
This is fun – Google Streetview rendered in colored ASCII characters. Background here.
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My entire extended family has been in Maine over the last week or two (examples: Isaac, Ebs, Ipswichers, old people). They’re starting to trickle back into town now but honestly I’ve been a little jealous of their time away. I can’t be too jealous though as I’m heading up there myself to go camping in a few weeks, something I’ve rather been looking forward to. I think I’ve mentioned before that I’m signed up for a service called the Photojojo Time Capsule that every now and again sends me one year old photos from my flickr stream. Normally, I absolutely love getting these but lately they’ve been more and more difficult to handle. I’m getting closer to the first anniversary of one of the more sucktastic periods of my life, the sequential failure of my relationship & the death of my critter. But that downer aside, when this photo showed up in my inbox yesterday it really, really made me happy. Our last great adventure, a hike up Mount Pemetic in Acadia, with the nieces-pieces in tow-slash-leading the way. I didn’t actually carry her up the whole way, she was an excellent hiker, through to the end.
That may serve to explain why I was excited to get an email about a $13 discount to the Providence Half Marathon. At least, I was until I clicked through to find out that bastard costs $105!! For a half! Ridiculous. Relatedly, the BAA 1/2 registration opens (and closes) next Wednesday morning the 18th, at 10am. Assuming I can get in, it will be my 6th time round with this race.
I find out later there’s less than 300 people in the marathon, making it by far the smallest I’ve done. The crowd at the start is bigger though, mixed with the half runners.
Mile 2: I hate this course already. Less than 20 minutes in and we’re doing a massive climb that has demolished any hopes I had of running a fast time. From reading online I kinda already knew this, but now I KNOW this. Mile 4ish: We pass an unmarked turn-around marker – apparently this is for the half-marathoners but there’s no sign. Carry on. Miles 5-7: Couple little dead end jags here, not terribly interesting and I kind of feel like they’re killing time with us just to lengthen the course out. Mile 8: This is the start of the biggest uphill on the course. From here (elevation 670ft) we gain ~900 feet over the next 8 miles, mostly gradual. Except, for… Mile 13: Holy crap we give all the elevation back and the regain it immediately. When I see this dip for the first time I laugh out loud at the ridiculousness of it – I had read about this so knew it was coming, but still. GPS says my pace dropped to it’s worst point of the race here, 10:53. I miss my half-marathon time and the pace has been too sporadic for me to bother looking it up from the GPS data – it just wouldn’t be meaningful.
Mile 18.1: I try to high-five the course marshall on her bike but mostly whiff. I’d be more embarrassed but I’m too happy about a downhill slope here. I pass a dude I saw before the race who said he had driven over from Syracuse. People are pretty spaced out at this point – there’s not a whole lot of passing or being passed (except for the occasional relay team runner flying by, who I can identify d/t overly fresh attitudes). Mile 19: I’ve started to hate that lady back at 16 who said we were at the peak because we’re still climbing. Looking back at the map now I realize 16 & 19 are really very close to each other, and that most of the next few miles of the course will be tracking back into town. I was so mixed up on my orientation here though – I thought we were going to double back on this road and that the people coming my way were all ahead of me, but they’re not, they’re behind. Seven miles behind, I finally realize at mile 21 (14 coming back).
Mile 23: Back at this big f’ing hill. This is way too big for this late in a race, this course is officially ridiculous. Trudged up the first 1/3rd before deciding to walk, hands over head to try to get some air in. Near the crest of the hill this pony-tailed course marshall on a bike was very encouraging, and walked me through the remaining topography. This guy was so helpful, I wish I could have thanked him more coherently but honestly I was losing it at this point.
I’m not sure if this is The World’s Most Beautiful Marathon – that’s obviously a subjective assessment and though I’d say both San Francisco and Cape Cod were more beautiful, there’s something aspirational about that tagline that I really like. If you love where you are, and you’re happy and rooted in that place then sure, it’s more beautiful than what anyone else has, regardless of reality. I dig that vibe, and I dug this race. Week 6 of 18 of training for my New England Double, done. Only three months to go.
Two things to note: their website says this is “The World’s Most Beautiful Marathon!”. Hard to turn that down. It also says “very, very very hilly” (see course profile) – this guy, this guy terrifies me a little bit.
Today marks start of the second half of the year, and the end of week 5 of 18 in training for my New England Double (Maine Marathon/New Hampshire Marathon weekend). Still not time to panic yet. Prior to today’s run I reached 1073 miles for the year to date, putting me above goal pace for 2000 miles in 2012. Which was not a specific resolution, but should have been. Song of the week, Lake Michigan by Rogue Wave. I actually liked this song a lot better before watching this crappy footage they slapped together for a video. |
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