Why? Why Run 100 miles across mountains and through the
night? I love running. I am competitive and love seeing how I stack
up against others. I love everything about mountains, from the steep craggy
ridges to the dense forest floors, to the frigid summits and bouldery trails. Lastly, plain and simple, curiosity, how far
can my body and mind go? I have wondered
that question as I finished marathons, all day trad climbs, and high summit
hikes. Thinking “dang I am tired, but I could keep going”
Quick Facts. The Wasatch100 Mile Endurance Run bares the
slogan “100 miles of Heaven and Hell.” Wiki
says “Wasatch gains cumulatively 26,000 feet in elevation as it traverses the
Wasatch Front, commanding vistas of basin and range country, the Great Salt
Lake, steep canyons, broad plateaus, and craggy peaks. Altitude ranges from
4,700 to 10,460 feet, and temperatures range from 80s in the shade during the
day to 20s on the high ridges at night. September weather in Utah can vary
widely. Some years heat is a major factor. The fastest runners typically finish
the race in 20 hours or so, while the field is given 36 hours to finish the
race.”
Over the past 3 years I ran a couple of organized 50 mile
races, a marathon or two, ran across Zion NP in a day, ran across the Grand
Canyon and back in a day, and ran and summited the highest point in Wyoming,
Gannet Peak, in a day. All of these
adventures left me wasted yet charged for more.
The Wasatch 100 starts in my front yard and was the logical next
adventure. So over the past 7 months I
paid the 200 bucks, did the mandatory trail work, trained (950 miles, 200,000
vert), bought a GPS watch and high tech trail shoes from Europe. Like you do.
Then swigged some Nyquil on Thursday night and drifted off to sleep.
5 hours later my dad picked me up, with my stomach and
nerves grumbling, and drove me a mile up the street to my favorite most run
trail. Then me and 300 other dudes were off, in the dark, heading North toward
Layton on the Bonneville SL Trail. The
field stayed crowded for miles, went past Adams Canyon, then at Fernwood Picnic
Area turned up the mountain for 4000 ft of gain, all the way up to the
Chinscraper Cliffs, near where a hornet stung my ankle, and then onto the ridge above Davis
County. I cruised up and down the slopes
past Thurston Peak and then under the shadows of the Francis Peak Radar Balls.
Sat and took a breather at the top of Farmington Canyon, mile 18 at 9:40
ish. A little later than I had hoped but
still good time. Feeling good and tired,
and my feet were hurting. Awesome fancy Hoka shoes were a nice nice ride (soft
landing) but too new and digging into my ankle.
I Grabbed water and energy gels, slammed a Red Bull, and took off. At about mile 27 I was alone, sore, walking
uphill, and getting passed by other people. It was getting hot and
mundane. The next aid station had Jelly
Bellys, bananas, and twizzlers, sweet. Spirits started to lift as I slogged up
a steep hill (somewhere above Muller Park Canyon) as the trail banked SE and
continued up over passes and down steep slopes.
I sprinted into Big Mountain Pass Mile 39 at 3:30 ish (hundreds of
people were there cheering and ringing bells.) Then I got on the weight scale
to see if I was healthy (eating and drinking enough) I was 6 lbs over my
pre-race weight! I was so worried about
being under weight. I needed to go to
the restroom bad and my stomach hurt from eating so many gels and power bars to
make weight. My new friend Beth met me here and helped get my drop bag. I downed a Red Bull, ate bananas, and an
orange, and filled water bottles. Then we trudged off. Beth helped keep me
moving but I was bonked. I could not do
more than a shuffle jog and my stomach was killing me. I am 90% sure I got giaraidi on a training
run in the Uintahs, stupid dead sheep. My gut was reeling.
I pressed on through the stomach cramps and heat and started
passing folks on the technical down sections.
My pacer buddy, Beth, was awesome, and kept encouraging me by saying
things like “hey pass those people up there, place does not mean anything but
passing people gives you a metal boost.” By mile 53, Parley’s Canyon I-80 Lambs
Exit, I was cruising and feeling good again. I kissed my wife and baby on the check, said
ho to my folks, ate some soup and fruit, changed my socks and my buddy Pete and
I were off on our way up Lambs Canyon.
My shoes no longer hurt, and I was feeling pretty good. We slogged all
the way up and over the mountain then down onto the Millcreek road. It was now dark and chilly. Pete was great
company and we even ran lots of the uphill, passing lots of folks. At the top of Millcreek Mile 60 I ate Ramon
and watermelon, got a jacket and more gus, heard the Utah/Utah State score in
OT, drank another Red Bull, and headed off up to Lake Desolation at around 10 o’clock. I did okay on the first part of the uphill
but soon I totally crashed, again. Every step was hard, jogging was painful. My
lungs were suffering. I could not breathe
in deep without pain. I had entered the
dark side of ultra-running. After what
seemed like an eternity we made it to the remote Lake Desolation aid station
and was greeted by a large warm fire, salty mashed potatoes, and broth. As I chatted it up with the volunteers, who
had all carried heavy packs up there PROPS!,, I looked above me and saw head
lamps up a steep ridge above me and thought, “I flat out can’t make it to the
next aid station, 5 miles away.” My body and mind were done. But I pulled
myself away from the comfy fire and got moving.
The chill felt good, I slowly made it up the climb and did whatever I
could to distract my mind; thinking about Anna and Amanda, singing songs, and
talking with other runners. All of a
sudden saw the lights of the next Aid Station Mile 70 at 12:49am. I ate some more broth, twizzlers, and a
bananas and headed down Guardsman Pass, I was feeling great and moving fast again.
By the time we made it to the Big Cottonwood Road Pete was tired and sick on
gus. As we pulled into Brighton Ski
lodge, Pete hurled in the parking lot repeatedly. O well, the upchucking pricked
Spence’s ears and he was ready to take me the last 25 Miles. (Pete felt great
immediately after, just didn’t do well with those energy gels) Brighton Mile 75
is nicknamed the Morgue, but there was no coffin for me. I felt great. I ate
some hash browns, downed some ginger ale, and another banana. My dad and wife Amanda were there in the dead
of night to cheer me on. Amanda had a pack
full of down sleeping gear and first aid stuff (ie the coffin), I just gave her
a hug and said I’m out of here. With
Spence all woken up now, I took off with a yeehaw. My pace was slow up the hill, just power
walking up passed Lake Mary, Catherine, and Martha. Got to Point Supreme (highest elevation of
the day) and started flying down the other side. Passing people here and
there. I was so focused I did not even realize
Spence had no light. His battery went dead 5 miles before. I didn’t even give it a second thought he is an
animal. We pounded through two more aid
stations, ate bacon, ginger chews (I was done with gels), and drank more
soda. I had told Spence about my
previous crashes and that I anticipated another around mile 88. But as we
rounded the last long climb I could smell the finish. I was in lots of pain,
but felt great. I got a rush of adrenaline on the first steep decent, called
the Dive for good reason, and continued good time even on the ups. On every down I passed runner after runner. I
love steep technical running down hills.
The sun was not up and it was still chilly. I was in and out of the next
aid station, Mile 93 in under a minute and started up the next 2 mile
climb. By now I was almost rapid with
excitement. My mile times had dropped
from 24 minutes, to 14 minutes, to 10 minutes.
I started down the last steep trail, through red fallen leaves and hit Midway
with at an 8 minute mile 99 and 100. I
sprinted under the Finish line banner at a dead sprint and hugged the
family. Mission accomplished. Ate a
muffin, drank a Monster energy drink, washed legs, got a massage, and headed
home. It was so great having friends and
family to see me finish and cheer for me.
I was stoked to see how many friends and fam had been following me
online. What a wonderful adventure.
That night was painful.
Legs could barely move. Every muscle hurt. Sleep was hard. Next day was stiff but made it to church and
could play with the dog. By Wednesday running
again, with just a little soreness. Hmmm
Western States 100…
I Love WASATCH, but, I don't have to run it anymore, HA HA, just too old, well, maybe just a bad knee, or, just too far away, but, I still remember it as if I did it yesterday, and I would do it again Lord willing.
ReplyDeleteBob Pence WF100 1986 finished last in 35:45 and 31 seconds.
And yes, Pence Point was named after me.