Going into this years Wasatch100 Mile Endurance Run I felt
pretty good. My training was not quite
up to where I wish it was, due partly to injuries, but overall ready to crank
out the 100 miles across the mountains.
I finished last year in a little over 28 hours and felt I could at least
do that well again or better if I ran smart and flew through aid stations. I
spent 1 hr 40 min at aid stations last year.
Pre-Race:
All summer I have not really stressed for this thing, that
is is right up until the week of the race.
The day before, I played a little Frisbee golf and realized how dang hot
it was going to be the next day. That
eve I attended a fun pre-race-BBQ with
other runners at the William's and met my pacer Aaron. Go VHS!.
There are some real strong runners that live around here. Cool to meet and talk to Davy Crocket a
little, he is a local legend and nice guy to talk with. My buddy Spence stayed at my house and we got
up at 4:15 (=mucho sleep). Sooo glad I live so close to the start line. I let Izzy and and little Anan sleep and
Spence and I walked over to the main road by my house and thumbed a ride to the
start line. Oh ya, and the car that stopped and gave us a ride was Nick Clark,
who went on to win the race that day.
Race:
Long story short. I
DNF’d. (Did Not Finish)
I rocked the first
half and by mile 54 I was almost an hour ahead of my goal splits. I felt good through the extreme heat all
morning, other than some leg cramping, and Aaron and I rocked the hottest
section. I felt prime going into the
cool Lambs Canyon with my buddy Court by my side to keep me company till
Brighton. Out of nowhere came the onset
of extreme nausea and stomach cramps. I
puked everything inside of me and felt super weak. After going up and over into Millcreek Canyon
the nausea remained and the stomach cramps turned into bad diarrhea. I trudged on and on and on all night through hellish
sickness hoping it would go away. The more I walked the sicker I felt. The more I tried to run the weaker I
felt. The more I hiked the more I
hoped it would pass and I could start to recover. I laid down many times, stumbled and
screamed, and just felt sicker. Somehow,
mostly due to Court’s patience, I made it to Brighton Mile 75, with almost zero
running. The doc there got me sipping V8
and OJ. I laid there for an hour in the
lodge hoping the stomach cramps would go away, but they did not. I dropped out
at 4 am. Miles 50-75 took almost longer
than miles 0-50.
After much thinking I have decided that the cause was
simple, not enough water and salt. I was
drinking tons and eating SCaps, but I guess it was not enough. I do not believe nutrition had much to do
with the GI failure. I got low blood
salt which led to blood leaving the GI area resulting in Ischemic colitis. I was taking at SCap every hour, I should
have done 2 per hour. I was not peeing
enough. I should have taken more time at aid stations and drank more. Simple.
Izzy and I drove to the finish the next day, after crashing
on Pete’s couch, it was fun seeing the last few finish. Good job to all my
friends that finished. Especially to
Spence who is a beast and charged all the way to the end for a 20th
place finish in 25:32 hrs. He trained
like a mad man and ran a great race.
Thanks to Aaron, Court, and Pete for pacing. Sorry Pete I could not show you the last 25
miles.
Post Race:
My legs feel good, I really only ran 50-60 miles, so I signed up forthe Bear 100 Miler in 3 weeks. Yes I have an ego and hate to fail, but I also just really want to finish a 100 miler this year, I love the Mountains by Logan in the Autumn, and Izzy said
go for it.
START LINE |
Getting Baked |
LAMBS before the crash |
good luck at the Bear. i can't walk normally yet but maybe in 3 weeks I could pull the last 25 with you if you need it.
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