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My Epic Endurance Products Shout Out

Ferg Hawke is a two time 2nd place finisher of the famed Badwater 135 Mile road race, known to be one of the toughest foot races on the planet. He's also finished 8th overall at The Marathon Des Sables six day stage race in Morocco, still the highest ever finish for a North American male.

I've looked up to Ferg for a long time as an amazing athlete and great ambassador of the sport of ultra running. A few years back he was kind enough to sponsor me via Epic Endurace Products / Carbo Pro as he's the Canadian rep for these products. I had already been using the products for just under a year and had found great success with them verses others on the market. I was stoked that he was willing to invest in me, especially since I had no intentions of using any other supplements anyways!

He recently contacted me and asked me to provide him with a short write up for his website and here's what I presented to him. I'm posting it on here because it took me years to figure out proper nutrition and whether you decide to use these specific products or not I hope some of this info might be able to help you our personally, especially any newbies out there.

As a Celiac with a sensative stomach I'd always battled issues with how to properly fuel during my events. I had experimented with almost every product on the market until I discovered CarboPro 1200 and the Epic Endurance Products line up. The products I've found success with are CarboPro 1200, Thermolytes, and RECOVER.

1200:

The main formula towards endurance success involves getting 200-300 calories into your body per hour, combined with sufficient fluid and electrolytes. Anything more than this is too much for the body to process, anything less and you can pretty guarantee hitting 'The Wall' head first! CarboPro 1200 is a 480ml bottle that contains 1200 calories!! Be warned, don't drink it straight unless you actually like cough medicine, lol! When you water it down the flavor is subtle yet tasty and it includes everything your body needs to ensure athletic success. The price point is much more cost effective than gels, and much easier to consume. It's a win-win situation.

Thermolytes:

My biggest initial problem a few years back was a serious lack of electrolytes. I tried numerous drink mixes but the trade off for the sweetness and high PH levels was never easy to 'swallow'...a tablet is! Within weeks of starting in on thermolytes I had effectively illiminated my leg cramping issues that I'd struggled with for four full seasons of racing!

RECOVER:


The one thing no one told me when I started endurance activities back in 2004 was that the most important part of any training program is your recovery after you stress your body. Sounds simple enough and makes total sense right, but how many people make this their focus? If you don't recover properly your next workout is compromised. Compound this with continual training and you're never going to reach your full potential. A huge part of recovery is getting a high quality essential Amino Acid supplement into your body within minutes of completing your workout. RECOVER tablets provide all the essentials and I stand by my claim that they have worked wonders for me. How can I confidently say this? I ran out of RECOVER for a three week period during peak mileage one year. It was the worst three weeks of my entire training program and I've been addicted ever since!

Epic Endurance Products have contributed greatly towards my athletic successes, and I've seen their products do the same for others first hand. Try them out and I'm sure you'll agree, their stuff just can't be beat!

GR

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Slacker


I hate it when I go this long without updating my blog. It's not like it really matters in the grand scheme of things, it's just that when I started this thing years ago I promised myself I'd stay diligent with it...plus I do love having an excuse to write stuff! It has not been without reason or motivation that I've been a slack ass, it's simply from being overwhelmed with life, in a good way, so much so that blogging has fallen off my radar lately. In fact I'd say it's taken a back seat for a few months now.

A friend once commented that she always knew when I was dating someone based upon how often I blogged. I laughed at first but she was dead on in her assessment. It's no secret that Tamsin and I have been together since shortly before Trans Rockies and I'd have to say my recent lack of blogging is pretty much all her fault, lol! I guess what I'm trying to say is that life is good, very good, and because of that I've been spending much less time online in my spare time than I ever have before. I still find myself writing things in my head while out running, unfortunately they just don't make it on here anymore. With that, here's a quick re-cap post HURT.

In the two weeks following HURT Hawaii I was absolutely shocked at how great my body felt, so much so that I actually felt somewhat guilty about it! I kept waiting for something to break down or catch up on me...it never did, and because of that I just finished the absolute best training week of my entire life!!

I promised myself I'd take the two weeks following the 100 miler and just chill. Run for fun, nothing more, nothing less. Week 1 consisted of all of 40km of running, week 2 bumped up to 60km. Week 3, this past week, it was back to business again, and with that I managed to hit 160km/100miles again. It was less than a year ago that this weekly distance was almost impossible for me, having done so just once prior to March of 09. It's truly amazing to see how you can transform your body with dedication, persistence, a bit of luck, and the right knowledge to keep you mostly injury free!

What made this week my best yet was the fact that not only did I cover 100 miles of terrain, but I did so with high intensity mileage, speed work, a track session, an intense gym/core workout, and some damn nasty climbing and descents. Pretty much every other 100m week I've hit before, which I think now stands at maybe seven total times, was basically just running the distance and trying to survive the week. This past week went like this:

M: 11k tempo in under 42min

T: 21k (+9k) Trails with good climb n descent, followed by 9k NSA track session

W: 18k hammer fest up n down Mtn Hwy from home w. Ryne Melcher (+2500ft), followed by 25k road ride, followed by 1hr intense gym session


T: 6k (+10k)up n down BCMC (+3000 ft in 3k) + 10k night run


F: 21k night run w. decent climb

S: 50k in Squamish w. big climbs one over 2500ft (7.5k Sun Run Clinic + 42.5k afterwards, and all with Roxy the ultra dog!)


S: 15k morning NSA run

------------
161km / 100 miles

PLUS great gym session and 25k on the road bike, total time = 17hr

A coupla body tweaks here and there, and ten hours of sleep last night to get back to good again today, but overall, slightly amazed at where I am in comparison to just one short year ago.

This week will be a slight down week, not from lack of desire or physical issues, but simply because The Olympics start THIS FRIDAY and I need to get on top of A LOT in the next five days to ensure I can enjoy as much of The Games as possible!

GO CANADA GO!!

GR

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HURT'ing In Hawaii, A 100 Mile Tale


Alright, so where to begin, where to end, how to recap it all so that people actually want to read about running 100 damn miles...

Hawaii. I'd never been before. I simply can not wait to go back again! It goes without saying that the place is amazing, but couple that with an incredible racing experience and a wonderful group of individuals associated with the race on all sides, directing, volunteering, and racing, and before the event even began, I knew I'd be longing to return again soon.

Quick background with my 100 mile experience. This was my 3rd 100 miler. In my three attempts at the distance I have now won two races, set two course records, and had one colossal melt down in the sauna that was Western States. HURT was by far the best race I've EVER HAD! I feel like I've finally learned from most of my 'rookie' mistakes and put forth my best possible effort in Hawaii. From training, to tapering, to fueling, things were almost flawless with this one.

I won't go into too great a detail with everything here, but I switched up some strategy on tapering and rolled with two weeks instead of three. This is a personal thing and I've now found what works best for me. My main concern and goal heading into Hawaii was to figure out my 'stomach issues'. Bathroom breaks, number 2's, have always been an issue for me. YES, we're going here already...but it's a part of running and racing so I know you can't be too put off by this side of things, and I'm sure there are plenty of others out there who are struggling with their own stomach distress so I figure it has its place in here.

Quick breakdown, my 1st 100 miler, Stormy x 13 pit stops...my 2nd 100 miler, Western States x 11 pit stops, my 3rd 100 miler HURT x 0 pit stops, YES ZERO, the big goose egg (not literally this time)...and what a 'relief' to finally fix this issue! This alone was a huge contributing factor to my overall success in Hawaii.

What did I do so differently? I ate like a pig on Thursday, not on Friday. I still consumed plenty the day before the race, but I went to bed a wee bit hungry. For a pre-race breaky I've always tried stuffing my face with as much food as possible. For Hawaii I promised myself I'd do the exact opposite. I had but one bowl of cereal. When I filled a second bowl and started to consume I stopped myself mid spoon and simply pushed it aside. It was the best decision and most successful experiment I have yet to complete in my short ultra running 'career'.

HURT HAWAII

The race was celebrating its 10th Anniversary and is widely known to be one of the toughest 100 milers out there. With a cumulative climbing and descending total of nearly 25,000 feet, and almost ALL of it on technical terrain, it was easy to see very early in the race why so many people love to hate this course!

I, on the other hand, saw a course that was perfectly aligned with my strengths as a runner. I possess more power than speed. I run up and down mountains everyday. I LOVE technical terrain and where others see obstacles I consistently see a clear cut route right down the the middle (there's a root pun just waiting to be exposed in there somewhere). No matter how incredibly tough the terrain appears, I somehow naturally and effortlessly find stable footing and rarely have to deviate from my steady pace. Never has this been more evident than my run in Hawaii. You absolutely have to quickly scroll through this photo album to get a feel for what the course actually looks like! (Thanks to Nathan Yanko for these pics)


The course consists of 5 x 20 mile loops, with a few out n back sections during that loop. You have access to three aid stations and on average see one every 90 minutes. The great part about this is that since I was without crew or pacer I was able to fully plan my race from start to finish and pre-package drop bags that I could consistently access. I spent nearly five hours strategizing on Thurs-Fri and absolutely resisted any beach-time until I was confident I had it all dialed!


I had only told four people that I was gunning for Geoff Roes' course record. I e-mailed Geoff himself and threw it in there with a few other questions. Since he did not comment on it specifically I figured he thought I was mostly joking. I also told my girlfriend Tamsin, my running buddy Aaron Heidt, and my Montrail teammate Ryne Melcher. Other than that I knew it would be viewed as a pipe dream and I kept it to myself throughout all of my training and planning.

For those who do not know the name Geoff Roes, he is based out of Alaska and was recently awarded North American Ultra Runner Of The Year. Geoff has run eight 100 mile races. He has won them all. He has set seven course records...one race was run twice meaning he's set a CR on EVERY SINGLE 100m COURSE HE'S RUN!! The guy is a machine and is where most of us find ourselves gauging our own running fitness these days. No one had yet beaten a Roes CR so I was not about to go around barking off about how I felt I had a shot at this. The only thing I knew in advance of the race was that if I ever had a chance at challenging one of his times, it would be on a course like Hawaii. I was also fortunate to be presented with the course in its best condition ever. Apparently 2009 was the best year they had seen, and 2010 was just slightly better again. I've been promised lots and lots of mud and misery should I return again in 2011...just for the record, I love mud and misery and am secretly hoping for a nasty year in my next running of the race!

The First 20

The race started at 6am with the blowing of 'The Conch'


You are then immediately thrown into your biggest climb of the loop. You gain approximately 1500 feet in the first 3 miles alone! I went about power hiking, as did most others. I was a bit shocked to see Darcy Africa running the entire first climb and then to find Tracy Garneau chasing her down. The women lead the entire race heading into the first aid station at 7.3 miles, and at the second aid station at 12.8 miles, myself, Nathan, Tracy, and Darcy all arrived within seconds of each other, while Dan Barger was a minute up on all of us. There was a good group of us up towards the front of the race, and along with Brett Rivers we shared in numerous entertaining conversations.

We started with headlamps and as the sun rose I was more distracted by the spleandor of the area I was running in, rather than the fact that I still had 90 miles of terrain left to cover. The incredibly beautiful terrain consisting of rugged trails littered with banyan roots, contained inside lush forests consisting of banana trees, coffee plants, and stands of bamboo, complete with ridgeline panoramic views, including Pearl Harbor and Waikiki, and all of this upon a backdrop of chiseled jagged rock walls showered in an almost neon green blanket of vegetation. It was truly a little slice of heaven!

Three things were evident to me early on in the race. First off was that I was going to be out-climbed on the course, but certainly not out-descended. After rolling through the first few aid stations two more moments of clarity found me. There was a distinct sense of confidence that overwhelmed me. There were still runners ahead of me at that point, but I did not alter my pace at all. I simply knew beyond a shadow of a doubt that if I ran MY RACE, if I stayed smart, if I paced properly, it was going to be my day. It was an amazing feeling that I worked hard to attain through big mileage training in December. I smiled to myself and actually forgot I was racing for the next few hours. I was too busy loving the run and trying to fully appreciate 'being in the moment' while it was still actually fun!

The final bit of clarity came after hitting my first two drop bags. I had taped all of Geoff's 09 splits to my three main aid bags (and my actual bib number itself) and after 13 miles I found myself six minutes up on CR pace. I was confident that I was pacing well and could mostly mimic it for the next 87 miles. Having constant access to the splits was the perfect fuel to keep me pushing all day long. I knew I had a legitimate shot at a sub 20hr run time.

After 20 miles I hit the start-finish area just a few strides back of who I considered to be the pre-race favorite. Bay area resident and all round great guy Nathan Yanko. We had run the first loop in 3h40m and as we departed together we agreed that we were just going to try to duplicate that again in our second loop.

2nd Verse, Same As The First!

Into the nasty initial climb once again and Nathan, being the stud climber that he is, started pulling away. After a bit of downhill had been thrown into the mix we again found ourselves running together. At about mile 25 Nate pulled off for a pee break...and I figured it as good a time as any to put in a slight push and to officially get the race started!


With there being an out and back section from both aid stations one and two (the course goes Makiki-Manoa-Nuuanu-Makiki-repeat x5), you are never fully able to 'hide' from your competitors, which adds a whole different dynamic to the race. I hit mile 27.3, quickly checked CR splits, grabbed my pre-packaged drop bag and was gone in thirty seconds flat. Knowing I was going to cross paths with Nate again on the way back up what we had just descended I kept a steady pace. I was happy to see that I had gained five full minutes during my push and didn't fully set into my 'power hike' until Nathan and I had crossed paths. Of course I put on my best 'I'm loving this effortless running poker face' as we went our separate ways, me away from aid station 2 and him heading into aid station 2. I will also give a quick HUGE SHOUT OUT to two time 100 mile winner Mike Sweeney for standing in the middle of the forest with his electric guitar and belting out tunes for us all day and night long!!

(or is that an electic ukulele? Either way, great ambiance for a trail run, lol! Thanks Jamie Nott for the pic)

I felt fluid and smooth heading into Nuuanu at mile 33 and was surprised to see that I had added another six minutes to my lead to now have a full eleven over second place.

As I closed out my second loop my split times stayed almost exactly the same!
1h22 / 1h22
59m / 1h01m
1h19m / 1h19m
-------------
3h40m / 3h42m

The Heat, The Heat, The Heat

Lap three began at 1:22pm and the mercury had climbed to about 28 degrees / 82F. This does not sound hot at all, but coming from a B.C. winter, albeit mild, this was the hottest weather I'd faced in over four months. I did nothing specific to prepare for this heat and it nearly cost me the race. I'm not a heat guy. Anyone who may have followed me during Western States last summer caught a glimpse of what heat can do to me. I will stand strong to my statement that I did not run myself into the ground at WS, the heat (40+ degrees) beat me into it. I knew that if the heat got the better of me after forty miles in Hawaii I'd undoubtedly face the 'I knew you went out too fast' comments from home...and I dreaded the possibility of that occurring!

I still felt strong heading into Manoa aid station for the third time, at mile 47.3, and was then rewarded with a surprise visit from my friends who had accompanied me to Hawaii, but were there for the beaches n beers more so than to watch a boring 100 mile running event! They announced my number, 85, as I approached and a roar of applause filled the air,

Wow, they must be confusing me for someone else I thought...but I'll take it!

Sure enough as I rounded the corner my friends Amber, Mark, and Omar were yelling and shouting and full of smiles and positive energy! Our time was obviously brief but greatly appreciated and they helped perk me up as I continued on.

From there to Nuuanu at mile 52.8 however, I consciously had to slow my pace and conserve my energy. I knew I still had a few hours of 'peak heat' to deal with and I found myself counting down to the setting sun.

My third lap split was 4h04m, but the sun was now kissing the horizon and I felt rejuvenated heading into the night! 60 miles and 11h30min of running down...only 40 miles left till the finish line!

Bring On The Darkness

I love running at night. Plain and simple it just feels cool to be out running when your primal instincts tell you you should be hiding inside somewhere. It's especially cool while running in a tropical place like Hawaii when the forest can come alive with the sounds of dusk.

As excited as I was for nightfall, I still felt slow while ascending the heinous initial climb away from Makiki. As I crested the trail and began the slight descent that split up the full climb, Nathan caught up to me and passed me like I was standing still! I was absolutely floored and devastated all at once. I knew my lead over him to be somewhere near forty minutes. I knew Nate to be a rock star climber. I felt like I was moving backwards up the 1500 foot climb, but for him to take forty full minutes out of me in just over three miles...none of it made sense, but it was late enough in the race that nothing else made sense either. I'd been running for twelve hours straight, and I wondered if I had anything left in the tank to respond to this challenge.

It was then that Nathan thankfully enlightened me to the reality of the situation. We were on a section of the course that you pass through twice each lap, for a total of ten times. I was approximately 45 minutes up on Nate and we just happened to be passing through the same part of the course, while heading towards different points, at the same time. Once I realized what was actually happening a slight shot of adrenaline woke me up. I wanted to ensure that I hadn't looked too pathetic while he initially passed me and I opened up into our now technical descent and regained the 'lead' from him right before we split trails away from each other. We wished each other luck and as soon as he was out of sight I fell back into my slog of a hike up the final few hundred meters of the massive climb.

Powered on by the sensation that I'd 'survived' the heat of the day, and with ample amounts of adrenaline now pumping through my body I leaned into and destroyed the descent into Manoa. I'd given away some time on the CR pace during the 3rd loop and I knew there would be many people following the live updates at home just waiting for me to crack and fall off pace. In fact the funny thing is that some people actually took to calling the running store I work at in North Van, and telling my co-workers that they had to somehow get a hold of me down in Hawaii, while racing, and tell me to slow the f#%k down! Late in races like this you use whatever bits of information you can to keep yourself motivated and blocking out the onset of pain.

I knew there were naysayers and I was secretly thankful as I dedicated a few minutes of thought to them. I followed that up with thoughts of my girlfriend Tamsin (winner of Mtn Masochist in Nov), and the fact that she's been dealt a shit card that involved contracting a staph infection during a standard knee scope that's sidelined her for the next few months. I wanted nothing more than to share my whole Hawaii experience with her by my side. I also thought of my family at home, as I knew they'd be up all night back in Nfld following along. This brought a smile to my face and it somehow seemed to nullify everything else my body was fighting at that moment in time.

Coming away from both out and back aid stations I had myself enough of a gap that I did not see another runner on the same lap as me. I was feeling almost invincible, right up until I was cruising over the one and only non technical section of the entire twenty mile loop, at which point I somehow managed to roll my bad ankle and strain my foot. It was the exact same injury I'd dealt with after WS and prior to Trans Rockies. I hadn't felt it this bad in months and I actually fought back tears as I attempted to walk it off.

To myself,
"Not now, not now, not now. Not like this, not like this, not like this!"

I had an MRI on my ankle last summer while this was bothering me and the exact news I was dealt went something like this...
"Your ankle will critically fail on you at some point in time and you will no longer be a runner. Enjoy it while you can." (there is lingering damage from numerous injuries, most over ten years old and before I ever thought I'd actually enjoy running)

I of course chose not to fully believe this diagnosis and had felt like I was back to 100% consistently since early October. Needless to say I was slightly freaked out and just a little bit pissed off at myself that I'd managed to do this on such a tame piece of singletrack. I did manage to keep my body moving though and sure enough within a mile I had mostly forgotten about it. This was primarily because the blisters were starting to set in and I finally felt one pop.

I was on the home stretch of lap four, still on CR pace, and not about to stop and deal with any foot issues now. I know from personal experience that the 'main pain window' lasts about twenty minutes. Ignore, ignore, ignore, and yee shall be fine. Sure enough, right on twenty minutes I knew I would not deal with the specific pain of the blisters again till I was finally finished running 100 miles.

The Bell Lap...

My fourth lap time was 4h15m. Race Director John Salmonson looked at me,

"You know you're on course record pace right" There was of course just a slight scowl behind this as John pays $500 for a course record performance!

"Still twenty miles to go. Anything can happen, but so far so good."

"I like your attitude, now get going!!"

The climb out of Makiki was by then known to me as 'the climb from hell'! I dreaded every single step of it and really started to falter as I tried to conquer it one last time. I was digging as deep as I could but was still left feeling like I was trapped inside a hamster wheel stuck in quicksand.

One step at a time. One foot in front of the other. Left-right-left-right. The death march had been initiated. Was I about to crumble after 80 miles, just like I had at WS? Was this it? Was my race over now? Was Nathan going to pass me like I was standing still for real this time? Did I even care about even finishing this damn race anymore? Do I honestly give a rats ass about some stupid course record? What state am I in? What's my name? WHY AM I STILL RUNNING AFTER 16 STRAIGHT HOURS DAMMIT?

All I wanted to do, was to lay down and go to sleep, and I very nearly did just that! I was convinced that the initial climb had grown throughout the night, either that or someone had re-routed us up something even more torturous than we had endured for the first 80 miles. I was fading fast and with it went my confidence that I was holding pace towards my secondary goal of trying to set a CR. My initial goal was obviously to try to win my first BIG U.S. RACE, and even that goal felt like it might evaporate right before my eyes.

Walking-walking-walking. Walking on nearly flat terrain. Walking the trails I had run through all four laps up until that point. Walking-walking-walking...but never stopping. Like my expedition adventure racing days, RFM, Relentless Forward Motion...ALWAYS!

Eventually I made it to a steep enough downhill that it was easier to run it than walk it. I hit Manoa aid station and immediately tore into my drop bag, CR splits, CR splits, CR splits...

I still found myself eleven minutes in front of where I needed to be. My doubts disappeared, I grabbed my drop bottle and headed towards the 'food table' for the first time all day. Then I heard, in a somewhat military like, yet caring tone of voice,

"DO YOU KNOW YOU ARE ON COURSE RECORD PACE?!!"

"Yes."

"THEN WHY THE HELL ARE YOU STANDING AT MY AID STATION RIGHT NOW!!"

I started in on thanking the volunteers for making the race possible before I was cut off,

"GET THE HELL OUTTA HERE ALREADY!!"

We all laughed out loud, and I started in on the final 13 miles to the finish.

A steady climb followed by a flowing descent into Nuuanu. A time check, now at fourteen minutes. A bottle switch and a steady grunt up and over my last climb of the day.

The elation of knowing that I was going to meet all of my pre-race goals carried me over the final six miles of the course like I was effortlessly flowing through in on a mountain bike. I simultaneously tried to take it all in while pushing as hard as I could to the line.

The wind carried me through my favorite section of the course, the bamboo forest, and with it the bamboo slightly swayed into itself. Whether I was hallucinating or not, it sounded just like a round of applause from the trail itself.

I crossed the finish line in a time of 20h12m to claim the win and a new CR by just 16min...which really amounts to just seconds over a 20hr run!

(Thanks to Betty Wiens for this plus many other pics)

I was completely overwhelmed by what I had just accomplished, having dreamed of the exact scenario on many a rainy miserable trail run through a dark December in B.C. I let loose with hoots, hollars, some jumping around, I hugged and picked up a few people...and I even kissed the RD, John Salmonson right on the lips! He took it all in stride, just like I knew he would, and he then presented me with my favorite new piece of hardware,



Not to mention this sweet new framed pic I was awarded at the banquet,



HUGE CONGRATS to ALL runners who participated in HURT 2010, it truly is a killer course!

(Brett, Nathan, and I. Top three men)

MASSIVE THANKS to the RD's and every single volunteer who helped make this event such a memorable one for not just myself but everyone involved!



HATS OFF to fellow Canadian Tracy Garneau for her stunning 3rd overall finish and women's course record time of 24h06m!



Top three men and women at awards banquet on Monday night...a few hours before I boarded my flight home, sob!



Full Results

Individual Splits

GEAR

Montrail Mountain Masochists

Princeton Tec Apex + Fuel headlamps

Carbo Pro 1200
Orange x 2 bottles

Thermalytes
x 20

Recover Tab's
x tons!

Gel x 35

Till next year...pray for mud, so that I can see the 'true course' in all its splendor!

Now, it's time for me to do a lot more of this...



AND IF YOU ACTUALLY MADE IT THIS FAR, thanks for taking the time to read this through!

GR

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A Proper Thank You To Hawaii


I'll have to keep this brief as I'm about to board my final flight home from Portland to Vancouver (I didn't get this posted before heading to work yesterday)...and am then off to work from 1pm-9pm tonight. Yes, I'm a dumb ass who should have taken at least one more day off and who should still be laying on the beaches of Waikiki!

I'm not the best logistical planner and when I booked my cheap flight of only $385 return it was with a late night Monday return. I didn't even process that the banquet would obviously be on Monday and although I was able to join for a few hours I felt somewhat sheepish sliding out the back door shortly after the food was served. For the record we just made our check in for the 11pm flight!

Being put on the spot in front of a crowd it's sometimes hard to put into words what's running through your head...here is what I wished I had said to everyone last night...

I had never been to Hawaii before and my experience was absolutely top notch from start to finish. I had heard horror story after horror story about the HURT 100 Mile Course, yet the race directors managed to keep the atmosphere light hearted and fun the entire time. Their 20 minute 'directly to the point pre-race briefing' is something that could/should be mimicked by numerous other race organizations! I knew by the end of that briefing why so many people return annually to torture themselves on such a challenging course.

I wasn't sure what to initially think of a five loop course as I would much prefer a point to point race whenever possible, however, as with everything else in Hawaii, there was a magic to the simplicity of it all. Five loops, twenty miles, three aid stations. Since I was without a crew or pacer it just made things that much easier to figure out.

Once out on course there was one pleasant surprise after another. It started with the incredibly beautiful terrain consisting of rugged trails littered with banyan roots , contained inside lush forests consisting of banana trees, coffee plants, and stands of bamboo, complete with ridgeline panoramic views, including Pearl Harbor and Waikiki, and all of this upon a backdrop of chiseled jagged rock walls showered in an almost neon green blanket of vegetation. It was easy to ‘zone out’ and forget I was racing at all for the first few laps.

Once the legs started to recognize that this was more than just a training run the real mental struggles should have begun. However, running a looping course meant there was no shortage of constant support coming my way from other runners on course, followed by all the incredible volunteers at each aid station! I packed my iPod for the ‘night shift’ but used it for under an hour. I tried my absolute best to reciprocate and initiate as many exchanges as possible. Everyone’s positivity was amazing, greatly appreciated, and the perfect fuel for a tired runner’s shattered body.

EVERYONE helped make this a very special experience for me, and I sincerely hope in some small way I was able to do the same for at least a few others involved in this top notch event.

Till 2011, I'll be counting down the days.

Full race report to come soon.




GR

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H.U.R.T. Hawaii, Follow Along

This is gonna be quick as it's late, I have to be up in 4.5hr and I'm still packing my bags!

Here's the info, it's a 2hr time difference to Hawaii so race officially starts at 4am PST. I'm gonna twitter some leading up to the race, definitely afterwards and I might have a crew do some during the race but I don't wanna promise anything just yet. As always you can link to my twitter page on the right side of this blog.

Race website and Info, HURT HAWAII

This is where
they have currently linked their live updates for the race, but it hasn't been updated in quite sometime. I'll update if I find out more info later, but for now the countdown clock to race start is at 3 days 7 hours and 20 seconds...AHHH I CAN'T WAIT FOR THIS ONE!!!!

GR

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The Results Are In!

Well not nearly the voters on this poll verses 'performance of the year'. This was either a Tory induced voter burn-out, or the fact that it just wasn't close from the start.

LANDSLIDE VICTORIES on both sides. Congrats to people's choice Canadian Ultra Runners Of 2009, Ellie Greenwood and Glen Redpath! Oh, and in case you missed it, check out the few late editions to Glen's race results from 09...in a 15 day span he raced three races for 250 miles and finished no worse than 2nd!! AN-E-MAL. Ellie just didn't lose a single race, which is becoming quite standard for her! We have to watch out that she doesn't beat the entire field in any races in 2010!!

Alrighty, short post n I'm out. Gotta pack for HAWAII BABY!!!!

GR

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Canadian Ultra Runner Of Year (UROY) 2009 Poll


I already had this whole posting pre-typed and then the Glenn Redpath fan club came out in full force!! Looks like the young buck Aaron Heidt blazed the first half of the competition, but the ever experienced Redpath saved his best for last and finished stronger than anyone else in the poll. He dominated the final 24hr and come out with a convincing 43% of the total votes cast! At over 100 for the men and just under for the women I'm very excited by the interest this garnered for all involved!

On the Women's side congrats to Ellie Greenwood for her dominating performance at the Stormy 50miler in Squamish where she crushed the women's course record and narrowly missed out on winning the race outright, finishing just minutes back in 3rd overall! At 37% of the vote she won convincingly.

Top three performances as voted on are:

1) 37% Ellie Greenwood CR Stormy 50miler

2) 22% Tamsin Anstey for her 50mile debut at Mountain Masochist

3) TIE 13% Sue Lucas & Tracy Garneau for Sulphur Springs & HURT respectively

For the men,

1) 43% Glenn Redpath for significantly lowering the course record at Canada's older 100 miler (15 years)

2) 32% Aaron Heidt for taking down the very established course record at the 20 year old Knee Knacker 30 miler

3) 9% Ryne Melcher for running the third fastest time in Mt Si 50 miler history...while on a bum knee that needed surgery!

HUGE CONGRATS to everyone! Like Bruce Grant mentioned, Canadians seemed to disappear from the top of the ultra scene for a few years but it looks like we're back in full force again now and hopefully many will have breakout races in 2010! Let's make this poll even harder to decide upon in 12 months time!!

OK, here it is, Canadian Ultra Runner Of The Year. Poll to your right, stats below. (Poll will run till 11pm on Monday night)

WOMEN

Tracy Garneau:
1st HURT 100miler / 2nd Diez Vista 50k / 2nd Stormy 50miler / 3rd North Face 50miler Champs

Tamsin Anstey:
1st Diez Vista 50k / 1st Frosty Mtn 50k / 1st Mtn Masochist 50miler

Ellie Greenword:
1st Orcas Island 50k / 1st CR Dirty Duo 50k / 1st CR Chuckanut 50k / 1st Knee Knacker 50k / 1st CR Stormy 50 Miler / 1st CR Run For Toad 50k

Monica Scholz:
3rd HURT 100miler / 3rd Sulphur Springs 100miler / 8th Badwater 135miler / 1st Arkansas Traveller 100miler

Sue Lucas:
1st Sulphur Springs 100miler / 1st Dirty Girls 24hr / 5th Lean Horse 100miler / 1st Halliburton 100miler

Nicola Gildersleeve:
4th Way Too Cool 50k / 5th Diez Vista 50k / 2nd Frosty Mtn 50k / 2nd Mtn Masochist 50miler

MEN

Aaron Heidt:
2nd Dirty Duo 50k / 1st CR Chuckanut 50k / 1st CR Knee Knacker 50k

Chris Downie:
1st CR Sinister 7 90miler / 1st Stormy 100miler / 1st Frosty Mtn 50k / 1st Walk In Park 54k

Adam Hill:
3rd Bull Run Run 50miler / 1st Sulphur Springs 50miler / 1st CR Laurel Highlands 50k / 22nd World Trail Challenge 68k France / 1st CR Dirty Girls 6hr / 1st Halliburton Trail 50miler / 3rd Oil Creek 50miler / 7th Mtn Masochist 50miler

Glen Redpath:
1st CR Halliburton 100miler / (1 week later!) 2nd Iroquois 100miler / (1 week after that!) 2nd V.Veromont 50miler / 2nd Bull Run Run 50miler / 2nd Bel Monte 50miler / 3rd Greenway 50k / 2nd Massanutten 100miler / 1st CR Dirty Girls 12hr / 7th Mtn Masochist 50miler

Ryne Melcher:
(Just for the record here, Melcher was born in the US and he actually cheered when the US juniors beat Canada in OT this week! Take from that what you will...)
1st CFA NYD 50k / 3rd Dirty Duo 50k / 1st Mt Si 50miler / 3rd Portland 50k / 2nd Frosty Mtn 50k / 2nd Run For Toad 50k / 4th Ozark Trail 100miler

Gary Robbins:
(Still heart broken from Canada's loss to the US...like any red blooded Cdn would be!)
3rd CFA NYD 50k / 2nd Orcas Island 50k / 1st CR Dirty Duo 50k / 1st CR Diez Vista 50k / 1st CR CFA 6hr Enduro / 49th Western States 100miler / 4th Knee Knacker 50k / 3rd Run For Toad 50k / 3rd Mountain Masochist 50miler

Have at er, and thanks for taking the time to vote in this 'just for fun' poll!!

GR

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Trans Rockies Discounted Entry Night @NSA

ONE NIGHT ONLY at North Shore Athletics. This coming Monday Jan 11th join us as we recount the 2009 race through pictures, video, and stories. Numerous Trans Rockies finishers will be on hand to answer all your QnA, appies and drinks provided, AND

ONE NIGHT ONLY: $200 off team entry AND $100 GC to be spent however you see fit at NSA...like getting some new Montrail shoes for the big race...shameless plus I know!

Click on this pic for exact details and drop me a line should you have any questions. Hope to see ya there!!



GR

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300km - 10 Days - 27hr - I'm Ready!

(CFA NYD 50k, as you can see not the nicest day for a run!)

I just knocked down the biggest and bestest training block of my short ultra specific training 'career'. I managed to log a full 300km in ten days of running, but the most amazing part to me is that I somehow feel great after all of it and am only slowing down now because I have HURT Hawaii 100 miler in just two short weeks!

The total distance broke down to be about 1/3 flat non-tech-road, 1/3 moderate yet challenging trail, and 1/3 highly technical mountainous climbs and descents. I covered the total distance in just under 27hr and had no major issues along the way. Other than general fatigue and some serious mental resistance on some mornings!

I stuck with a daily post run ice bath, compression socks for recovery, compression calf guards during my runs, was strict on my recovery drinks, and I slightly bumped up my daily consumption of my recover amino-power tabs.

Here's how it broke down. Oh yeah, it also helped that I had five of the ten days off due to the holidays, so free time was on my side. I also had one full week away from running due to Tamsin's hospital scare going into this block, so I was fairly fresh and determined to take advantage of my final few days of training.

Thu Dec 24th: 32km/2h40m

Fri Dec 25th: 50km/4h20m

Sat Dec 26th: 40km/4h15m

Sun Dec 27th: 15km/1h15m

Mon Dec 28th: 15km/1h25m

Tue Dec 29th: 20km/1h50m

Wed Dec 30th: 38km/3h40m

Thu Dec 31st: 10km/50m

Fri Jan 1st: 70km/5h45m

(Club Fat Ass 50k sandwiched between 10k runs to and from. Finished 4th in 3h59m)

Sat Jan 2nd: 10km/50m
---------
300km/26h50m

Bring on my third 100 miler in less than two weeks time!! Just a heads up, I'm apparently bib number 85, lucky number Ochocinco baby!

GR

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To The Polls We Go...Cdn Performance Of 2009?

Alright, let's get this show on the road already! Without further ado please refer yourself to the poll on your right and have your say AND I'm prepared to take some flack for my top five...err top six choices in the poll as it was no easy task to even whittle down this far...I had no idea it'd be this tough to break it down to just six individuals!

Poll will run from today, Jan 2nd until Thursday Jan 7th, at which point we'll roll out the 'Canadian Ultra Runner Of The Year' polls. SO, please help me fill in the blanks for the candidates on that one as I know I'm missing info.

Current POLL to your right, next poll info being collected below for 'ultra runner of year'...

FEMALE


Tracy Garneau: 1st HURT 100miler / 2nd Diez Vista 50k / 2nd Stormy 50miler / 3rd North Face 50miler Champs

Tamsin Anstey: 1st Diez Vista 50k / 1st Frosty Mtn 50k / 1st Mtn Masochist 50miler

Ellie Greenword: 1st Orcas Island 50k / 1st CR Dirty Duo 50k / 1st CR Chuckanut 50k / 1st Knee Knacker 50k / 1st CR Stormy 50 Miler / 1st CR Run For Toad 50k

Monica Scholz: 3rd HURT 100miler / 3rd Sulphur Springs 100miler / 8th Badwater 135miler / 1st Arkansas Traveller 100miler

Sue Lucas: 1st Sulphur Springs 100miler / 1st Dirty Girls 24hr / 5th Lean Horse 100miler / 1st Halliburton 100miler

Nicola Gildersleeve: 4th Way Too Cool 50k / 5th Diez Vista 50k / 2nd Frosty Mtn 50k / 2nd Mtn Masochist 50miler

MALE


Aaron Heidt: 2nd Dirty Duo / 1st CR Chuckanut / 1st CR Knee Knacker

Chris Downie
: 1st CR Sinister 7 90miler / 1st Stormy 100miler / 1st Frosty Mtn 50k / 1st Walk In Park 54k

Adam Hill: 3rd Bull Run Run 50miler / 1st Sulphur Springs 50miler / 1st CR Laurel Highlands 50k / 22nd World Trail Challenge 68k France / 1st CR Dirty Girls 6hr (umm, did anyone tell him it's a girls only race!) / 1st Halliburton Trail 50miler / 3rd Oil Creek 50miler / 7th Mtn Masochist 50miler

Glenn Redpath: 1st CR Halliburton 100miler / (1 week later!) 2nd Iroquois 100miler / 2nd Bel Monte 50miler / 3rd Greenway 50k / 2nd Massanutten 100miler / 2nd Bull Run Run / 1st CR Dirty Girls 12hr (again, Glenn, it's a womans only race, no wonder you boys are setting course records out there!) / 7th Mtn Masochist 50miler

Ryne Melcher
: 1st CFA NYD 50k / 3rd Dirty Duo 50k / 1st Mt Si 50miler / 3rd Portland 50k / 2nd Frosty Mtn 50k / 2nd Run For Toad 50k / 4th Ozark Trail 100miler

Gary Robbins
: (I'll throw my name in here but honestly PLEASE no default votes, I think I should be in the running but DO NOT think I should win this year!)
3rd CFA NYD 50k / 2nd Orcas Island 50k / 1st CR Dirty Duo 50k / 1st CR Diez Vista 50k / 1st CR CFA 6hr Enduro / 49th Western States 100miler / 4th Knee Knacker 50k / 3rd Run For Toad 50k / 3rd Mountain Masochist 50miler

GR

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Canadian, Ultra Trail Performance Of The Year, Male & Female


I see lots of this type of thing going on in the U.S. scene, with friendly polls and banter about who put in the best performance of the year and who deserves the 'ultra runner of the year', but I have yet to see a Canadian specific poll so here it is!

In a very slight effort to get a few Canadian trail demons a bit more notoriety, I'd like to propose a poll. Male and Female Ultra TRAIL performance of the year, and runner of the year. I'll start with performance of the year and want to be sure I don't miss anyone, so I'll leave it open to comment for a few days first. Here's what I've got so far. I'll narrow it down to five a side for the vote but please let me know if I've missed anyone?

RULES:
-Has to be of an ultra distance
-Has to be on TRAILS
-Has to be either born in Canada OR currently resides in Canada and represents 'The Maple Leaf' when they run
-Has to have been run in 2009
-Has to have won the race in question
-Can't be a staged race
-Most runners are multiple race winners. I've chosen what I consider to be the most impressive run by that individual in 2009. Full results for each will be listed in the 'ultra runner of the year poll'. If you feel one of their other races was more impressive than please say so...Hiedt's KK CR comes to mind, I'll have to ask his take on his best race?

Candidates, Performance Of The Year, Female



-Tracy Garneau: 1st - HURT 100 Miler, Hawaii
-Tamsin Anstey: 1st - Mountain Masochist 50 Miler, Virginia
-Denise McHale: 1st - C.R. Elk-Beaver 100k, B.C.
-Jen Segger: 1st - C.R. Bridle Trails 50k, Washington
-Ellie Greenwood: 1st - C.R. Stormy 50 Miler, B.C.
-Monica Sholz: 1st - Arkansas Traveler 100miler, Arkansas
-Lorie Alexander: 1st - Scorched Sole 50 Miler, BC
-Sue Lucas: 1st - Sulpher Springs 100 Miler, Ontario (Cdn ACU 100 Mile Champ!)

Male

-Ryne Melcher: 1st - Mt Si 50 Miler, Washington
-Aaron Heidt: 1st - C.R. Chuckanut 50k, Washington
-Chris Downie: 1st - C.R. Sinister Seven 90 Miler, Alberta
-David Papineau: 1st - C.R. Scorced Sole 50k, B.C.
-Taylor Murphy: 1st - C.R. Run For The Toad 50k, Ontario
-Hassan Lotfi-Pour(Sammy): 1st - Stormy 50 Miler, B.C.
-Bruce Grant: 1st - Scorced Sole 50 Miler, B.C.
-Adam Hill: 1st - C.R. Laurel Highlands 50k, Ontario
-Glen Redpath: 1st - C.R. Haliburton 100 Miler, Ontario
-Derrick Spafford: 1st - Finger Lakes 50 Miler, New York
-Gary Robbins: 1st - C.R. Diez Vista 50k, BC (I'm just throwing my name in here but I won't put it to the poll cause it won't be fair considering it's my own damn blog! Plus I truly feel there are numerous more impressive runs on this list anyways)

Plenty of great runners missed out due to either injury or simply not winning outright. Special mention for sure to Nicola Gildersleeve and Darin Bentley, who each put in some great races in 09 and will always be in the mix with the top runners Canada has to offer on trails!

On a side note, Nicola wrote a great article for the local North Shore News about our Mountain Masochist experience in early Nov, here's the link.

I'll put this to a poll on the weekend, so please let me know if I've overlooked anyone, and my sincerest apologies if I have!!

GR

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The Countdown To Hawaii


Though she might still argue otherwise, Tamsin has been improving daily. It's a stupidly lengthy recovery process, but like I've already said, she'll blow the Doctors estimates out of the water. She's still on crutches, she's still in constant pain, but I've seen her smile and heard her laugh again, and that means the world to me!

Since I finished work on Christmas Eve at 2pm I've done nothing but spend time with my wonderful girlfriend and her amazing family, talk daily with my own folks, and run...lots and lots of running. In the last 51hr I've managed to log 123km, and the scary part is that I feel great! I think the week off due to the stress surrounding Tamsin's health was actually a beneficial thing for my own body. I seemed to be on the verge of a few things shutting down, but have felt surprisingly good since getting back at it again. As long as I hit my intended 30km tomorrow, I'll manage 100 miles / 160km of running this week. Having run only 8km in the first three days I'll take this as a PB/PR of sorts, almost 160km in four days.

With only one week of mileage left to go I've set a pretty lofty number to achieve in my final 10 days of training. So far so good. We'll see how the next seven days treat me.

Today was AMAZING! A low level fog had buried North Vancouver, but just up the street it was nothing but blue skies and warm temps. I managed a solid 40k over tough terrain which should mimic the H.U.R.T. course nicely! I ran the Cap-Pacific Trail up onto BCMC (Grouse Grind), across the ski hill...only getting in shit from two ski patrollers along the way...and rightfully so of course, back down Mtn Hwy, along the Baden Powell (I heart the BP) and down Mos Creek. All in all an awesome day! Quick pics, n I'm outta here!





GR

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The Longest Week Of My Life

This Blog posting was originally supposed to be about logging 100 miles of running in a week and what it takes to accomplish this. I was tracking my daily mileage, thoughts, sleep, weather, etc, and was going to pop it up here on Sunday night. Basically I've noticed that anytime I've hit 100 miles in a week it has not been achieved without a high level of sacrifice, pain, dedication, and even doubt as to if my body would recover day after day to allow me to do this. I've always been amazed by weeks end that I've made it through so many peaks and valleys to stand atop my stated goal. Much like running 100 miles in a single day, it's never easy and you just roll through the bad while reminding yourself that the highs are once again just around that next corner. As with most things in life, it's 90% mental, and the rest is all in your head.

Unfortunately, on so many levels, that just wasn't meant to be this week. Running, for the first time in a long time, was about to take a secondary role in my life. In fact running was the absolute farthest thing from my mind come Friday evening. (I've left that partial running diary attached to the bottom of this posting)

FRIDAY NIGHT TAMSIN BECOMES ILL FROM HER KNEE SURGERY

Up until my anticipated run tonight, Christmas Eve, I've managed only one 8km run in the last seven days, and that was on Tues night through work. Even then I struggled to get motivated enough to move my ass out the door. Normally I'd take almost all of December off, but with a 100 mile race looming in mid January I was not afforded that luxury this year.

It's amazing the clarity that can find you in rough times like these. I'll elaborate as to her situation in a second, but what was completely evident to me in the last week is that nothing else mattered to me outside of Tamsin's immediate health. I could not focus on anything but thoughts of her sitting in a hospital bed and how I could possibly make that situation better for her. How I could somehow help her get out of there faster, and back onto her feet sooner? Not only did I not run a single step, I didn't think twice about it.

I won't go into too great a detail here as I don't think it would be completely fair to my girlfriend. All I'll say is that I've honestly never seen a human being suffer like that before. We went to the hospital on Friday night, were released with morphine tablets a few hours late, only to be carted back to the hospital on Sat morning via an ambulance.

What has transpired since then has been both gut wrenching and astonishing. Simply put, Tamsin contracted a staph infection from her 'very standard' knee scope last Thursday. On Thursday night and even Friday morning she could not believe how great she felt. We both thought she'd be back to running within three weeks. By late Friday afternoon however everything changed and she quickly plummeted into a world of suffering that I would never wish upon anyone.

Last night (Wed 23rd) she was finally released from hospital, but life hasn't gotten any easier just yet. She's still in constant pain, and is almost bed ridden. The newest prognosis is that her full recovery will take up to four months, and it will likely be a full month before the swelling in her knee even recedes. I am left wishing there were something I could do to alleviate her pain, and constantly struggle with that fact that I am powerless to do so.

For now, we take solace in the slight positives that we can attach ourselves to. First and foremost, we're home for The Holidays, and right now, that's all that really matters. Being surrounded by family and loved ones will undoubtedly expedite the recovery process for her, and everyone who knows Tamsin is completely confident that the fighter in her will trump even the best case scenarios the Doctors can come up with. And on that note, I'm done on here and off to spend Christmas Eve with my girlfriend. I hope Santa is good to both of us!

------------------------------------
Decide at beginning of week what priorities will be, make running number 1, every decision after that is based upon getting mileage in first

Monday: Supposed to get in an easy 10k, to boost miles early, get free tickets to The Vancouver Canucks hockey game! Plus am still kinda hung over from Staff Party previous night.

Tues
:
Sleep: 6.5hr
Work: 1p-9p
Miles: AM 25k/17m - PM 5k/3m
Times Ran: 9am-12pm - 6:30pm-7:00pm
Climate: Cold, wet, slippery, icy

Slept in, tired, thinking too much sugar lately not doing me any favors. First 5km sucked, my right shin and foot bothering me, take it slow. Was dry when started but rains begin within 30m, not happy. Not really into it, think about shorting route numerous times. Reflect upon running 100m race in one months time, push through. By 10k feel better, at 15k feeling great! Get into a rhythm I haven't felt in quite awhile. My mind is absent from my body and the terrain flows underneath me effortlessly. This abruptly halts when I crest a small climb, lean into the downhill, and find myself dancing upon a surface of black ice! Best 'trail bail' in a few years, no damage done. Happy to knock down 25k before work and will get to add another 5km to it through run clinic tonight. Happy

PM, ran an easy paced 5k with clinic tonight. Body sore and hurting. Right ankle bothering me, quads tight, feeling left glute med...not happy...shouldn't have skipped out on my ice bath this morning!

WED:
S 8hr
C Rain, dammit
M 41.6k / 26m
T 10am
W Off

Swear to myself that I'll never sign up for another 100m in January...unless I somehow find myself living in the Southern Hemisphere!

Tired start to day and body feeling sore, kinda like lingering soreness from full contact tobaganning on Sun night? Looked like would be great morning for a run but now it's raining sideways out there...uggh, 40k to knock down...this sucks!

First ten minutes my right ankle keeps locking up on me, go from 1/2 run to hobble to 1/2 run n back. Figure it'll loosen up and within ten minutes it's fine. This is new and hoping it's nothing serious. Actually feeling pretty good, better than thought I would. Soaking wet but not cold, 2 degrees colder would have made for a long miserable day! Do a 20.8k loop with 1700 feet of climb n descent. Drop off Roxy and change clothes. Happy with a 30 min turn around as the rain has increased and it's not looking pretty outside. Get moving and feel surprisingly good again! Knocking down the miles and again not cold, just wet. Felt really good till about 33k and then felt nauseous. Never feel nauseous on runs. Concerns me, hoping haven't caught a bug. Last 8km kills me and gets increasingly tougher. Wasn't pushing pace at all today but destroyed by end of run. Into ice bath and suck back recovery drink n food. Hoping this doesn't take too much outta me for tomorrow and rest of week!

Thurs:
S 5h45m
W 8-12 4-8 (Split shift for Tamsin's Knee Surgery)
M 21k / 13m
T 2pm
C 10 Degrees/Overcast/Perfect! No gloves/hat/jacket!

Same thing in first ten minutes, right ankle not wanting to bear weight. Eventually loosens up without issue.
First loop good (flat gravel around Burnaby Lake), sub 40m, time left for second loop, left Achilles starts to hurt at 13km, push through. Great run, happy with how felt, for most part, but realize I need to get my calves and Achilles looked at. Immediately text Lesley White and book in for massage tomorrow. Achilles ends up very swollen later in evening

FRI:
S 7h30m
W 11-7
M 0

Day off, sports massage to start day, Achilles still swollen plus now a sizable swollen bruise on same shin? Looks like impact but can't remember any? Massage hurts, Lesley suggests physio, water running, etc...tell her I need it to be better for tomorrow!
Also see Dr. Bovard, and told I can push through pain as long as not getting worse. Have to work on heel drops to strengthen. Wondering if wearing dress shoes with higher heel cup on Sunday night aggravated it??

Sat:

Amazed at how much better I felt, but running was furthest thing from my mind by this point in time

GR

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Funny Fridays (The Ultra Runner)

K, I know I'm giving props to Brooks here when I'm sponsored by Montrail...BUT...they deserve it! They had a whole campaign around these commercials and all are incredibly funny. Here's the link to all, and below is the most specific to the ultra side of things. Enjoy!



GR

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The NSA Family

Last night was our annual North Shore Athletics staff Christmas party. We had an absolute blast with our very own party bus! The night started with some full contact tobogganing on the local Mt Seymour, with bodies stacked as much as three high on a single crazy carpet! The overall goal ended up being who could keep up enough momentum to shoot up the 'slow down incline' at the base of the run and also continue right on through the safety fence at the very end. Being the competitive group that we are, eventually this was accomplished by many. Tamsin and I managed to do so on a double carpet...and I only had to absorb one significant charlie horse to accomplish this.

Back on 'the party bus' and into downtown Vancouver where we were to close out our evening. However, this was not before the team had a full on chin up competition on the party bus, complete with a eventual contortion that could only be described as who could hump the ceiling of a moving bus the most times. Add to this an improv game of 'bus surfing' as people tried to see who could stay upright the longest as the vehicle meandered it's way through downtown Van and you can see the fun times were 'rolling' right along. Once at the restaurant we were treated to fabulous food and flowing drinks before we set in on our annual Secret Santa gift exchange.

After the dust had settled on this we somehow found ourselves playing a full on game of duck-duck-goose...yes the game where you tap heads till you say goose and then sprint around the group to see who can complete a lap and grab the empty seat first...yes the game you most likely have not played since you were ten years old.

Eventually owner Keith Nicoll stood up, with only minimal assistance, and gave a quick speech. It had to do with 'the North Shore Athletics Family'. This is something I have heard him talk about for years but never really thought twice about.

Coming from a Fairmont Hotels background the 'Fairmont Family' had always been jammed down our throats on an almost daily basis. The problem was that it was simply a program instituted within a massive company to create something that never existed. The Fairmont Family Fallacy was how I always thought of it. Don't get me wrong, I loved my time within Fairmont Hotels and most of my life long friends have come as a direct result of those five years of employment. However, there never was and most likely never will be a family environment within such a large organization.

North Shore Athletics on the other hand employs between ten and fifteen staff at a time. After waking up just slightly hung over this morning I couldn't help but feel like I had shared in something special last night. Quite simply we just had an absolute blast, but on a deeper level we all share so much in common that it's hard not to consider it a family like environment.

Everything was confirmed for me last night with but one glance towards our waitresses. As we were sprinting in circles around each other playing duck-duck-goose they could do nothing but stand back and laugh...even after we inadvertently knocked, what appeared to be a rather expensive piece of art work, off of the wall.

We were acting like kids. All of us. Together. From the second our evening commenced, with our crazy carpet adventures, till the moment most passed out from over indulgence, a continual laughter filled the air. Good times like those can not be faked, and laughter that comes from within is what keeps us young.

It's a pretty cool thing to love going to work everyday. To be in an environment where you know you share so much in common with those around you. Of course like anything else in life there are ups and downs, pros and cons, ebbs and flows...but in the end, I just feel very fortunate to be a small part of...dare I say it...The NSA Family!

GR

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Funny Fridays, Stand Up Routine

I'll start by saying that I'm none too happy with my inability to take my numerous blog posting ideas/topics and bring them to fruition. I just haven't had the time to sit on here and make that happen as much lately. I really want to get back to blogging more but maybe this intermittent break is a bit of a good thing. It's been three full years since I started this thing and I've managed to stay pretty consistent throughout. Hopefully I'll find that bit of writing fire that's been burning on low as of late. Anyways, at least to keep up on the Funny Fridays side of things for now...Comedian Demetri Martin,



GR

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Funny Fridays, Ode To My B.Day Pup

YES, I love my dog and I'm going to be 'that dog owner' who gushes about their pet! Roxy just turned 4 on Tues Dec 1st, though I was busy/working that day so I didn't tell her it was her B.Day till Wed Dec 2nd, when I was off for the day and I could treat her properly.

We headed out for a beautiful trail run on a spectacular December day and then followed it up with a $10 dog bone treat, amongst other treats as well of course. She was then pampered like a good woman should be on their 4th / 28th birthday, how does that dog year conversion work again?

Anyways, these are two short vids from when Roxy was just 1yr old, first she was trying to figure out what was attached to her ass, and second my then girlfriend was teaching her some pretty cool tricks...I always meant to follow through on training her to grab beer cans but somehow we just ended up running trails together instead! I've also attached my favorite five shots that were easily accessible in a thirty second search.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ROXY!! You've enriched my life more than I ever dreamed an animal could do, and the fact that you make me laugh out loud at least once a day is a testament to that. You're the best!




(I can't believe how small she is in this vid!)







GR

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Back To 'The Rock'!


The weekend following Mountain Masochist in Virginia, Tamsin and I heading back to Newfoundland to attend the wedding of my best bud from High School. I hadn't been home in just over two years, since my other best bud from H.S. got married, so it was long overdue!

Flying to 'The Rock' in November is to roll the dice on the weather you could face. My B.Day was on the 19th, a few days after departing Nfld and returning to North Van, yet I recall numerous times growing up where we saw whiteout snow storms on my birthday. Somehow Mother Nature sided with us though and we had virtually nothing but sunshine for the entire trip...which was all of 72hr long! Yeah, I didn't even realize it when I booked the flights, but out total ground time in Nfld was almost exactly 72hr...so we hit the ground running...


In three days of being home, from mid-day on Friday till mid-day on Monday we managed 2x trail runs, one short scenic run of only 5km and one longer coastal run of 15km. There is a trail in Nfld that follows the coastline for over 200km, aptly named The East Coast Trail...and I have aspirations of heading out there again in the not so distant future to run it in its entirety. To my knowledge only Ray Zahab has accomplished this so far, so unfortunately the 'first baggers rights' have already been claimed! On my last visit home in 2007 I also ran a 25km section of the trail and it's incredibly beautiful and rugged. It would be a dream to conquer it one day.

The Wedding was great and we stayed well into the wee hours of the morning yet somehow managing to rise early enough to run the following day. We also managed to hit up the waterslides at the local pool with my niece, visit/Tamsin meet the Grandparents, and to cap it all off I had absolutely no idea that The Olympic Flame was passing through my hometown while we were there! Just six hours after landing, my beautiful Niece Kayla, my beautiful girlfriend Tamsin, and my own beautiful self (sounded like it might fit), were freezing our assess off in a bitter east coast wind while celebrating the spirit of The Games.


My family also managed to genuinely surprise me with a delicious Gluten Free b.day cake, of which my Mother has become a master GF chef since being diagnosed herself. And to cap it all off I got to check out my bro's new business, of which he's doing incredibly well at custom car rims/stereos/starters/alarms.

Could not have asked for a better weekend, just a few more hours/days at home...hopefully next time, while running 200+km of course!!

Here's the slideshow of the best pics from the trip (lots of trail pics), only thing we forgot in all the rush was to get a full family shot!

Oh yeah, and shortly after Trans Rockies I e-mailed the local St. John's paper to inform them of the fact that there were four of us Newfoundlanders competing down in Colorado. Topped off with the fact that half of the 'open mixed' final podium (3 of 6) were from a province with less of a population base than the average large city, at just over 500,000. I wrote an article about our collective accomplishments, of which the editor followed up on by calling me for a phone interview. Ironically enough the article finally ran while I happened to be home! It ended up being more about myself than the four as I initially intended (sorry guys), but either way I was shocked and amazingly appreciative over a full page spread! Article Here



GR

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Funny Fridays

Since my Dad forwarded me this one I'll take it as his subtle hint that he didn't quite agree with last weeks posting! This is pretty damn good...



GR

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My Mastercard Moment

Forgot to mention this about my recent trip back home to Newfoundland.

-Montrail Mountain Masochist Trail Running Shoes $120

-Mountain Hardwear Transition Jacket $170

-Injinji Trail Running Socks $22

-2XU Compression Running Tights $125

-Seeing the look upon my Mother's face with her first born son standing in front of her in full fledged spandex tights...PRICELESS!!!

("Where did I go wrong with you?")

GR

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