Saturday, June 14, 2014

2014 San Diego 100 Race Report

The San Diego 100 goes through the mountains east of San Diego — including trails around Lake Cuyamaca, Mt. Laguna Recreation Area and a section of the Pacific Crest Trail. The course has been altered several times, so coming up with my predicted finishing time (20 hours) was a bit of a guessing game. I used a modified version of some splits that Ken Ward had come up with as a guide.

With Ken Sinclair at the start
The race begins with a gentle climb over some double-track trails and fire roads. I started my SD100 off by getting lost. While rounding a turn near mile 4, I failed to follow the course ribbons to the left and kept climbing. How I didn’t see the runners around me taking the correct path, I do not know. My misstep cost me an extra 1.5 miles in total and I lost about 15 minutes. I tried not to dwell on it. Better that it happened here than 50 miles into the race, I told myself.

I’ve learned to start slow in 100 milers. It takes some restraint, but it’s usually worth it. I’d rather be passing runners later in the race than getting passed. Going off course early, just reinforced my strategy. It meant I’d have more opportunity to pass people later on.

I did my best to fight my way back into the group where I had been running. I joined up with a pack of runners descending through a rutted out, shady section with lots of twists and turns. I managed to pass a few people but I was in 84th place when I rolled through the Paso Pichacho Aid Station.

As we began a steady climb up Stonewall Peak, I saw Ken Ward. We ran together for a bit, talking about his next hundred (at Hard Rock no less!). He urged me to go on ahead, reminding me to have fun. The course winds around switchbacks and boulders, then before you know it, you’re going back down again, connecting with a series of trails with quintessential So Cal names like California Riding and Hiking Trail, Los Vaqueros and Los Caballos.

Feeling "Arrr right!" near Chambers 1 Aid Station. Photo by 
Milan Kovacevic 
Before long, we hit Chambers 1 Aid (12.5 mi.), kind of a strange stop that’s accessed via a lakefront trail, an out-and-back across a levee and a couple of loops that allow you to see the other competitors. A guy dressed as Captain Jack Sparrow said I was doing “Arrr-Right” and a lady pirate cheered us on from the other side of the levee.

Even though it was 9:30 in the morning, the sun was so high, it felt like 3 p.m. Everyone had warned me that this race was “exposed” but I wasn’t quite sure what that meant or what it would feel like. I’d heard stories of people running the race in long sleeve white shirts to defend against the glaring sun. I had chosen to wear a singlet and I would end up getting viciously burned, which I anticipated (I don’t wear sunscreen and I’m from Oregon). Ideally, I would have worked more on my base tan in training, but just getting the miles in is enough of a stretch for me these days.

The sun at SD100 is deceptive. Generally, it’s not all that hot, but the lack of shade takes its toll on you. I’ve run the canyons at Western States, which can be like running into an inferno, and I’ve run the Grand Canyon, which is a blistering kind of heat, but this was different. I had prepared for sunny conditions by doing eight sauna sessions two weeks before the race. I also wore a bandana and a white hat that could both be stuffed with ice. The SD100 aid stations were well-stocked with ice and the volunteers were happy to resupply me at each stop.

But heat and exposure weren’t really issues early on, and it wasn’t until I reached the Pacific Crest Trail shortly before the Sunrise 1 aid station that I began to think about staying cool. By the time many of us noticed that the heat was taking a toll, it was already too late. This, I understand now, is what they mean by “exposure.”

The section leading into the Sunrise Aid Station is high and dry with lots of low-lying bushes. The trail snakes around a high desert plateau and you can almost always look forward or backward and see another runner coming or going. I was on a liquid-only diet (agave syrup with chia seeds in water) but I was already getting sick of it. I was carrying one large handheld bottle, with plans to grab a hydration pack or a second bottle at the Sunrise Aid Station.

Sunrise (mile 23.2) is accessible via a short out-and-back that comes off the PCT. I stumbled in for my first meeting of the day with my crew (my wife, Rebecca, and my daughter, Alice). Alice, is 7 and has been to lots of other races, but this was the first time I can remember her being fully aware of what was going on. She seemed concerned for my well-being so I tried to downplay my issues. My stomach was starting to sour (pretty much par for the course for me). I struggled to eat a Twinkie, slugged a ton of ice water and spent too much time in the aid station. I left and promptly puked before I had even made it back to the PCT. 

Others who had run this race before promised great views in this section and the course did not disappoint. To the east was a small range of dusty mountains rising above a flat desert floor. Beyond was a dry wasteland so inhospitable that I didn’t want to look at it for too long -- I feared that it would bring me down mentally.

One aspect of SD100 that makes it challenging is the long distance between aid stations. The 7.2-mile section between Sunrise and Pioneer Mail (30.4) was a particularly dry stretch, that seemed to inflict its damage on a lot of runners, myself included. Luckily, all that ice water seemed to have helped and I rolled into Pioneer Mail feeling parched but not in any sort of serious trouble. At the aid station, Rob Cain and Denise Bourassa helped me out. Rob was there to pace John Price and Denise Bourassa was pacing her husband Ken Sinclair. Denise offered me Orange Crush, which hit the spot and Rob convinced me that yes indeed it was a good time to start putting ice in my hat and bandana. John Price was dropping due to injury and he too helped me out, expertly soaking the ice I was wearing to ensure that it began melting immediately.

Having opted not to use a pacer and seeing the error of my ways, I asked Rob if he wanted to pace me. He had already signed on to pace Justin Walker, a fast, young runner from Ashland who work for National Geographic as a storm chaser, but Justin was suffering from a first-time bout of exercise-induced asthma and his race was looking more and more questionable.
The helping hands of my crew

I left the aid station carrying a second bottle, renewed and ready to conquer the dry switchbacks of the PCT. I felt fortunate to have bumped into the Oregon contingent, which had taken such good care of me. The next section went quickly. I spotted Ken Sinclair at the Penny Pines Aid station. He had run out of water during the 7.2-mile stretch from Sunrise to Pioneer Mail, and had since been struggling with muscle cramps. I ran with him for a bit, and he urged me to pass him. He said we’d be going through some burned out sections that might offer a little more shade, but they proved to be about the same in terms of exposure. It was here where I first started to see strange shapes in the burned out stumps — the profile of an elephant, a couple of giraffes, brown bears all around. It was the first time that I’ve ever hallucinated in the middle of the day during a race.

It was the hottest part of the day and the relatively high altitude (5,500-ish feet) was probably getting to me, too. Altitude sickness and stomach upset, are the two factors that melt me the quickest in 100 milers. I’ve never gotten a handle on the altitude (my lone DNF came at the high-elevation Leadville 100 in 2008) and I’ve had limited success solving my stomach issues. I typically stop processing solid foods after running anything 50k or longer. This year, I had been experimenting with my strange agave syrup mix. It had worked for me at the Sonoma 50 miler in April where I ran the distance without taking any gels and without vomiting at all. In advance of the SD100, I knew I couldn’t go 100 miles on cactus syrup alone, but it was becoming harder and harder for me to stomach the concoction, let alone the solid foods I had imagined I would somehow be supplementing with.

On our way to Red Tail Roost Aid Station (44.7 mi.), we ran into a race volunteer who advised us that there had been some course sabotage (basically some dickheads had moved the course markings and re-routed all the runners down the wrong path). The course had to be altered, so we were directed onto a roughly paved road where we ran for approximately two miles before encountering the aid station. I met my crew for the second time, did my best to eat some canned ravioli that had once sounded like a good idea but now seemed designed only to make me puke. I drank some soda, popped some prescription anti-nausea medication and reassured Alice that I was going to be okay.

At some point during the next section to Meadows Aid Station, the high alpine trail gave way to a series of lightly treed forests. Until this point, I had been passing runners pretty consistently but suddenly the tables turned. I came upon a pair of runners, prepared to pass them, and then, before I knew it, they began to pull away. I turned my head just in time to see another runner coming up from behind to pass me.

“Dude, I was in a very dark place,” he told me. “But I feel soooo much better now.”

Those are the kinds of energy highs and lows that happen in a 100 miler – one minute you’re fighting your way through molasses like some bad dream, the next you’re floating over the trail effortlessly. Unfortunately it was now the former for me.

When I reached the Penny Pines Aid Station (mile 56.3), I received a big mental boost from the news that Rob Cain had agreed to pace me. This still blows me away anytime someone volunteers for this duty. What do they get out of the deal? Ten hours of listening to their runner bitch and moan. A very slow jog in the dark. A guarantee that they won’t get to bed until sunrise.

Rob led the way for most of the descent into Noble Canyon. Having him run in front of me worked well and seemed to keep me moving forward. He would gap me, then slip away down the trail, but I could still see him up ahead, and it removed a lot of the stress of me having to navigate. I didn’t have to wonder how it would have gone for me without a pacer as I had planned. It would have been a disaster.

Toward the bottom of the canyon we ran into a woman and her pacer. We slipped by them, since they were taking their time on the downhill, but I figured we’d see them again. All day long, the uphills had been a challenge for me. And this is how it usually goes — I can either run uphill or downhill, but never both.

The stretch from Red Tail to the Pine Creek Aid Station was another long one. The bottom of the canyon reminded me of the final Cal Street section at Western States along the sandy bottom trail that follows the American River. You feel like you’re running forever but getting nowhere closer to your goal. Anticipating a long climb out, I took my time at the Aid Station. I sucked down ice water and sat with a cup of chicken noodle soup. In hindsight, I did far too much sitting at SD100, but it’s hard to resist a comfortable chair when it’s offered to you repeatedly.

Luckily Rob had encouraged me to bring a light down into the canyon (reason # 632 to be grateful he was there for me). What had seemed like a fairly routine section of the course turned out to be a nearly four-hour affair and it was well past dark by the time we crawled out of the canyon. We followed the ladies up a road and I forced myself to run in small segments while Rob encouraged me. We both remarked on the fact that something seemed strange about the course markings and we soon ran into RD Scotty Mills who told us the course had been vandalized. Again.

Scotty directed us toward a trail that would take us out of the canyon. By this point, we had passed the other runner and her pacer and I was starting to become focused on them not passing us again.

“I just have to run the sections I know they won’t run,” I kept telling myself.

“I can’t walk the stuff I know they will run.”

“I just have to push the downhills.”

As we moved on, those became my mantras. We climbed the switchbacks up the mountain toward the Pine Creek Aid Station, and I could see lights behind us. This kept me going to Pioneer Mail 2, where I grabbed more chicken noodle soup and took it with me as I exited the aid station.

The next section was the PCT section that had seemed so hot and barren, but now it was lit up by moonlight and to the east we could see the ominous glow of Las Vegas. To distract myself, I looked to the ground counting backwards from 36,000 (no significance to that number) until I lost count and had to start over again. I had the Magnum PI theme song playing in an endless loop in my head and I kept seeing imaginary bugs and dead fish on the ground. I stuck with my running mantras and enjoyed the fact that I was no longer puking. I had settled into a fueling routine of chicken noodle soup, Lifesavers, Mountain Dew and electrolyte drink.

The section from Sunrise 2 to Chambers 2 was an interminable one for me. The strange bit of trail approaching Chambers was even weirder at 1:30 a.m. than it had been in the day. I spotted a runner and his pacer who appeared to be about 12 minutes back. They looked hungry to catch us. Rob pointed out a couple of other runners that he said we had a shot at catching.

I wanted to put my head back in the game and start racing, but I was feeling lower than ever at this point. We still had two climbs and 10 miles to go. At one point we veered off course, losing 5 minutes or so, which only added to the sense of doom that was growing inside of me. I knew I wasn’t going to drop, but it just seemed so far from the finish as we climbed our way back up and over Stonewall Peak

It’s strange contrasting a route you’ve been over twice in a 100 miler, especially when it’s a section that’s separated by 80 miles of running. The first time through here, I had fresh legs and was running under sunny skies, but this time it was dark, I was exhausted and dirty and I was, once again, losing my mind. I swore I saw a mouse run across my path. Then another, and another.

“The mice are coming out,” I told Rob. “Oh my bad. Those are just shadows from my headlamp.”

This wasn’t the hardest 100 miler I’ve ever done, but I was more wacked out than I’ve ever been. The mild hallucinations I had experienced during the day had evolved into something more intense at night. I saw fish scales everywhere and a black shadow that appeared to be a cow running alongside me. What I thought were police sirens turned out to be coyotes howling in the distance. None of it was unpleasant or distracting – just part of the 100-mile experience.

The final miles in a 100 miler are both the richest, most rewarding challenge you can ever hope to have and the most dreadful, please-let-it-be-over trial you can imagine. You’re in all kinds of pain, your body is tired, your mind is exhausted, you’re sick of eating aid station food, you’re sticky and smelly and each mile seems to bring you no closer to finishing.

On the other hand, you’re running through the night under the stars on an adventure you could never replicate on your own. And it helps to have a pacer who can remind you just how cool the experience is, as Rob did when he remarked repeatedly on what a nice night it was or how much fun he was having.

The long distance between aid stations at the SD100 becomes magnified late in the race. Some of the 8-plus-mile stretches that we went through were the longest that I can remember in any race. At one point, Rob and I both thought we heard a race volunteer tell us we were 4.8 miles from the finish. We knew we were closer, but we believed him because the race had dished out so many long stretches that anything was possible.

It turns out we were just 1.8 miles from the finish. At that point, I had just been passed by another runner and was suddenly running as hard as I could. Just when you think you can’t go any faster, something like that happens, you find another gear and you wonder why you haven’t been running like this all along.

I wasn’t able to catch the other runner, but I did pass another guy on my way to the finish. Sometimes, I try to relish the final miles of an ultra to make it last longer, but this time I didn’t care. My slow race was suddenly on fast forward and I was ready to be done. I followed the ribbons on a weaving course around a grassy field. Several turns later, I spotted the finish, ran up a small hill, crossed the line and found myself in the same parking lot I had been standing in 22 ½ hours earlier.

With Alice and recovery stuffed animals at the finish


Lessons Learned:

#1 Don’t discount the value of a good pacer — Without Rob Cain pacing me, my race would have been a disaster from start to finish. Instead it was only a disaster from start to start. Rob helped me rescue a race that got off to a bad start. He kept me motivated, moving forward and prevented me from making numerous dumb decisions. Thanks, Rob!

#2 Just because it worked in training doesn’t mean it will work on race day — I know this is the opposite of what everybody tells you and I wouldn’t recommend trying out all new food in your next hundred, but rules are made to be broken. I’ve had many a secret food that works great in training, but come race day I’m so sick of it, I can barely stand the sight of it.

#3 Stay positive and keep things in perspective — I had hoped to run under 20 hours and finish in the top 10. Instead, I ran 22:30 and finished 14th. This was not the race I envisioned, but neither was it the unmitigated disaster it seemed like it could be at numerous points during the race. It’s also true that sometimes the races where things go wrong end up being the ones you remember most. I had a great time out there.


Thanks to Scotty Mills for putting this race on, and to all the volunteers for making it happen. Thanks to my family, too, for being there for me through all the training and the race.