow, she regularly trains going up and down Baldy. (My last trip up Baldy her mom Anne passed me going down – oh, and you can see their house on Bridger Canyon Road from the summit.) Wanting to be in really good shape for another fast Ridge Run, she took it easy the months leading up to Aug 13th. She only did one longish trail race – a 30km trail race in Ketchum (Idaho) called the Standhope Ultra Challenge, July 23rd. Oh, she won that race, outright (3:22:13)…98 runners, the guy behind her was 5 minutes back, and the woman behind him was 37 minutes behind. Kristina said this was a low-key race which was perfect for being relaxed come August 13th. Not to be misleading, she did pretty heavy distance work on her favorite trails (going up and down Baldy all summer!!).

I pressed her for her nutrition. Remember, her body is not like yours, so her regimen is what works best for her, not yours! She likes food that’s easy on the stomach, that digests well. This means pasta, rice, eggs, fruit – she prefers bland food, and light on the veggies. The night before was pasta, and just a bit more than usual. Having no ride to the start, she drove herself up, and was the 1st runner to arrive (“I wanted to beat the train!”) She relaxed in her car as the sun rose, and then strapped on her waist belt (3 GU’s, and 1 bottle of water). She also carried one handheld water bottle. She had Chris (her boyfriend of many years who is in his last year in nursing) meet her at Bridger. He handed over 2 more GU’s, and exchanged 2 full water bottles. I was struck by her not having any fancy, chemically enhanced powder in the water. “No, water is best for my finicky stomach!” And 5 GU’s total for the run, like 1 every 1⁄2 hour or so. And that’s it. Period. Talk about different bodies….my last Ridge Run I downed over 3 quarts of strong Gatorade, 6 GU’s, 14 ecaps, stopping at each Aid Station downing as many calories as I could get…potato chips, pretzels, pickles, gummy bears). It also took me over 7:30 to finish 🙂 Back to the rather unreal Trygstad-Saari world…

Kristina did go to the “M” parking lot to examine the new finish area the evening before the run. I’d say she was conscious of the possibility of breaking her own record, and knowing it would take an extra minute or 2 to get to the Fish Hatchery. She said that’s when she realized “I’m just going to go for it!” At the start, she was in a pack of 4 guys, some of whom she knew. And soon she was just behind Zach Perrin (who won), knowing that she wouldn’t catch him, but not having anyone behind her to push her. This meant the pressure was off – she just had to run her own race. Weather? Not a factor since it was cooler than usual, and by Baldy, there was the usual blazing sun.

This is her 6th time to race the BRR, and she’s the type who clearly knows the times needed at various checkpoints, so she was totally aware of her pace and possibilities. She glanced at her watch as she passed approximately where the old finish line was, and her watch read 3:37. That’s a CR (Course Record). And she only needed another couple minutes to cross the new finish line in 3:39:25!!

What type of person can be called a hero who has such an easy time pulling off a heroic feat?? The telling of this story does make it sound like Kristina was just doing a “walk in the park”. But it was the result of not racing the Ridge for 3 years, for starters. You could call her a “one point focus” hero. In talking with her I could hear the unsaid

thoughts – like “I know I can go faster”. She’s 37 and in the prime of her running life. I know of no runners who finish such runs without knowing “I know I can do it faster next time!” They also don’t brag about their exploits. They work harder than most of us know how to work. Fear doesn’t exist – caution, yes, but no fear. Just assurance that if you focus all your efforts, you can do whatever you set your mind to.

And I’ll leave it at that, finishing on a preposition as well…I seem to remember Kristina was an English major 🙂

The Mature Runner: What World Record Fell This Month?

July 28, 2022/in Latest News, News, Newsletters /by Mira Brody

By David Summerfield

At the Eugene, Oregon World T&F Championships, Sydney McLaughlin (USA) ran a 50.68 in the women’s 400m hurdles – and was just 1:57 behind the winning 400m, without hurdles! And Noah Lyles just lowered the American 200 meter dash time to 19:31. Great…these quick short, little runs were well shy of going 26.2 miles.

Anything else? Well, the fact that I eeeked out one more marathon this year, yes – that’s a Summerfield 2022 Record. Ha! Must I bore you with the details, obviously! Since ending my “real running exploits a few years ago, I only jog downhills anymore. Now all I do is pick a course that gets measured accurately (I used to be a certified USA T&F course measurer, and I would “sanction” races, really). Then I build up to it, and pull it off. I used to do this using Frank Newman’s marathon course going to Livingston (yes, walking the whole way). Moving to Nye, Montana – I found a great course, measured it, and did it last year, with Stacy’s help who did the last 16 mile with me (if you ever need a new marathon course, just get to Absarokee, park near the intersection of the only blinking light going through town, and take off going toward Red Lodge.

(the Absarokee blinking light starting line “everipedia.org”)

After 2.8 miles, turn West onto the Nye Road, and go the 24 miles to the Cathedral Mountain Ranch gate…exactly 26.3 miles. You have the thrill of seeing the snowcapped Beartooth Mountains as a backdrop – just like seeing the Absarokas going over to Livingston).

(CMR Gate Finish Line, “cmra.us/photo/cabins/gagte1a.jpg”)

Back to this year’s 2022 marathon. Instead of the traditional FNM on Memorial Day weekend (we were in France then), we kept waiting for decent weather – not hot, not on a weekend. Too many days in the 90’s, so I got impatient, and decided to start at 2:30am, on the coolest day (only 85°) for weeks.

The next challenge was to find the perfect cache sites for my smorgasbord every 5 miles or so. This year, I discovered that all those metal guardrails along highways always have little curved endings, with hollowed-out cupboards behind, perfect for storing food and drink, and a flat spot on top to sit on while dining along the roadway. Suddenly, “doing a marathon” turned into a stroll along the road in style. What’s in the cache? The obligatory 14oz, 30g Premier Protein drink à la Franklin Coles, a used Coke bottle with Gatorade refill, a banana, a GU packet, a Kirkland chewy granola bar, and a little crisp apple. The last 3 caches had a wonderfully honeyed (moist soaked-through) peanut butter/honey sandwich. I discovered that much food is great for a much longer distance! At the end of the walk, I found out I weighed a pound heavier at the end than at the beginning! That’s something new. (Perhaps I’m putting out too much food.) Oh, I also carry a Scott Jurek inspired waist belt which holds 3 pouches – one for the ibuprofen and HammerNutrition ecaps, the others for the nasty GU packets.

If you’ve gotten this far in the article, my apologies. Here are some of the highlights: at 2:30am July 19th, the moon was high in the SW over my shoulder, with Neptune right beside it. This picture doesn’t do justice to the sight. It was like a huge flashlight.

(Moon with Jupiter “www.theweathernetwork.com”)

I could easily see the white lines telling me where the asphalt ended. The Pleiades rose further to the West around 3:30am. There was NO traffic. I was in my own personal paradise. I wore a headlamp, but only used it to find the various mileage markers so I could compute my pace. My 1st cache was across the street from the Fishtail General Store, next to a perfectly flat sitting rock. 6 minutes later, off I went into the night.

Fishtail General Store “www.whereiscookie.com”)

Around 5:30am, the 1st of 6 big white buses roared by – taking the daytime shift workers to the Stillwater Mine, located just 2 miles down from my finish line. That’s when the traffic started to grow. It wasn’t until past my 2nd cache (mile 11) that I entered the 1st direct sunlight. With a good headwind, I was kept quite cool as I got to the 1⁄2 way point, where Stacy and Morgan (daughter) joined me for the last 1⁄2 of the route! The 3rd cache was by the “Fishtail Creek End-of-the-metal-guardrail Smorgasbord station. I was too full to take much, realizing I wasn’t burning as many calories as I imagined. Up and over the pass, there’s a 5 mile long winding downhill with gorgeous views of the Beartooths. Yes, getting hot, but that headwind was a Godsend. Realizing we were going to go faster than the year before (8 hrs 47 min) we pressed on with blistering soles yelling away. We finished at our car parked next to the Cathedral Mountain Ranch gate in 8 hrs, 28 min. A wonderful walk on a beautiful day, and whew – the 2022 marathon is history – and I’m consciously wondering why I have to do this every single year. Yes, the streak is unbroken since my 1st marathon in 1980. (digression: the 1st marathon was the “Marathon de Martigny”, Switzerland – run entirely on narrow cobblestone, gravel paths through their vineyards…done in 2:59:36…yes, I was trying to get under 3 hours!) Back to streaks, they are made to be broken….just like world records? We’ll see. Frankly, making it a huge production is sorta fun, and with a willing family to put up with this kind of stuff, we’ll keep it going 🙂

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Latest News

  • The Mature Runner: Runners Who Made Us ProudAugust 26, 2024 - 10:45 am
  • The Mature Runner: Fierce Competition Yields World RecordsJune 25, 2024 - 10:54 am
  • Congrats to the 2024 BSWD scholarship recipients!May 30, 2024 - 7:12 am

Fun Runs Volunteer Signup

  • Highland Glen
    May 14 – 1 Open Spots
  • Bozeman Creek - Sourdough
    May 21 – 0 Open Spots
  • Frank Newman Marathon
    May 24 – 15 Open Spots
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