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Labor Day: back to play and... work!

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It's a common theme, I did blog about this opportunity to use this 3-day weekend to work (aka run) harder in 2009, 2012, 2013 and 2014!

Well, this year, it wasn't much about mileage but speed. I took only one day off after last week's Tamalpa 50K Nationals, and logged 106 miles since. Nothing extravagant compared to when I was logging close to 100 miles in a 3-day weekend back then when preparing for States in particular, but I don't feel my body can take on that load anymore. And neither can my mind/motivation. As much as I refuse to age (!), there are some physics and physiologic laws you have to abide by... mind me! ;-)

As a matter of fact, there are more articles around how intensity is more important than just mileage when you, well, age. For the simple reason that intensity is a way to maintain muscle mass and that's what we tend to lose when we get older.

With that, although I didn't feel fully recovered from the hilly Tamalpa course, I couldn't resist when Bob pinged me on Monday to get back to the track on Tuesday morning for some speed workout as we used to do very consistently a few years ago! Bob is recovering from a minor knee surgery and has taken on the goal to run a mile under 5 minutes. While this is really not my goal, with my focus on ultra racing, it can't hurt to regain some speed and motivation to work on my leg turnout in particular.

Our speed workout consisted in a 2-mile warm-up (perfect opportunity to chat and catch-up), 8 400s, 2 800s and a 1-mile cool-down before some stretching and driving to work (we start at 5:45am, which is already soon enough to watch the stars in the sky). Our 400s were between 1:29 and 1:22 and our 800s, respectively 2:53 and 2:47. Quite far from 5 min/mile pace, but I was pleased how light my legs felt for the rest of the day, it's really good to change stride and pace for once.

On Thursday I logged 11 miles at Alviso. On Saturday, I surprised Agnès with a round-trip to the Avenue of the Giants in a convertible, a dream she had had for more than 10 years. After driving 580 miles in 24 hours, I could only run 12 miles on Saturday evening.

This Sunday, I set a PR on my 16.6-mile out-and-back along the rail track, across Cupertino, Saratoga and down to Campbell/Los Gatos. This isn't an official trail all along, but there is barely a train a week on these tracks, so no danger at all.

Then, this Monday, Labor Day, I worked harder by climbing to the top of Black Mountain twice, for a total of 28 miles. Passing quite a few cyclists on my way to the top on Montebello Road, while I was pushing the pace thinking of the upcoming climb to Rose Peak at Ohlone 50K in two weeks!
Yes, I'm always training for something, barely have the time to recover and taper... Which, to conclude, leads me to training planning. I read with interest how Scott Dunlap used Strava's canned training plan before Tamalpa. Scott has run so many marathons and ultras, he certainly knows how to train, but he is also a geek and wanted to test that Strava feature (yes, I did resist for a few years, but you can find me on Strava too! ;-).

Personally, I was a big advocated of following a training plan when I was focusing on marathon and didn't know much. My running bible was Gordon Bakoulis Bloch's book, "How to train for and run your best marathon":, I loved all the pragmatic advice, the structure and in particular the holistic view from pre-race to race to post-race tips. That provided me with a very strong foundation to improve while staying injury free.
For ultra marathons, there is such a variety of format, distance, terrain, profile, weather, and ultra is still such a personal experiment, I doubt there is much room for generic training plans. For sure, you'd better be ready to run a marathon but, beyond that, you'll have to do very different things between getting ready to run a hilly 50K, a 100-mile on a technical and rocky course, or a 24-hour event on a flat 1-mile loop. But Strava is collecting so much personal data, they have the opportunity to apply some start analytics (hint: IBM's Watson Analytics can help! ;-) and create course and race-specific training plans, customized for every individual!

After almost 10 years of ultra racing, my best training advice now is variety! Various distances, various terrains, rotate shoes, various intensities, various social settings, various locations, ... the limit is your imagination and flexibility! And you, what are your training strategies and tips?

With that, I hope you had the opportunity to not work today to celebrate what our parents and grand-parents have fought for but, instead, could spend time running or doing whatever else is playing for you!

QuickSilver Club: we run, play and (trail) work!

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First, our complete name is the QuickSilver Running Club of San Jose so, for sure, we run, that's the main purpose! But we do many other things together and, with a sport which is fundamentally individual, it's key to add and rely on the social connections and support which a running club can bring to its members. If you live in the South Bay, are an adept of trail running or what this is about, please consider joining us, we welcome members of all ages: Coach Marc takes care of our Youth team and Jim still brings us points for our Ultra Running Team by running 100-milers at close to 70!

So, what else can we do apart from running? Well, among other things, we eat and drink for sure (some even enjoy a few beers from time to time, not just water or GU2O! ;-), play, mingle, volunteer, crew, pace, recognize, encourage, coach, learn, help, cook, serve, network, organize, speak, listen or even argue (over Jim's procedural motions! ;-), strategize, plan, recruit, cheer, motivate, entertain, direct (races), participate, relate and sympathize, give back, pay (our club dues for sure! ;-), dress (occasionally, for the Pacific Association USA Track & Field annual award banquet, or in costumes at the Western States aid station at Duncan Canyon), drive or fly (many miles to many places) and inspire. Oh, and above all, we enjoy: the company, the outdoors, the local trails, the competition, the trail, road or ultra challenges, heck, we enjoy life!

But, again, we also work hard. On our running and fitness, but also on the races the Club organizes, and the trails of our local backyard and playground: the Almaden Quicksilver County Park.

This morning, 7 of us joined our CTO, Paul Fick, who wears many hats in our Club. After running many ultras himself and directing our popular Quicksilver ultra races in May for years, Paul serves as our CTO and CBO. CBO for Chief BBQ (if not Banquet) Officer in May, and Chief Trail Officer all year round. Paul reminded us this morning that we have adopted the New Almaden trail back in 2003 and he pointed out a few of the major improvements that we brought to this trail.
Today's project consisted in removing a few stairs and lowering a section which was plunging into a creek crossing. It was one of the hardest job I had done on this trail, we'll see how I feel tomorrow to race the hot and hilly Ohlone 50K tomorrow! We removed a lot of ground, sculpting a sort of gully, a couple of feet deep. With the drought, it was quite dusty and I'm sure we ate quite some dust this morning.
Our crew today was composed of Ashley, Scott, Paul K and his son John-Paul, David, Paul F of course, and I. Here are David and Paul K wearing our Club racing top.

Back to the other fun things we do, 3 weeks ago we had our Club picnic in Los Gatos, a nice way to reconnect with teammates and their families, outside of the race context and rush.


Again, if you live in the South Bay, we'd be delighted to have you join the fun. You can visit our website for more details. I just realized that our membership has grown significantly as part of USATF, we even passed the 100-member barrier this year!

And for those reading from far away, I hope you also get such a support from a local running club: there is so much to give and receive from club mates, don't miss this part of running, and ultra running in particular. "One for all, and all for one!" as they say! ;-)

PS: like we are blessed with many hills, trails and races around the Bay Area, we also have many other clubs, so let me mention the first one I joined, almost 15 years ago, which taught me so much about trail and ultra running: the Stevens Creek Striders in Cupertino. In particular, please check out their upcoming trail races on September 26 (50K, 30K, half-marathon).

And a few more pictures of these two Club events...

############# TRAIL WORK

Receiving the instructions from the Park Ranger.

Meeting another groups of volunteers, the Sheriff's Search and Rescue team, doing their fitness test.

The trail as we arrived:


And how it looked when we left, 3 hours later:


Back to the Mockingbird entrance parking lot, with our tools, and today's trophies, 5 wooden stairs:


############# CLUB PICNIC

El Presidente, Greg, introducing the Board
 Our Ultra Racing Team Captain, Loren:
 Greg, praising Coach Marc's amazing work with our Youth Team (Marc in red):
 An attentive audience!


 Jim's traditional opportunity to remind us about the long history and origins of our Club:

I even got highlighted for my 4 hours of volunteering in May, right after placing 4th at our 100K! But, really, with 118 ultras over the past 10 years, and despite a few events/opportunities a year, I'm seriously in debt with regard to volunteering. Here is the introduction from iRunFar's great article on an ultra volunteer, Stan Jensen:
One of Stan Jensen’s mentors, Dick Collins, once said, “One of the key principles in this sport is volunteering. You cannot just show up, pay the entry fee, and run. You have to give back.”. 
A really wise ultra advice to make our sport sustainable...

(Photo: Frédérique Garderes)

Ohlone 50K 2015: so much walking, yet...

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I got into today's race with many mixed thoughts. A few doubts on one hand. First, I was only in 5th position in the UltraSignup predictions. These predictions and list of entrants have disappeared from the UltraSignup website, but I recall the first one being young, coming from Ashland, Oregon, and fast with an UltraSignup score of 98%. Second, for those not familiar with this race and what happened this year, the event had been moved from May to September due to some rain 4 days before the start (you can see that we would have had a wonderful day on the trails back then, would the race not be cancelled by the Park management). Third, I had done some good trail maintenance yesterday with our QuickSilver Club, and my back was really sore when I woke up this morning. I was wondering and worried about how this would play on this challenging course. Last but not least, the reschedule of the race prevented me from participating in this year's 24-hour Nationals in Cleveland this weekend and it felt odd to have to follow that epic race without being part of it.

On the other and positive hand, this is my favorite race. Having ran it 7 times and won it 4 times, this made for a special connection with the Native American Ohlone spirit, this course fits me well! Also, the temperature was forecasted to reach 100F today, and I'm doing much better in the heat than the cold.

With 14 members of our ultra racing team, our QuickSilver Club had a great representation today. Here are 11 of us, seconds before the start:

Agnès drove Frédéric, Louis and I at the start and we arrived just before 7 am. A sample of our local ultra French Connection! ;-)
I took the initiative to clean the mess in the porta potties before the bus arrived, they evidently had been used by hikers for at least a day or two...  yikes! And, note to the Race Director, the toilet paper was already quite sparse... Not sure how it ended up, the line was still long right before the start...

Here is ultra volunteer Stan Jensen (see the bottom of the article I posted yesterday) welcoming Mike Palmer:


With the challenging course profile and the expected heat, a few opted for an early start at 7 am.


The rest of us started at 8, after a briefing from Eric, the son of Race Director Larry England. The temperature was 64F in the shade of Mission Peak and it felt good to finally get moving before the sun showed up. It wasn't as a crazy start as when Leor set the course record to 4:16, but still, I wasn't going to try keeping up with the group of 6 ahead of me, led by youngsters and speedsters, Rickey Russell and Yew Ferrara. Rickey, 30, is a teammate and did beat me by 2 minutes at both Skyline 50K and Tamalpa 50K last month. I actually didn't knew Yew before meeting him at the finish, I learned later that he had placed 10th at our recent 50K Nationals in Marin Headlands, finishing 17 minutes ahead of me. And then there was another young and tall runner, carrying a blue hydration pack, whom I assumed was our visitor from Ashland as I saw him in the distance taking the overall lead in our climb to the top of Missions Peak. Here is Yew, leading right off the starting blocks!





I used to not walk any section of this climb but I wasn't in the mood today and when I saw Yew alternating walking and running, I thought the walking part was a good idea in the steepest uphills. We traded places a few times but he was then passing me back really fast, showing great climbing power. With that, I reached the top of Mission Peak in 7th position and I could point the 3 leaders right at 2 minutes ahead. I reached the first aid station, Laurel Loop, just under one hour, and passed 2 runners who made a quick stop there. As opposed to the previous years, I did stop at the second aid station, Sunol, mile 9.5, to get some ice in my water bottle and cap. Poto credit, Peter Hargreaves:

I saw Peter and Peggy there, from the Stevens Creek Striders, who were enjoying the shade and, in a rush, took a wrong turn, getting down straight to the creek! Thankfully, there was water so I knew this wasn't right--we are supposed to cross over a bridge-- and Peggy and other volunteers were already yelling to catch my attention. Hmm, thinking about it, I would have set the aid station differently, on the other side of the trail leading to the bridge. Phew, back on track (well, on bridge), photo credit, Peter Hargreaves:

Anyway, I had already about 90 minutes of running and I was now at the bottom of the climb beast. I couldn't see the leaders anymore but I had the feel that they couldn't be very far because I kept moving reasonably well in the uphills. I did pass a few of the remaining early starters in that section, and was chased by one of the two runners I had passed at Laurel. It was already hot but there was no time to lose so I ran, or rather jogged, most of the uphills, hoping to reconnect with the 4 runners now ahead of me at some point. Before too long, I passed the runner with the blue pack first but he wasn't from Ashland after all. I was now in 4th place.

I begged for some more ice in my water bottle and my cap at the 3rd aid station, Backpack Area, and took 2 small cups of Pepsi, 2 S!Caps and 1 piece of banana. The next climb through Hawks Nest is brutal and I was looking to damping my head at the faucet for a few seconds like I had done back in May but there wasn't any water left in this severe drought.

Continuing on, I passed another runner who was struggling and then saw Rickey who was struggling too. At the start, Rickey wasn't sure he had recovered from Tamalpa yet, and the heat and fast start didn't help either. I asked him to hang on as we needed points for the team. I was now in second but it took me another couple of miles before I could see the front runner. I maintained my effort and was closing on him but, with this heat, didn't want to kill my self only half way in the race, so did some walking too.

It was Yew, and I saw him leaving the 4th aid station, Goat Rock, mile 15, just as I was getting in. This is a very remote access aid station and ice was very scarce here, with a volunteer spending a lot of energy trying to break the ice... A volunteer who knew my name helped refill my GU2O bottle and, in the meantime, I assumed that the water was in the blue tank, but it was the electrolyte, so I inadvertently added electrolyte to my water. It didn't taste very good (I'm picky so I carry my own citrus GU2O powder bags with me) but thankfully it was quite diluted as my bottle was already almost full of water. I tried to convince myself it wasn't going to derail my progression... ;-)

Despite these few minutes at the aid station, I could still see Yee not too far ahead and we alternated running and walking up to the top of Rose Peak. We passed teammate Keith Blom who was volunteering today, had started at 6:30 and ran the entire course to check all the markings, and add a few more ribbons here and there: way to go, Keith!

We got our bracelets proving that we had completed the loop at the summit, and flew down the next aid station, Maggie's Half Acre, at mile 19.7. This time Yew and I were in the station at the same time but he still left first. I had thought of passing him by mile 17 but that's when I felt a first cramp in my left hamstring, yikes! By the time we reached the top of Rose Peak, both my hamstrings were hurting so I was just happy to stay behind at that time. Thanks to more S!Caps (3 to 4 an hour), drinking a lot, a couple of cups of Pepsi and some water melon, I felt better and passed Yew at mile 22. Knowing what was ahead before the finish, I made sure to do a quick stop at Stewart's Camp at mile 23.5, to water my cap and buff. Conversely, Yew probably skipped this unmanned station as I found him right on my heels at the bottom of this long downhill. As I started climbing again, both my legs froze and I thought I was finished but, with strong determination and painful effort, forced myself to keep walking at least. That worked and, a few hundred yards later, I was able to run strong again to build up some distance between the two of us. I saw Race Director, and IBM colleague, Larry just before Schlieper Rock, and he didn't seem surprised at all to see me in the lead again... Ah, if people knew the effort this is requiring... ;-) Anyway, my GPS was showing 4 hours and 30 minutes of running and I almost apologized to Larry how slow of a year that was going to be. We were are mile 26 and with 5 challenging miles to go, I wasn't even sure I was going to improve our M50-59 age group record which Jeff Boote set last year at 5:23. When my initial goal was to break 5 hours again. Yet, having Pierre-Yves' heat stroke in mind, it wasn't safe to push much harder.

Anyway, I was really hoping to get a lot of ice at this aid station but got only a few cubes which melt right away. The quads and hamstrings were hurting really bad in the countless switchbacks down to the river and I'm glad I didn't cross any hikers as it would have been hard to stop on this slippery dirt. At least, I was grateful to Mark Tanaka's clean-up of the poison oak which he did in May, as I couldn't see much of it as opposed to previous years. Thanks Mark (and maybe the drought help)! Getting down to the river, I was super disappointed to find it dry as I was dreaming of damping my hat in it. Going up again was super hard on the legs and I imagined Yew was making up time in the switchbacks. That motivated me to push as hard as I could in the last and very exposed uphill of the course which was now radiating heat like a furnace. I kept looking over my shoulder and was really relieved when I got to the top without saying anyone behind.

I kept pushing and, this time, was really relieved to find the Stromer Spring flowing: I put the top of my head down into the reservoir, that was so refreshing! And a volunteer was kind enough to fill my bottle with ice so I could drink more to help with the cramping. Flying down to Del Valle, I thought of Tom Kaisersatt who was brave enough to climb this last mile despite his late stage lung cancer, to encourage his Stevens Creek Striders club mates. Yes, Tom, you are still such a running and life inspiration!

I was so happy to win this race for the 5th time in 9 years and 8 participations (couldn't run last year because of Max's graduation), I let my joy explode before crossing the finish line in a time of 5:05.

And what better way to celebrate than in company of the ultra running queen, Ann Trason, and Dirt Diva, Catra Corbett?


Or even Catra's ultra elite dog, Dirt Doxie, aka TruMan, who got his very own and special award for running a 50K?

This is the first time I don't finish under 5 hours but, given the circumstances, I'll take it as we say! Speaking of circumstances, it wasn't pretty behind. In addition to the 79 or so entrants who didn't start, there was an unusual rate of drops/DNFs (Did Not Finish), with people backtracking to Sunol. And I think only 6 runners broke 6 hours this year...

We were supposed to drive Frederic back home but he dropped at mile 20 after experiencing nausea and dehydration. Without any cell coverage at the finish, but thanks to a network or radio amateurs covering all these remote aid stations, it took us 2 hours to find out. We drove back to Sunol which we reached moments before Fred arrived with other runners in a Ranger's pick-up. Always going there by foot, I had never realized how remote even Sunol was, and more so the other stations which have no road access at all. No wonder why this is called the Ohlone Wilderness...

The results are not published yet but I think Yew finished 10 minutes or so behind me.

Our team did quite well today: John Burton took 3rd in 5:35, and, with a lot of courage to keep going after falling apart around mile 12, Rickey finished in 5th place. Way to tough it out, Rickey!



You can find a few more pictures of the starts and finishers in my Picasa album (please give credit to this blog by including a link if you use or post, thanks!).

By the way, while this appears to me like a feat beyond my dreams, do you think winning Ohlone 5 times is a record? Despite what I thought and mistakenly told Ann, not even! Dave Scott won 8 editions, even breaking 4 hours (yes, four) twice! And Beth Vitalis won 6 times (and, would she have started this morning, I bet she would have had a good chance to get a 7th title). Anyway, I wasn't running ultras when he was and never met him, but I'm certainly not in his league, and I know Leor could win every year would he focus on that event. But we are all glad to see his splendid pictures and accounts of his high country hiking adventures instead.

A quick word on nutrition: 3 Vespa (2 before the start, one at the top of Rose Peak) did their magic again! I ate 2 pieces of banana, 8 small cups of Pepsi, 4 GUs, 2 pieces of watermelon. And drank 2.5 bottles of GU2O. Less than 800-calorie intake and more than 3,500 calories consumed, you do the math, I still have fat to burn to fuel my races! ;-)

Overall, Ohlone is traditionally hot anyway, the temperatures we experienced weren't that exceptional. The difference though is that, this late in the season, the ground is much warmer already in the early morning. And the air must be dryer too. I think the second factor explaining the high number of no shows and drops is that we are late in the season. Many people had tough races this summer, and were still tired.

This time I stopped at most of the aid stations exceptionally, so I'm even more grateful than ever to the volunteers who spent their Sunday in such a heat to attend to our needs. And of course to all the volunteers who worked on the pre and post-race logistic, and the flawless course marking. And a special mention to Eric England who came from Portland to support his father's race, and took over the BBQ, a very hot place to be on such a hot day...! And, of course, huge thanks to Race Directors Larry England and Ann Trason for taking on the big responsibility of organizing such an event in a wilderness and having offered us this unusual Fall edition to make up for the May no go (without any additional cost!). I bet they will hear from the Rangers who got busy transporting runners from the Maggie's Half Acre aid station back to Sunol all afternoon...!

I hope everybody made it back home safely, and that we all have a cooler end of the season, easing up into El Niño hopefully. Run Happy and stay cool...!

Stevens Creek 50K, Aquinas climb, Trailblazer 10K: a very busy running weekend!

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This year again, there was a lot of buzz going on regarding our local Stevens Creek Trail. First, the Stevens Creek Striders had their ultra race event on Saturday, including a 50K, 30K and half-marathon, going through the Stevens Creek Canyon. And, on Sunday, on the other end of the trail, the Trailblazer 10K and 5K races at Shoreline.

But, no, I didn't do the 50K/10K same-weekend double which I did back in 2013, I was just volunteering at the 50K on Saturday.

Under Jim's leadership, our Club (QuickSilver Running Club of San Jose) was manning the Saratoga Gap aid station yesterday. After an 11-mile stretch without an aid, the runners were quite happy to find us to refuel for the next 9-mile section.


I worked the timing with our Club President, Greg Lanctot. Here we are under Peter Hargreaves' supervision, Peter Hargreaves (photo credit: Tiffany Trevers who, in the afternoon, won the half marathon race).

In addition to writing down bib numbers and times on paper, we used the ex-Race Director, Steve Patt's PocketTimer app, which made it really easy and so much official. We officiated for more than 4 hours, just to say that the runners were quite spread out especially given the staggered starts. It must be quite another experience to time a cross-country event when you have dozens of runners crossing the finish line within less than a minute!

Anyway, great way to see the race from another angle, from the front to back runners, and taking time to catch-up with club mates.

After seeing these runners enjoying the trails, and since I was passing through Saratoga anyway on the way back/down, I decided to drive to Los Gatos to give a try to the Segment of the Month, a challenge organized by Jeff Clowers and advertised in the Quicksilver Trail Runners group on FaceBook. This time it was 3 miles straight up (see the Strava segment), a climb of about 1,300 feet. One of the key challenge of that segment was actually getting to the start: a super steep road on which you can't park. Thanks to Jim's insider tips, I did park on Lookout Road, then went on to climb the Sheldon Road up to the gate. It was 2:30 pm when I got to the start, with temperatures of about 85F and I was already sweating hard and thirsty before even starting. Long story short, I was gasping for air after 2 miles in the red zone and had to stop 3 times to walk a few steps to catch my breath. Not only was it hot, but I had many things going through my mind, most importantly questioning what I was doing here, instead of tapering before the next day's 10K... Not sure I was a the top, I continued on the rolling section until my GPS reached 3.6 miles to make sure I had at least covered the whole segment.

The descent was much easier of course and I made sure to enjoy the stunning views over the Bay Area. A noisy F-20 flew by quite low and I thought of the aerial views like the ones I was experiencing this afternoon, that these pilots get all the time! Back home, I was pleased to see that despite getting only the second all-time performance on this climb with 27:09, that is 1:57 behind Mike Helms, I still had the best performance of the month, yay! Oh wait, 2 hours later, that time was improved by super fast Chris Wehan by... 1 second! Yes, that is one second, how inconvenient that Strava truth was! Oh well, later in the evening, the group was chatting about even-faster Dave Roche attempting to break 21 minutes this Sunday!

Meanwhile, I ran the Trailblazer 10K for the 11th time this year. I have not been able to run every year but had a good consecutive series these past 7 years. Overall: 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009-2015, so 11 out of 21 editions. And two wins 10 years or so ago, after the local Kenyans stopped showing up, and before Jose Pina, Sr, took control of the race! At 51, and after winning the grueling Ohlone 50K last week, winning a 10K was really not part of my goals today, I just wanted to see how fast I could still go after so much focus on ultra running these past months and years. Thankfully, my running buddy Bob got Jeremy and I back on the track for some speed work these past weeks, that helped regaining some leg speed.

Now, when Jose wasn't to be found near the start line with one minute to go, I saw a window of opportunity. When Race Director, Aaron, called the sub 7-minute/mile runners and only 5 of us moved toward the start line, I told to myself, "maybe this year gain, let's see..." There was a 13-year-old in that group and I was doubtful he would hold 6 min/mile especially after hearing him talking to his buddy about 19 minutes for 5K and trying to break 42 minutes for 10K, the math didn't work. Yet, he took the lead right off the start, as well as a much taller runner. I was just behind them when we got on the bike path and our pace was 5:30 after 500 yards. At that corner, they slowed down so much that I almost hit them from behind and, going around to maintain the pace, I took the lead. I stabilized my pace around 5:40 for the next 2 miles. Still that was really not comfortable but I had to keep pushing to maintain and increase the lead. As I was approaching the mile 2 marker, which is just before a bump in the levee, I was moving to the left side, ready to plunge in the left turn, when an old and grumpy cyclist came to my side and pushed me on the right. I got that I was on the wrong side but had to let a big bad word out of my mouth when, on top of it, he slowed down in front of me just after passing me. I did pass him on the short climb out of the chicane, I was really mad. Anyway, he passed me again on the flat section, without saying a word fortunately, as I was myself trying to remain calm...

The rest of the race was fortunately eventless. I did slow down a bit in the last 3 miles, finishing in 36:29 for a 5:52 average pace. Not my fastest 10K, but good enough given the circumstances. And good enough for a win this year, short of more competition! Here are the top 4 finishers of this morning's 10K race, 2 of them being 50 plus! You are never too old to keep moving! ;-)

Speaking of which, here is one of my ultra racing buddies, Bill Dodson, who, at 80, was enjoying this short 5K course, bare foot, before running the Twin City marathon next week. Not that marathon is much distance for Bill, he set a new American Age Group record for 100K in April, then for 50 miles one week later in San Francisco!

Five minutes after I crossed the line, Agnes surprised me: she had biked from home and was disappointed to have just missed my finish. Bob took 4th in the 5K, which is good news after the knee surgery he went through earlier this year.


Learning from previous years, when we've waited for more than an hour to get the results and awards, albeit also enjoying the kids race in the meantime, I went back on the course to run it again, this time in a more comfortable 41:53 (6:44 min/mile). I even chatted for a few seconds with Don Murdoch, who taught me track workouts back in 2000, and passed a handful of runners finishing their 10K loop.

Here is the start of the cool kids' race:

Back to the title of this post, it was such a busy running weekend that the turn out of the event was much lower than usual: it is hard indeed to compete with the Rock 'n Roll half-marathon which was held this morning in San Jose. Same thing yesterday, the Stevens Creek ultras were far from filling-up. More generally, as much as this is such a great thing to get more people healthier, there may be an over-abundance of running events on the market. It has been only 10 years since I started running ultras and, in this period, the number of 100-milers in North America went from below 30 to a whopping 142! As a result, the competition is very uneven, you have to pick your battles. With that, I won the coveted newly released Microsoft Band, which I look forward to try and write a review about (now that I moved to a Macbook and iPhone, I hope it talks some Apple language...). After winning 2 XBoxes at this race, Microsoft has been good to me! ;-)


Anyway, that event isn't much about competition, but a fund raising opportunity to help prolong/extend the Stevens Creek Trail through Mountain View, Sunnyvale, Los Altos and Cupertino so we can hike, bike or run from the Bay to the hills (and, beyond, to the Ocean!). Since such a trail wasn't designed at the right time, when 85 was built especially, we are so grateful to have volunteers giving up hundreds of hours to advocate for a solution and address this urbanism flaw. It was great to spend some time with Ross Heitkamp, the webmaster of the Friends of the Stevens Creek Trail, who updated me on the trail outlook.

And I also met an IBM colleague, Linda, who volunteers in this association. There were many volunteers this morning, about 30 of which coming from Cupertino High School, a few who even knew me then. Linda (left), giving the start of the kids' race:

That was my 48th 10K race (I've run 54 50Ks, so 10Ks are only my second favorite format), and 15th race of the year (only 2 non-ultras). Next is the inaugural 68-mile Folsom Lake Ultra organized by Single Track Running in 2 weeks. Was great to see so many people on the Stevens Creek Trail today, keep up the great job of getting healthier and enjoying the outdoors!

East Bay errands: Oakland and Alameda's shoreline

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It was our first Cal Parents weekend and, despite being in the Fall and a year in which we expect El Niño, it was a hot and sunny one! As a matter of fact, it was our first parent weekend because, for various reasons, we never managed to make them for Yale and Georgetown for Max and Alex. Better not miss this opportunity to experience another American tradition!
We only live 50 miles away but there is always some traffic on our local highways so we decided to stay overnight in Oakland. Friday was too busy with lectures, visits and the dinner to squeeze a run in and I had some catch-up to do on Saturday morning (and more this Sunday before leaving for Chicago and tapering for next weekend's Folsom Lake 68-mile race).

We stayed at a hotel which had 'waterfront' in its name and I was really looking forward to a scenic run in the morning. Unfortunately, with the millions of people living in the Bay Area, it's not quite a continuous trail along the Bay's shoreline, see for yourself:
And in more details in the Oakland area, you can better see all the holes in the shoreline:
Preparing for my run on Friday evening made me work on my local geography... As much as I've run a lot in the area, there is so much to learn and explore. In this case, I had heard about Alameda when driving on 680, but I had not realized it was a city on an island, in front of Oakland. Our hotel was actually facing another island, the US Coast Guard one, albeit a smaller one, and definitely not a place for a run (Federal property, no trespassing!).

Long story short, there were a few hundreds yards of boardwalk but it took me about 3 miles to reach a significant stretch of bike path, entering the Martin Luther King on Tidewater Avenue. With the sun rise, and the birds busy looking for fish, that was a really nice run and, before I knew it, I ended up close to OAK, the Oakland International Airport. Rather a busy and unwelcoming place to run but the traffic wasn't too bad so I ran the 1.5 miles on Dolittle Drive, toward Alameda.

But, before going though Alameda, I thought I had time to go around the loop which I had see on the BayTrail map. I had promised Agnès I will be back at the hotel by 9:30 but despite running sub 7 min/mile it was 9:30 by the time I finished this 5-mile loop, oops! I wasn't sure how far I was from the hotel but it took some sprinting to get back at 10 am, just in time to grab a breakfast before it closed, phew! You can see some of that stress in the pace getting faster and faster below... ;-)
By the way, there was some fog preventing me from seeing much of San Francisco but, otherwise, the views from the West side of Alameda must be gorgeous!

After a quick shower and check-out, we managed to see part of the Centennial celebration for Cal's Campanile.
The campanile has a carillon with 61 notes!
After that, Agnès and I split, her going to see the Amélie musical at the Berkeley Rep, and I going to the homecoming football game. It was quite a good fight and we were delighted to see the Golden Bears winning their 5th straight games this season, amazing debut!

Yesterday was more academic with lectures on 'The Stress and your Brain", "Research on self-compassion", "Music: Art and Science" and "Neuroscience: your Brain at Berkeley". Amazing professors and amazing students which make Cal Berkeley the number one Public University in the World. It felt great to get back to school for this occasion, a nice break from work.

Have a great week!











Inaugural Folsom Lake Ultra Trail: which lake?

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First, and breaking my tradition of thanking the Race Director at the end of my race reports, let me start with putting the spotlight on Paulo Medina and his co-race director, Clint Welch. Paulo worked on this project for 3 years and I must say it was a brilliant idea to come create this event, circumventing the entire Folsom Lake. I'm amazed at the guts it takes to organize an event of that scale, requiring 4 permits, all on the same day of course, and manning so many remote aid stations along the way. It was also original to combine an individual format with a 3-leg relay.
With such technical trails, including the famous 'meat grinder' (which I called 'feet grinder' in the past), a start at 5 am and a cut-off at 1:20 am, this also make a very long day for the organizers and certain volunteers, kudos to all! With 68.8 miles or 110K, the distance was a bit odd, but it definitely made for quite a challenging course. As for the lake, here are two pictures which sum it up: no more lifeguards needed, unfortunately...


With that, when Paulo invited me to run his event instead of Julie Fingar's more traditional Dick Collins Firetrails 50-mile which was held that Saturday, I did hesitate a bit but I already logged a record 580 points in our Pacific Association Grand Prix (9th consecutive Age Group win!) so I got really excited to run this inaugural event instead. Given the length of the course, Agnès cancelled a few of her Friday afternoon classes so we could leave Cupertino early. Well, that wasn't enough we got into quite some traffic so we missed the Friday evening briefing. Given the low number of participants though, I wasn't too worried about getting my bib in the morning.

It was pitch dark at 5 am and my new Petzl Tikka RXP worked wonders (after bad experiences with Black Diamond, finally switched to this French product! ;-). And, yes, with more than 200 lumens, this small thing shines, so long for Agnès' traditional pre-start photo!
At some point I thought I had seen Bob Shebest so told to myself 'oh well, so long for a win today...' Indeed, I had the second highest UltraSignup.com ranking behind Bev Anderson-Abbs, so I thought I had a shot at winning my 3rd race in 4 weeks! Fortunately, a few miles in the run, I realized it couldn't be Bob because he wasn't in the lead.

Right off the start, I took the lead alongside a young and tall runner who was on the 68-mile, and we got quickly joined by two relay runners which became very handy as I wasn't sure about the course but one of the two had run rehearsed his first leg recently. And it was good to have him because I had heard Paulo say that we had to be under the levee and we weren't in the first 4 miles. The first ribbon was at mile 1.5 and the second at mile 3, you had better know we needed to stay on the American River bike path at the beginning, running the American River 50-mile course in reverse.

We had a few hesitations at mile 4 as we reached that levee and couldn't see a ribbon. Again it was great to have our guide with us (sorry, I didn't pick the name)! Running on the lake bed was like what I imagine would be running on Mars: sharp rocks, dust, uneven ground, sand. At that point, our pace increased from the (crazy!) 7:30 min/mlle to a more sustainable 8:00 when our guide and I reached the second aid station, Brown Ravine at mile 6.7. Carrying 2 bottles, I didn't stop and took the lead, creating a gap in the next 8 miles. I did a long stop at the New York (where does that come from ? ;-) aid station where I got David Lent and two volunteers refill my GU2O and water bottles (special kudos to David for manning that aid station in the morning, then Granite Bay in the afternoon!!). My pace went down from 8:06 to 8:13 with that 1 minute 40 second pit stop, yikes! I pushed in the next miles on a great shady single track but only regained 1 second for my average pace. The first rays of sun hit me when I was at mile 20.5 and I was thinking of the back of the pack runners who were going to be in the heat for many more hours than I intended to be (another perk with the gift of running faster, I often say that I have a lot of respect for these runners who are on their feet for much longer).

There was still plenty of shade on the trail and, with that, I reached out the Salmon Falls aid station still in the lead. 22.4 miles in just above 3 hours (8 am), an average pace around 8:30 by the time I left the aid station after refueling a bit and, more importantly, getting more ice in my water bottle. It was great to see Agnès there; who rushed after a quick breakfast at the hotel to grab my precious (well, expensive) headlamp. What stunned me is that, while I imagined being welcomed by dozens of runners waiting for their teammate finishing their first leg, I only saw one! Oops, maybe I was way too fast then... But I knew the next section had a grueling profile, so it seemed ok to have run the initial 22-mile leg faster, at least there was no way to run an even pace all along on that type of course.
From Salmon Falls Bridge, we went down the boat ramp (with an empty lake, certainly no boat loading this year unfortunately) then, on the lake bed again.


This time, it was a field of uneven pebbles making our progression quite challenging. I had seen a picture of runners crossing a river on the race website so I was wondering what was coming up, seeing the rushing American River on our right. As you can see on Agnès' pictures, the colors of that early morning light were amazing.

Thankfully, we only had to cross a very shallow, but that was enough, as well as two previous creek crossing where I missed the rocks meant to keep our feet dry, that was enough to fix all the dust on my relatively new Brooks Racer ST5 (the ones I also used at Ohlone). Speaking of which, there were so many rocky sections that I got quite a few free foot massages today in these racing flats! So long for the matching Royal Blue color with all the dirt:
With that, I was glad that the course got us on a large bridge in the middle of nowhere to cross the American River. I couldn't see anyone behind anymore, yet free from that pressure, decided to keep pushing the pace in the next section, including the first super steep climb at mile 26 in which I admit I walked for the first time. That side of the canyon was quite exposed to the sun so I was glad when I got to Flagstaff Hill at mile 28.4 (at that point, my GPS was off the course description by at least half a mile). We reached that station after a mile on a rare fire road, yet, such a rocky one that I wouldn't want to drive my car on it! More ice at that aid station as the temperature had increased significantly, and my second GU2O refill. Yet, there was some nice refreshing breeze from time to time. I was surprised when the aid station staff sent me out with the message 'stay on that road until the next aid station.' I thought they meant the fire road but it was a paved/asphalt road instead. Wow, what a change from the trick trails we had been on earlier! Being a polyvalent runner, I certainly enjoyed that relief and took the opportunity to get my average pace down to about 8:24 on the long downhill. Now, I had not dared to ask how many miles away the next aid station was and too busy running to reach out to my aid station chart in my pocket so, after a few miles of this without seeing any ribbon, I started doubting. I crossed a pickup and the driver was kind enough to tell me 'yes, keep going up, you'll see a bridge and sign "Runners on the road"', that was comforting. Well, maybe not the uphill part though, because it was a few miles long, phew! Thinking of all the training I do on the 7-mile climb to Black Mountain on Montebello Road in Cupertino, I was well prepared and managed to run--and gut out-- all of it! Although I was relieved when I reached the Oak View Drive aid station at mile 36 (37 on my GPS), thinking it marked the end of the climb. Well, not quite, the following 2 miles before we reach the Cool trails were hard to run after that, so I did some walking, except when chased by two barking dogs, yikes!
It felt really great to be back on these smooth and flat trails which I ran on in a few occasions (Way Too Cool, Rio Del Lago, ....). And, even more so to see Agnès waiting for me at the Cool aid station, along with 3 very nice volunteers who gave me more ice to... cool (!) down a bit.

My pace was now 8:38 (8:41 after exiting the station) and, at that speed, I was trending on the overheating side, yet feeling quite good physically and mentally.
There were barely a handful of spectators, quite a change with the buzz on Way Too Cool race day!
Leaving with a few ice cubes in my hat.
Between the heat and the fact that I had still to cover 29 challenging miles, I certainly didn't run my best time for going down to the river. I was excited to get back to the famous No Hands Bridge on the Western States trail and even more saw by the subsequent climb. The aid station had limited ice but I got some and they were going to get more (I was still in the lead so, surely, there would be quite a few followers requiring ice in the peak of the heat). It wasn't even 10 am for me, I was moving and, again, my thoughts went to the rest of the pack.

Enjoying every second of the bridge crossing, I went on the traditional climb, the one we get for the Western States finish. But, bummer, after a couple of miles, and half way up, we were sent down a sandy, slippery, dusty and super narrow trail, so narrow in places that horses are washing it out with their horseshoes. After going down again to the river, the subsequent climb up to Auburn was exhausting. It was great to see Martin Sengo (photo credit) and Paulo, near the top.
I had to walk several times and my pace was 8:58 when I got to the Gate 142 aid station in Auburn, which was also the transition area between legs 2 and 3.

Agnès was there, as well as Ian Grettenberger, who offered to pace me, on Thursday. I had not planned to get paced, but Ian contacted Paulo with this offer and I replied 'why not?' Out of 120 ultras, I only got paced less than 10 times and I certainly learned to take care of myself, plus build even more respect for the 'screwed' format of ultra running, as my teammate Mark Tanaka puts it, that is when you have neither a pacer or a crew. Well, today was both crew and pacer, for a change! I didn't know Ian except for some professional information gleaned over the Internet. Now, as other have figured out in the past, I'm certainly not a talker when I run (well, in life in general), one more reason I enjoyed the solitude and silence of these long runs. Besides, with my accent and soft voice, and me running in front, it's actually impossible to hold a conversation while I race. Long story short, we didn't talk much for the next/final 23 miles, but it was great to get company, most especially to check the course marking which, after being excellent in the first half, was now getting less consistent and sparser. A good thing we were finishing on the American River and Rio Del Lago trail which I know so well after having raced on it 15 times or so.

The last climb up to Auburn had its toll and I started feeling really tired but it was good to go back down to the river. The next aid station, Oregon Bar, was only 2.4 miles after Auburn but, thankfully, we stopped to fill up my bottles as the next section was 6 miles to Rattlesnake Bar. It was now early afternoon and getting hot when not in the shade. I was so tired but still moving at a reasonable pace that I felt twice in that section. Nothing bad, but too tired to avoid getting down. In the second fall in particular, my legs cramped and it took me a minute or so to get back up, my average pace falling from 9:09 to 9:11 min/mile. Back on the trail, things were different, I was still running most of the uphills but everything was becoming really painful and my stride shorten. After 7 hours of running, and this change of allure, I started losing exact track of my Gu and S!Caps intake. I think I got the sodium intake mostly right, but I ended up low on the carb side. Thankfully, Vespa was handling the fat burning for me so I could keep moving.

The marking before Rattlesnake Bar was quite confusing and I hope nobody got lost there (Ian moved a few ribbons to make it more obvious, and we asked volunteers of the next two aid stations to notify the race director). After 6 miles, I certainly didn't want to miss that strategic aid station. Even if the next one, Horseshoe Bar, was only 2.7 miles away, I'm glad that I refilled because it seemed like taking for ever to get to it and I had to drink way more than usual with this heat. We had now reach the infamous 'meat grinder' section, which I can still get a hold on after 15 times. When I used to get exercised-induced asthma (before getting it under control thanks to Singulair now), that's the section I had my worst death mark in my first American River, with half the participants passing me. While it looks almost flat on a course profile, it's actually more than 6 miles of shorts ups and downs but, more importantly, countless large round boulders which you have to hop over. With my short legs, not to mentioned tired ones at that stage, walking was even difficult! I couldn't imagine how the last runners would have to go through this at night!


I had slowed down so much now that I had emptied both my bottles after just 3 miles, and there were 3.4 miles to go before the Granite Bay aid station. I kept looking at my GPS that didn't make the distance move faster, just the pace going down to now about 9:45. Clint had told Agnès that I had created an hour gap by mid race but I had lost an hour in that 3rd section already so I became worried about getting caught. Assuming the followers weren't going through the same nightmare as I was now in... It was such a relief to get to the Granite Bay aid station, with only 4 miles left! I was out of GU2O powder and filled my 2 bottles with fresh water, which I needed so much, being so thirsty after running the last 3 miles without drinking. We were finally on very runnable trails, including the three flat levees we were finishing on, and where I even pushed the pace, to the point that I managed to lower my average pace from 9:54 to 9:52, yeah!

8 miles earlier I had told Ian that I had nothing left so, now, I had to admit that I was lying, since I could still run that way to the finish. But, it was hard to know for sure what was left in the tank during my low.

With that, I did get this third consecutive win I was after today, albeit in a non-competitive field. Yet, I certainly pushed as hard as if there was competition, creating my very own pressure.

I was hoping to break 11 hours today but obviously that didn't work out. After this hard push at the end, I fell in Clint's arms and I need this big hugs from the RDs! ;-)

I'm sure someone can improve my time in the coming years, but maybe the 50-59 course record will hold for a while, unless Rich Hanna is tempted to race around his backyard lake in the coming years! ;-) I didn't stop my GPS right away but I think my time was about 11:23:30, just below 10:00 min/mile pace with a 68.5 mile distance (my GPS ending up with 69.50 miles).

Very nice award, I certainly didn't have any trophy like that one on my shelves! And I'm glad I didn't have to fly with that in my suit case...


 Paulo even teased me and said that was my finisher medal to wear:
Short of a conversation, Ian had a nice last slow long training run before his upcoming 50-mile race next week (Twin Peaks 50 in Corona, CA). Hope that was worth it, Ian, and thank you again for proposing to volunteer this way!

While I was recovering and waiting for the next runners to come in, Agnès drove him back up to Auburn where he had left his car. The next runner arrived an hour after me, she was part of the winning relay team. We waited more but, Agnès and I both starving for an In and Out burger, we left around 6:40 without seeing any other runner coming in. It was going to be a long day for the organizers... And, maybe, I had put extra pressure on me when I was fearing to get caught in the last 8 miles... With that, I hope everybody made it back home safely (early Sunday morning, the results are of course not posted yet).

This Sunday morning, my legs are sore so I don't feel like racing hard at the 50-mile Road Nationals in 2 weeks, but 2 weeks is a long time, so who knows... I'm not in yet anyway, but I'm already registered for the New Jersey Trail Series One Day, in 4 weeks. Yes, as I mentioned in previous posts, that's a busy Fall season!

Big thanks to the volunteers, especially those manning remote aid stations, in the sun, all by themselves! To Paulo: I wouldn't change the start and direction of the course. First, since it's an inaugural event, the following have better to have the same format for comparison sake. Second, changing direction would mean much more running in the sun/heat on the East side of the Lake in the afternoon. Third, Beals Point provides ample parking and easy access. To the point of access, you may want to add to your event page more instructions for the crew to access the aid stations they are allowed at. Thanks to Vespa, I don't eat much but I felt aid stations could have been more stocked, especially those in the last section after Auburn since it is such a tough one that late in the race. Apart from a few turns before and after Rattlesnake Bar, I found the marking very good. It was especially important for me who had never ran the East side of the Lake up to Auburn.

Again, what an amazing opportunity to circle the entire Folsom Lake, I strongly recommend this event, kudos to Single Track Running! Of course, after these 4 years of drought, there wasn't much lake to be seen, but let's hope there will be plenty in the years to come, making this event an even more enjoyable ultra experience. And, for those vetting the Western States qualifier events, this is to me definitely a good one. Despite the few miles of road section which are matched by countless of rugged and rough single track miles, I found it tougher than Miwok 100K or Quicksilver 100K, just to mention two.

Run Happy all, and considering this great run around Folsom Lake, next year. Rain or shine as we say, maybe California should switch to a Rain AND shine version of it...


The Fall 50-mile US Road Nationals: one too many?

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Am I too greedy? I'm sure many will answer yes, yet, I assure you that there are many other gluttons in our ultra running world! ;-)

I started this year hoping not only to win our North California Ultra Grand Prix for the 9th consecutive year, in my age group that is, which I did. But, to top that focus on local races, I set my eyes on 6 US ultra distance championships this year, versus 2 last year. Carpe diem, or you only live once, as the saying goes...!

It didn't started well as I DNFed at Rocky Racoon 100-mile in January, in TX. I had a great rebound in March in NY for the 50K road, taking the Masters title, albeit missing the 30-year pending M50-54 record by 1'48" partly due to the freezing conditions. In April, it was my first trip to Wisconsin (Madison), for the 100K, and I also got the Masters title. Fast forwarding to August for our local Tamalpa 50K Trail where I won my 3rd M50-54 title this year, and placed 2nd Masters. I had to miss the 50-mile trail Nationals at the end of May for family reason (the funerals of Agnès' mother), and I was looking forward to this last opportunity of the year, the Fall 50, also the 50-mile road Nationals.

Now, I must admit that I was really tired after my last race, 2 weeks ago, the inaugural Lake Folsom Trail, a demanding 68-mile course in the heat. It was my 3rd win in 4 weeks, I knew I was taking some serious risks to compete again, especially for such a distance on road pavement. Not the mention the rolling profile which I had not realized initially. Bottom line, I signed for it at the last minute and didn't come fully prepared.

And prepared for what anyway? A week ago the forecast gave a few light showers in the morning. Well, it's not just that, as a Californian, I forgot what rain is, even the locals admitted that we got quite a lot today. And that's even only one part of the story: the wind was also strong and blowing from the South, that meant running 50-mile against headwind.

I stayed in Green Bay, left the hotel at 4am and hopped on the shuttle at 5:30 which got us to the start by around 6:45 am. I had considered registered on race morning, I'm super glad I actually drove to Sturgeon Bay on Friday night to do it. With 15 minutes to get prepared before the start, there was definitely no time for some paper work!

We started at 7:03 and, with the thick clouds, it was still quite dark. At this point it was drizzling but the road was quite wet so I was trenched right away. At least it wasn't too cold (~55F). The list of participants wasn't published but I had heard that Zach Bitter was here to take his revenge over last year's mishap. He was running with Michael and they both went off course for almost 2 miles because of some sabotage of the course marking, and dropped shortly after. Zach is one of the fastest American distance runner nowadays, setting many records especially at the 100-mile distance. And he is our best ambassador of Vespa too! He has run 50 miles in 5:12 2 years ago so, with this level of speed, I wasn't ashamed to lose track of the group of lead runners after a mile.

My goal was to try breaking 6 hours (I ran a 50-mile in 5:43 4 years ago, albeit in better conditions!), and, without knowing who else was in the Masters division, I was hoping that would put me on that podium. After a few miles, we were quite spread but I could still see Camille Herron 3 to 400 yards ahead. I met Camille when she won the 100K Nationals in Madison in April. She was already quite known on the marathon circuit but that was her first ultra and, right away got her on Team USA for the World 100 championships last month, which she won in a blazing time of 7:08! Despite the rolling profile, by just trying to keep Camille in sight, my pace decreased to 6:53 by mile 7 which was more aggressive than what I had planned. And all that was under a very heavy rain!

In the 11th mile, with serious road work in Sister-Bay, we had to negotiate our way across damaged sidewalks and huge puddles. We were running against the heavy traffic of all the cars driving the first teams of runners to the start (the event has a 10-leg relay starting 1-hour after the solo race), and I got splashed by a few cars, refreshing! There is a short but steep hill at the exit of Sister Bay and I gasped for air at the top, yikes, not a good sign! My pace was back to 7:00 which I stabilized for the next 4 miles but at the top of the hill at mile 15, again, I could catch my breath and had to stop to walk for a few steps. I could feel my lungs weren't working properly and, sure enough, it got only worse in the next few miles. I did a long stop (1'30") to refill my GU2O bottle at mile 18.7 and was completely worn out after that. No breathing meant that my legs weren't getting enough oxygen and I was bummed that happened so early in the race. I kept trotting and, one I saw that the first runner to catch up with me was wearing a M50-54 bib too, I had only only one idea in mind, quit. Although, for some time, I was hoping to run as far as the 28-mile aid station, to pass the marathon distance at least, I just called it a day at the 23.7-mile aid station instead, glad that I had ran enough to even see some light (aka sun) after the first storm. I wasn't coughing too bad, but couldn't take a full breath without triggering some spasms in my lungs, to it was safer to just stop there.

Thankfully, I got the 'golden Uber' service with volunteers Dan and Barb driving their minivan from the finish to Fish Creek Bay just to pick me and drive me down to the finish. That was the first round trip for Dan today, and there will surely be many more given the conditions! It was great to chat with this super nice couple who have been helping on this race for the past 10 years, and helping organizing many other events in the area, including triathlons, for the sake of supporting and giving back to the community.

I got the finish line around 11:15 which left ample time to change before seeing the first runners coming in. Yet, and despite the conditions which turned back to heavy rain and headwind again, we were amazed to see Zach finishing in 5:17!!


I actually knew he was doing great thanks to Michael who had run with Zach in the early part of the race before also dropping at mile 24, on residual fatigue from a 100K (Lake Superior?) 2 weeks ago. But it was quite something to keep a 6:20 min/mile pace for 50 miles, and in these adverse conditions, even Zach himself was amazed!

Another surprise for the day was 2nd place finisher, Anthony Kunkel, 23, from Boulder, CO, who clocked 5:38, and ran most of the race in the rain, shirtless!


Then, 22 seconds later (!), Chris Denucci (Hoka) took 3rd overall, 6 seconds before... Camille who covered the 50-mile distance in 5:38:41, that is faster than the World Record for that distance on road !!! Unfortunately for Camille, a IAAF rule doesn't recognize records set on a course where the start and finish are distant of more than 40% of the overall distance, darn! She will have to do it again, without remembering the suffering she went through today... (In the meantime, Ann Trason still holds the record which she set in Houston in 1991.)



I spent the next hour taking care of Camille who had given it all and was so cold now. She first got a massage but I don't think that did much as she was shivering and couldn't relax. Then she asked for a glass a beer, and one of root beer, but that didn't do much either (some hot soup would have been better!). I got her to the medical tent to change (there wasn't any other place), and even that tent wasn't heated (in retrospective I'm kind of glad I dropped after all, I would have been miserable at the finish in these conditions...). She was starving for a hamburger but there was only pizzas which she didn't want. Long story short, she just wanted a hot shower so I put her in her car, hopping she could drive the 3 miles to her hotel. Amazing champion who pushes the envelope to the extreme (she had issues breathing around mile 20 too but took some caffeine and had a second week around mile 34).

So, back to my intro, what about Camille as one of our ultra gluttons, and a successful one!!!

Isaiah Jenzen (winner of the 24-hour Nationals last year) took 4th in 5:54. We then had to wait for 32 minutes and it was Tim Stieber, the M50-54 runner who had passed me at mile 20, who also won the Masters race. 5th overall and 1st Masters, that's worth $750 and was pretty much what I was shooting for, although I thought it would take a 6-hour/7:05 min/mile pace to get that. Smart race from Tim! The second Master (M45-49), Bruce Udell (orange top), finished one minute behind.


I finally got a few slices of pizza but, with the need to drive back to Green Bay and some amertume for having missed all my goals, didn't feel like staying for the mega party. With that, I didn't see anything from the team race, which is the fun part of this event.

Except for the weather, it was an amazing experience to be part of this 10th anniversary of this event which grew more than 10 folds in the meantime! A bit too much of car traffic for my taste, but I could see a few of the great sections along the coast and I know I missed a few in the second half. I was amazed how the marking and my GPS were aligned, it surely is a change from the mountainous trails. Kudos to the Race Director for such a professional event and this amazing logistic of a point to point course along this super busy road. And all that to raise money for local charities! Special mentions to the many volunteers along the course and to support such a large scale operation!

Will I be back? Maybe, although I must admit that I have difficulty returning on courses which I got into trouble in the first place (e.g. Tahoe Rim Trail 100M, American River 50M, Rio Del Lago 100M). But I would be happy to change that curse, like Zach did brilliantly this year!

My next one is in... well... 2 weeks, a 24-event format in New Jersey, so I better taper right away and fully recover this time... I may have to cut it 'short' to 12 hours anyway to fly straight to South Africa for work, we shall see.

3 out of 5 championships, that will be it for 2015, see some of you again at these events next year!

PS: a picture who those who actually 'made it!'


Running Northwest of Chicago: Busse Woods

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I had some unfinished business after my drop in Saturday's Nationals. At the finish line party, one of the volunteers who was serving pizzas was impressed because I still managed to run 24 miles, yet that felt to me quite like a short run, and some disappointment, by my new standards... :-/

So, on my way back to Chicago, to log a few more miles on Sunday, I stopped by the Busse Forest Nature Preserve, or Ned Brown Preserve but also known more simply as the Busse Woods, a large patch of green I had spotted in the Northwest area of the Chicago metropolitan map. With the huge Lake Michigan on the East side, Chicago has quite a lung to breathe from, yet, like Central Park in New York City, it's great to have a few green areas for those of us not able to run on water! ;-)
The park has a wonderful 7.3-mile (11.75 km) bike path loop and while it is bordered by busy highways on two sides (I-90 and I-290), you can feel like you have escaped from the city when running for a few miles in the woods. It has a convenient map online.
And, in this late October, that meant still a few amazing Fall colors on the trees, a bonus!
Apart from a couple of spots, the bike path is in great conditions, very smooth and allows inline skaters to practice before the real snow comes for some Nordic skiing. Now, on such a beautiful Sunday afternoon with blue sky and a temperature of 60F, the path/trail was quite busy with all sorts of users, and inline skating required quite some slaloming between moving obstacles: dozens of runners, a few serious bikers (I didn't see any speed limit signs, but a few sprinters were really border line), tens of roller-bladers, skateboarders, but mostly walkers of all ages.

Even on a busy weekend, there was ample parking space at each of the 9 (!) entrances. As a matter of fact, the park map denotes 32 groves, large grass areas with nearby parking spots, plus the Elk Pasture which features, as you may guess, real elks! And shouldn't come too much of a surprise in this Elk Grove Village Township.

I parked at the Main Dam entrance on the Arlington Heights Road side. See a picture tour, starting at these grooves (26 & 27), just before the mile 2 marker (running anti-clockwise), in this Google photos album.
While you run and if that's not their thing, the rest of the family can even rent a kayak on Busse Lake, do some fishing, biking, walking or simply lay down on the grass, well, if it's not raining or snowing...
Anyway, if you are staying in the North West area of Chicago, this is a great place to log a few miles and enjoy the outdoors without worrying about car traffic.
Oh, by the way, I managed to run 28 miles at 7:06 min/mile average (3:06 marathon), a small redemption to complete 50 miles over the weekend. Did I say on Saturday evening in my previous post that I had better tapering seriously now...? Sorry for the lack of short-term memory, it felt too good to run in this perfect weather on Sunday afternoon! ;-)

Hope you keep moving too, have a great week!

Vespa: power from the good fat

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I cannot resist talking about the benefits of Vespa Power again, after seeing this article in the Wall Street Journal earlier this month.
Here is how to read the chart: the author looked at the energetic power of various sources, using the volume of the Apple iPhone 6S battery as a reference. And, guess what, body fat comes in second position, close behind diesel fuel! But, with body fat, you don't even have to stop by the pump...! ;-)

Many of you have heard me talk about how Vespa has changed my (ultra racing) life these past 4 3 years. How does that Japanese magic potion work? It accelerates the metabolism to burn fat and use body fat as a source of energy during a prolonged effort, instead of carbohydrates. I'm not a specialist of the field but here are some basic nutrition maths which are part of the theory: while our muscles can store between 2,000 and 2,500 calories (or rather kcal), during a marathon we burn about 100-120 calories per mile. With that, you run out of fuel around 20 miles, which corresponds to the famous, or infamous, wall. To avoid hitting the wall, and if you want to only run on carbs, you then need to ingest and process 600 or more calories to stay afloat, 6 GU gels for instance.
Meanwhile, a pound of body fat corresponds to roughly 3,500 calories. Even at a 10% body fat ratio which is already low even for athletes (lower than 6% is considered as unhealthy), that's 15 pounds for a weight of 150 pounds, and 52,500 calories which could sustain more than 500 miles theoretically, quite some distance! Of course you don't want, can cannot fortunately, process all your body fat at once, but the point is that you can run 50 or 100 miles without much else.

While Vespa triggers this body fat burning, you can also teach your body to naturally use body fat as the main source of energy by cutting on your consumption of carb. That's what Peter Defty labels as 'Fat-adapted metabolic state' in the Optimized Fat Metabolism (OFM) program.

And, yes, this works as you can see through the transformation and performances of not only elite athletes, but regular ones as well, and not only for running, but other endurance sports as well such as cycling, swimming, skating, triathlon. At the 50-mile road Nationals last week for instance, the top 2 males, Zach Bitter and Anthony Kunkel, are avid adepts of OFM and Vespa.
Now, I must admit that, although the Vespa maths make a lot of sense, you have to believe in this approach: it's not going to work if you just drink one pouch of Vespa randomly during a race when you are bonking. The way I'm using Vespa in races is one pouch 45 minutes before the start, one at the start, no calorie intake for 90 minutes, one pouch every 2.5 to 3 hours depending on the pace and intensity of the race (e.g. 3-hour intervals for 8-10 min/mile pace 100K+ races, or 2.5 hours for 6-8 min/mile pace 50-mile and under races).

Ironically, I'm writing this post on the day of Halloween when the whole country is going to go high on sugary treats! Oh, well, not everybody is interested in endurance sports... But, for those of you who are, then enjoy some fat and, since you are carrying it anyway, learn how to use it as a super powerful and natural fuel! You'll be amazed at your now power! ;-)

NJ Trail Series One Day: multiple goals

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As the saying goes: "Chase too many rabbits, and you will not catch either one." And it doesn't have to be rabbits of course...

NJ Trail Series One Day is the last ultra race which I had put in my calendar in the second half, hoping to improve my 133-mile PR at this format (at last year's 24-hour Road Nationals) and starting with a redemption for the disappointing 129-mile performance at the San Francisco Summer Solstice back in June, plus, with my DNF at the 50-mile Nationals 2 weeks ago, a redemption of that one as well. Big goals...

Now, running is only my second job and I'm fortunate to have a great first job to pay the bills, so it takes precedence on my work and travel schedule. 3 weeks ago, my calendar was earmarked with a consulting gig in South Africa and, given the time difference, I had to fly to Johannesburg on a flight leaving JFK at 10:40. Between the international check-in and the return of my rental car, the 1 hour 40 minutes drive between Augusta, NJ and JFK, a shower at the site of the race, some post-race recover, that meant I could not run beyond 5 am with a race starting at 9 am on Saturday, hence mission 5 hours. I used that as an excuse to focus on two Age Group (M50-54) American Records: 12 hours and 100 miles. The first one was set by John Maas in 2012 in Minneapolis at 84.64 miles, the second by Brian Teason in May 2013 on that course in 15:02:30. I don't know John, but I met Brian, first at the Invitational Desert Solstice 24-hour last December in AZ, then in March at the 50K Road Nationals in NY. Amazingly humble and gracious person who keeps sharing nuggets and quotes of human intelligence and wisdom on his Facebook page.

Brian has a very impressive ultra running resume, and here are just a few lines, excerpt from a recent message of the Race Director of the Snowdrop Ultra 55-hour Race which is not only a race, but also a relay and, more importantly, a fund raising event (and, yes, that's 55 hours, like Catra will enjoy doing for her birthday in 4 years! ;-).
He is a 21-year ultra-running veteran. In his 1st 100 miler, he finished 3rd with a sub-18 hour performance. He is a 3 time USA 50 Mile Champion (2x’s road, 1x trails) with a PR of 5:23. He is a 2 time member of the USA 100K Team.
With that, I knew it wasn't going to be easy, yet, I have already run 100 miles under 15 hours a few years ago at Run d'Amore, so it seemed that the bigger challenge would be to run 85 miles in 12 hours, something I never did (my two attempts at the distance were 78.6 in Oct 2010 and 79.576 in December 2011, both at Crissy Field in San Francisco. And, yes, 5 miles makes a big difference, not to mention 5 more years of age... Oh, and both these runs were not part of a longer format either.

Because, indeed, while I was going to focus on the 12-hour first, then on 100 miles, you know my phobia about losing percentage points in the UltraSignup rankings and that event was going to be reported as a 24-hour, with a few serious contenders in the mix. So I also had to think of running as long as many miles as possible or doable or bearable beyond 100 miles...

Starting with Le Grand Serge Arbona who has been on Team USA for 24-hour world championships. And, as I was going to find out, a few laps into the race, another amazing distance runner, Phil Mccarthy, who holds the American Record for 44-hour road with 257 miles! Just before the start, Race Director, Rick McNulty (with his wife, Jennifer, as Co-RD), teased us that we should follow Phil at least for the first loop in case we weren't sure about the way, since he has run it so many times, but I thought he meant at the 3 Days at the Fair event which is also part of this NJ Trail Series (72 hours). Speaking of Trail Series, most of the course is actually an amazingly smooth road, like a car racing circuit, with long straight lines, long curves, and a few chicanes to bring some variety, plus just enough feet of elevation to make several groups of muscles work repeatedly. With the perfect weather we had this week, which may be a bit of a gamble in November in the North East, I found the course much more suitable for top performance than San Francisco's Crissy Field loop (risk of wind, sandy half, mostly flat and two straight lines). But, again, I would certainly have said the same thing would we have had a snow blizzard blowing this weekend...
I arrived at the site just after 8, coming from Dover. We started promptly at 9 am, under an overcast sky and temperatures in the mid 60F. While a few local runners were complaining about the heat, it felt perfect for me, I didn't even have to use by Brooks arm warmers. Three races started at 9 actually, our 24-hour, a 50K and a marathon, with a 6-hour starting at 6 pm and a 12-hour starting at 9 pm. With that, and a 1-mile course, there was a lot of passing and the game became to recognize the patterns between the runners leaving the interior way, those not, those in groups, those zig zag-ing. At least that brought some variety to remain alert and think of something else than the monotonous and brutal pounding of so many miles on asphalt.

The average pace for 85 miles in 12 hours is 8:28 so I thought of aiming at 8:15 to take into account time for breaks (pit stops and bottle refill). Not having a crew, I took the excuse of running after a record to ask a few volunteers for help. Many runners had actually quite a serious crew, with tables, tents, chairs, ice chests and a ton of food. Being on the road for 2 weeks, with only a carry-on, I was not even able to bring enough GUs for 24-hour, as I was limited by the famous quarter-size bag limit for liquids and gels... Not to mention that I could not pack more than one pair of running shoes, or even much warm running gear, so a good weather was a blessing!

Back to the pace, I could not even slow down enough and ended up running most of the first 6 hours under 8 min/mile. While it felt comfortable, at least for the first 50K, I knew this could get me under trouble... To increase the pressure, one of the local runners I shared my goal with while running, told me that the course record for 12 hours here had been set by no less than Valmir Nunes at 80 miles, Valmir having won Bad Water and the Sparthatlon among many other feats. Oops, I had to bring on my A game then...

While I was pushing the pace, there were still a few 24-hour runners keeping up, which was a bit insane. I don't have all the stats, but I think that Phil and another runner were only 4 or 5 miles behind when I passed the 50-mile mark in 6:48. At this point, I was averaging 8:10 min/mile and, running some maths in my head, thought 85 miles was well in reach, I was more thinking between 87 or even 90. Then, I was thinking, from there, I'll have 3 more hours to run 10 miles, a walk in the park. Oh well, like it was my first ultra...

First, the night fell upon us around 5 pm, that's the issue with running in the Fall (yet, probably better than humidity in the Summer). Besides, it's not a great excuse because the course is so well lit that you don't even need a headlamp, something I really appreciated. Yet, from an internal clock, darkness is night... We were just 8 hours in the run, that was short/early to switch to night... Interestingly enough, around 4 am, we were finally bathed by some low sun rays, it was almost unreal. But that meant that the sky was clearing up for the night and, with the associated breath, explained the chillier temperatures announced in the weather forecast. I'm doing so much better in heat, yikes...

With that, I did slow down (finally...), and I think I ran the 100K around 8:32, that is around 8:15 min/mile. Still a good margin, except that many of my laps were now close to 9 minutes, so that wasn't a good trend. Rick was still quite optimistic but, with 4 miles to go and about 36 remaining minutes, I'm super appreciative that Serge accompanied me for the final focus and push it took to complete 85 laps in 11:58. Unlike some official time-events where the actual distance is measured wherever you finished when the horn blows, only completed laps would count today. Bottom line, that's going to be 0.36 miles added to John's record, pending the official certification by USAT&F which may take up to 2 years. And assuming no other M50-54 runners has done better on a USAT&F-certified course and event in the meantime...

I was quite worn out by that final push but still hopeful of running 15 miles in 3 hours to give a try to Brian's 100-mile record. I went on one more lap and, feeling cold, stopped by the car, changed and put my rain jacket on. I continued with a few laps but got sweaty under the vest and started shivering which was a bad sign. I decided to warm up in the car for a while and, at this point, made a stupind mistake: I was parked next two two tents and didn't want to turn the engine with the risk of waking them up, so I just tried to sleep, hoping I'll dry up in the meantime. First, I was shivering so much, it was hard to sleep but, I set my clock for 1 hour and 20 minutes and when this woke me up, I was super cold. At that time, I realized I could just drive the car a few hundred yards, and, indeed, got much better after about 20 minutes with the heater on, phew! With that, I lost 3 precious hours and was feeling so much better when I came back on the course. I had left the course in 1st place and was now in 6th but made it back quickly in 3rd place.

Serge, who is also 50, had told me he had barely trained for this race so he was 'just' hoping to run 110 or 120 miles today. But, at 12 hours, he had already logged 77 miles, so he had a much better day than expected. On the contrary, Phil had troubles before the 12-hour mark, and called it a day I believe around 19 or 20 hours. Then there was Megan Stegemiller who was actually leading the race, overall. With 6 hours left, I was 11 and 10 laps behind Megan and Serge, respectively. I was going to give it a try but, unfortunately, my adductors froze like it happened at the Summer Solstice in June, and that forced me to stop in the car for another 'warm air blowing' treatment, which, fortunately, resolved the issue and allowed me to have a few great laps in the last hours.

Serge was still running strong, despite fatigue and pain the legs and won the race with 135 miles. Far from his best (over 150), but on the high end of his expectations for the day with not training going in the race. Megan not only won the women race with 129 miles, which 4 miles over the Team USA qualifying standard for 24 hours. And I took 3rd with 123 miles. See full results in Rick's Google doc.

One record in bank (pending approval), one record missed, and another proof that it is super hard to keep going when you start fast. Yet, I needed the 85 miles for the first goal... But it's still so unnatural to think that it is so hard to run basically a 50K (32 miles) in 12 hours... One thing is for sure, I could have been smarter about my first stop, saving 2 hours at least, or getting a better return on the 3-hour stop rather than fighting with the shivering for 2 hours. Anyway, you can't rerun un ultra, this is been a great outcome overall. Many participants went through their own struggling, missing 100-mile or 100K goals, for instance (one was actually chasing a 150 miles as a matter of fact). I want to highlight Clifford who kept walking for 24 hours and managed to cover 59 miles. For one thing, he was wearing Brooks shoes (my ex-sponsor! ;-).
Rick and Jennifer were amazing the whole way, not only before the start (e.g. super responsive with emails) and post race, e.g. cleaning up the place in record time and giving us personalized and autograph license plates! But also on the course as a matter of fact as they did a few laps to accompany their daughter who did 27 laps! And, of course, attending to all our needs during the race, following our progress and time tracking, providing encouragements to us, and directing the few volunteers at the aid station. For once, I don't have much pictures, as a matter of fact, none during the race, but here is one of the cooks who served us so diligently though the night and morning, as far as making us egg/bacon sandwiches for breakfast at the finish! When I asked him if he was a runner, he replied: "yeah, but I never ran more than 100 miles like you guys!" That's quite humble, isn't it? Oh well, he plans on running the 3 Days at the Fair event, so he will go "ultra 100-mile" eventually...! ;-)
Very professional organization and a very friendly ultra community, I'm really glad I had the opportunity and privilege to be part of this edition! Thank you for offering this perfect setup to test and push our limits again, this is all what ultra running is about!


I want to give one more shout out to Vespa which really helped me minimizing my calorie intake during the first 12 hours. I also had 3 full servings of mash potatoes afterwards (a tip I found on my own but was later confirmed by Jon Olsen, 24-hour World champion), and took about one GU gel and 1 S!Caps an hour, plus a few cups of Coke, a few pieces of banana here and then, and one cup of chicken noodle soup. Oh, and one piece of cheese cake during my 3-hour stop, since I had time to digest! Could not resist it when stopping by Trader Joe's on Friday night (making the cashier wondering on which diet I was, and, after I told him what I was up to, he couldn't believe someone would run for 24 hours... ;-).
And the Brooks Launch were perfect to deal with all the pounding, combining cushioning and lightness needed to move fast.

PS: short of pictures during the race, here is a visual description of the course, post race (everybody was gone, but Serge and I as we were trying to get an hour of sleep before driving on our own), otherwise you'd see the tents and cars on the side of the course before and after the finish. But, overall, there was plenty of parking space.

The start, between the two trees. The white/green building on the right serves as the timing headquarters, the red building on the left (behind the trees) is the aid station kitchen.
 The super stocked aid station kitchen (closed promptly after the race).
The first turn on the right (and the steepest bump of the course), with the conveniently located and spacious restrooms, including 4 showers, in the background.
 Second turn, left, then right (chicane).
 The out and back to make the exact 1.00 mile distance (albeit, with all the sharp turns, GPS are easily getting 2-3% off).
 The turn around at the ned of the ~150-yard out and back.

The way down the Conservancy, a great opportunity to get some leg speed for variety.


 The start of the great curve.


 Entering the longest straight line.

 A chicane through Gate 8.
 Cutting on the grass for optimal trajectory.
Line before the last left turn to the start/finish.




Running on a treadmill: help, need tips, please!

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I love the outdoors! If it wasn't for the pleasure of enjoying the fresh air, I'm not sure I would love running so much. Conversely, I hate running inside and especially on a treadmill. Thankfully, I live in a paradise from many aspects and, in the context of this running blog, not only for the perfect weather we have in the Bay Area but also the amazing profusion of trails around, from flat ones along the Bay, to hilly ones either East or West.

I've visited 49 countries so far and ran almost everywhere... outside! In Singapore, it was so hot and humid at times, that I used the hotel's treadmill from time to time but, otherwise, I ran in South Africa or Senegal even when it was deemed to be unsafe. I ran through Hong Kong and Shanghai. And many other busy places and suburbs, to the point of writing quite a few posts labeled "Running in...", see in the right margin. In Paris, I even had to cross the Seine one night on a bridge on the Périphérique, which is the highway going around the whole city, not meant for pedestrians, oops!

So, when I visited Saudi Arabia for the first time in 2011, I ran 22 miles across Riyadh, only to find out the next day that my local colleagues thought I was crazy because I didn't realize I could have offended some local officials and religious. This time, Agnès explicitly asked me to stay inside and, with the 11-hour time difference, and therefore jet lag, it was a good thing that the Double Tree gym was open 24 hours a day!

3 days after my 24-hour race, I was still recovering so didn't push the pace but, even at 8 min/mile or 12 km/h, it felt so uncomfortable bouncing on this machine, with all the noise that it makes. The first night, I couldn't go longer than 8K (8 miles), I was so bored, feeling like in a hamster wheel in a cage, and I really hate this idea/thought...

The second night, I uploaded a movie on my iPhone and that distracted me enough to go for 20K, not even to the end of the movie... 8 miles the following day and a half-marathon the 4th night. I really wanted to run more, but couldn't indoor, even while watching a movie on my small iPhone screen.

So, here is my question to you, if you manage to log many miles on a treadmill yourself, either by convenience or if you live in areas to hot, cold or humid to enjoy the outdoors: what are your tips to make that, if not enjoyable, at least bearable?

I hope to hear back from you, because, with the overall insecurity around the world, I may need to get back in the wheel and better get used to it to log a few of my miles occasionally. Thank you in advance!

Running in Riyadh: Al Muruj Park (Double Tree)

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No, I didn't find the equivalent of Central Park or the Golden Gate Park in Riyadh, but just a little green patch. As a matter of fact, I didn't even find it on my own: a local colleague, whom I was telling about my struggle of running on a treadmill as you could read in my previous post, indicated this small park just behind my hotel, the Double Tree. By the way, I highly recommend this hotel, very nice personnel, nice rooms with very modern equipment, excellent breakfast buffet, 24x7 gym. And you know you are there when you smell the chocolate chips cookies! ;-)


After 4 nights of feeling like running in a hamster wheel inside, I was delighted to run outside around this park. Its circumference is almost equivalent to a track at 0.23 mile. With that, it took me 60 laps to do 13.8 miles, yet it felt so much better and pleasant than the same distance on a treadmill.


The park has a few users from kids and their mothers at the playground during the day to groups of men gathering at night to chat. But the real inhabitants of the park are feral cats, by the dozens. It's not legal to have pets inside, at home, so people stop by to feed these cats.





The park is bordered by a rectangular and wide sidewalk, lit by a few street lights which make running at night easy (again, that's important because, with 11 hours of time difference with California in Winter, jet lag is a real issue and an evening long run may actually help you falling asleep more easily afterwards).

Again, nothing comparable to a real urban park, but enough to breathe some air and a safe place to run right behind that hotel without having to cross streets and fight against the dangerous traffic. Finally, a way to escape the dreary treadmill, phew...!

PS: I was in Riyadh during the weekend of the tragic and deadly terrorist attacks in Paris. It felt really odd to be in such a well established and accepted Islamic State, ruling with force and terror as well and, yet, getting associated to the pain felt in France with the coloring of the Kingdom Tower... A very ambiguous position for Saudi Arabia between conflicting political interests on all geographic, economic, ideology and religious fronts...




Silicon Valley Turkey Trot: run, walk or... trot, all for good causes!

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It's amazing how this special American tradition has turned to a running celebration over the past years. Ultra queen Ann Trason posted on her FaceBook page yesterday an article mentioning that 786,730 runners finished a turkey trot in 2014! Turkey trots have become a national phenomenon. And, thanks to the vision of Carl Guardino, CEO of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group, and his wife, San Jose is proud to host the largest Turkey Trot in the country with close to 25,000 participants.

This year was my 7th participation out of 11 editions. My first one was actually for our local USA Track & Field Pacific Association 5K road championship which I ran in 2009 in 16:34. While a 5:20 min/mile pace felt fast to me, I finished a few minutes behind the top international elites, quite humbling. This year, the men podium consisted of athletes from Kenya, Canada and Morocco respectively, while an Ethiopian won the women race (here they are, congratulated and interviewed by Mark Winitz).

Eliud Ngetich (Kenya):
Buze Diriba (Ethiopia):
Here is a glimpse of the women race.

Buze Diriba (Eth), Kim Conley (course record holder from Sacramento, CA), Alisha Williams (Golden, CO), Betsy Sanya (Kenya):
 Jessica Tonn (Seattle, WA, Brooks team), Marisa Howard (Boise, ID), Monica Ngige (Kenya):

After 2009, I ran the 10K every year: 35:05 in 2010, 35:20 in 2011, 35:06 in 2012, 36:09 in 2013 and 35:41 last year for the 10th anniversary. Although the 10K distance isn't my focus since I switched to ultra running 10 years ago, I really enjoy this speed test at the end of the season. And, like other participants shared, this opportunity to run through San Jose neighborhoods which we may not got to know otherwise.

After my 24-hour run 2 weeks ago (only 123 miles, but a new M50-54 American record at 12-hour with 85 miles), I had a few 8 min/mile recovery runs while I was in Saudi Arabia and just one speed work session last Saturday where I ran, for the first time, a back to back 10K at the Fremont High School track, with a 10-minute recovery break in between: 36:34 and 36:43, it felt good to get back to below 6 min/mile pace, phew!

This year again, after pouring rain on Tuesday, the weather was perfect, sunny, albeit on the cool side. I decided to run with long sleeves, gloves and hat, but that turned out to be almost too much. The start line area was jammed with slow runners who were just trying to bomb the start pictures, but, right off the gun, I managed to get in the top 20 runners. I ran side by side with Jose Pina Sr for a few strides, but let him keep contact with the front runners as I had no intention to match his pace. We were slightly below 5:25 min/mile after 500 yards, so I eased up a little to find my own sustainable pace. I was amazed at the diversity of ages within this group of 20 lead runners, from high schoolers to a few Masters (or Seniors like me), and of course, many from the most competitive Open division.

I passed the mile 2 marker in just under 11:30 minutes (5:45 pace) while my GPS was indicating a 5:38 pace, so I kept pushing and did pass 2 other runners. I could see the lead pack a few hundreds yards ahead but there was no way I could go faster. There were about 7-8 runners, and then a single runner between that group and I. I had planned on taking a GU gel just before the start but forgot. As I had trouble maintaining the pace after mile 3, I took it at mile 4 instead, that certainly costed me a few seconds but helped for the finish. In the last mile, I was hearing a runner closing behind and had to sprint in the last 200 yards to avoid getting passed, although the results placed him ahead of me (the difference between gun and chip times). 35:49 was my finish time, not too shabby for a "Senior..." ;-)

And I was thrilled on Thursday evening to see in the results that I had made the Top 10 again, first in my M50-54 age group and 2nd Masters, behind Jose of course. Now, to be honest, the real elites were in the 5K races, so there isn't so much glory in placing in that popular event. After all, the Silicon Valley Turkey Trot is less about competition than it is about raising funds for local charities, and having fun times to celebrate Thanksgiving!

IBM was sponsoring the Main Stage of the Festival Area for the 4th year and, right after I crossed the finish line, I rushed back to my car to change and get ready for our stretching routines at 9:30 and 9:45. This year, they were led by Anita Lee, both an IBMer and renowned fitness instructor teaching at the YMCA, 24-hour Fitness and Bay Club, and certified and expert in BodyPump, TRX, CXWorks, GRIT, Body Combat, Body Flow, UJAM and Zumba! Accompanying her, with Max on the other side, I got a really good stretch after this fast run.



A few finishers benefited from these stretching routines too but many were more interested in the free food available throughout the finish area. Come on folks, like you had not enough to eat later that afternoon! ;-)




With the multitude of starting waves, and the range between competitive runners and family walking the 3 or 6 miles with kids, it's really challenging gathering all the IBM participants for a picture at the finish. Short of one capturing the more than 100 participants we had under our company name, here is a small sample.

I also met a few people I knew from other races or running clubs, and this very special group, commemorating Valentine, the daughter of our friends Tanguy and Virginie who died in a tragic car accident near Seattle, 2 years ago.

Anyway, amazing conditions to combine fun with this opportunity to raise $1 million for the 4 selected charities benefiting from this event. Thank you again to the Silicon Valley Leadership Group for organizing such a professional and large event, making Silicon Valley proud!

Hunter S Thompson Fear and Loathing 50: nature is calling!

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Did I catch your attention with this title, especially the last part? That may not be what you are thinking about, please read on...

The first part is rather convoluted, isn't it? I had heard about this low key fat ass-style going around the City by the Bay. When I realized that there was a 50-mile option consisting in running the entire famous 49-mile Scenic Drive, and that it was the 30th edition, I was hooked! I didn't really plan on racing a 50-mile in December, I was actually happy to take it easy. I even took the entire week off running because I was nursing an inflammation (shin splits) after the fast Turkey Trot. Last Sunday I even went for a run to only turn back after 300 yards, certainly my shortest 'run' ever. Of course, with no exercise for 7 days, it disappeared and I was quite optimistic for a great run this Sunday. I spent a few hours on Saturday to review the course and all the turns and felt ready with the list of turns and the course highlighted on a AAA map (I strongly recommend their San Francisco Guide Map), in a plastic sheet protector. Because rain was expected; not too much but showers around 7am (start time) and 10am.

For some reasons, this edition became the most popular ever with more than 80 participants (45 entrants in the 50K and 36 in the 50-mile)!

At this level, the start really looked like an organized run. And surely, with all the work that co-race directors, Chihping Fu and Keith Blom, put into perpetuating this local ultra tradition, there is quite a sophisticated logistic for providing moving aid stations along the course to support runners moving a different pace. It was also very convenient to car pool with Jeremy to the start, knowing that I'll meet with Agnes in San Francisco in the afternoon.

I started running the 8 around the Twin Peaks hills like a dog, going from the front to the back of the pack to take a few pictures and say Hi to the many familiar faces from local clubs. Then I speed up in the first down hill to catch up with the front where 66-year (freshly) old Errol 'Rocket' Jones was having so much fun!

We chatted a bit and, after a few miles, it was time to get the pace back down around 8 min/mile on the long stretch on Chavez at the end of which we found Stan Jensen just setting up the aid station for us at mile 6.

We were still 5 running at the front and, carrying 2 bottles and food, I went on first on 3rd Street then Embarcadero, still stopping from time to time to take pictures. Rain had stopped at this point but resumed on Market, making for long stops for me to take off or put on my rain jacket. I reached the Japan Town aid station first, at mile 13, but just a minute before 5 other runners. We ran together to negotiate the convoluted crossing of China Town, then the short but steep climb to the Coit Tower.

I didn't stop at Chihping's aid station on Lombard, but at the next one on Marina, manned by la crème de la crème of our local ultra volunteers and race directors: Larry England, Rob Byrne, Steve Jaber. And the omnipresent Stan Jensen who arrived at the station as I was leaving.

My pace was now around 8:35 and, since mile 13, I could not feel much juice in my legs. I ran the next 5 miles with Lucas and Kevin and it was getting harder to keep up even at a 8:40 pace. The inflammation started really burning on the way down from Presidio so, when reaching the aid station manned by Hollis Lenderking at mile 25 at the Legion of Honor, I stopped for a few minutes to regroup, fill my bottles and eat a Snickers.

That was enough for Elizabeth to catch-up and not even make a stop at the aid station, she was killing it! Here is a picture she graciously took of me over Land's End, an intriguing place I had never seen before.

We ran the next 5 miles together but, at the end of the long Great Highway, the pain was so tough that I decided to call it a day as there were still 19 miles to cover and the fun was all gone. I painfully jogged the 5 miles to go back to Twin Peaks, where I found a few of the 50K finishers, in a joyful celebration despite the ongoing drizzle. It was meant to be only a 36-mile run today...

Agnes was at Max's house 3 miles away so it was easy for her to pick me up. By the time we left Twin Peaks, I was amazed to see Lucas then Kevin coming up the hill for what would be 50-mile finishes under 6:45! I was amazed because we ran the first 25 miles in 3:40. Maybe the course isn't 50 miles after all (which would make sense as it is called 49-mile scenic drive), or it's much flatter. I'll have to be back to check it. And finish it! On this Sunday evening, Kevin posted his run on Strava, reporting a 46.8-mile distance (the trace is so coarse grain that it's hard to see if they followed the convoluted tour of the Golden Gate Park, but they surely did all the turns in the City, I did witness it! ;-). Still, an amazing performance.

So, what is the deal with this title? Well, after yet another amazing season, it's really time for a break, and nature is here to remind my body to get some rest. I already logged 3,205 miles this year, very close to my 100K/week goal, I can afford taking 3 weeks off.

Here is the second reference to nature in this title: it is about time that we get some rain in the Bay Area and I better used to it, and like it! Ok, today was barely rain, they call it fog in San Francisco, but still, it was enough to get me wet. That's what we hope to be nature's wet revenge after such a long drought.

As for the 3rd allusion to "nature's call": the more I grow up (!), the more I prefer running on trails, deep into natural areas, rather than on asphalt and concrete in a city. I feel drawn by the spirit of Native Americans when I run Ohlone or Miwok, not much when paying attention to the traffic running through San Francisco. Yet, it was really cool to get to visit the City on foot and finally run most of this famous scenic drive. I'm very thankful to Chihping and Keith in particular, as well as the volunteers who made our journey possible and safe today. After 30 years in the making, long live the Hunter S Thompson Fear and Loathing tradition!

With the rain and grey sky, and the low light at the start, the pictures don't stand out, but you may still want to check a few in my Picasa album, online (click on Slideshow).

See you on the trails in a few weeks then. Well, next year! Rain or shine...



GU Energy: keeping the bunnies ultra running!

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Didn't you have friends comparing you to the Energizer bunny already when you were sharing ultra tales with them? It happens to me often and that usually leads to great discussions about where we get our physical and mental energy to keep going after 3, 6, 12, or 24 hours...

As much as I now get used and equipped to draw many calories from my body fat while running, thanks to Vespa Power, I still rely on GU Energy a lot, first to keep my electrolytes in check, but also for a few strategic carbs to keep moving and get a burst of energy before a long and big uphill for instance. So, no, in this year end season in which you see a few athletes boasting about their sponsorship, I didn't get on Team Energizer, I don't think there is one as a matter of fact, I trust nobody is cheating by running on electric power (yet...)! ;-)

No Energizer then, but, after losing the Brooks sponsorship last year, and insisting on paying for my own Vespa, I'm thrilled that GU Energy kept me on their GU Pro program.
With all I consume in races and training runs, that discount really helps. To avoid surprises during races, with other flavors or brands, I even carry my own GU2O and GUs during races instead of relying on what is provided at aid stations. And with all the racing I do, I need a lot! Here is what I got in the mail this week to get me through 2016:

A few tips on how I use these products:

  1. GU Drink Mix (ex Brew, which I still use the original Gu2O in my blog posts for). I stick to Lemon Lime, that has worked well for the past 10 years and makes it predictable. I typically drink 20 oz of it per 15 miles (2-2.5 hours), more on super hot days, a bit less on cold ones. I have a few Drink Tabs in case, for long travels, but, most of the time, I carry powder doses in snack-size ziplocs. By the way, I got a big upset when the dosage changed but I think I'm mostly back on my feet now (can you tell I don't like change, especially when things are working?!).
  2. GU Roctane Energy Drink Mix. I know this will disappoint running elite Magdalena Boulet, GU Energy's VP of Innovation, Research & Development, but I still have mix feelings about the different composition after trying it for a year on training runs. Anyway, glad the simpler brew works for me.
  3. GU Energy Gel. This is a no brainer, compact packets of pure calories to sustain very long runs, and not requiring any digestion effort. I typically take one gel every hour, starting after 1.5 hours of racing to give the fat burning enough time to kick in. I use mostly the Tastefully Nude (ex Just Plain) flavor, a neutral flavor which I believe helps keeping nausea at bay, but I don't mind trying other flavors from time to time, although remaining with classical ones: Vanilla Bean, Chocolate Outrage, Lemon Sublime, Tri-Berry (as opposed to salty or stranger associations).
  4. GU Energy Chews. I haven't consumed too many of these yet during races, but there are easier to pack when flying since TSA restricts the number of gels we can have in our carry-ons.
  5. GU Recovery Drink Mix. I started using the recovery brew super rich in proteins after tough races and training runs, 2 years ago, and I definitely saw a difference. I really love the Orange-Pineapple flavor in the summer and I regret it isn't available right now on the web site, I hope it will come back. I like the Chocolate flavor in the winter so I'm all set for now. I typically use the brew (3 scoops) in a smoothie with water, milk and vanilla ice cream. So delicious that just the idea lifts up my energy level at the end of challenging long runs! :-)
With that, I pretty much use all the products GU Energy offers, except one: I don't take the Roctane Electrolyte Capsules as I got so used to the S!Caps since I started running ultras 10 years ago. 

GU Energy is such a wonderful supporter of our ultra running sport, as well as other endurance ones like triathlon and cycling. Not only by providing these great products but also sponsoring most of our races, very grateful to them too. It's also cool to know this is a local business based in Berkeley, CA, and run by local athletes, with the manufacturing happening in the US. Way to go, GU Energy, keep us ultra energized and going, going, going, ...




Athletic cheating in trail running: how much is ok, really?

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I started writing this post last weekend and couldn't finish it, too much work before my next business trips (leaving for the Middle East again on January 2nd...), and too big and serious of an issue to address...

So, as I was writing last Sunday, it had been a tough week for the ultra community on social networks. Well, not everybody seems to be so affected as a matter of fact, I'm beyond words to describe the discomfort I got from seeing so many lax positions in the blogosphere and on Facebook in particular. I must be an ultra idealist, let me try to get a big weight out of my chest: if we are not 100% against cheating and for enforcing bans, but start accepting offenders into certain competitions, for the sake of being inclusive and cool, how much is tolerated then? My feeling is that, as this has been demonstrated in many other sports already, or in life in general, any tolerance, any grey area, yes any shade of grey, is spoiling the whole body. Double solid line, no passing!

For those of you who have no clue what I'm referring to, a very quick recap to put this post in context. No, it's not about the previous six episodes of Star Wars (and The Force Awakens is a great continuation of the saga!). 2 weeks ago now, Lance Armstrong (no need for introduction) ran a local 35K trail race and won it. Granted, not a competitive one, not one with prize money, but a race setup by an organization which certainly believes in competitiveness in our ultra sport as it has its own ultra trail racing team. As a matter of fact this organization is called Inside Trail Racing, so competition is built in its name and mission, and they are also engaging the reputation of their numerous sponsors. There have been so many posts on this matter, my preferred one is the very well documented, and therefore lengthy, article from Vladimir Gusiatnikov. Although I don't agree with the conclusion, it has the great merit to weigh in several positions in a very constructive manner.

Like many, I was caught by surprise and overwhelmed by many questions. Trying to be a sensible and considerate runner, I was even torn between the two camps: "shouldn't have happened!" on one hand and, on the other, "we, the trail running community, are inclusive and everyone is welcome."

Indeed, I started thinking that, with a wealth estimated at over 100 million dollars, Lance Armstrong could certainly do a lot to support our sport and, for a start, help us to keep it clean since cost seems so much of an excuse for accepting cheaters or ex cheaters in race, just because drug testing is deemed too costly. That part blown me away as it seems to show a total lack of citizenship, civic sense or responsibility. Call me naive again, but that is so against the view I have of this country. So, because there is no test, and because most of us don't make a living out of ultra running, then doping is acceptable? By the way, this tolerance to cheating impact many other areas of our lives:
  • How much cheating would you deem acceptable in proctored tests such as SAT and ACT? What if your child's future and chances of landing a great school or job were going to be impacted?
  • How many seconds are ok for running a red light? What if it was going to hit you and you had to finish your life in a wheel chair instead of running on trails for many more years?
  • Would you not respect speed limits if there weren't controlled, if there was no risk of being caught by law enforcement?
  • How much is texting while driving ok? Really, some, until you or they kill someone?!
  • Tell me, is some cheating tolerated on tax returns, or none just because the IRS is watching?
Back to running, we had another case of cheating making the news this weekend: a runner who qualified for Boston and won age group awards at the Marine Corps Marathon by cutting the course. not at one edition, but at more than a handful of them! And what did he have to say, once caught? "“I messed up. There’s no reason to do that,” he said. “There’s really nothing else to say. There’s not a good explanation. I apologize to all the other runners. I feel bad, there’s no great back story to it. It’s just wrong.” (see the story in Runner's World and The Washington Post). Once it starts, cheating can take many forms (and, how easy it would be to cheat at some ultra events by cutting the course short when there is no one watching...).

As for the challenge of keeping convicted cheaters out of races, a race director from the Northwest even argued several times on Facebook that he couldn't possibly check every entrant for previous offense. Well, I have a very simple solution for that: like some forms ask if this is your first ultra or not, or to agree with the event T&Cs, what about asking if you've been convicted or not, that will do. We may even ask entrants if they are taking PEDs, why not, for instance it would be good to know if that's for therapeutic reasons. Because, that's another alarming issue I discovered in a few threads: that some people aren't so bothered with PEDs because, according to some statements, half (sic) the teenagers running cross-country in high school, are prescribed and use Albuterol, a banned substance, in competition. Having had my boys participating in such meets and been close to our XC team, I don't believe the half is true but even if it's 1%, it should be a shame which we fight, not tolerate and accept. Yes, as subject to exercise-induced asthma myself as you might have read on this blog. My first crisis caught me by surprise during the Phoenix marathon around mile 10 when I was still in the top 10 of the race. Not knowing what this was about, and not able to breath much, I decided to walk the remaining 16 miles. I finished in 5 hours and change, my slowest marathon ever. A stop by the local ER didn't do anything and, a few days later, I was prescribed Albuterol. After some research on the Internet, I was shocked to discover that the product was banned by the French Track & Field association but not the American one! I was still competing in French Nationals from time to time back then, so using the product was out of question anyway. But, more importantly, it was clearly identified as an enhancer, I didn't need more rules to realize that using this product in competitions in the US would be cheating, even if the product was allowed for therapeutic use. Should I be allowed PEDs because I've shorter legs than others? Should someone be allowed PEDs because they have a lower VO2max than other competitors?

And that is really the point which baffles me so much in all these discussions. In various threads, so many people were asking for more rules and, until such rules were discussed, debated, agreed upon, promulgated and enforced, then suggesting everything was ok. Suggesting that, until drug testing prevailed in races, the usage of PEDs wasn't cheating. That's where I would have to agree with some radicals claiming that we need less rules, less government, not more. Indeed, it should be common sense to apply the knowledge accessible to all that these products have been evaluated as enhancing performance in an artificial way which contradicts the principle of fairness in sport competitions.

Puzzling too were the comments that elites must all be cheating obviously for being so fast, like accusing Killian Jornet for instance. First, with all the racing he does in Europe, I'm sure Killian has been tested more than anyone else in our sport. And negatively as far as we all know. But, seriously, Killian? Climbing mountains since the age of 4, training so hard while having so much fun, who has lived in a van for many months, such a simple life that almost anyone could have spotted if there were any suspicious products coming in! Of course, he got caught cutting corners and switchbacks but that's how he learned to run in mountains where there weren't any trail anyway. And I trust that, since the SpeedGoat episode, he has realized how serious we were with that.

Anyway, this is already too many lines to make a case for a black and white position on this, it should not have to be that complicated. For what it is worth since it is based on an honor system, which more people than I thought don't seem to really support or believe in, this initiative made my day on Monday: Run Clean, Get Dirty. Here is the univocal pledge of the signatories:
I am committed to being a clean athlete. In addition to any punishment imposed by the IAAF, a national federation, or any national anti-doping agency or government in any sport, I pledge that if I am found by such body to have committed a doping offense (at any competition or out of competition) past, present or future, and I have been subject to a ban of 3 months or more, I agree to a lifetime ban on receiving any prize money, points, other form of prize, or a position in the competitive rankings of any race.
You cheat, you are out, no discussion, how simpler can that be? It still involves testing and being caught, but it's a good start. Personally, I would have added one more statement: "Furthermore, I pledge not to take any banned Performance Enhancing Drug." Since this is really what's important.

So, here is the personal note I added to the pledge I just took:
The essence of trail, mountain and ultra running is how you deal with the physical and mental challenges offered by nature. It includes a personal element (you against the elements, a certain distance, the clock) but also a competitive aspect (you against the performance of others, either in organized events or other peer to peer measures). Using artificial and banned substance is not only cheating others but also yourself and nature. Since PEDs are changing the nature of that game, irreversibly, competition bans should not have time limits. The beauty of trail and ultra running lies in their natural form, let's keep our sport 100% clean for the current and future generations!
I certainly pledge to forgo any concept of competition and ranking if I'm ever to be convicted of cheating with PEDs but I also pledge that I will simply not use any banned PED.

In many aspects, I feel sorry that we have to do this but, from time to time, it seems that we need to reframe our human nature. The freedom we have to act, leading the freedom to pick right or wrong options and paths...

For race directors, since we don't want bandits in races either, that means that they could still enlist banned competitors, but exclude them from any ranking. Should be doable although the sites managing races results will be impacted.

In conclusion, this isn't at all about banning cheaters from the joy of running on trails or in group runs! It's not even about the fact that our community is inclusive and cool or not with that matter. It's about people who have taken cheated others by artificial manipulations in a way that it erases that equal playing field principle. It's not something you can erase or change, it's something they could have avoided before engaging into such banned manipulations. Let's face it, it's not possible to agree on an acceptable level of cheating or cheating redemption, it would be purely subjective, so the only way to keep our sport clean is by maintaining a zero tolerance approach to the use of PEDs. Drug testing or not. #cleansport. Simple.

I feel sorry to have to write on this topic. Sincerely. As a matter of fact, I know so little about doping for one thing, and I'm certainly not a pioneer of this sport, so what do I know? I did win some prize money from racing, albeit certainly not enough to pay the bills and I'm lucky to not have to win races for a living since I'm not an elite! But still, I have more experience than many who voiced their opinions so publicly. So, as the saying goes and Errol "Rocket" Jones would say in particular, this is my story and I'm sticking to it! I hope this will show that a few in the quiet majority so far aren't ok with what happened 2 weeks ago. Yet, I would also welcome the wisdom of the older gurus of our sport whom I found rather quiet on that matter...



2015 in review: quite another year!

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No, this isn't a review of what happened around the world this year, there are many wonderful ones in newspapers, magazines or in other blogs. This isn't even about what was my year was at work, or what our family events, but just a recap of my ultra running experiences this year...

And, I know, with more of the same races and more consistency, it's getting boring and, based on recent threads about doping, it may even appear as suspicious! Well, I can assure you, it's not getting any easier with the years, and I'd admit that competing with kids half my age is more challenging and requires even more work and training. Unfortunately, although I didn't experience any serious injury, I would also admit that high mileage/volume is getting harder to do. There are certainly limits in how much you can defy aging, we may be ultra runners but we remain just mortals like anyone else... Furthermore, this isn't just about personal endurance, but also on what your support system can handle. Or maybe the word egosystem would be more appropriate for us ultra runners... After racing 122 ultras (and running more than 300 ultras including those ran in training), you can't decently expect the same excitement and engagement from your family and friends.

How good 2015was? Well, really really good! Again...! ;-) In short, here are the main stats: 5th year averaging 100 kilometers a week (62 miles) at an average pace of 8:01 min/mile. Ran only 34 ultras but this is still within the 32-37 range of the past 5 years. From a blog standpoint, I haven't been able to keep up with the weekly pace, missed 8 posts (44). 19 races including 17 ultra ones and 2 short but fast10Ks. 2 DNFs. 5 participation in US National Championships with 3 M50-54 titles, 2 Masters ones, 2 DNFs. On the local scene, I got the top M50-59 spot in every race except Way Too Cool where Rich Hana ran an amazing race. In New Jersey, I ran a second 24-hour race this year, focusing on improving our age group American Record for 12-hours (85 miles).

A few more details on how the year went (for my records... you can jump to the 'thank you' section at the bottom of this post!):

Race wise, and as quite an aggressive goal, I was hoping to compete in 6 Nationals this year: 100 miles trail, 50K road, 100K road, 50-mile trail, 50K trail, and 24-hour road. I had to skip the 50-mile trail for family reasons and the 24-hour because Ohlone 50K got rescheduled that same weekend. Added the 50-mile road championship in November instead. Ended up setting too high of goals and DNF'ing at Rocky Raccoon in January and The Fall 50 in November. 7 of these ultra races were back to back ones (1 week apart), in March, April and May. Got chicked in 3 races, including twice at Way Too Cool, and at the 100K Nationals by the new legend Camille Heron (2 World titles this year).

Locally, everything worked amazingly well: Ohlone, Jed Smith, Miwok, Skyline, American River, Way Too Cool, Summer Solstice... I picked the 50-mile distance at Ruth Anderson as it was just a week after the 100K Nationals. And I replaced Dick Collins Firetrails 50 by the 68-mile Folsom Lake ultra in October where I was invited to participate in the inaugural edition.

A few lows this year, part of the game of pushing the envelope hard:
  1. Dropping at mile 24 at the US 50-mile road Nationals
  2. Dropping at mile 60 at the US 100-mile trail Nationals
  3. Having to miss the 24-hour US Nationals because of the conflict date with Ohlone
  4. Missing the 30-year standing 50K Road M50-54 American record by 1 minute and 40 seconds, amid freezing conditions
  5. Missing the 100K Road M50-54 American record on GI issues caused by a green banana (yikes!)
  6. Cramping badly during the PCTR Summer Solstice 24-hour and finishing with only 129 miles
But many more super cool highs:
  1. Winning Ohlone for the 5th time
  2. Breaking 4 hours again at Way Too Cool for my 10th consecutive participation in that race, marking 10 years in ultra running for me
  3. Setting a new American Age Group record for 12 hour at the New Jersey One Day
  4. Receiving the Ultra Runner of the Year (URoY) award of our local but strong USATF Pacific Association (this year's is going to be a tough one between Alex Varner and Chikara Omine in my opinion)
  5. Running a 2:46 marathon, as part of a 3:20 50K! (Beating "my own law" of keeping running a marathon in 2 hours plus my age in minutes...)
  6. Placing 4th at Miwok
  7. Winning Trailblazer 10K for the 3rd time
  8. Placing 10th overall at the Silicon Valley Turkey Trot 10K (and 2nd Masters and 1st age group)
  9. Placing 4th at Quicksilver 100K amid strong competition
  10. Winning the 50K Road Nationals in my age group, and the Masters division
  11. Same at the 100K Road Nationals!
  12. Placing 2nd Masters at the 50K Trail Nationals (and winning my age group of course! ;-)
  13. Running 2 36-minute 10Ks back to back on the track days before the Turkey Trot (first time I tried this format)
  14. Bouncing back from a tough night at the PCTR 24-hour and running the last 2 hours at 7 to 8 min/mile pace
  15. Scoring yet another record-breaking number of points in our local Grand Prix at 580
  16. Volunteering at two races (Stevens Creek 50K and our own Quicksilver race)
  17. Setting 5 age group course records in our Grand Prix
Overall, more ultra races than ever due to the pursuit of two tales, our local PAUSATF Mountain and Ultra Trail Grand Prix for the 9th consecutive year and 5 US National titles.

Quite a few trips this year, not counting the many business-related ones...

And with all that, it's hard to set reasonable and attainable goals for 2016 if I keep aiming at more... For instance, I already set 12 of our 22 M50-59 course records, but won't be running at least 9 of the remaining 10 due to lotteries or scheduling conflicts. Tough life... ;-)

As the year closes, I'm particularly thankful and very grateful to:
  1. My wife Agnès for coping with the life of an ultra runner and crewing for me at American River, Miwok, Ohlone and Folsom Lake.
  2. Peter Defty who introduced Vespa Power in the US, a product which allows me to optimize my fueling during races (eating much less and burning calories from fat instead), and accelerate recovery so I can do back to back races and keep training all year round. As I said before, this product changed my ultra life!
  3. My first job which, although extremely demanding, still allows me to combine business trips and key racing weekends, and this amazing opportunity to live in the Bay Area.
  4. My track work out buddies Jeremy and Bob for keeping that speed work discipline alive.
  5. Bill Dodson, Hollis Lenderking and Gary Wang who accepted to remain on our PAUSATF MUT Board for the 25th anniversary of our Grand Prix in 2016!
  6. My teammates of the QuickSilver Running Club for adding some fun into local races.
  7. Along with the other teams competing in our Grand Prix.
  8. Rich Hanna and Mark Ritchman especially among the old guys for keeping me on my toes (if not kicking my butt... ;-).
  9. The Race Directors and volunteers of all these races, without whom I couldn't challenge myself race after race. With all this racing, I really don't know how I will ever be able to give back as much as what I received from this community in the past 10 years.
  10. Those of you reading this personal blog. I hope you find some inspiration to get farther and faster on the trails or in life, and a few useful tips for racing, training or running while traveling.
  11. My Facebook friends from which I get inspiration and tips myself in such an extended and open community.
  12. A special shout out to Paul Fick and Kristina Irvin who do so much for our Club and our main race, so modestly. They are amazing examples of the giving back side of a complete ultra running career!
I also have to mention my neutral stride and a great variety of Brooks shoes(*) which certainly contribute to remaining injury free despite all the mileage and hard racing.

I hope you were able to cross as many goals in your 2015 list as you wanted or could, and that you'll pursue many healthy goals in 2016 as well!

See you on the trails, either Faster or Farther...!

(*) Launch, Pure Connect, Pure Flow, Racer ST
Photo credit: Dofus.com

Running in snowy Chamonix: fast ass on the dread mill

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When mentioning Chamonix, many ultra runners think UTMB, the populous Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc, one of the world most arduous 100-milers. Now, although it may be rainy and stormy during the race in August, there is a big difference between running these mountains in the Summer and Winter as you can see from several of my posts relating some of my training on the UTMB course.

After a hectic business trip to Jordan last week, I've been in Chamonix for a few days for vacation and to finish renovating an apartment. It has been rainy for a few days (thanks global warming...) but seasonal snow finally came on Monday evening. So, what do you do when you wake up to this wonderful snowy landscape? (View of the Glacier des Bossons, just below Mont Blanc, from the apartment)
If not snowshoeing, then you'd better running inside and that's what the municipal sport center named after Richard Bozon, offers: a fully-equipped fitness center with daily, weekly, monthly or yearly passes.

As you know from my post about running on a tread mill during my last trip to Saudi Arabia, running on a belt isn't my preferred activity but I'll take it when no other safe or reasonable outdoor option is available. This fitness facility is rather small (4 tread mills, 4 bikes, 2 ellipticals, 1 StepMaster, 2 rowers) but the view on the mountains is amazing. Knowing that I would run for a while, I actually picked a machine facing the inside basketball court and, luckily, it was set on the standard system which I'm so much more used to for pacing now (min/mile versus kilometer).

With all the traveling since the beginning of the year, my training has been rather inconsistent and I was eager to go for some distance yet set an aggressive pace of 6:27 min/mile (9.3 miles/hour). It felt so good that, after running 10 miles in 1 hour and 5 minutes, I set my goal to 50K. Quite a lofty goal knowing that I had never run more than 2 hours or 14.6 miles on a treadmill before (that was 2 years ago during another trip to Saudi).

What I like with the treadmill --did I just say like?!-- is that you don't have to think about your pace, you are just 'hamestering' down and keep pedaling. I was amazed though that this machine was actually slowing down if it felt I wasn't keeping up with the pace, for instance while grabbing my towel, picking an S!Caps, a Gu Chew or a bite of Snickers: way to keep you focusing on a straight stride!

After 99 minutes at that pace, the treadmill automatically switched to a cool down mode as it couldn't display more time. I had covered 15.6 miles in that first 1 hour and 40 minutes and had to stop to start another workout. I took advantage of this short break to quickly refill my two Ultimate Direction bottles and start another session less than 5 minutes after the first one.

I passed the marathon mark around 2:48:30 and was super pleased to be able to maintain this 6:27 pace way beyond. As a matter of fact, with 15 minutes remaining, I pushed the pace to 6:17 then 6:00 for the last 10 minutes to cover 50K in 3:19:35, wow! For those who followed my attempts at improving our 31-year standing M50-54 age group American Record of 3:19:33, this is quite a milestone. And comforting to know I'm not that far off my 2012 50K PR of 3:19:09. Of course, the conditions are quite different, and who know how exact the distance really is on a treadmill for such a long workout duration, but that felt about right from an effort, or rather exhaustion, standpoint. Anyway, we shall see in a few weeks, on rolling courses and with different weather conditions, outdoor. At least, that was quite a good tempo run, to say the least!

Hope you have started the year on the right foot yourself, keep it up as we say, and see you on the roads or trails!

PS: back to play on words in the title, for those not used to the Fat Ass expression, this is how we typically start the yearly season in the US, with informal 50K runs. Since I've missed our local Saratoga Fat Ass this year, that is my own version. On a completely flat course (no treadmill incline), so not so comparable, I must concede...

A 50K every other day: new prescription?

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As I mentioned in my previous post, with 2 weeks on the road so far in 2016, my training got inconsistent and I had some catch-up to do this week. Although I started with an ultra on January 1st, I couldn't run much in Jordan and was so excited to log miles last week in Chamonix, I stayed for 3 hours and 20 minutes on the tread mill for what the machine reported as 31.1 miles.

On Thursday, Agnès and I took the night train from St Gervais to Paris and, on Friday, I was back on the Coulée Verte for another 50K, 2 days later, running from Stade Charlety to Saclay Bourg, and back, in freezing temperatures. 3:57:54 or a 7:37 min/mile, certainly slower than my Wednesday workout on the tread mill. As a matter of fact, I couldn't feel my legs while running against the wind on the plateau of Saclay in sub-zero (Celsius) temperatures, I need more 'cold training...' Fortunately, the sun made an appearance as I turned back, and that helped a lot!

This Sunday, after running 10 miles yesterday 2 hours after landing in SFO, I was aiming at doing my 16.6-mile run on Joe's Trail, twice, something I have never done before. It was a good mental strength training to go for a second round as I felt tired enough after the first one and it started drizzling just as I was leaving home for the second time. I did turn around the second time 1 mile before Winchester Boulevard as I was lacking juice by then and it was enough to make it 31.1 miles. Oddly so, I finished really close to my Friday run, just 8 seconds slower for the same distance, albeit a flatter course.

3 50K runs in 5 days, 3 different locations including 2 countries, that's quite an ultra regimen! But not one that I expect to last, this is way too tiring, not sustainable. So, back to the title, not an advisable prescription! Still, I'm glad I did it, at least this got me used to the distance in preparation for Jed Smith 50K in 3 weeks. I've done more intensive training than this, like 1 daily and hilly ultra a day for 3 days, but never that early in the season. And I'm trying to listen to my body on one hand, to avoid the minor injuries I got the past years when resuming too quickly and, on the other hand, balancing ramp-up training with the constraints I can't schedule on the business side.

Anyway, I hope that, if you were not racing this weekend, your training is going well albeit maybe not so aggressively. But keep up the effort and discipline,  it will pay back! Eventually... ;-)

The discipline of the track: essential training component

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It's not a scoop, but it is worth the reminder, speed workouts at the track don't seem natural to the ultra and trail runner, yet they are essential to a complete training and, of course, to build up form and speed.
(Picture taken from an article with great speed workout tips from champion Alan Culpepper in RunNow.eu)

The first benefit of the track is the precise measurement of distance which allows for a precise pacing. As much as the GPS watches made progress these years, they are typically a few percent off, especially on hilly trails. And, on uneven trails, you are never at a constant pace.

The second benefit of training at the track is that it invites you to focus on intensity on much shorter distances than usual. I typically don't do anything shorter than a lap (400m or 440 yards), but speed work can include explosive hundreds or 200s.

The third element of track workouts is the complete flatness which allows you to focus on your stride.

Last but not least, the best is to do these workouts with some company, buddies running at your max pace (e.g. 5K race pace) or slightly faster so you get a challenge. Meeting others will also increase your chance of completing these work outs and including them in your busy life schedule.

We are so lucky in the US with so many public High Schools and Colleges having state of the art tracks open to the public every day, at least outside of school hours and between dawn and dusk. And even more lucky in California in particular where the weather cooperates all year round (I'm sorry for those leaving on the East Coast for instance as most tracks must be under 1 or 2 feet of snow as I write this post). That's a luxury which appreciate even more as I travel around the world.

During the full season, I race and travel so much that I've hard time doing track workouts regularly. After 2 weeks overseas this month, it was a delight to be able to get to the track with my buddies Jeremy and Bob on Thursday. We do all sort of work outs there, ranging from standard repeats from 12x400s to 3 miles, or the more complicated pyramid: 400-800-1200-1200-800-400 and breath-recovery breaks of 20 to 30" per lap completed (it is important to keep the cadence going to remain in an anaerobic state to get the full benefit of the workout). As you see, our sessions always consist in 3 miles of intense work which we do after 2 miles of warm-up (and catching up on work, family and other National or World news), and followed by a 1-mile cool down jog plus some stretching before getting back to work. When we can, we meet on Tuesdays and/or Thursdays at 5:45 am at Mountain View High School which is one rare campus leaving the access to the track open most of the time (exceptional closure for instance when they prepare the field for graduation in June).

This Thursday, Jeremy picked an unusual workout called the washing-machine: 12 x 400s, alternating the rotation direction each time and walking 100 meters to the start of the next lap (in other words, first starting at the usual starting line, then at the 300-meter mark in the opposite direction). We clocked laps between 82 and 75 seconds. I was just done with a 202-kilometer training week (the 3 50Ks I mentioned in my previous post, one every other day), I could barely keep up with Jeremy and Bob this time and would have never pushed that hard if not with/for them!

After taking Friday off (yes, rest is important and I used to be much better with taking a day or 2 off each week, years ago), I was back to the track this Saturday morning, albeit another one, at Cupertino High School. For a much different work out, a (very) long tempo run. This time, my goal was to run 20 miles at a sub 6:30 min/mile pace. Yes, that's 80 laps, and I'm glad my Garmin GPS has a function to keep track of the laps and lap times. With one time every lap, it's like a super slow motion metronome, yet much better from a pacing standpoint to one measurement every mile.

Sorry for the purists, but I'm counting 4 laps to the mile although this is missing about 10 meters, that is less than 1% error.

Anyway, I started with slightly faster laps (of course!), in the 1'32"-1'34" range but I'm glad to report that I was able to keep up that pace most of the way, averaging 6:20 min/mile pace for these 80 laps, with my fastest lap at 1:32 and slowest at 1:37. Not to bad for a metronome, especially given a few bursts of wind in the first hour and some rain in the last 12 laps. Great training to build up conditioning before the racing starts in 2 weeks.

I hope I gave you some motivation to hit the track at least once in a while. If you want to run faster, you cannot escape this track regimen, this is what will have the most impact and make the most difference in your training miles. Even for trail races, just look at how fast the young elite runners are!

Many happy laps to all then!

PS: for those in the South Bay, it has been a while I didn't visit these tracks, but I recall Los Gatos High School being also quite welcoming, as well as De Anza College (I imagine the same for the nearby Foothill College). The tracks of the Cupertino High School District, which have all been renovated recently (Cupertino High, Homestead, Fremont, Monta Vista) have high fences and strict closure hours at night unfortunately. If you know of other welcoming/all-time open tracks, thanks for leaving a comment underneath.
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