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-   -   Marathon on Saturday (http://www.cougarguard.com/forum/showthread.php?t=19450)

Sea Chicken 05-15-2008 10:27 PM

Marathon on Saturday
 
I'm already feeling butterflies in my stomach and pooing alot.

Runner Coug 05-15-2008 10:34 PM

Just pray you'll be able to poo Saturday morning before you start running.

Venkman 05-15-2008 10:38 PM

I'm dreading it. My training has been pathetic. Thank goodness there's no uphill.

Sea Chicken 05-15-2008 10:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Runner Coug (Post 221801)
Just pray you'll be able to poo Saturday morning before you start running.

One of the reasons for the butterflies.

bigpiney 05-15-2008 10:49 PM

Good luck to you all. You are much tougher than I may ever be.

I am running the hardest 10k I know on saturday, which should be awesome. It is fun to see marines sucking wind as I pass them. http://y-events.com/mwtc/

Runner Coug 05-15-2008 10:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Venkman (Post 221805)
I'm dreading it. My training has been pathetic. Thank goodness there's no uphill.

That hill right before Pineview is no cake walk.

When I ran Ogden, it was the canyon that beat me up.

Sea Chicken 05-15-2008 10:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigpiney (Post 221813)
It is fun to see marines sucking wind as I pass them.

A word of advice: Don't taunt wind-sucking marines.

ThatSportsFan 05-16-2008 06:18 AM

I procrastinated to long and didn't get in the half. But I get a call today from a girl in my ward and her sisters friend dislocated her knee and can't run it and they want to see if they can transfer me over for her, I still signed up for the 5K.

But I'm a little nervous, I really haven't been training for the half the past couple weeks and I have been just been thinking about the 5K. I guess I will find out tomorrow.

bluegoose 05-16-2008 03:12 PM

Good luck guys. May your legs be fast and your bowels be slow.

ThatSportsFan 05-17-2008 09:17 PM

Well I didn't get in the half of course. I had a feeling they wouldn't transfer me. But I ran the 5K and I ran it at 25:27. I thought I was going a lot slower which I guess is good. But when I got close to the finish line and saw my time I was pretty happy. Not to bad after having to take 2 weeks off from my hamstring injury and then having no time to run during finals.

I'm for sure going to sign up for the half next year. No more procrastinating.

Sea Chicken 05-18-2008 07:37 PM

3:49:00

20 minutes better than my previous best (Logan last September) so I'm happy with my result. Now my calves hurt ... and my feet, and my thighs, and my knees, and my ankles, and my ass.

All the downhill running wasn't as bad as some people had said it would be except that a couple miles from the bottom of the canyon my back started hurting a bit, but that went away when the course leveled out.

All in all, it was a pretty cool marathon. Y'all should try it some time.

bluegoose 05-19-2008 04:06 PM

Nice work chicken.

How many marathons does this make for you? 20 minutes is a huge improvement, any way you look at it.

MikeWaters 05-19-2008 04:09 PM

Congrats chicken. My sister in law could have cooked a casserole in the time between her finish and yours, and you would have had enough time to fry an egg and eat some cereal in the time between you and my mom.

But seriously, good job. The furthest I have ever run in my life is less than 3 miles. I would die.

Archaea 05-19-2008 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MikeWaters (Post 222572)
Congrats chicken. My sister in law could have cooked a casserole in the time between her finish and yours, and you would have had enough time to fry an egg and eat some cereal in the time between you and my mom.

But seriously, good job. The furthest I have ever run in my life is less than 3 miles. I would die.

You may wish to work on your skills complimenting people. First time under four hours is quite an accomplishment.

Some of us are nonrunners who run and others are runners who do what nature intended them to do. SIL is doing what nature gave her. I can't comment upon Sea Chicken but endurance is a struggle. Coming from somebody who can't stay healthy enough to run well, I find it amazing people can run quickly on a frequent basis.

Congrats Sea Chicken.

SteelBlue 05-19-2008 04:52 PM

Dropping 20 minutes is huge! Nice job Sea Chicken.

I'm with Archaea, I love to run, but I can't keep my legs healthy long enough to accomplish what I feel like my heart/lungs are capable of accomplishing. I've always got a tendonitis or a bursitis somewhere. I really admire you guys who can rack up those miles and stay pain free.

bigpiney 05-19-2008 06:16 PM

in the spirit of full disclosure, I suck.

I ran that 10 k. Not sure if any marines beat me, but a bunch of other people did, including 2 girls. It was a 11:00 start and I was feeling really good as we started out down a steep hill and turned the corner to the 1000 climb over 2 miles. I was still feeling good for about 1.5 miles and then the burn in my quads and lungs got super intense. At that point I was in 3rd place but my body decided that running wasn't a good idea. So people started to pass me and when I got to the first obstacle the 5 foot wall climb I couldn't do it. Had to use the hay bail like a freaking wimp to get over it.

The race seemed to go on forever. I was hurting. I thought I was going to kill myself when I came to the tire run. Had to walk through that. I passed some guy that had passed out on the course, but the medical staff was already with him. The last mile and a half are a steep down hill and I managed to not let any one pass me in that time and even out sprinted some guy that was coming up behind me (allowing me to maintain 1st in my age group).

After the race I couldn't walk more than 10 feet without feeling like I was going to wither puke or pass-out. It took me 45 minutes to recover and never have I felt like such a wimp. I have never actally participated in something where I felt like I could not have gone any harder. I used everything my boby was willing ot give me that day, and it wasn't much. Overall result 19th out of 307 racers, first in my agegroup, 4 minutes and 20 seconds slower than when I did it 2 years ago.

One fun part was watching my kids climb the 60ft climbing wall in the gym. The marines were great hosts. I just sat there on the floor and tried not to lose it.

Overall it is a great race, even though the 80 degreee temperatures and 7500 ft elevation didn't agree with me. Next year I may be watching from the sidelines taking care of kids as my wife wants to do it. She could win the womens race.

Runner Coug 05-19-2008 06:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Archaea (Post 222593)
Some of us are nonrunners who run and others are runners who do what nature intended them to do. SIL is doing what nature gave her. I can't comment upon Sea Chicken but endurance is a struggle. Coming from somebody who can't stay healthy enough to run well, I find it amazing people can run quickly on a frequent basis.

Congrats Sea Chicken.

Well said Archaea. It's too bad when those who have never toed the line diminish the hard work of runners whose gains have to come through running their ass off instead of natural talent.

Way to go Sea Chicken. Under 4 is a hell of a good marathon time, and in most races will put you ahead of about 65-70% of all finishers. Under 3:50 is even better. Anyone who knows anything about running will agree.

SteelBlue 05-19-2008 07:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigpiney (Post 222670)
in the spirit of full disclosure, I suck.

I ran that 10 k. Not sure if any marines beat me, but a bunch of other people did, including 2 girls. It was a 11:00 start and I was feeling really good as we started out down a steep hill and turned the corner to the 1000 climb over 2 miles. I was still feeling good for about 1.5 miles and then the burn in my quads and lungs got super intense. At that point I was in 3rd place but my body decided that running wasn't a good idea. So people started to pass me and when I got to the first obstacle the 5 foot wall climb I couldn't do it. Had to use the hay bail like a freaking wimp to get over it.

The race seemed to go on forever. I was hurting. I thought I was going to kill myself when I came to the tire run. Had to walk through that. I passed some guy that had passed out on the course, but the medical staff was already with him. The last mile and a half are a steep down hill and I managed to not let any one pass me in that time and even out sprinted some guy that was coming up behind me (allowing me to maintain 1st in my age group).

After the race I couldn't walk more than 10 feet without feeling like I was going to wither puke or pass-out. It took me 45 minutes to recover and never have I felt like such a wimp. I have never actally participated in something where I felt like I could not have gone any harder. I used everything my boby was willing ot give me that day, and it wasn't much. Overall result 19th out of 307 racers, first in my agegroup, 4 minutes and 20 seconds slower than when I did it 2 years ago.

One fun part was watching my kids climb the 60ft climbing wall in the gym. The marines were great hosts. I just sat there on the floor and tried not to lose it.

Overall it is a great race, even though the 80 degreee temperatures and 7500 ft elevation didn't agree with me. Next year I may be watching from the sidelines taking care of kids as my wife wants to do it. She could win the womens race.

So first in your age group means you suck? That sounds like a brutal race, I doubt I'd finish. For the 5 foot wall does it have a rope hanging off of it? Or do you just grab the top and throw yourself over?

Sea Chicken 05-19-2008 08:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigpiney (Post 222670)
Overall result 19th out of 307 racers, first in my agegroup.

We should all suck like that. Great job Piney. That sounds like a fun race.

bigpiney 05-19-2008 08:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SteelBlue (Post 222712)
So first in your age group means you suck? That sounds like a brutal race, I doubt I'd finish. For the 5 foot wall does it have a rope hanging off of it? Or do you just grab the top and throw yourself over?

The 5 foot wall is just sitting there so you have to run up and launch yourself over. Or if you are like me put two hands on top and try and climb over a few times, before sheepishly moving over to the side where there are hay bails that you can step up on.

The worst obstacles were the tunnel crawls. They were 20 ft long plastic culverts that you had to crawl through. My knees got all cut up inside those from the rocks that were in there.

I really feel like I suck because I had to walk so much. I would get to a small hill and my mind and body would be HELL NO are you running up this. I thought I was much tougher than I really am.

Runner Coug 05-19-2008 09:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigpiney (Post 222787)
I really feel like I suck because I had to walk so much. I would get to a small hill and my mind and body would be HELL NO are you running up this. I thought I was much tougher than I really am.

There's no shame in walking.

That race sounds like fun. I've been wanting to do the Camp Pendleton Mud Run. There aren't many 10k's that I would travel to, but that's definetely one of them.

http://www.camppendletonraces.com/mud_sat.html

bigpiney 05-19-2008 09:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Runner Coug (Post 222801)
There's no shame in walking.

That race sounds like fun. I've been wanting to do the Camp Pendleton Mud Run. There aren't many 10k's that I would travel to, but that's definetely one of them.

http://www.camppendletonraces.com/mud_sat.html

I have been meaning to do one of the mud runs. They seem to fill up the day registration opens, so whenever I think about doing it, it is way too late.

THe race I did used to be part of the race series. The Marines do a good job with support on the races.

I may try and do one next year.

Runner Coug 05-19-2008 09:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bigpiney (Post 222810)
THe race I did used to be part of the race series. The Marines do a good job with support on the races.

Of course another option for a military-style race would be the Bataan Memorial Death March.

http://www.bataanmarch.com/

http://www.bataanmarch.com/Elevation...-stations2.jpg

Venkman 05-20-2008 02:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sea Chicken (Post 222377)
3:49:00

20 minutes better than my previous best (Logan last September) so I'm happy with my result. Now my calves hurt ... and my feet, and my thighs, and my knees, and my ankles, and my ass.

All the downhill running wasn't as bad as some people had said it would be except that a couple miles from the bottom of the canyon my back started hurting a bit, but that went away when the course leveled out.

All in all, it was a pretty cool marathon. Y'all should try it some time.

Great job Sea Chicken! I had a great first half, but just about everything that could go wrong did go wrong in the second half. Oh well, I'll live on to run another day. Very pretty course though.


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