Two nights ago I dreamt I was running this Saturday's Desert Solstice and was in terrible pain. Today, I feel no pressure and only hope I can run for 24 hours without getting injured. It is an exciting opportunity, this. I'm not really sure how I feel about the fact there is a webcam. I'm not really sure how I feel about the fact that I am interviewing for a residency spot on Friday at University of Minnesota and on Monday and UC-Irvine (okay, I'm nervous)! This is all a lot to take in. By the way, I would not be able to do any of this without our Au Pair, Nanna - not to mention SR, who just tossed a Danish jersey singlet on my lap.
Here is the startlist for Desert Solstice:
2013 Desert Solstice Entrants
Name | Notable PR | Other Highlight | Nationality |
---|---|---|---|
Jennifer Aradi | 128.1 Miles (24 Hour) | 2012 Heartland 100 Winner | USA |
Zach Bitter | 5:12:36 (50 Miles) | 2012 50 Mile National Champion | USA |
Eric Clifton | 13:16:02 (100 Miles) | Former JFK Course Record Holder | USA |
Anthony Culpepper | 82.39 Miles (12 Hour) | 2013 Beyond Limits 100 Winner | USA |
Ed Ettinghausen | 135.7 (24 Hours) | 52 Lifetime 100 Mile Finishes | USA |
Anthony Forsyth | 16:03:47 (100 Miles) | 2013 Beyond Limits 50 Winner | UK |
Connie Gardner | 149.368 Miles (24 Hours) | Former American 24 Hour Record Holder | USA |
Tracy Høeg | 43 Miles (6 Hours) | 2013 Salomon Hammer 100 Mile Winner | USA |
Deb Horn | 134.45 Miles (24 Hours) | Multiple Time Team USA 24 Hour | USA |
Carilyn Johnson | 130.92 Miles (24 Hours) | Multiple Time Team USA 24 Hour | USA |
Olivier Leblond | 14:33:25 (100 Miles) | 2012 Old Dominion 100 Winner | USA |
John Maas | 15:37:23 (100 Miles) | 2013 Kettle Moraine 100 Winner | USA |
Beth McCurdy | 122.55 Miles (24 Hour) | 2012 North Coast 24 Runner Up | USA |
Padraig Mullins | 8:42 (100 KM) | 2 Time Lake Waramug 100k Winner | Ireland |
Kristina Pham | USA | ||
Roy Pirrung | 154 Miles (24 Hours) | World Age Group Record Holder | USA |
David Ploskonka | 134.3 Miles (24 Hours) | 2010 Beast of Burden 100 Mile Winner | USA |
Pam Smith | 15:01:40 (100 Mile) | 4th Fastest North American 100 Miler | USA |
Jay Smithberger | 13:49:13 (100 Mile) | 3rd Place 2012 Desert Solstice 100 | USA |
John Ticer | 16:35:45 (100 Mile) | 2010 24 Hour AG National Champion | USA |
Victor Vella | 34:29:40 (Spartathlon) | National Age Group Record Holder | Malta |
The race director, Nick Coury, wrote a very informative piece on irunfar as a lead up to this Saturday's race, which includes an interesting history about 100 mile and 24 hour American records. Of course it will be exciting to see what Pam Smith can do (if she can break the track 24 hour American record) and if Zach Bitter can run a 100 mile American record. Pam, her husband and I will be staying together then night before and I hope at least some of her aura (don't be freaked, Pam) will rub off on me. Of course I can not be better than I am; I can only be the best I can be at this time. And that is pretty low-pressure and purposely vague, which is fine with me. No one is watching me and no one knows me. (Let's keep it that way)
Back to Nick Coury. He has been emailing all of us about exactly what he can buy for us to have at the aid station. If we are cold- they have extra jackets, if we need pacing, they are there to calculate, if we want Thai food at 2am, they'll get it- or something like that. And now we are all invited out to dinner the night before.
By the way, I love Duluth in the cold. On the way back from Virginia, driving with SR, Nanna and the kids, we saw amazing northern lights.
The nothern lights we saw looked like this. They were green because the wind from the sun was blowing through the weak spots in the magnetic field at the north pole and reacting with the oxygen in the atmosphere. Had they been reacting with the nitrogen, the northern lights would have been bluer/purpler and higher up in the atmosphere. It's intuitively obvious, really. What I never knew about aurora borealis is the lights and pattern change constantly (mostly it gets brighter and dimmer)! It is incredible. Like a sea of sun spot wind (an analogy we can all relate to). |
Yesterday it was -5F/-21 C
One more thing.
I read this article last night by Dr. Nicholas Romanov and it made so much sense to me! Why would you have a goal of running a marathon before you have learned to run well? I was exactly one of those people who never learned to run and was convinced to sign up for a marathon before I had even run a 5k. Sure it was fun and I had a runner's high at the end, but then I was injured for months afterwards. And for what? To tell people I had run a marathon? Pointless.
Would you try to play a concerto before you had learned the notes of the piano? Before you have learned to play chords and each scale? I don't know. Maybe. But you are sure making your life difficult. Plus it will sound like crap. And when it is not just your fingers, but your entire body, you are risking injury if not worse. Just something to consider.
Where I am right now-- my goal is simply to be good at running. This is a very satisfying and understandable goal. It has intrinsic value. Like, I want to be a good painter (okay I don't really) rather than paint 100 enormous murals before I have really learned to paint. (Maybe I should learn to write before writing this blog?!)
I leave you with some pictures of First Landing State Park in Virginia Beach, the site of the first landing of Jamestown Colonists in 1607.
I read this article last night by Dr. Nicholas Romanov and it made so much sense to me! Why would you have a goal of running a marathon before you have learned to run well? I was exactly one of those people who never learned to run and was convinced to sign up for a marathon before I had even run a 5k. Sure it was fun and I had a runner's high at the end, but then I was injured for months afterwards. And for what? To tell people I had run a marathon? Pointless.
Would you try to play a concerto before you had learned the notes of the piano? Before you have learned to play chords and each scale? I don't know. Maybe. But you are sure making your life difficult. Plus it will sound like crap. And when it is not just your fingers, but your entire body, you are risking injury if not worse. Just something to consider.
Where I am right now-- my goal is simply to be good at running. This is a very satisfying and understandable goal. It has intrinsic value. Like, I want to be a good painter (okay I don't really) rather than paint 100 enormous murals before I have really learned to paint. (Maybe I should learn to write before writing this blog?!)
I leave you with some pictures of First Landing State Park in Virginia Beach, the site of the first landing of Jamestown Colonists in 1607.
Spanish Moss on the trees, plant identification by Pam Smith |
I gained an understanding of why it was called the "tidewater area" |
On my way to the plane, I showered at the Zen hot yoga studio in Virgina Beach- one of the nicest showers I have ever experienced! Yogis are such awesome people. And they like nice shampoo and soap.
1 comment:
I have a framed photograph of the aurora hanging over my fireplace. If I look at it more than just a few seconds at a time, I swear the colors still grow brighter and dimmer. It is awesome!
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