Category Archives: Random Notes

Just a collection of random notes that don’t fit the other categories

When is it too much?

As endurance athletes we make our living (recreationally for most) off pushing ourselves to and beyond our limits. But in the past several years many of us have become all too familiar with terms such at OTS (OverTraining Syndrome) and Adrenal Fatigue, many of us even know someone who may have struggled with this in the recent past (or present). There are countless good articles discussing these issues, so that’s not my purpose here, rather my intention is to discuss the culture that leads many down this nasty spiral of over training and into months, if not years of recovery.

Finish line of the Gorge Waterfalls 100k, 12:54

Finish line of the Gorge Waterfalls 100k, 12:54

11 days ago I ran and finished the Gorge Waterfalls 100k race in Oregon, I was tired, a bit sore, but no worse for the wear. I’ve found over the past several years that my body seems to recover pretty well from long distance races, so wasn’t too surprised when the following Tuesday (3days later) I was back on the trail headed up the second flatiron for a jog/hike. The legs felt ok so I got out again Wednesday, then Thursday and when the weekend rolled around plans for a mellow ski snowballed into a possibly epic ski mountaineering route around Longs Peak; including some 5.4 climbing, lots of rock hopping with ski gear, and possibly 7500ft of vertical gain, oy.

Headed toward Longs Peak, 4/9/16.

Headed toward Longs Peak, 4/9/16.

We started skinning up the Longs Peak trail just after sunrise on 4/9/16 (one week after running a 100k race). I felt alright, but as we climbed higher and higher my legs began to feel like lead, my stabilizers were shot and I felt wobbly on the rocky terrain hiking in ski boots. The entire day was a slog for me, extremely fatigued, barely managing 1mph much of the time, and just feeling like crap. It was pretty apparent that I was not recovered from Gorge Waterfalls, but had no choice but to finish the route, so 13hours later (note, 14mi took longer than my 100k) I staggered back into the Longs Peak parking lot, completely wasted, so much so that over the next two days all I did was sleep and walk 3miles quite slowly. Special thanks to Jason, Andy and Dana for sticking out this long slog with me.

Sunset as we descend away from Longs and Chasm Lake back to the TH, 4/9/16.

Sunset as we descend away from Longs and Chasm Lake back to the TH, 4/9/16.

So the endurance athletes out there might be saying, “so what, you had a bad day” and that’s what our sport(s) is built on, but at what point is it more than a bad day, and really just a bad idea? In ultra distance running the mental ability to push through pain, to weather the highs and lows and to keep yourself going when most in this world would quit is really what separates many finishers from DNFs. But it is also this incessant drive to fight, struggle and suffer that gets so many in trouble. Terms such as FOMO (Fear of Missing Out), YOLO (You Only Live Once), ‘pain is temporary, glory last forever’, and ‘sufferfest’ are often thrown around by well meaning friends and training partners to help motivate others to get out and push through the pain. While this encouragement is a necessary part of success, especially in 100milers, I argue it’s also what leads many into over training territory. Combined with the fact that many of us know only one thing…physical activity, you have a ticking time bomb just waiting to go off.

When you need a nap, you need a nap. 2010 Wasatch 100 Pete decided 500 yards from the Ant Knoll AS he was sleeping, 10 seconds later he was snoring.

When you need a nap, you need a nap. 2010 Wasatch 100 Pete decided 500 yards from the Ant Knoll AS he was sleeping, 10 seconds later he was snoring.

But the real question is, when does pushing your body no longer become beneficial, but rather detrimental. This is exactly what I was asking myself the day after my Longs Peak debacle, and trying to understand if the signs were simply indicating short term fatigue, or if there was a larger underlying issue creeping in. Sadly the answer is, I don’t really know. There are various metrics such as heart rate, blood work, sleep patterns, etc that can help address fatigue, but what it comes down to is you really just need to listen to your body, and do so very carefully. Building in rest week (40+miles/wk is NOT rest) during big training cycles, rest months (or two) during the off season where you do limited cardiovascular activity, and really taking the time to take care of your body during those harder training weeks are probably the key. As the scientific community learns more about over training, we may have our magic biomarker to indicate when it’s happening, but for now the endurance athlete (me included) needs to remember to take a break every now and then, you’ll be better off in the long run.

Inaugural Salomon Run Club group run, 4/5/16.

Inaugural Salomon Run Club group run, 4/5/16.

Last week’s training cycle was supposed to be for rest post-Gorge Waterfalls, but does 19hours on my feet with 12000ft of vertical gain sound restful…I didn’t think so. Thankfully after several days of hard rest and recovery I’m feeling much more normal, but as I ramp into bigger training cycles there will definitely be this seed in the back of my mind…don’t overdo it. In the ten years since I started ultra distance running, 12 years of competing in ultra distance events, I’ve managed to avoid over training issues (plenty of aches and pains though), but have also watched many a friend fall down this rabbit hole. Sorry I can’t provide you any definitive answers, but maybe the ramblings of my brain will sound familiar to your personal struggles or your friend’s. So I hope everyone has a wonderful rest of the week, get in some great trail/rock time, but also listen to your body about what it truly needs, sometimes that’s activity, sometimes it’s a good acupuncture session, sometimes it’s a soak in the hot tub, but sometimes it’s simply rest. Thanks to Vfuel for helping to keep me energized throughout training, and all my friends in the Rocky Mountain Runners and Boulder Trail Runners for sharing many a long day with me. Run fast, run healthy, but mostly run happy.

A few articles for further reading on the topic if you so desire…

Dark side of Fitness, 5280

Overtraining Syndrome, Sports Health

Are you overtraining?, Runners World

Falling off the Wagon

Well my two week no sugar experiment is over, and it was interesting. The first several days of cutting added sugar and sweeteners (not whole fruit) had me feeling a bit run down, partially because I realized I was not getting enough calories. After the first few days I was able to settle in and my body started to equalize with the new diet. Oats for breakfast, leftovers and fruit for lunches, and cooking some sort of meat, grain and veggies for dinner. The biggest change for me was that my snacks consisted of fruits, veggies and nuts/nut butter rather than crackers, granola bars or other processed items. The only lapse I had was when I accidentally ate some banana chips only to realize they were sweetened.

After the two weeks was up I guess I gently fell off the wagon at first; consuming a doughnut, piece of birthday cake, a bowl of ice cream and some dark chocolate over the next week. The real test came during my conference this past week, eating well on the road is always a tricky endeavor and takes extra effort. We were served muffins, cookies, brownies, sugar cereals….all of which I partook, though I tried to stock my bag with fruits and other healthy snacks to stave off the cravings. I was mostly successful the first three days, but completely feel apart on the 4th day, consuming a bowl of cheerios, two brownies, three small cookies and a bowl of ice cream in one day, oops. And oy did I feel off that night after those sugar bombs.

Doesn't all this sugar look delicious?

Doesn’t all this sugar look delicious?

So the original experiment was a success and at home I’ve been able to shift around my eating habits when I have complete control over meals, my will power is still pretty weak when presented with tougher choices or when temptation is dangled right in front of me. So I’m hopping back on the wagon now that I’ve returned home, trying to eat a better balance of food and to remove the sweets yet again. So I guess the cliché, “old habits are hard to break” is pretty true. In light of this and my complete meltdown at the conference this past week, I’ve decided to restart my no sugar/sweetener binge the first two weeks of March…with one exception, a few squares of dark chocolate now and again 🙂  I know, I know, a slippery slope for sure, but at least I’m going in with the rules established. Not too surprising, but breaking bad habits does take effort and a lot of commitment, not just sometimes, but all the time. So back to the drawing board, and hopefully now that I’m back home I can get back into the good routines that I setup earlier in the month.

EDIT: I’ve had a few requests for a diet log for what I did. Even though I didn’t keep an official log, here are a few examples in more detail of meals/snacks and what I ate throughout the day. I found the key to keeping temptation away is to make the right choices on food you buy and keep around the house. Lunches were the hardest for me being at work with no time to prepare anything.

Breakfast: Rolled Oats with apples/cinnamon, blueberries, bananas/walnuts, or tsp cocoa powder/walnuts. Scrambled eggs with mushrooms, bell peppers, tomatoes, arugala.

Lunches: Dinner leftovers (see below). Turkey (careful here, as much of this is sweetened) and avocado wraps in corn tortillas. Sandwiches are ok, but most commercial bread has sugar. Be careful when purchasing lunch meat or jellies as many are sweetened with added sugar/HFCS.

Snacks: Pretzels and peanut butter or avocado, fruit (apples, bananas, oranges, blueberries, etc), nuts (cashews/almonds), baby carrots, cucumber slices and hummus.

Dinners: SW quinoa; quinoa, corn (can be frozen), bell peppers, anaheim pepper or similar, black beans, grilled chicken if desired. Stir fries; shrimp/chicken, broccoli, bell peppers, onions, snow peas, egg plant, mushrooms season w garlic, ginger, cumin or whatever suits your pallet serve over rice. Endless permutations. Sweet potato curry; sweet potato, broccoli, bell peppers, water chestnuts, mushrooms season lightly with curry. Curry sauce; 1 can coconut milk, 2 tbl of curry powder (adjust to desired spice level), simmer and mix. Serve over rice with sauce on top. Grilled/seared fish with a small basic side salad (not good as leftovers). Pasta with pesto and grilled veggies (bell peppers, mushrooms, onions)

Most of these meals make good leftovers and store well, so you can make larger quantities when time permits.

You Are What You Eat?

…so I guess I must be a giant sugar cube. I’ve never been one for New Years resolutions, rather opting to try to improve myself on a daily basis. While I usually try to eat somewhat healthy, I know I’ve got room for improvement in that field. Recently I was reading through ingredients on several packaged foods and kept noticing one theme pop up way too often….sugar. If you know me, you know I have a pretty bad sweet tooth; gummy bears, Reese’s PB cups, otter pops, ice cream…., but was somewhat surprised how many other things I could add to this list. Items like bread, many salad dressings, granola bars, frozen sweet potato fries, peanut butter (non-natural varieties), 75% dark chocolate, chai tea mix, many almond/soy milks (except unsweetened variety), pasta sauce, and on and on.

Though usually I succeed on consuming these only in moderation, lots of moderation can lead to excess. So I’ve decided to perform a little experiment on myself and take two weeks where I don’t consume anything with added sugar or sweeteners (cane sugar, corn syrup, agave…its all sugar). Before anyone out there launches into a diatribe about eating vegan, or gluten free, or raw, or paleo or whatever else diet you think is best…..that’s not the point of this exercise. It’s simply to become more aware of what I eat and put into my body, and to see how difficult it is (for me) to eliminate such things from my diet and how it makes me feel.

I’m not a dietitian and far from an expert, but simply an observant human being (and scientist) who loves to experiment. I know a lot of this can be remedied by simply cooking for myself more often, but as someone who spends 11hours/day associated with work and likes to recreate/socialize every once and a while, that doesn’t leave an over abundance of time for 3 complex meals a day. Yes yes, excuses excuses, but that’s the goal of this little exercise, to break old habits and negate the excuses for long term change. So let’s see how this goes. Note, I don’t plan on giving up sugar/sweets forever, what fun would that be 🙂

I’ll update on how this little test went in two weeks…..

2015 Year in Review

I’ve been somewhat slacking of late in my writing, too much work, too much wandering, and just too much scatter brained-ness going on. While I try not to live in the past, its always good to take a moment to reflect, remember and relish all the wonderful things one has done. 2015 was an amazing year, some amazing highs, some tough spots, but overall full of friends, fun and adventure. First a quick synopsis of a few stats, because I’m geeky like that, then some photographic highlights from the year.

Miles

Vertical Gain

Time on Feet (h)

Vertical/Mile

Running/Climbing/BC Skiing stats

2686.5mi

678,700ft gained (New PR)

749.73hours of time on feet

252.6 ft/mi gained

Since my last post about UTMB way back in September I’ve been to the Eastern Sierras for some fall running, scrambled a number of flatirons, spent a week in Zion canyoneering, snagged several days of back country skiing, had a feature article published in the inaugural ‘Boulder Running Journal’, and spent the holidays in California. Life has not been short on action and fun, and when 2015 is all said and done I’ll have spent 17 days traveling on airplanes, visited five different countries, seven different states and summited Green/Bear/Sanitas a cumulative 96 times. Here’s to a great 2015 and hopefully and even better 2016.

Celebrating the win with my sister and nephew, best High-fiver ever. Mississippi 50, 3/8/15.

Celebrating the win with my sister and nephew, best High-fiver ever. Mississippi 50, 3/8/15.

Running through the redwoods on a beautifully sunny California day, Miwok 100k 5/2/15.

Running through the redwoods on a beautifully sunny California day, Miwok 100k 5/2/15.

This place is alright. Relaxing and taking it all in at Yosemite Point. 7/1/15.

This place is alright. Relaxing and taking it all in at Yosemite Point. 7/1/15.

Headed toward the Maroon Bells on the shortcut from Snowmass, 7/25/15.
Headed toward the Maroon Bells on the shortcut from Snowmass.
I've never been good at tapering. Pre-race play time in Iceland, 8/21/15.

I’ve never been good at tapering. Pre-race play time in Iceland, 8/21/15.

Finally atop the Grand Col Ferret, rough climb, but now I get to go downhill.

Finally atop the Grand Col Ferret, rough climb, but now I get to go downhill.

First time back in the Eastern Sierras in a long time, 9/26/15.

First time back in the Eastern Sierras in a long time, 9/26/15.

Zion Narrows for Thanksgiving, 11/28/15.

Zion Narrows for Thanksgiving, 11/28/15.

Early season touring in the Indian Peaks, 12/20/15.

Early season touring in the Indian Peaks, 12/20/15.

 

Summer of Fun Recap, Next up UTMB!

It’s been a while since I’ve written anything, not for lack of content, but for lack of time. The Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc is rapidly approaching, only 9 days away, so I thought I’d throw a little fun recap out of my ‘training’ for the race, more like playing. Mostly its just a small collection of pretty pictures, hope you enjoy it 🙂

My DNF of 2013 at UTMB still haunts me to this day and I would say it’s been a driving force in keeping myself healthy and strong. Before this year’s UTMB race I’ve taken a little different approach to training, and it hasn’t really been ‘training’. After Miwok I was really struggling to find any sort of fire when it came to races, so decided that this year would not be about training and races, it’d be about adventure and fun. July 1st I ran an unsupported 100km loop around the Yosemite Valley, first known time as far as I can find.

This place is alright. Relaxing and taking it all in at Yosemite Point.

This place is alright. Relaxing and taking it all in at Yosemite Point.

The following week I was fortunate enough to join Andrew Hamilton for Longs Peak as he broke the Colorado 14ers FKT. I then paced a good friend Jason Oliver for 40miles at the Hardrock 100 enroute to his first finish, always an amazing time in the San Juans.

Sunrise near Virginius while pacing Jason Oliver at the 2015 Hardrock 100

Sunrise near Virginius while pacing Jason Oliver at the 2015 Hardrock 100

 

Trudging our way through the snow up to Oscars Pass

Trudging our way through the snow up to Oscars Pass

I finished off July with the Pawnee-Buchanan Loop and a successful connection of Capitol Peak, Snowmass Mt and the Maroon Bells in just over 15hours.

Descending off Buchanan Pass on the Pawnee-Buchanan Loop.

Descending off Buchanan Pass on the Pawnee-Buchanan Loop.

Traversing Pierre Lakes basin between Capitol and Snowmass during the Capitol-Snowmass-Bells linkup.

Traversing Pierre Lakes basin between Capitol and Snowmass during the Capitol-Snowmass-Bells linkup.
Headed toward the Maroon Bells on the shortcut from Snowmass.

Headed toward the Maroon Bells on the shortcut from Snowmass.

This linkup was something I’ve been eyeing for a while and was the last piece of the 14ers puzzle left to connect. I started at 345am at the Capitol Ditch TH and made steady progress up the standard route to Capitol Peak. I then backtracked over K2 and descended the Wandering Dutchman couloir into PierreLakes basin. The key to an efficient linkup is the class 3-4 ascent of the low point of the Capitol-Snowmass ridge, an otherwise foreboding knife-edge ridge guarded by sheer cliffs, pinnacles and nasty scree chutes. Once over the Capitol-Snowmass ridge I scampered up the backside of Snowmass Mt along the West Ridge, descended the standard route and took a high traverse to the trail just below Trail Rider Pass. Once I hit the trail I immediately crossed over and headed up the valley toward the ridge that separates Snowmass Lake from the Bells, taking a direct line across the high tundra toward the back side of the Gunsight Couloir. The climb up North Maroon’s NW ridge went slow and steady, then I did an out and back over to Maroon Peak across the Bells traverse and descended the NE ridge of North Maroon back to the TH. I had originally intended to go for Pyramid as well, but due to poor planning I was running out of food and didn’t have much warm clothing so left that for another day.

Headed toward Jasper during an extended High Lonesome Loop

Headed toward Jasper during an extended High Lonesome Loop

Jon laying in a field of flowers near Diamond Lake in the Indian Peaks.

Jon laying in a field of flowers near Diamond Lake in the Indian Peaks.

August saw more mountain play time including; an extended High Lonesome Loop including Jasper Peak and Mt Neva, a ridge run from Guanella Pass, the Maroon Bells Four Pass Loop and a scramble up Meeker and Longs.

High altitude ridge running near Guanella Pass.

High altitude ridge running near Guanella Pass.

The Maroon Bells Four Pass Loop rarely disappoints

The Maroon Bells Four Pass Loop rarely disappoints

Making our way up Keplingers after climbing the Loft and Mt Meeker enroute to Longs Peak.

Making our way up Keplingers after climbing the Loft and Mt Meeker enroute to Longs Peak.

My training volume never peaked over 75miles, I never broke 20,000ft of vertical gain (in the past I’ve hit as much as 30,000ft), but I feel very strong and fit after spending lots of quality mountain time outside and mixing in some solid weight sessions a few times a week. Whether this has adequately prepared me for UTMB remains to be seen, but I can say that it’s been quite a few years since I had this much fun simply playing outdoors; having rediscovered what brought me to the outdoors in the first place, a love of mountains, scrambling and off-trail adventure. With only 10 days until UTMB I’m trying to behave myself and keep the energy expenditure down, but with five days in Iceland coming up we’ll see how that goes. I’m excited and ready for some more mountain play time on the volcanoes of Iceland and in the mountains of the Alps. Thanks to Vfuel for keeping me energized throughout all these crazy fun mountain adventures, Adam Engel at Waldron’s Peak for helping me fix my ailments and get me stronger, and all my adventure buddies who have made this summer so wonderful….off to Europe!

The Long Way Around: Yosemite Valley Circumnavigation

Run Stats

Route Yosemite Valley Rim Circumnavigation
Time on Feet 17h 55min
Distance 64.5mi
Elevation 15,750ft Gain/Loss ea
Calories Consumed 3400 kcal; 12 Vfuel, 3 Clif Bars, 2 chewy bars, 6oz trail mix, 1 Justin’s Almond Butter, 2oz M&Ms, 2 fruit snacks, 1oz turkey jerky.
Water Consumed 13-15 20oz bottles (9L)
Salt Consumed 19 capsules/9000mg, approx 400-500mg ea
Calories Burned Approx 8,000 kcal
TemperatureRange 65-85°F

 

Gear: UD UltraVest, 2x 20oz bottles, BD Z-poles, Tikka XP headlamp, Fenix ED10 light, Foretrex 301 GPS, Canon S110 camera, SPOT locator, inhaler, First-aid kit, Emergency blanket, Aqua Mira.

Clothing: iNov8 X-talon 212, Smartwool PhD crew socks, Champion synthetic boxer briefs, TNF Better-than-naked shorts, RMR Patagonia shirt, Moeben sleeves, $1 Walmart gloves, Drymax hat, bandana, OR Helium 2 Jacket.

The actual GPS track from my loop around the Yosemite Valley.

The actual GPS track from my loop around the Yosemite Valley.

Motivation comes in many forms, and all too often I hear people say, “I need to sign up for a race to keep me motivated in training”. I’d argue you don’t need a race, just a goal to work towards. In recent years I’ve come to realize that racing and competition don’t really excite me like it does other, there’s no adventure, there’s no mystery, and the unknown/uncertainty is minimized by the structure. So when I decided to postpone my original big project earlier this year I went searching in California for something fun to do. This is when I noticed a series of trails that seemed to loop around the rim of the Yosemite Valley. I began searching for additional information about the trails, distances and routes, and found very little, and nothing on people completing the full loop. Really? Could it be that no one has completed (and recorded publicly) hiking or running the loop? The closest I’ve found are runs/hikes of the North Rim and Leor Pantilat’s Tenaya Canyon Loop.

4500kcal is a lot to carry around. Prerun packing.

4500kcal is a lot to carry around. Prerun packing.

Early morning light at the Tunnel View overlook, here goes nothing.

Early morning light at the Tunnel View overlook, here goes nothing.

Tuesday 6/30 I flew back into CA, picked up a car, and drove to the boundary of Yosemite to catch a few hours of rest before an early AM wake up. On Wednesday AM as I descended into the Yosemite Valley before dawn the temperatures were already in the 70s, as the forecast predicted it was going to be a hot one (90s in the Valley). I packed up my gear, threw 4500calories in my backpack, 40oz of water, and slathered on some sun screen. At 4:53am I started up the Glacier Point Rd, opting for this easier start than trying to find the connector trail in the dark. I quickly reached Tunnel View and struck on up the trail toward Inspiration Point. As I ascended toward the valley rim the temperature finally began to cool and the views began to open up. I quickly passed by Inspiration Point and found myself at Dewey Point (6:37am, mm6.5). The Yosemite Valley sprawled out below me, with El Capitan’s massive face dominating the Valley wall directly across from me. It was going to be a LONG way until I stood atop El Capitan probably less than 2miles as the crow flies from where I stood.

Sun shining on the Yosemite Valley from Dewey Point, this place is awesome.

Sun shining on the Yosemite Valley from Dewey Point, this place is awesome.

Between the view points the trails weren't so bad. Even in a drought year the flowers bloom.

Between the view points the trails weren’t so bad. Even in a drought year the flowers bloom.

I snapped a few photos and jogged off along the South Rim’s rolling forest and meadow laden trails. A quick stop at Taft Point (7:39am, mm11) to take in a few more views up Valley and off to Glacier Point and Sentinel Dome I went. A light cloud cover kept things from heating up too much, but also led to some hazy views from the top of Sentinel Dome (8:15am, mm13.9). Sentinel Dome is a highly underrated short hike, with views of the Yosemite Valley, Half Dome and into the Yosemite High Country as well, all achieved in under a mile each way from the Glacier Point Rd. I blew past the Glacier Point Rd and opened up the pace a bit as I headed down the smooth switchbacks toward Illouette Falls. Illouette Falls is one of the hidden gems of the Yosemite Valley, dropping 370ft sideways into a narrow rocky valley after starting as a narrow band before being broken into a nice fan. It can only be seen from several view points just below Glacier Point or by hiking up the valley to its base.

Looking down into the Valley and at the Nose of El Cap from Taft Point.

Looking down into the Valley and at the Nose of El Cap from Taft Point.

View from the top of Sentinel Dome toward Half Dome, Cloudsrest and Tenaya Canyon.

View from the top of Sentinel Dome toward Half Dome, Cloudsrest and Tenaya Canyon.

On the trail to Illouette Falls just below Glacier Point. Half Dome, Vernal Falls and Nevada Falls.

On the trail to Illouette Falls just below Glacier Point. Half Dome, Vernal Falls and Nevada Falls.

Often overlooked Illouette Falls.

Often overlooked Illouette Falls.

Another quick water refill and I hiked my way over the Panorama Cliffs and soon rejoined the crowds, briefly, for the run from Nevada Falls to the Half Dome cutoff. As I cruised past the roaring Nevada Falls (9:48am, mm20.9) and up the Merced the constant stream of people reminded me I was still so close to the Yosemite Valley.  I again refilled water, soaked my bandana, and sponged off near the bottom of Sunrise Creek then began the long hot, dry ascent up Cloudsrest. The sun was out in full force and the cumulative effects of the warm dry air were starting to take their toll, but when you’re running around unsupported you just have to deal with it and keep moving. I chugged water as I slowly climbed, but desperately needed too cool off. As luck would have it I found a trickling spring popping out of the hillside at 8200ft, what a little miracle that was amongst the barren dry slopes of Cloudsrest. My pace had still slowed quite a bit in the heat of the day, but I kept plodding along up up up. I reached the summit of Cloudsrest at 12:32pm (mm27.6), fairly tired/fatigued from the heat, but my legs felt alright. I ate some jerky and M&Ms and took a short nap as the cool breeze blew across the summit, waking 10min later feeling fairly refreshed. The panoramic view from Cloudsrest’s rocky summit includes a close-up profile of Half Dome, the giant granite lined bowl that is Tenaya Canyon, and a glimpse of the granitic peaks and spires that make up the Yosemite High Country.

Nearing the rocky summit of Cloudsrest, its hot.

Nearing the rocky summit of Cloudsrest, its hot.

View down the Yosemite Valley from Cloudsrest.

View down the Yosemite Valley from Cloudsrest.

I trotted off down the North side of Cloudsrest toward Tenaya Lake and the long haul around Tenaya Canyon. As I descended the incredibly rocky trail towards Tenaya Lake the all too familiar boom of thunder echoed high overhead in the clouds. As the rain began I was glad I was back below treeline, far from the exposed summit of Cloudsrest. The rain felt wonderfully soothing, and was a welcome change from the relentless heat and sun of the rest of the day, but would be short lived. I settled into a nice jog/hike mixture on the rolling terrain past Tenaya Lake (2:08pm, mm33.6) and around past the tourist crowded Olmstead Point toward Snow Creek. My mind began to become a bit foggy and I was worried the general fatigue was going to shut me down. Another thunderstorm rolled overhead as I crossed an exposed section of trail high above Tenaya Canyon, unfortunately the sun was soon back out heating things back up. My legs still had some decent pep as I cruised down the soft single track toward the Snow Creek crossing.

A quick peak into the Yosemite High Country at Tenaya Lake, halfway home.

A quick peak into the Yosemite High Country at Tenaya Lake, halfway home.

Romping through the forest along Snow Creek.

Romping through the forest along Snow Creek.

I plopped on down next to Snow Creek, wet my bandana and munched on my trail mix, staring blankly at the map trying to decide my next move. I was moving slower, but my legs still felt alright, so I pushed onward, deciding to forgo the spur to North Dome, opting for the more direct line down Lehamite Creek instead. I put on some music, put my head down and chugged my way up the climb to the Indian Ridge saddle. As the sun dropped lower in the sky, the trees began to filter out a lot of the sunlight, cooling things down a bit and softening the light. Before I knew it I popped out at Yosemite Point (6:00pm, mm47.3); the Valley floor was 3000ft below my feet while Half Dome loomed large with the Clark Range dominating the skyline. As I sat enjoying the view I realized this moment was why I’d decided do to this insanely long linkup in the first place. To experience the awesome immenseness of Yosemite in a fashion and at times of day that few others would ever experience.

Cooling off in the upper reaches of Snow Creek, a regular occurrence, and a necessity.

Cooling off in the upper reaches of Snow Creek, a regular occurrence, and a necessity.

This place is alright. Relaxing and taking it all in at Yosemite Point.

This place is alright. Relaxing and taking it all in at Yosemite Point.

As I made my way through Eagle Peak Meadow I did some calculations and realized I’d be coming back into the Valley after dark, not something I’d wanted to do on the overgrown and unmaintained Old Big Oakflat Rd, but not completely unanticipated either. I pushed my legs a little on the flats and downhills, but the ups were a labor, as the fatigue from the long day was really taking its toll. I finally strolled my way across the top of El Capitan’s broad summit and sat down on a rock pile atop the immense hunk of granite (7:38pm, mm52.5). The sun was hidden behind some clouds bathing the Valley in a soft glow. El Capitan may not have the best view of the Valley and surroundings, but it’s a cool feeling to sit atop the monolith, something surprisingly few people do.

On the homestretch, 15 long miles to go.

On the homestretch, 15 long miles to go.

Sunset on top of El Capitan.

Sunset on top of El Capitan.

The sun fades away to the West and back into darkness I go.

The sun fades away to the West and back into darkness I go.

Then began the long trudge back to the car. From the top of El Capitan it was roughly 11.8miles of rolling downhill forested single track and unmaintained access road (dirt) back to my car at Bridal Veil. No more views, just closing out the loop…in the dark. As I crested the final small hill near Ribbon Meadow the last remnants of the sun lit the sky up in an array of yellows, oranges, reds and pinks, then into the darkness I descended. My legs were very happy on the somewhat rough downhill single track, and soon I found myself at the unsigned turn off for the Old Big Oakflat Rd, an unmaintained access road that the park service had ‘let go’ of and is now know as the ‘Rock slide’ trail for good reason. As I started jogging down the old road grade I found out what 50years without maintenance can do, hundreds of downed trees, tree branches growing right into the track, manzanita narrowing the path to 1-2ft wide, and finally the rock slides. Just after an old view point known as Rainbow View (it was dark, no views) the old road had been ravaged by dozens of large rocks slides, some that have completely wiped out the old road grade. Ever tried navigating sideways through a large talus field in the dark? It’s not easy, and was very frustrating. In all the descent down the Old Big Oakflat Rd was mentally the most painful and frustrating part of the day, because my legs felt good and wanted to run, but I could never get a rhythm going because of the overgrowth and rock slides. Finally after much rock hoping and thrashing I popped out on the maintained service road at the bottom and hopped on the Valley trail that would take me back to the Pohono bridge and the Bridal Veil parking area. I jogged my way across the valley, finally reaching the Bridal Veil parking lot at 10:48pm (mm64.5), completing the whole loop in 17h55min, not blazing fast by any means, but I’d gotten it done.

And there were hundreds of these on the Old Big Oakflat Rd, ick.

And there were hundreds of these on the Old Big Oakflat Rd, ick.

El Cap in the moonlight with a solitary headlamp bivied on the wall.

El Cap in the moonlight with a solitary headlamp bivied on the wall.

I was exhausted, but very happy with the long day. After a quick rinse off in the Merced River (I was filthy) I threw all my gear into the back of the car and drove just outside the park boundaries to a logging road I’d found the previous night and was out within minutes, the rest of the drive to meet my family at the Lair of the Bear where we’d be camping until Saturday would have to wait until morning.

Closing Thoughts:

When I first conceived of the idea of running a loop around the entire rim of the Yosemite Valley, the main intention was to experience as many of the iconic view points as possible, while never returning to the hustle and bustle of the Valley. Except for my one detour off the North Dome loop it was a success, the views were amazing and varied all day long, I saw surprisingly few people, even at major junctions like Glacier Point, Nevada Falls and Yosemite Falls. What I hadn’t expected were all the wildflower laden meadows (even in a drought year), the beautifully soft forest single track and the immense fur and pine forests that encompassed all the sections in between the labeled view points. I’d gotten a little unlucky with the weather; being an abnormally low snow year leading to rivers drying up early and a hotter than usual day, which baked me pretty good from 11a-5p. The only part that I really did not enjoy was the final descent down the Old Big Oakflat Rd in the dark, some of that may have been due to fatigue, but I was definitely frustrated by the rough and unrunnable nature of the ‘trail’.

I would love to do the run again someday, but I think the CW direction would be better for several reasons, and placing some self-supported drops at the Tenaya Lake and Glacier Point bear boxes would be a great help. I also think that during a normal snowpack year the flowers could be 10x better than what I saw and water much more plentiful (trail could be muddy in places though). This route would also make a fantastic 3-5day backpacking trip for those less inclined to run, or it could be split into two segments for runners using the free shuttle bus service to/from Tenaya Lake. There are unlimited possibilities for loops of varying distances and difficulties depending what you want to see, many of which have been done before, but putting the whole thing together in one day was an awesome experience, and truly a unique way to get to know the Yosemite Valley Rim.

Special thanks to Vfuel for keeping my energized during this crazy adventures, Cindy Stonesmith at Ultrarunner Training for keeping me in line (physically), Adam Engel at Waldron’s Peak PT for helping fix me earlier this year and all my running/climbing/scrambling/skiing partners for being equally crazy and adventurous. Run fast, run healthy, but mostly run happy.

Here is a link to my Strava GPX from the day.

Here is a link to the video/slideshow of the entire run (approx 10min)

2014 in Review

It’s been quite some time since I wrote a blog, and with the end of 2014 nearing its probably a good time to sit back and reflect on all the awesome experiences, all the tough moments, and everything in between. I also will be writing up a recap of November’s trip to New Zealand, but there is so much to tell that will need it own space and time.

Hanging with a few friends this past weekend in the North Cascades, 1/21/14. Photo by Ben S.

Hanging with a few friends this past weekend in the North Cascades, 1/21/14. Photo by Ben S.

Unlike 2013, 2014 started off healthy, and with the exciting news that I’d be running the Hardrock 100 for the first time ever! Training started off in full, snow be damned, and included a little trip to Seattle to visit Ben and Amanda with a chance to explore the Cascades.

For the first time in many years I did not race the Moab Red Hot, opting instead to explore some of the other trails in the surrounding areas and to do a little scrambling with Buzz and Tressa on some super secret routes…shhhh. In March I headed back to Mississippi 50 to try and defend my title, falling just short on a hot and humid day, taking 2nd overall, oh well, you win some and you lose some. But most importantly I got to meet my nephew for the first time (born January 2014), I like the sounds of Uncle Eric 🙂

Accepting my 2nd place award at the 2014 Mississippi 50.

Accepting my 2nd place award at the 2014 Mississippi 50.

Playing with my new little nephew Ryan.

Playing with my new little nephew Ryan.

 

Tressa and Buzz scrambling along a secret route in Canyonlands.

Tressa and Buzz scrambling along a secret route in Canyonlands.

After Mississippi my life became focused on one main goal, Hardrock, and getting my legs and lungs are ready for the challenge as I possibly could. Trail miles with tons of vertical, backcountry skiing at high elevations, and a whole host of shenanigans from Boulder to the mountains to deserts of Fruita.

First summit of 11 on the day of Mt Sanitas, training with the RMR.

First summit of 11 on the day of Mt Sanitas, training with the RMR.

Downhill skiing with Jason and Kate, Photo by Kate Fisher.

Downhill skiing with Jason and Kate, Photo by Kate Fisher.

On May 1st I hopped a plane back to CA bound for the Marin Headlands and the starting line of the Miwok 100k. A beautiful race that winds through the redwoods, across open grassy hillsides, and above steep ocean side cliffs. Despite a rough patch around mm50 I hung in there for a 34th place finish in 11h28min. Definitely a must do for those ultrarunners looking for some hard but incredibly scenic and varied trail miles. I continued my racing by entering the Dirty Thirty 50k in Golden for the first time since its inaugural running in 2008, treating it as more of a training run for Hardrock.

Running the Bolinas Ridge around mm17 of the Miwok 100k.

Running the Bolinas Ridge around mm17 of the Miwok 100k.

Skiing touring near Independence Pass, a little early summer high country fun.

Skiing touring near Independence Pass, a little early summer high country fun.

As summer began to settle in to the high country I found my way to higher and higher elevations, exploring new trails and hitting up some old favorites in the process. As July rolled around and Hardrock neared I had one other piece of unfinished business, the summit of my 58th and final 14er, El Diente, had eluded me last year. On July 4th I met Ben, Bruce and Tressa and summited my 58th and final 14er, closing up one chapter of my journey through the mountains, just as the next was opening up. The Hardrock 100 is arguably the US’s most difficult 100mile foot race, traversing the rugged San Juan Mts, crossing a dozen high passes, requiring off trail travel, sleep deprivation, and one to put up with inclement weather it proved a worthy test. After many high and lows, aided by my parents (crewing) and good friends Andy and Stephanie (pacers) I kissed the Hardrock for the first time, 34h38min after starting. It’s such an amazing event, one that can not be fully understood or felt until you toe the line along side 150 others, all unified under the goal of kissing the rock. One of these days (lottery gods willing) I’ll return.

On the summit of El Diente, my 58th and final CO 14er with Ben and Bruce. 7/4/14.

On the summit of El Diente, my 58th and final CO 14er with Ben and Bruce. 7/4/14.

Welcoming committee of Rocky Mountain Runners atop Grand Swamp Pass. Photo by Ryan Smith.

Welcoming committee of Rocky Mountain Runners atop Grand Swamp Pass. Photo by Ryan Smith.

What lovely scenery....When does this climb end? Dives Basin, Photo by Stephanie Lynn.

What lovely scenery….When does this climb end? Hardrock 100 Dives Basin, Photo by Stephanie Lynn.

After Hardrock things did not slow down, and the mountain adventures just kept on coming, I couldn’t say no. Aspen Four Pass Loop, Maroon Bells Traverse, Niwot Ridge, Ten Mile Range Traverse, East Ridge of Pacific Peak, a snowy through hike across the ElkRange, winning the inaugural Kite Lake Triple-Triple, the Little Bear Blanca traverse, pacing the Bear 100 in a downpour and finally capping off the season at the Bluesky Marathon. October brought a month of rest and recovery, something I like to give my body every year so that it can heal all the damage.

Boulder Banditos atop West Maroon Pass at the end of the Four Pass Loop.

Boulder Banditos atop West Maroon Pass at the end of the Four Pass Loop.

Scott and Jason cruising across the mellow part of the Ten Mile Range

Scott and Jason cruising across the mellow part of the Ten Mile Range

 

Looking across the Little Bear-Blanca traverse, fun day of scrambling.

Looking across the Little Bear-Blanca traverse, fun day of scrambling.

 

First rain storm of the night around midnight, all geared up and having fun.

First rain storm of the night around midnight, all geared up and having fun at the Bear 100 with Jason.

Early in 2014 I’d decided to give myself a birthday present, so on November 7th I hopped on the first of several flights that would eventually land me in Australia/New Zealand. After a short visit with my Uncle, who lives just outside Sydney, it was off to New Zealand for 3+ weeks of adventuring with my parents. We saw glowworms, beaches, mountains, rain forest, glaciers, waterfalls, dolphins, penguins, our share of rainy days and more on our whirlwind tour of New Zealand. The more indepth story will come later, with photos and videos. In short it’s a beautifully varied country where you can find a multitude of ecosystems all within a days drive. While no one thing alone sticks out as unique in the world, the sum total of all its beauty (different and varied) is what makes it so amazing.

My parents and I before our amazing overnight boat cruise on Doubtful Sound in the Fiordlands region of New Zealand.

My parents and I before our amazing overnight boat cruise on Doubtful Sound in the Fiordlands region of New Zealand.

In total I’d have to say this year was a pretty awesome year, full of new experiences, great friends and tons of adventure. 2015 looks like another fantastic year with a return to the Mississippi 50 and Miwok 100k already planned, some big mountain projects during the summer and possibly a return to UTMB for redemption (lottery gods willing). Hope everyone has a happy and safe new year and a fantastic 2015! Run fast, run healthy, but mostly run happy.

Special thanks to Vfuel Endurance for powering my year of adventure and to Hind Performance clothing for keeping me warm and comfortable during the journeys.

2015 Stats

2,842

miles run/climbed/skied (new Best year)

656,000

feet of elevation climbed (2nd Best year)

42,900

minutes spent on my feet (715 hours or 29.8days)

32, 31, 17

Summits of Mt Sanitas, Green Mt, Bear Peak respectively

58

# of Colorado 14ers climbed (list completed)

6

Races run and completed in 2014 (marathon to 100mi)

6

US States visited

2

Countries visited

Resting; it’s not just for the injured and broken

Hello my name is Eric and I’m an addict; not to alcohol or drugs, but to outdoor activity, especially running/hiking/climbing. Like many other endurance athletes I’ve traded in the many other vices of the world for physical activity, and while I’ve heard many people say that it’s a healthy hobby, it is possible to have too much of a good thing. Over the past ten years I’ve been competing in endurance events, predominantly ultramarathons (races longer than a marathon), I have seen many a competitor come and go from the sport. Some succumb to injuries, some to the dreaded adrenal fatigue (overtraining) and others simply mentally burn out and move on. While there are many tips/tricks/strategies to keeping oneself fresh and healthy in such a demanding sport (cross training, strength/balance training, moderation), one thing that I find is key to preventing physical and mental burnout is a nice long rest period at the end of every season. I’m not talking about the week off you took after your 100mile race, the fact you changed over to cycling 200miles/week instead of running, and no a 50-60mile week is not real rest. I’m talking about limited cardiovascular activity, 20-30miles of easy running/hiking a week, no tempo runs, no long runs, no epic adventures, no double days, but 3-4weeks of rest and recovery for a body much in need.

Forcing myself to slow down, climbing and scrambling amongst the Boulder Flatirons.

Forcing myself to slow down, climbing and scrambling amongst the Boulder Flatirons.

As endurance athletes we pride ourselves on suffering, and how much pain we can endure, but eventually it becomes more than a mental game and takes a physical toll on your body. Over the past ten years I’ve watched many a friends and competitors push themselves at such a high intensity for so long, that their body eventually gives way with catastrophic consequences, leading to a long term forced hiatus from the sport. I think its time that we endurance athletes start thinking about doing what’s right for our body in the long haul. That’s why every Oct/Nov I take 3-4weeks of very limited cardiovascular activity and let the entire system reenergize and recover. We don’t build up all this stress overnight, so why do we think the body can fix it overnight?

I clean up alright (I think), blues dancing the night away.

I clean up alright (I think), blues dancing the night away.

I think the most difficult part of this extended rest is mentally committing to not running/hiking much, while still getting outside to enjoy the time you have. During these down times I personally love to play volleyball, do some dancing, maybe a little technical climbing, and catch up on house chores. Coming from a mountaineering background into the running world, what I’ve noticed is many people who are life time runners, don’t know anything else, thus don’t feel like themselves unless they are running. These are the people whom I would push the most to find some alternative hobbies to meld in, ones that don’t tax the cardiovascular system and the legs as much as running/hiking/cycling. There are so many great activities out there, why limit yourself to just one? I don’t have any scientific proof for my hypothesis, just a bunch of anecdotal observations. Whether its superstition or actually physiological effects doesn’t really matter, because after 10 years it’s kept me physically and mentally fresh. So give your body a break, even if you’re not sore, injured or fatigued, think long term, and get out and enjoy something a little different. Of course, this just one man’s opinion, so do whatever makes you happy in the long run.

Finishing the Colorado 14ers

One week before starting my first Hardrock 100 my mind drifted away from the race to a bigger project, one that had been ongoing for nearly 10 years: climbing all the Colorado 14,000ft peaks.

There are 54 ‘ranked’ Colorado 14ers and an additional 4 commonly accepted peaks. It was one of these, El Diente, that remained as my lone unsummited peak. Last August I was thwarted in my attempt due to horrendous monsoonal weather, but this year I was determined to summit my last unticked peak.

August 2013 near the summit of Mt Wilson, weather did not allow for the traverse to El Diente.

August 2013 near the summit of Mt Wilson, weather did not allow for the traverse to El Diente.

I left at the crack of dawn from the Navajo Lake TH, slowly jogging up the trail to meet up with several friends who had camped in the basin the night before. They got an earlier start, so I had to play catch-up, quickly moving up the trail and then cramponing up the South slope of El Diente. As I scrambled my way up the final slope to the summit of El Diente I saw my friends Ben and Bruce waiting there for me. I’d like to say that reaching the summit of my 58th and final CO 14er was a transcendent experience or that I was overjoyed, but I was simply satisfied, another step along my greater journey through the mountains.

On the summit of El Diente, my 58th and final CO 14er with Ben and Bruce. 7/4/14.

On the summit of El Diente, my 58th and final CO 14er with Ben and Bruce. 7/4/14.

Nearly 12 years ago I needed to clear my head so I packed up my car and backpack and hit the trail from Cottonwood campground bound for the upper Cottonwood Lake and eventually Mt Langley in California. After spending a chilly October night at the upper CottonwoodLake and armed with a map and a very small amount of beta, I found my way up OldArmyPass and eventually to the summit of Mt Langley. I found that the high alpine terrain and clear thin air really helped clear my head and put things in perspective.

My first 14er summit, Mt Langley in CA, 10/25/2002

My first 14er summit, Mt Langley in CA, 10/25/2002

 “Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature’s peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into trees. The winds will blow their own freshness into you, and the storms their energy, while cares will drop away from you like the leaves of Autumn.” -John Muir

On that summit I left a singular rose and some parting words for my ailing Grandmother, one of my childhood influences who had introduced me to the outdoors. It was on that summit that I realized where I felt at home. It wasn’t in the bars or on the beach, it was in the mountains, and in particular on the highest summits. I descended from basecamp and found my way back to Lone Pine, CA where I was finally able to put into writing some final words to my grandma Betty. It may not have been the most eloquent writing, but it was exactly what I needed…

Eulogy; Good-bye Grandma :,(

Written October 26th, 2002 by Eric J Lee

Hello, as most of you know, I am Eric Lee and Betty was my Grandmother.  To me she was more than just a loving Grandmother.  She was a second mother, who watched me and helped me grow up to where I am today. Since I was young Grandma was there helping me along; whether it was pushing me on an air mattress so I could snorkel without the fish biting my feet, babysitting me while my parents were away, or simply accommodating my sister and my picky eating habits at holiday meals. And it was Grandma who made Christmas extra special as a child. Most children have one Christmas and one tree, but she took it upon herself to have Santa visit us twice. What more could a child ask for. She would decorate the house, put up a tree, make a lunch even Kirsten and I liked, just to satisfy the gleam in our eyes, you know, the one all children get on Christmas Day.  Betty truly treasured the people around her, to this day a drawing I made 14 years ago about a hike through the trees, rocks, and lava in Tahoe hangs on her kitchen wall.  It may not have been artistic or even logical, but she loved it and the story behind it.

            As we all grew a little older, and life became harder on Betty, she still persisted with family dinners, our extra special Christmas celebrations, and trips to Hawaii. A place that obviously meant a lot to her, and I can happily say I was able to share its beauty and simplicity. When I reached my teenage years Grandma and I saw a little less of each other than we probably should have. School, sports, friends, and that darn Driver’s license got in the way.

            Despite all this she took it upon herself to help secure my future by donating to my college fund. In these past few years life became difficult for Betty, and I was away more and more. But when I did return home she found the strength and time to have dinner with our family. No matter how much she complained or how much discomfort she went through you could tell she was longing to spend time with the ones she loved. Right up to the end she stayed strong, both knowing and understanding the inevitable. So with these words I say goodbye to Betty; a Grandmother, a babysitter, Santa Claus, a chef, a mentor, the Easter Bunny, a mother, and a caring soul. Thank you.

Back to the present: July 4th, 2014, standing atop El Diente Peak, my 58th and final Colorado 14er, enjoying a few chocolate bars with friends. We then proceeded across the traverse to Mt Wilson and back to our cars at the Navajo Lake TH. It was a fun and beautiful day in the mountains, and while the 16.5 miles was more than I was supposed to be doing during my taper, finishing this segment of my mountain journey was the perfect way to kick off a week of rest. Live in the present, but don’t forget the past; let it drive you, inspire you and push you to be the best person you can be. My Hardrock 100 trip report is forthcoming soon. For now, here is a video compilation from the first time I sumitted every single one of the CO 14er, a journey that afforded me a multitude of unique experiences.

Camping atop Red Mt Pass before the 2014 Hardrock 100, rest and acclimatization.

Camping atop Red Mt Pass before the 2014 Hardrock 100, rest and acclimatization.

Highland Mary Lakes dayhike the week before the 2014 Hardrock 100.

Highland Mary Lakes dayhike the week before the 2014 Hardrock 100.

One last hike/jog before Hardrock, into Ice Lake Basin for some serene peace and solitude.

One last hike/jog before Hardrock, into Ice Lake Basin for some serene peace and solitude.

When Running is Life

Ever looked at the running log of one of the elite full time runners and marvel at them running >120mi/wk or >20000ft of vertical gain? Maybe you’ve thought, ‘that’s impossible for me to do’ or ‘I can’t even fathom running that much’. Sure they are gifted athletes and very strong, but in the words of Ken Chlouber, “You are tougher than you think you are and you can do more than you think you can.” I think the biggest deterrent to many of us putting in 100mile+ weeks or massive amounts of vertical gain is one very simple factor….time.

This past week I set out to put in my biggest training week of the year, 90miles/30000ft. I’ve cracked the 100mile mark in a week a few times in the past, but I’d never broken 30000ft in a week outside of when I completed Nolans 14. Ok, so some of the elite guys throw this down on a weekly basis, unfortunately I’m not a ‘full time’ runner, and a large proportion of my life is dedicated to a non-running activity, biological research, then somewhere in amongst working and training there is doing the daily tasks of life and trying to sleep (6-7h/night). Here’s a one week breakdown of what its like for the working class to put in big ultra training weeks.

Afternoon training run among the wildflowers on Bear Peak. Not a bad place for some afternoon miles.

Afternoon training run among the wildflowers on Bear Peak. Not a bad place for some afternoon miles.

I’m usually up at 5:15am, on the bus at 6am and at work by 6:50am, I’m cursed with a long commute. Work all day in the lab, catch the bus home at 3:50pm, home around 4:50pm, on the trail by 5:15pm. Run for 2-3hours, 8-14miles and 2500-4000ft of vertical gain. Get home, stretch out, hit the foam roller for a bit, eat dinner, shower, check a few emails and off to bed around 10pm only to wake up the next morning and do it all over again. Then add on a long run on Saturday and run up Pikes Peak to 14000ft on Sunday and voile you’ve got 91miles and 30000ft of gain in a week.

High above the clouds and trees on Pikes Peak, capping off the week with a trip to 140000ft.

High above the clouds and trees on Pikes Peak, capping off the week with a trip to 140000ft.

Sounds simple right? Except for the fact that this schedule leaves no ‘down time’, no time to clean or take care of life’s little happenings, no time to cross train, no time with the kitty and definitely no social time. I tend to overextend myself all too often, so add in a non-restful rest-day that consisted of a 15 hour photo shoot (sprints and weights for the shoot) and 6hours of hauling dirt and building trails Saturday morning and you can understand why most of us working class folk don’t put in big weeks like this often.

Doing some running with my Hind teammates at a photo shoot on 6/5.

Doing some running with my Hind teammates at a photo shoot on 6/5.

On the converse, imagine what it would be like if you had an additional 5-7hours each day free to run, stretch, recover, relax. All of a sudden 100mile weeks and big vertical gain don’t sound so bad, time is truly the biggest luxury of the full time runner. So rather than be in awe of the single, childless, full time runner without a 9-5 day job, be amazed by the person putting in hard workouts who works 8hours+ a day, has kids and a family, but still manages to squeeze in the miles/time whether it be at 5am or 8:30pm, or both. For the immediate future this is my life, but there is always part of me that wonders what I’d be capable of IF I committed to running and mountains full time . With one more big week of training slated for this week (June 9th-15th) I am very much looking forward to tapering and finally toeing the line at the 2014 Hardrock 100. Special thanks to Vfuel endurance for fueling me through a bonk free big training week where my legs felt solid and Hind performance for outfitting me for all my adventures. Run fast, run healthy, but mostly run happy.

What I felt like doing at the end of the week, curling up in the sun with the kitty.

What I felt like doing at the end of the week, curling up in the sun with the kitty.