Prerace
By choosing to run the 25k, I was able to sleep in a bit. The race didn't start until 9am. The 50k started at 8am. Hindsight, I think the race could have been pushed ahead by an hour, both of them. But, I took full advantage of the extra hour and stayed out a littler later than usual for me for a prerace night. We had dinner at my in-laws Friday night for my brother-in-law and his boyfriend's birthday. I also had a few beers with the family, since, after all, this is Wisconsin! I got to bed around 10pm and then woke up around 6am. I had a few cups of coffee and was on the road around 7:15ish. After getting to the State Park, I picked up my bib and also found out that I won a raffle prize of an Ultimate Direction Buff. I got my race bib and hung out in my truck for a few minutes. I then got my warm up in, which was 2 miles. I saw a family of deer in the park, which was really cool. I saw a couple adult deer and two fawns. After warming up, I went and hung out near the start line until the race started.Nutrition Plan
This race was a waste-free race. So there were no paper/plastic cups, no wrappers, no nothing. I thought this was a great idea, considering how much waste there is at each individual aid station of any race with typical race cups. With this in mind, I brought my handheld water bottle filled with a serving of Heed (100 calories). I also brought a Hammer Gel, but ended up never taking it. I also had my usual dosage of Anit-Fatigue Caps and Hammer Endurance Caps.Miles 0-5.5
The first 4 or so miles were the toughest miles I think I have ever raced. I have run a ton of miles in High Cliff State Park. But I have never run on many of the trails that the first 4-6 miles ran on. Many of the first few miles were all on single track. On top of being single track trails, much of it was over grown with brush. Along with the over grown single track trails, there was the climbing. And when I say climbing, I mean literally climbing. There was a couple of sections of the trail where you had to use your hands and climb up a hill. I am not complaining at all either, it was AWESOME. It was so much fun. It was hard. Not only was it physically challenging, it was mentally challenging. You had to try your hardest to get up and down the cliff edges, but you had to try your damnedest not to fall and break a leg. I honestly think I went out too hard in the climbing and took everything out of my legs. But, whatever, I had a great time!Miles 5.5-15.5
Post Race
What's on Tap
I have just six and a half more training weeks until the Fox Cities Marathon. Ever since the Oshkosh Marathon I have set my eyes on a PR at the Fox Cities. But not just a PR, but a sub 3 hour PR. This summer, I have been following the Hanson's Marathon Method Training Plan. I bought and read the entire book and am now following the advanced training plan. On top of following the advanced plan, I have been adding two miles to every non SOS (Something Of Substance) training run. So for the past few months, I have been averaging roughly 60 miles per week with one rest day. I won't dive into the meat and potatoes of the training plan and how it's been going, as I will save all that for my race report for that race. But let me say that this has been something totally new for me and it has also been a very tough training schedule for me. So at this point, I just need to keep my nose to the grind stone and keep pressing forward until September 23rd!As always, thanks for reading and Cheers!
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