Wednesday, April 1, 2009

The race from down under

Race report from Alpine Skyrun 100 mile race in Australia, I can cross Australia off the list now. Just as I thought navigation proved to be a major issue for me on the race. During the first stage I got lost three times, because it was the beginning of the race I was able to find my way back to the right trail by following the headlamps. For safety reason I decided to buddy up with other runners, by the time I made it back to the trail that would take me to the top of Mt Feathertop, I had found my running buddies for the rest of the race. Elm Tree men’s relay team from Melbourne who were armed with a Garmin GPS became my company and pacers for the rest of the race. Safety wasn’t my concern even if lost, each runner was equipped with EPIRB (a tracking beacon) and my cell had coverage, so the major concern was lost time and snakes of course, but we did learned that it takes about four hours for the venom of a deadly snake to kill you, so there were plenty of time to rescue, at the meeting they had a great time watching me squirmed every time they show the snakes slides, Leslie part of my support crew and a Banff residence in exchange reminded them in Canada we have bears to deal with, and with bears specially the Grizzly kind there is no 4 hours window to protect you. They left me alone after that.

On ultrarunning there are three types of competitors, the frontrunners, who usually run most of the race and win the top spots, the mid-packers are usually competing for the age group brackets and usually do a combination of running and fast walking, most of the time this is where I find myself, competing for the 40-49 age group, and the third group is the late group, these are the competitors that speed walk the race mostly and do a bit of running if any, this is where Elm Tree Relay team fit, the range of fitness of the eight members vary from somewhat fit to very fit but as a team you must finish each stage together so you are only as fast as you slowest member. And sometimes especially at 1am and because I was running each and every leg of the race, the slow member of the group was me.











At first the pace seem at bit slow but I knew that I had a better chance of finishing the race if stay with the team that if I went on my own. After the Yukon race, my focus had shifted more toward surviving a race rather than setting course records, even of the age group kind. As I am also finding out, racing so often has affected my speed dramatically, last year I run Boston Marathon in 3:28:42, this year I would be surprise if I can run in under 4 hours. After a few hours on the course, their speed became my speed. Team Elm and I struggled through the first 21 hours of the race, they because of an injured member and I fought fatigue and the effects of jet lag, we missed the cut off time at the end of stage three so Paul Ashton the race organizer decided to allow us to continue on an alternative shorter distance, the 120 kilometre distance. We camped on top of Mt. Bogong, and continue the rest of the race at 9 am the next morning






If you think we Canadians are friendly, you haven’t been to Australia. This is by far the race that I have enjoyed the most, usually run races alone and ultras can be so long, there are times I would run for seven hours before I would see somebody again. The next day facing a much shorter course and after a few hours sleep my pace become a bit faster, team elm also put their fittest members on day two so we successfully finished the new 120 kilometre race in about 42 hours. At the end of the race there were three different distances that would continue to be an option for next year, 100K, 120K and 160K, Paul and Jessica and team one won the 100 mile distance, Paul Ashton, Elm Tree team and I won the 120K and Andrew a soloist runner who also couldn’t navigate successfully finished the 100K distance.








Alpine Skyrun’s course was breathtaking, also the participants attitudes of no man left behind made it an unique experience, this was no picnic, the course is truly challenging, but in a true Aussie fashion the race environment was very lay back.
So even though I did successfully finish the race, there was a possibility of not finishing if the rules had been enforced and ended up being disqualified for timing out. I did a lot of thinking during the race, my next race is 100 miles and the time limit is 30 hours, i wondered if this is still realistic giving the fact that I am slowing down, i played with the idea of finding a 100 kilometre race somewhere in North America and running that instead, after all 100K is no laughing matter. But just a few hours, a nice shower and pizza, i wondered if it was not fear talking instead, the fear of making a fool of myself. There are certain risks I am willing to take, and making a fool of me because I am stepping out of my comfort zone is one of them, where would human kind be if it’s not for that wonderful willingness of being ridicule for the sake of following your dreams. So after much though I decided to run the iron Horse 100 mile race in St Paul, Alberta on Mother’s day weekend as my replacement race. The good news is that I have a few weeks to prepare for it, as I am finding out my quest to run 7 ultraraces in 7 months is as much to do overcoming the limits of the body as of the mind.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Fantastic Norma....keep it up! Sounds like you really enjoyed yourself. Don't let self doubt creep in! Your more than capable of achieving your end goal. Always stay positive...rest those legs for a little bit...then back to work! Once again....excellent job and continued success!

abhi said...

keep running

Anonymous said...

You couldn't make a fool of yourself even if you tried :).
No fear! The only way you will feel bad or have regrets is if you don't try to do it.

Norma Bastidas said...

Thanks so much! i am back training hard. the next 4 races are going to be the most demanding phisically.