Saturday, 19 June 2021

There Is Good In Cowboy Poetry: My 2021 Idaho-Montana Trail Rail 50 Mile Race Report

 

I’m not a Hegelian, but his Dialectic has been on my mind this trip. Thesis-Antithesis-Synthesis.  The primatologist Robert Sapolsky observes that humans are creatures that at once have the greatest capacity for both kindness and violence.  He’s right, I think. Humans can be cruel, vindictive, and petty pricks.  They can also be citadels of altruism, kindness, and empathy.  What a sludgy dichotomy. What an interesting dialogue between those two poles.  

Sapolsky is a hardline determinist, firmly anchored in the “Free Will Does Not Exist” camp.  Behavior for Sapolsky is driven by a mélange of genetic predisposition, hormones, self-preservation, sub-atomic particles bouncing off of one another,  and evolutionarily programmed imperatives.  Free will as we think of it is an illusion - a necessary one, and a fantasm which,  if not accepted in our daily lives, would result in most of us being sucked into a dark vortex of futility, frustration, and despair. That would be less fun than listening to Björk's Biophilia on repeat.  I join Sapolsky in his view that there is no free will, and I see the psychological and metaphysical hazards of that whirlpool. Yet I do, somehow (probably because I am fairly adept at putting things in boxes), believe we have agency - volition - and that intentions matter both to define our objectives for moral behavior and to impel action. Volition, as delusional as it may be, is a necessary conceit. 

So, given all of that, it seems I ran a long race in Idaho & Montana on June 12, resolved dichotomous feelings of wild rage and centered calm during the thing, and pretended I made choices which resulted in a successful result.  So, please read on and understand that everything that I experienced and observed was pre-ordained by Physics, Evolution, and Genetics. It could only have been what it was.

I came across the Montana Trail-Rail Run in late 2019.  Fifty miles, a distance I like, running straight through the Rockies, two states, two time zones, one way, no out and backs, reasonable vert because it is an old valley-set railroad bed converted to a trail, and on what seemed would be a forgiving and predictable gravel surface. So, I registered right away for the 2020 race.  The Plague happened and I didn’t race, but Tyler, the kind RD, allowed me to defer it to this year.

The logistics should have been easy.  Fly into Missoula, rent a car, stay at an AirBnB, see the sights, hob nob with the locals, run my race, and fly back to the Green Mountains.  But events conspired against me. It seems that COVID had a massive impact on rental car availability across the country.  People weren’t traveling, demand plummeted, and rental car companies had to sell off their inventories to staunch the bleeding.  Now they are struggling to replenish their stock.  Bottom line is that there was neither a rental to be found at the Missoula airport nor in the city itself.  Nothing.  So, I had to shift gears. I looked at the region and checked car availability in Helena, Bozeman, Great Falls, and Spokane.  Spokane was the only place with vehicles, so I booked the flight.  Now the plan was to fly into Spokane, stay the night, drive the three hours down to Missoula, race my race, hang out in town, drive back to Spokane for another night, and fly home.  That’s what I did and I’m glad.  I got a chance to enjoy two different cities, each with its own unique funky vibe.

Spokane is an interesting little city.  Like so many places which have struggled with the manufacturing-to-service economy transition, Spokane is a little rough around the edges.  But blasted industrial areas are slowly being converted to mid-range housing, galleries, coffee houses, brewpubs, little bakeries, boutique restaurants, and eclectic shops.  I walked over the river on Thursday upon my arrival and enjoyed some top end sushi.  I tried a salmon and tempura shrimp roll wrapped in thinly shaved Kobe beef.  Delicate and delicious, and accompanied by a cold local IPA (though tbh Vermont has absolutely superior IPAs), it hit the spot after a long travel day.  After, I headed back to my lodging, the Montvale Hotel, a cool smallish place done up in the art deco style and featuring a bar, the Gilded Unicorn, which served up a wonderful Old Fashioned festooned with a thick brulee-ed orange slice and Luxardo cherry. So good. I enjoyed one as I began taking notes on the trip. The hostess seemed to like me.  But maybe she was flirting because she wanted to keep me there to spend money. I hear that happens. Yeah, it was probably that.

Next day, Friday, after a coffee and a nice shakeout jog on the Centennial Trail, I headed down to Missoula.  I was to race tomorrow, so I wanted to get settled in, hydrate, get some calories in me, and transition into that special mental space. It is a truism, but as one might imagine, running long distances like this is as much a mental game as it is a physical one.

But first the trip down, which was uneventful as trips go, in terms of weather and traffic.  But the rental car I ended up getting is worth noting.  I was interested in it because it had so many bells and whistles to the point it was disconcerting and, to my mind an existential threat to humanity. It was a 2022 Subaru Outback, and it had a system called “EyeSight® Driver Assist Technology.”  This is what the description says:  

“Eyesight® monitors traffic movement, optimizes cruise control, and warns you when youre swaying outside your lane. The Automatic Pre-Collision Braking feature can apply full braking force and bring you to a complete stop in emergency situations. Advanced Adaptive Cruise Control with Lane Centering can take some of the stress out of driving by helping with steering, braking, and throttle control – both in daily traffic and on long road trips.”  

What that means in real life is that it is an autonomous AI robot - prepared, with its nation of brilliant and intuitive four-wheeled co-conspirators, to conquer the world and likely destroy it. 

I got on I90 heading south to Missoula, turned on cruise control, and was ready to settle in for the three-hour drive.  I noticed that when a car came up on either the left or right to pass, there would be a light on the outside mirror which would shine.  OK, helpful.  Then, as I relaxed a bit and the car moved slightly laterally, I would get a flashed “Lane Departure” warning and audible alert. Fair, I suppose. Then I noticed if I looked at a beautiful vista along the way and lingered there for a microsecond too long, I would get another flashing and audible warning saying, “Keep Your Eyes on the Road!”  It knew.  How did it know?  What else did it know? Who else was it telling?  It was very scoldy and I told it so.  Then I pressed a button with a steering wheel icon on it.  I noticed that it caused me to exert a bit more force on the wheel to control the vehicle.  What was this about? Well, it turns out it was keeping within the lanes all by itself.  It didn’t need me.  It had a speed to maintain, a lane to stay in, a distance to maintain between it and other cars, and so it did.  I was just along for the ride.  Odds Bodkins!  So, I put my hands in my lap, feet off the pedals and just sat there like a passenger.  But within 5 seconds I get the damnable audible flashing alert, saying, “Keep Both Hands On The Wheel, Idiot!”. “Idiot” was inferred by context. I couldn’t win.  You can’t either.  We are all doomed.

I arrived at my AirBnB in Missoula, which was enchanting and well-appointed.  All unpacked, and race kit set out for the morning, I went out for a stroll to find some food and ended up at the Tamarack Brewing Company, enjoying a mediocre local IPA and some decent wings and fries.  This was followed by an enormous custard cookie and an early to bed because I had to be back up in St Regis, an hour away, to get on a 5am shuttle to the start.  That meant a 3am wake-up. I didn’t sleep great, but I felt decently rested, somewhat adrenalized, and ready to race when I got up.  Coffee?  Check.  Greasy microwaved breakfast sandwich from grimy 24/7 convenience store across the street?  Check. 

I was on my way.  I arrived in St. Regis on time, parked, hopped on the shuttle and we took off for the Start in Mullan, ID.  I was quiet, pensive, and in Zen mode for the trip up.  It was supposed to take about 45 minutes for a 5am start in Idaho time (we lost an hour when crossing west over the MT/ID border, and gained it, of course, racing back east).  Our bus driver found the right exit, but could not seem to find the starting area, so that took an extra 20 min, and consequently the gun went off later than anticipated.  All good though.  Conditions were perfect.  Temps in the low 50s, light sprinkle, no humidity, and no Sasquatches in view. We could not see them, but they could see us.

My race kit entailed:  Patagootch Shorts, Moosalamoo tech shirt, socks, Hoka Challenger 5 shoes,  Leukotape on the nips and a blister prone toe, Body Glide in chafe areas, light poly gloves, buff on the skull,  20 oz handheld with 2 packs of Tailwind in the pocket, elastic Nathan running belt containing my phone, travel specs, earbuds,  1 x Sport Beans, 2 x Gu, 1 x Cliffshot gels, baggie with bandaids, Vitamin I, electrolyte tablets, and my laminated race plan.  I was keeping it light and lean.  Basic fuel plan was to start taking in 200-250 cals per hour starting at the 15 mile mark, and drink at least 20 oz of fluid every hour, checking pee color and if things went well avoiding the brown porter hue.

There was the expected electric excitement at the Start.  There were new 50-milers, their collective nervousness palpable, wily old vets, and talented younger runners.  So many ages, shapes, sizes, attitudes, talent - so diverse and one of my favorite things about this zany sport.  Thirty second warning, countdown, the gun goes off and the game was afoot.  My race plan had me starting slowly for the first 8 miles which was a sustained but manageable climb and got us to the highest elevation of the race, about 5000’, a ski area.  I felt good, and the running was easy on what at the time were resilient dirt paths punctuated with mud puddles to avoid.  I was at an 8:25 pace and having to reign myself back.  But I was good and just went with it.  That pace placed me in a group of 5 guys which soon became the lead pack.  There were two guys that took off screamingly fast at the start, but it turns out they were doing an 8 mile relay leg. I decided to stay with the group at this mid-8 pace for a while, and assess things.

At the 8 mile aid station, I filled up with water and took off.  The others ate a bit and took their time, so I led the race for a mile or so until the gang of four caught up with me.  I’m feeling good through the 14 mile aid station, and still in the lead pack of 5, which was oscillating such that we were together and then apart, and so on.  Back and forth like a pulsar.  I’m feeling spry, fit, and well in control of my pace and body.  I consciously slowed my pace staying behind the other 4 guys, at this point to conserve energy. At mile 19 there was a beautiful excursion over an old railroad trestle bridge and through an ancient tunnel.  So dark and eerie, and evocative of the 19th century, a time in the Old West I have romanticized.  Anyway, the lead runner had taken off and was well ahead.  Then there were two young guys hanging together at #2 and #3, and #4 was a quarter mile ahead of me.  I had been running and chatting with all these guys so I sort of suspected what would play out toward endgame. I’m no willowy sprite or anything (more like a stout ogre, perhaps) but two of the guys ahead of me were bigger men and I really didn’t see them being able to sustain the pace, and I knew that one of them, Andrew, a high school history teacher from Hot Springs, had never gone beyond a 50K and due to his job, hadn’t done much more than 40 miles in weekly volume leading up to this.  He’d be feeling it. Great guy and we spent a good amount of time together.  He’d turn out to be the 1st Montanan to finish.

At mile 25 I was still feeling fantastic.  I was fueled, avoiding glycogen depletion, and well hydrated. No issues there.  I was experiencing some discomfort in the joints and muscles but overall running very strong. I looked at my watch and saw that I could possibly be at a sub 5 hr 50K pace.  I was comfortable and so kept on going at that pace, still at #5.  I ran strong through 50K, and I think I was at about a 4:50.  But it could have been slower because I realized after the fact that my watch was recording moving time, vice race time, so it wasn’t including my various aid station stops, etc. User error.  Regardless, still feeling great going into the post 50K piece.  Miles 32-35 were a different story and marked a transition from the happy place where I was, to the shambling pain cave where I would soon exist for the final 15 miles. I knew misery would be coming because I was running a quick pace but was hoping to stave off the awfulness until mile 40.  Not to be. I overtook the lead runner, Darin, an EMT, at mile 32 at an aid station because he blew out a hamstring; but with a lot of guts and heart, run-walked to the finish.  I then overtook Andrew who had been at #4. He was just wearing out. I later found out that Andrew, about 6’2” had played nose tackle in college and weighed in at about 100 pounds heavier than he was this day.  Hell of an athlete.  So that put me in third.  I saw glimpses of #1 and #2 about a half mile up the trail at around mile 34 or so, but then I lost contact, never seeing them again.  I felt myself slowing- the temps were increasing, my feet were getting sore from stepping on a lot of stones, my quads were starting to ache, and my back (prone to injury) was stiffening.  None of this is abnormal for me, mind you, just a bit too early for my liking. 

At mile 35 I stopped to empty my shoes of stones which had been in there for a while.  My quads were sore and stiff, and I was protecting my back, so it took a long time to get that done, and when I started up again it hurt so I walked a bit to ease into it.  It was a slothy mile split. But I could still run and so I did.  Just more slowly. The last 15 miles were tough.  I tried to keep it consistent, walked a few hundred-yard stretches, but maintained constant forward motion, overly excited by each mile marker.  The wheels were not destined to fully come off this day.  

I had conspired with my friend and training pal Dylan (she’s running Western this year -Hell Yes!)  back home about music and what would work and when so she helped me develop a playlist.  I worked a lot of that plan (through only one damned ear bud for some reason-frustrating!), having just finished out a leg of peppy honky-tonk.  That was great but for this last part I found that mellow is what I needed, so I played some Gregorian chants and Italian madrigals.  That was a soothing vibe and really helped.  My quads truly began to feel the Love (=Pain) at mile 40.  I had horrible visions of my 2019 Lean Horse 100 debacle where these quads gave up the ghost at 45 miles and I ended up “speed” walking 55 miles to finish. 

To this day, my quads blowing up at Lean Horse had been a mystery but now I think I may have an explanation.  I believe it may have to do with racing on a consistently runnable course.  Lean Horse was an old railbed as well. I was running the whole way.  Same with this one.  I was running the whole way, but even faster.  Typically, in ultras there are sections of steep vert that we walk/hike, and then when on single track, one’s pace normally is slower. It allows the legs to rest a bit. That doesn’t happen on railbed races like this.  Maybe that’s the answer. Next time I do a rail bed race, I will fold long tempos into my training plan.  I didn't do enough of those.   

Another bizarre physical thing happened for those last miles, and it was similar to what happened to me in the 2019 MST 50K. As I got more and more physically spent, I tended to lean and wandered over to the right of the trail, but had no idea why. I just found myself there.  It was kind of comical.  I felt fine, not vertiginous, not ill, just tired, sore and vaguely constantly unbalanced.  I’d be running and then notice that tree branches were hitting me in the face.  This was because I was on the right edge of the trail.  I’d make corrections, get over to the left or center, and next thing you know I’m back on the right getting jackslapped by trees again.  This happened continuously for the last 15 miles. If my heart were on the right side of my body that would explain it, as it has been heavy at times recently and could have thrown off my center of gravity. At mile 49, smelling the barn, we transitioned from trail to pavement, and then from pavement to field, and then from field to the woods and into the chute and Finish line.  The race was over.  I had a great day, finishing in 7:46, which was good for 3rd overall and an age group win.  I cannot complain with any of that.  I was happy, knackered, and ready for a beer…

…which I had, washing down some good barbecue and salty, oily potato chips.  I love this part of the race because it is time to relax, let down, and share pain and stories with all your fellow racers.  I found the winner and the second place guy to congratulate them and ended up sitting down with them and cheering the other racers coming in, and there were many because not only was there our 50 miler, but there was a 50K, 25K, 15K, and a 50 mile relay.  Good times.  

The winner of the race was Kevin Dempsey, 30 yo, who came in at a blazing 7:08.  Super sweet guy, fantastic runner.  Originally from Mansfield MA, and now a professional guitarist in Nashville.  Kevin ran a smart, consistent race and really kicked it in for the last 15 miles.  The second place finisher, Ryan Robbins, 29 yo, finished six minutes ahead of me and had a ton of heart.  Ryan has a great  story which is personal and is his to tell, but the long and short of it is that one day he woke up and, in a dead-end job, the father of a young boy, and feeling like he was going nowhere, he decided he needed to do something… to be someone to make his son proud.  So, he ran 3 miles that day.  Then he ran more the next day, and more, and more.  Running changed his life.  Now he runs ultras and owns his own thriving and successful business in the greater Spokane area. His pride is palpable, and it ought to be.  The first female in was Amanda Bradley, 26 yo, from Birmingham, AL.  She was a riot.  I found her after she finished and said, “Hey, nice run!  You killed it!  How’re you feeling?” Seemingly exasperated with me and my question she answered, “ThanksIhateditandI’llneverdothisagain.”  I replied, “But you know you will, though.”  She sighed, “I know.”

This was a good race.  I’d definitely do it again. It would be a good first 50 miler.  But there are a few specific thoughts that I think are worth mentioning:

·   The race instructions need to be tighter.  There were time and location changes re packet pick-up and bus departure which were not well-communicated to the racers.

·   Volunteers were fantastic and really supportive.  It would be nice to give them cheat sheets on all aid station locations so they can tell racers how far up the course the next one is.

·   Water is best given to racers from a large pitcher, not the low volume spigot of the big plastic Gatorade vat. Also, please label the vats with Water or Hammer (etc).

·   When mixing energy drink in the vats, make it full strength so runners know they are getting 200 cals in a 20 oz hit

·   The trail is very runnable but is not crushed gravel.  It is dirt, stone, and puddle, so even though you can maintain a good pace there is a lot of dodging and avoiding things.  And running on marble to golfball size rocks after that many miles can certainly take its toll on the feet.

·   This trail is basically adjacent to the I90 right of way, so while the interstate and its noise is not always present it is there a lot.  But it makes total sense that this is where the railroad tracks would be, down low in the valleys. 

·   Being so close to the highway precluded seeing major wildlife or cryptids, but I did see a few deer, and several hundred thousand chipmunks.

·   The BBQ and festival at the Finish was fantastic.  The food was hot and delicious, the beer free and cold, the applause loud, the cowbells louder, and the comradery palpable. The award was not a medal, but a railroad spike with a finishers label on it.  Super award, but caused me to really unleash my charm with TSA at the airport.  They ultimately let me take it on the plane.


After a while I shambled slothlike over to my evil robot car, got in, and it took me back to Missoula where I showered stiffly and clumsily and proceeded to prepare myself to seek out protein and lots of it.  But first there was a certain matter of having a drink at a musty and dingy dive bar I’d espied the night before, The Missoula Club. Lots of Stetsons.  I went in and had a couple of boilermakers, listened, and engaged in conversation.  In my physically traumatized redneck reverie I thought again about the Dialectic.  You’ve all heard of it.  Thesis encounters Antithesis, and Synthesis is birthed. It was all Hegel, and Marx borrowed the concept to explain economic history.  Encounter, interact, and out comes some nuanced combination of the original things.  It is ideally a progressive dynamic. 

Some of the best philosophy comes from dialogue:  Socrates, Goethe, Hume, Shakespeare, etc.  It is also a model for how society and government could (should) work. But somehow it does not nowadays. We have two fatally flawed and dangerous fringe camps bookending, and because of their incessant noisemaking, dominating, the political space and the news cycle. Personally, I think it is a pretty wonderful thing that I can sit in a Red State dive bar, nurse a longneck, do a shot, listen to country on the juke, and have a reasonable and rational conversation around UBI, single payer health care, individual choice and personal responsibility, small vs big government, Keynes vs the Austrians, the strengths and flaws of market capitalism, and whether a unitarian or identitarian approach to political change is best. I can also do that in Vermont, my home, though George Jones on the jukebox would be harder to find.  Carve off, isolate and muzzle the fringes, and we’d be in a better place to get real work done. Pollyanna?  Yeah, I know.  Sad. So, by this time, dizzy with hunger, I ambled over to the 1889 Steakhouse where I absolutely devoured 12 oz of Ribeye.  It was wonderful and I could have eaten a second. 

Oh, speaking of pontification, I must mention here that my friend Matt and I had hatched a plan to run this race together, but he got injured and then the government in its wisdom (truly) moved him to Germany.  Still, he is a phenomenal writer and an insightful and inspired thinker. He publishes his stuff here at Wiser, Braver, More Optimistic.  Note the stylish scarf - such the Euro-intellectual.  Please read him. Matt, I wish we could have spent some time together on the path and sorted all of the things we often bat around.

The race was the apogee of the trip of course, but the days after are worth a quick review.  Here are some highlights:

·   I walked (very very slowly) to breakfast at Ruby’s on Sunday morning, where I passed some exquisite Arts & Crafts homes.

·   I saw Christian Bale’s doppelganger at Ruby’s and am still not sure it wasn’t him

·   The food intake of the day after included (for maximum systemic insult): 12 oz chicken fried steak, hash browns, rye toast, 3 eggs over medium, a massive maple donut from Veera, Szechuan beef, chicken teriyaki, fried dumplings, coconut fried shrimp, and a mint chocolate DQ Blizzard. A man hungers after a long race.

·   I visited an actual and absolutely cool AF Montana Ghost Town called Garnet, like you read about.  Again with my 19th century Old West fetishization.  Why? (Aside:  People nowadays can’t hold a candle to the toughness of those miners and their wives.  The women ran the town. The men toiled in the gulches.  Gulches.  They are a thing out there).

·   Had a nice trail run up Mt Sentinel via Crazy Canyon on Monday. Met some hiking ladies and their daughters up top and took their pics. My legs hurt quite a lot.

 

And then it was over.  Another race trip in the bank.  On my drive back up to Spokane I stopped in Couer d’Alene and had lunch with my friend Laura for a few hours at the Cosmic Cowboy.  Great chat and catch up. From there after another morning shakeout run in Spokane it was travel back to Vermont, which was largely uneventful with the exception of serendipitously meeting my friend Sylvie at ORD, sharing the flight back to BTV and giving her an Uber alternative home.  

Thanks for reading this far.  And thanks, too, for all the encouragement and support over the years. It means a lot and energizes me.

 

 

 

Sunday, 18 April 2021

The Viral Load: My 2021 Mountains-to-Sea (MST) 50K Race Report

 

I haven’t raced since the Shakori 40 in November of 2019. It felt great to get back out there and enjoy the thing again. The whole thing.  The anticipation, the visit with JJW, the getting limbs gnawed upon by his pit bull, the Purple culture, the witnessing of the grits, the competition, the finish, and the Moscow Mules as a refreshing reward. All of it.

Because physics. That is why. Time dilation. The faster we travel, the slower we age.  It is the Twin Paradox.  Two twins are together on Earth.  One twin travels on a spaceship at 80% the speed of light to a star system 4 light years away.  To the twin on earth, it appears that the sibling takes 10 years for his journey.  But when the traveler gets back, he is only 6 years older.  One brother is 10 years older, and the other is 6 years older.  Let that sit for a dilated second.  Not magic.  Science. Surreal.  And very real. 

It is mind-blowing, brain-bending, awe-inspiring, and the bald fact that our species can conclude such a thing deserves far more attention than it receives, and there are so many more spectacular things, too!  Yet we continue to fiddle with annoying little hobby shop causes in these inane days, losing the forest for the trees. This is what I was thinking about during my trip.  This in-your-face, hilt-deep, science which leads to bizarre, counterintuitive, Dali-esque, yet delightfully unassailable conclusions. It is predicated upon reason, experiment, validation, repetition, and increasing certainty.  And humans did this. Damned remarkable.

And it is not just time dilation, of course.  It is everything. It is Epistemology: what can be known, what counts for knowledge, and how we make such claims as individuals and as organized human units. Sadly, we seem to have lost our critical thinking capacity in most sectors of society.   This issue, and the contemplation of the perfect Dan Dan Noodle recipe occupied my mind during the race,  when I wasn’t listening to the wailing leather-clad bequeenery of Rob Halford glamming it up.

And speaking of time dilation, The Plague Year certainly progressed at a pace more accelerated than the heartbeat of a frightened Etruscan Shrew.  I started dealing with COVID-related matters at work in January '20 and that led to immediate inundation and immersion in the crisis as the bug lowered its protein-crowned head and charged. Time flew however it does. And now, 15 months later, here I sit, typing.  What happened in that transition zone between then and now?  Well, a few insights emerged, not all equally significant and none directly related to the race:

·         COVID-19 is bad. Granted.  It has killed 3 million people globally with many more sickened.  But, I hope we have learned from it because this isn’t nearly as horrible as it could have been. And it almost certainly will be worse when the next one hits.  The 1919 Spanish (more accurately, “Kansas”) Flu killed 50 million worldwide. The Black Plague of the Middle Ages killed possibly 175 million.  We will prevail over COVID, but this was a practice session. Stand by for heavy rolls.

·         Capitalism is fraught, but it works. The speed at which private industry produced the vaccines for COVID was remarkable and unprecedented.  It begs the question as to why the vax development cycle had been as slow and sclerotic as it had always been portrayed to be by public health officials. I’d like to think that a forthright and purely altruistic ethical position drove such innovation and production, but it didn’t.  It was money.  Profit motivates. Gordon Gekko was right. But, I do wonder about what other technological breakthroughs could be realized and efficiencies uncloaked around fusion power, energy storage, aquaculture, bioengineering, tidal power generation, ethical AI, robotics, cyberdefense, and such, if we put our minds to it. I would hope it will not always take a crisis to impel us out of the innovation doldrums.

·         “Distributed Work” will become the neo-normal.  “Remote work” will go the way of the dodo because there will no longer be a “place” of work for many knowledge workers, but there will be a network of workers. The decentralized network became the "place" over the past year and it worked just fine. I love my home office gig, and look forward to continuing this kind of work at some level in the future.  Not an original idea, btw, I learned it from Matt Mullenweg. Know him. And he is spot on.

·         I’m pretty unWoke and cynical, but oh so lovable.   I live politically between two poles: the dangerous, violent, xenophobic, toxic, anarchic, and thick-browed troglodyte fringe to the Right, and the naïve, intellectually bankrupt, reductionist, strident, authoritarian, “progressive” elect to the Left – the Diaconate of the new Church. But despite this clash of the terminally enfeebled, which at once amuses and petrifies me, I do appreciate the baroque commentary and exposure to diverse opinions however festooned with their many-hued ribbons of batshittery. If we could channel that seething bolus of heterodox ideas toward a more meaningful and practical enterprise, and away from dimwitted, emotion-laden performative scoldcraft, then that would be a good thing for our society.

·         Divorce sucks.  My marriage officially ended in October of this Plague Year. Nothing I ever expected, wanted, or intended, but there it is. Still recovering from that heart-pain and wishing the best for everyone involved. Hope springs eternal though it seems like it springs infernal more often than not.  An upside is that I am really enjoying having grownup independent relationships with my three boys.  All these guys are in the process of becoming and are a sight to see as they continue upon their collective and individual journeys. I love to spend time with them.  But, for the love of God, why do they continue trying to get me to like hip-hop?  Other than the Sugarhill Gang, I mean - they are clear masters of the craft.

·         Bodies are fascinating and responsive.  Inspired by David Sinclair’s book, Lifespan, I conducted an experiment for 3 months where I used InsideTracker, a private laboratory and analysis company, to analyze 46 blood markers before and after I initiated a significant lifestyle change program. The results were notable. What I did was:  switched to a pescatarian diet, broke fast with a probiotic yogurt, took resveratrol, ashwagandha, and NMN supplements, practiced time-restricted eating (only between 2pm and 6pm), dialed back my weekly running volume to around 50 mi vice my norm of 60-65 mi, exercised upper body and core, practiced daily mindfulness meditation, stayed well-hydrated, and  spent more time reading than watching things.  Bottom line is that it lowered my weight, lowered LDL, increased Vitamin D, increased T, lowered C-reactive protein, increased Vitamin B12, mitigated tendon and ligament pain from inflammation, and gave me something interesting to talk about with my friends. It also helped my running.

·         Bidets have potential. I’ve never been a bidet enthusiast, but Ward had one at the Snake Farm, a gift from his brother.  He got it early on in COVID as a way to mitigate against the toilet paper shortage. I tried it and it was disconcerting;  yet I see the appeal.  There were sounds, there was movement, there was water, there were pressure and temperature gradients, there was a control panel with colored lights and icons. There was sensation.   I smile secretly to myself when thinking of the initial research, planning, and engineering that went into the design.  Questions were asked. Plans were drawn. Decisions were made.  Bemused heads were shaken in shock as career choices were questioned. Take that, e. coli.

It was so refreshingly normal to fly again. In fact it was the first time I had flown anywhere since Shakori in November 2019.   Other than the obligatory mask-wearing (I’m a neck gaiter guy but had a regular institutional blue medical style mask for when I would get chastised by airline staff), travel seemed like it always had: early wakeup, drowsy drive,  tepid airport coffee, $17 chocolate bars in the market, lines to endure, struggling to not laugh at the caricatured seriousness of the TSA overseers, and assiduously avoiding conversation with adjacent seatmates.

Jonathan picked me up at RDU around noon on Thursday.  He opted to drive the RAV4 his Mom, Joan, gifted him rather than the usual large, white, menacing panel van which could as easily be used to haul drywall as house gagged captives. Greeting me in the van, along with JJW, was Pogo, Jonathan’s newest canine companion after Tugboat, his zestful, friendly, and sturdy Cane Corso succumbed to brain cancer on New Year’s Eve just a few months ago.  Pogo is a loathsome cur. But, we became friends soon after he lacerated my arms with his talons.  




I enjoyed the company of young Pogo, but also really missed Tugger.  I took a walk out to the back field to his burial place to pay tribute where he lies in peace adjacent to the cairn-topped tomb of Oliver the Airedale. Fare thee well, sweet Tugboat.

Jonathan seems to be doing well.  A writer, mechanic, engineer, luthier, musician, philosopher, heavy equipment operator, and boss-level curmudgeon, Ward keeps moving inexorably forward.  He encounters information, gives it due consideration, and typically dismisses it as nonsense, all in the service of wanting to be left alone and unfettered.  I think a bunker and MREs may be in the offing for him. He has what he describes as “an unpleasant personality.”  This is a true statement. But indeed, a truer friend I could not find.  We’ve been pals for 39 years now.

Food featured in the visit as it always does. Thursday, the day I arrived, we headed up to Saxapahaw and enjoyed a heavy lunch and libations at the Eddy Pub, sitting outdoors on a warm Carolina afternoon enjoying views of the River Haw.  I ate a spicy lollipop chicken appetizer, an 8 oz Picanha steak, roast potatoes, and drank a couple of local ales. It reminded me of times back in mid-‘80s Columbia, SC,  when we would head to the local, and just stay there, the world depending upon our conversations on world problems and the solutions we derived.

Friday morning involved a drive into Pittsboro for breakfast at Verlie's where I felt compelled to abuse my body with sodium and nitrates delivered via a skillet full of potatoes, eggs, bacon, sausage, ham, and cheese.  Oh, so damned good. That evening was a basket of smoked wings, slightly sweet hushpuppies, and a ¼ rack of baby back ribs at the Blue Note Grill, where we also enjoyed some local bluegrass by a band called Morgan Creek.  I think the stand-up bass player was named “Orville.” I really want his name to be Orville. There are too few Orvilles in the world these days. 

Pre-race day Chinese buffet has become a tradition for my NC races with Ward, so we did that. Plates with heaps of sesame chicken, Sichuan shrimp, dumplings, and greens did not last long.  And since I was carbo (and protein, and salt, and fat, and MSG, and potassium…) loading, we finished off that day with a trip to Maple View Farm for what many consider to be the best ice cream in the state.  I opted for a couple of scoops of Toasted Almond and Butter Pecan.  So fresh it needed to be spanked. A food coma nap ensued.

There was also the feel-good normalcy of checking back with my Vermont people.  It was my ex, Carol’s, birthday so I called to wish her happy cake as she and the boys drove to a raptor rescue center for a nice day out together. A spike of melancholy hit and then I recovered.  I also learned some great news from my running group in Montpelier.  The indomitable Richarda E rocked through a quick Unplugged Half Marathon, overcoming some pace challenges along the way to prevail, and the fleet, fairy-footed Dylan B, who was accepted to run in the Western States 100 Mile Endurance Run (WSER), but hadn’t been able to decide whether she wanted to or not, opted to go for it. This is a really big deal and I am so psyched for her. Jim M inevitably overlayered as he trained hard and quipped wryly, and Nathan S, I’m sure, ran exuberantly and with the gratitude he so often exhibits blasting out of his big, beautiful, bleeding heart.  Bravas and bravos to all.

The race was a success on a few fronts: style, result, and lack of serious post-race body horror.  I was happy with it, as I decided to run a completely different race than I normally do. My typical M.O. is to do the research, set defined and realistic goals, establish pace targets, determine water and fueling strategy precisely, and execute with intensity and focus.  I threw all of that away in this race, just to see what would happen. Honestly, the aforementioned Dylan was an inspiration for this approach.  She is a supremely talented ultrarunner, especially at the longer distances, and she doesn’t do any deliberate planning to speak of, or at least that I know of.  She runs by feel, does what her body needs it to do, and sets no concrete goals. Excel spreadsheets are anathema to her.  She does well and is happy.  So, I thought I’d try it. I wore my watch but kept it on the mileage display and didn’t look once at average pace or mile splits, apart from checking in on pace at the 25K turnaround. (Note: I was running 9:36 average at the turn, but didn’t know if that was necessarily good or bad.) I didn’t do a comprehensive post-mortem on my 2019 race and set goals to beat it, though I believed I had the early season fitness to do a sub-5 hour run. I just decided to make it a pleasant morning run in the woods to culminate a welcome vacation spent with my friend.

Bull City Running puts on a great event.  Race communications were timely, clear, and comprehensive.  I knew what I had to do and when. No issues. We picked up my number and schwag on Friday.   Race day began with coffee and a stout breakfast sandwich at the Snake Farm and a 45 min drive to the venue.  I got there at 7:00 for a 7:30 start, stretched, milled about with others, easily identifying the vets and the noobs. No jitters.  In a 50K race with aid stations every 3 miles or so, all you need is a handheld and pocket belt, if that.  Those that had more tended to be new to the game.  I had a handheld, and my elastic belt with some Vitamin I and electrolyte pills, 1 x Gu, 1 x Stinger Waffle, 1 x pouch Sport Beans, and a packet of Tailwind.  I also had my headphones and iPhone on my waist. Pretty self-sufficient. 

The areas which could undercut my race were pretty clear in my mind:  humidity, heat, pollen, lack of trail training due to the stubborn Vermont winter, mud, and injury (falls and ankle sprains). But my training volume was good, weight was low(-ish), speedwork was effective, and confidence was at peak. I felt ready and happy to race again.

The gun went off at 7:30 on the dot, and I took off with the lead pack of 10 runners. There were 75 racers total.  This was a tactical move because I really didn’t want to start mid-pack and have to pick off a bunch of runners on pretty narrow single track as I worked my way up.  It was effective and I ended up running at  #7 after a few miles and there I stayed until near the end.  I got glimpses of #6, but lost contact with him after 8 miles. So, I was alone for nearly the entire race interacting only with the terrific aid station volunteers along the way.  They were an exuberant group and I am grateful for their service. I ran by gut at a pace which felt fast enough to be comfortable and safe.  Single track is definitely not my best surface and I get anxiety about bad falls and ankle sprains which I have experienced frequently in the past, and this was 30 miles of rugged bony undulating trail. 

I decided not to put music on for the outbound leg and ended up thinking a lot about Chinese food, but even more about my overall concern with the epidemic of misinformation and poor reasoning in society, and chagrin that I feel powerless to influence it in any meaningful way.  It seems we have regressed culturally into a tribe-centric epistemology where content, trust mechanisms, and activism exist within an algorithmically defined echo chamber thrumming at just the right frequency for the compromised denizen. This leads to lemming-like behavior politically, and blind obedience to one of the two prevailing orthodoxies. Once upon a time the middle ground seemed like a reasonable terrain to inhabit. Now it just feels like a barren, blasted Hellscape, missing the good loam required for proper and fertile public discourse. The corpulent God of Confirmation Bias is enjoying flagons of strong red wine and chuckling as he watches his work manifest.  But then I thought again about the Twin Paradox and marveled at the fact that human beings have the cognitive ability to reason their way to such astounding and powerful conclusions. And they are True!  Oh, the things we can know about the Cosmos.  But, we can’t seem to get our collective shit together as we interrogate fundamental societal challenges and determine the most prudent pathways to generate positive change. As if I know the answers. I don't.

Then I tripped and nearly impaled myself on a wooden bridge handrail.

The return leg presented challenges, but it was accompanied by a 70’s metal and 80’s hair band soundtrack so all was good.  I twisted my ankle after the turnaround, screamed at the Fates, then did it again, and again.  Three times in about 2 miles. I had a loud and unkind conversation with the ankle which could have been a real joy to watch if someone were around, and without context. I would have been deemed mad.  No individual twist was catastrophic, but the cumulative effect caused me to dial the pace back and awkwardly lighten the load on my left foot, which put a heavier pounding on my right leg/foot.  Then, at about mile 20, I felt my right calf start to cramp and seize, probably due to the excess work.  I stopped immediately, stretched the little bastard out and it helped.  I managed to use pace and stride dynamics to control that calf for the rest of the race, but it clearly slowed me down heading back to the finish.  I reflected a bit on the 2019 race and remembered that on the return leg I'd totally bonked at around mile 22 and essentially death-shuffled into the finish.  This was accompanied by an odd loss of balance where I was constantly leaning to the left as I ran, bumping into trees and almost falling over, for reasons not understood.  That didn’t happen this year.  No bonk, and no imbalance.  My splits were slower for this race, as I later discovered, but it was due to controlling for the injuries; overall I felt spry.

I ended up overtaking a couple of racers who had been ahead of me in the last 6 miles.  One guy had fallen and he was just getting his senses back when I passed, but was okay. Another guy simply smashed into the Wall at speed, and needed to sit down for a while, drink some water, and regroup.  I finished strong, coming in 5th overall and got the age group win with a 5:13:32., slower than last year, but a better race.

Ward collected me, we headed back to the Snake Farm, enjoyed some pizza and refreshment, had a chinwag with his brother Eric for a while and then I crashed.  It was an early flight back to the 802 in the morning.  I feel fortunate to be able to travel and race as I do and be supported by friends, family, and strangers. Thanks, Ward, for your hospitality and conversation.  Next stop, Montana in June for a 50 miler. I’d love to have company.  Thanks for reading, tolerating, and lasting this long.