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Thursday, December 30, 2021

Goodbye to 2021

 I feel the need to post a Year In Memorium for 2021. It's been a truly astonishing year in a lot of ways. But I'll focus on the fitness-related ways.

Running/Walking/Hiking

Garmin Data

My Garmin mileage was surging in the spring, dropped sharply in the summer after my Trifecta weekend and sprains, then picked back up along with my motivation in the fall. My averages are decent considering all these issues. These workouts are mostly outdoors, with the (very) occasional treadmill thrown in. It's not the total extent of my cardio.

Other Workouts 


As you can see, this increased dramatically and massively starting in August. This coincides with the addition of key pieces of my indoor cardio nook, namely the stepper and the climber. The rower addition in December kicked it up another notch. I have been CRUSHING the indoor workouts this fall/winter. Also included in this number are my gym workouts, when I started teaching my circuit weight class again in July. This might be the first winter ever where I get in BETTER shape.

Weight 


I mean, this is just epic. You can see the moments in time where I was like "to hell with THIS" and buckled down to lose weight. At no point was I overweight, but every endurance athlete has a weight at which they get minimal injuries, few aches and pains, better recovery, and generally feel much faster and like the cardio becomes easier. My "ideal race weight" is around 150 so that's the goal I put in. I end 2021 just four pounds north of that. Not shabby.

2022 Goals

1) PR in every distance I attempt. Obviously this will depend on conditions on the day, but I'd love to just get personal bests in all my races, both road and OCRs. 

2) Get to and maintain an ideal race weight. Maintenance is tricky (see: above graph), but I feel much more attuned to what I need to do at this point. Getting an ADD diagnosis has helped me immensely in realizing WHAT was compelling me to fall off the wagon all the time.

3) Actually compete in the Notre Dame Stadion race. I'm running age group and I want to kick ass. Ideally I'd be up there with the lead pack, or at least keeping them somewhat in my sights. 

4) Keep stress levels down. High volumes of exercise massively help my stress levels. No matter how big my problems, they seem much smaller at the end of a 3-hour hike. I need to do whatever I must to keep my mental health solid.

5) Try something new. I just want to try something that I haven't tried before. Maybe a new kind of race, or at least a new brand. Maybe a new activity. I'll be sure to post about it if I do.

Friday, November 26, 2021

Race Recap: Cedar Falls Turkey Trot

Cedar Falls Turkey Trot, 11/25/21 Cedar Falls, IA

Weather: 20 degrees, windy (windchill around 0 degrees)
Terrain: Recreation trails and grass
Distance: 3.1 miles

Course map

When you have a small child, you have to modify your Thanksgiving day workout routine. Gone are the days when I would potentially travel to another area to do a half marathon. No, when you have a six-year-old, you go to the Basic White People Thanksgiving mainstay: the local 5K turkey trot. Fortunately, we have a fun one (fun run?) right here in town! I picked up our packets the day before at the running store. T-shirts are cute and heather-red, bibs have chip timing. We have three cheap turkey hats from Amazon from the race two years ago. Team Gobble Gobble was ready to rock.

Woke up to freezing cold weather. The day before it was in the 50s, but this is Iowa, so it was 20 degrees with a 0 windchill at 8 AM. We drove to the venue and Husband dropped us off and drove 1/3 mile to park and run back to us. Parking for this race can be iffy but fortunately they have satellite lots and even a shuttle from the farthest one. Child was already sort of cranky (possibly from the cold, but more likely because his Mood Switch seems to have been set to Total Butt this week) and he got even crankier during the very short interval between our arrival and the race start, which was promptly at 8:30 as advertised!

Nobody wearing a turkey hat should look that distraught.

We took off through the grassy field, letting Child set the pace, obviously. And his pace was faster than I expected. Child took off at a sprint. Husband easily jogged beside him. I trailed behind slightly gasping for air and semi-hoping Child would trip over a stick or something and I'd have a second to catch my breath. We wound through the grassy trails near the start before rejoining the paved trail and hitting the one-mile mark near the campground (in 11 minutes). Child's mood was oscillating wildly between "yay exercise" and "I don't like that I'm not in first place." My mood was oscillating between "too winded to think" and "I should have eaten more carbs this morning." 

In the spirit of Thanksgiving, I was grateful that Child took more walk breaks at this point as we made our way around Big Woods Lake on trails that I've traversed hundreds of times. We hit the mile 2 mark just before the bridge and that mile was in about 12 minutes. Holy smokes, this kid was gonna set a new personal best by a lot. His average 5K pace in his previous attempts was over 17 minutes. We went back near the start and Child was quite upset that we still needed to loop around the frisbee-golf course before finishing. "I'm tired!" Join the club, kid. 

The frisbee-golf course had some hay bale hurdles that I managed to jump over in one bound. Shockingly, Child did as well, despite being approximately 4'4". The walk breaks were becoming even more frequent now and I was almost starting to acclimate to the intense cold that was making my lungs feel like a shattered glass bottle. We looped through the entire park and when he saw the finish line, Child took off at a totally unreasonable pace, insisting that he would at the very least beat his parents in this race. Our finish time: 36:45, which is a new Child PR by 18 minutes. Awesome.

We immediately got in the long line for mini pies, which were our "finisher medals" (medals are temporary, pies last forever). Flavors available were apple, pumpkin, peach blackberry, and raspberry. We got the latter two, since I'd already made the former two at home. A nice cool-down walk to the car and we were out of there.

And I was mildly hypothermic. Happy Thanksgiving!


Pros:
-Logistics. The first year for this race was two years ago, and last year was cancelled due to COVID. They really cleaned up the logistics this time - no more confusion about when/where to start, or the parking situation. 
-Early packet pickup. Nice to have this year.
-Pies. I mean come on. That's awesome.

Cons:
-Terrain. I didn't mind a combination of grass and trails, but it was fairly ankle-breaking grass if you aren't an experienced trail runner (which there are not many of at a turkey trot).
-Iowa. The weather sucked. Not the race director's fault.
-Venue's lack of on-site parking is a bit annoying.

Race Grade: A-. A great local race option that gets the job done, as far as turkey trotting.

Video I took during the race



Thursday, November 4, 2021

At-Home Cardio For A Super-Fit Winter

 It's that time of year again. The leaves are changing and falling. The air is crisp. My allergies are going so bonkers that my nose is essentially a faucet. In the words of...someone on Game of Thrones, I dunno, I never watched it: winter is coming. Which means your workouts will be making their way indoors, at least some of the time.

If you are a snow bunny, you may already own a pair of snowshoes or cross-country skis, or a fat-tire bike. You may already know that waterproof socks are Jesus's single greatest invention, after skin lubricant. But if your idea of a good time does not include frozen hydration-backpack tubing, you might want to bring your workouts indoors. Fortunately, you can create a comprehensive home gym of cardio equipment for yourself for a relatively small financial investment.

There are three main pieces of equipment that I will detail here, but first I will list some bigger-ticket items that you may be interested in: a stationary bike or a bike trainer (which allows you to turn your bike into a stationary bike); a treadmill; a rowing machine; an elliptical. These are the main pieces of cardio equipment that are available at most gyms. If you absolutely LOVE using one or more of these, consider buying one for your home. A treadmill is probably the most versatile, but the machine you should get is the machine you *want to use.*

Now for my aforementioned three, listed in order from least intense to most intense.

1) Mini Bike

I bought my husband this under-desk bike for Father's Day and he is enjoying it. It gives him something to do while sitting on phone meetings at his home office. Because it's not electrically powered, he is able to bring it in to work when he goes back to the office full-time. The links I'm providing in this section are all the exact equipment that I bought. I purchased this one in particular even though there are cheaper versions available because I wanted to buy a heavier one on purpose. A heavier one is more sturdy and less likely to move. Despite this, be advised that you will ideally want to use a non-moving chair and put the mini bike so that it backs up against something solid. Otherwise you may have to readjust very frequently to keep the fit perfect, especially if you crank the resistance up and are pushing harder against it.

2) Mini Stepper

Not gonna lie, I've wanted one of these for a long time, so I took the opportunity to get one. It has been an absolute joy to use. It's not really like climbing stairs, but rather like running in place. The range of motion is very small, but it gets/keeps the heart rate up and is extremely portable. I keep mine under the coffee table unless I'm using it. There's nothing like throwing a movie on HBO Max and getting on this bad boy for 90 minutes. 

But if you want to take your workouts up several notches...

3) Climber

BOY HOWDY. This machine packs a punch. It is the single best piece of equipment you can purchase for your home, as far as efficiency. This machine uses your entire body. Not kidding. Your lower back will be sore. Your legs, your arms, your abs. Big range of motion with all of them. It is such a phenomenal workout that I can really only do it for a few minutes at a time, so I'll generally do 2 minutes on the climber, move to the mini stepper for 8 minutes, and go back and forth like that for an interval workout. I swear I am not being compensated by Big Climber for this endorsement, but it is just a great machine. Takes up a bit of room in the house, but it's well worth it.

I've also been pleased by how much my combination stepper/climber workouts have translated to run fitness. I haven't been running much but I've been doing plenty of this style of home workout, and I am able to perform really well when I DO have to run. The fitness translates in a way that an elliptical machine (for example) doesn't. And with similarly low impact. 

So consider getting something fun for yourself for your winter training, whether you want to enjoy the snow or are more "indoorsy."

Friday, October 22, 2021

Race Recap: Beat the Blerch Virtual Half Marathon

Beat the Blerch Virtual Half Marathon 10/19/21 Cedar Falls, IA

Weather: 70 degrees, sunny
Terrain: Recreation trails and some sidewalks
Distance: 13.1 miles

Course map


It's been a long time (a year!) since I was a regular runner. I've done plenty of hiking and OCR stuff, but running, not so much. But having always been the type of person to say "why not" to a ridiculous physical challenge, I set out on a gorgeous autumn Tuesday to complete this year's Beat the Blerch virtual race. This time I would do a half marathon, using the same course that I ran last year for my Des Moines virtual half, only backwards (the course being reversed, not me literally running BACKWARDS).

I started heading east from Gateway Park, unsure of what my pacing would be. I decided to jog until I thought I should walk, and I made it 90 seconds. Then I decided to walk 90 seconds, then jog again. I kept up this totally impromptu pacing strategy until, I figured, I would grow too exhausted to continue. I felt unstoppable as I weaved my way through George Wyth state park's hard trails. Dropped by the campground to use the bathroom only to discover that it had closed for the winter the day before. Off to another bathroom. I was basically improvising at this point but it didn't take me too far off course. Continued east all the way to the creepy neighborhood in Waterloo, which was far less creepy today. Turns out sunny weather really helps the "yikes" factor. Plus my pace was fantastic - sub-12-minute miles, and feeling easy. I could possibly PR today!

Although the sun was beating down, I wasn't feeling terribly overheated, since there was a lovely breeze. Headed past the Cattle Congress fairgrounds, then made my way downhill into Hartman Reserve county park on the south side of the river. At this point I was around mile 9 and was starting to feel pretty tired. I had just run out of Gatorade Zero and had to switch to water. I think that's where the trouble began. Tried to maintain my 90/90 ratio but my runs started getting shorter. Down to 60/120. I hit Pfeiffer Park at around mile 11 and felt so tired. I was in survival mode and just trying to jog as much as possible. My PR dreams were absolutely dead but I wanted to see if I could get a sub-2:40 half marathon through pure, unfiltered GRIT. 

Looped through Washington Park and was basically the walking dead, but still gave ugly jogging a good go every few minutes. I realized I could cut through downtown and stop by the running store to pick up my CVAST member t-shirt, which I'd not picked up for 8 months (oops). So I continued my walking/hideous jogging until I got to the running store at mile 12.9. Stopped in and got my shirt. I did stop my watch at this point, full disclosure. But I resumed the workout and continued the few blocks back to Gateway for exactly 13.11 miles on my Garmin. And my time? 2:39:40. My third best half marathon time EVER. With no run training. Main takeaway: my indoor training on the mini stepper and climber lately must have MAJOR cross-training value. This is a great omen for my at-home winter training!

Legend in my own living room


Pros:
-Virtual kit. The shirt and medal are amazing (go to my Instagram to see pictures of the swag included).
-Weather. I picked the last gorgeous day of the year, I think.
-Course. I just really enjoy having such a flawless loop. Mostly flat, perfect distance, a couple bathrooms along the way. Who could ask for more?

Cons:
-Fueling. Next time I will bring TWO bottles of Gatorade Zero, instead of one plus water.
-Man, if I hadn't bonked so hard, I could have PRed, LOL.

Race Grade: A. An amazing effort. The kind of workout that takes you to another level.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Jumping to Age Group

Well, it was bound to happen eventually. My buddy Wes has talked me into attempting...AGE GROUP. This is a competitive division with strict rules. Racers must complete all obstacles without assistance and perfectly according to the rules for each obstacle, or do all penalty burpees. Normally, I would avoid Age Group like the plague, since I prefer to have the option to get a boost on certain things, or if I'm in dire straights to modify the burpees or do a different penalty entirely. 

But Wes made the excellent point that, in a Stadion race, there are only 15 penalty burpees per failure. I am also capable of running a clean Stadion, and did so at Wrigley in 2019. The obstacles are within my comfort zone and I don't require boosts. Hence, I have signed up for the Age Group division at the Notre Dame Stadion on July 9, 2022.

Before that day, I have some work to do. I refuse to show up and just wing it. I want to actually do something decent out there. I don't want to embarrass myself. Back in 2012 I did a competitive walking division wherein I came in second place, missing out on winning by less than one second, because of an amazing finishing kick on my part. So I know that I have a competitive side that can come out. My goal for this race is to finish in the middle of the pack for my age group. 

Since every Stadion race is different, I analyzed the data from the last one I did (Wrigley). My fastest lap there was 1:03:51. This was by far my Stadion PR, and I failed one obstacle (spear throw) on that lap (it was my second lap, run more slowly and with a friend, that I ran clean). I completed in that time with minimal jogging, but a general effort to "hustle" a bit more than I usually do. I also had done very little stair training in advance of it. All this to say, there is a LOT of room to make gains in my time.

Which is good, because I looked up the results for the Female 35-39 Age Group for that same race. Podium spots were run in 41:09 to 42:44 (yes, fat chance of that, but it's good to know what winning times are). Middle of the 19-person division would require a time of about 50:30. Which means I have to shave about 23 minutes off my Stadion PR to make that goal happen.

With this information, I can begin to look at individual areas of improvement. I have pinpointed several, and estimated very approximately how much time I could save with each one.

1) Clean race OR fast burpees - 2 minutes

2) Great stair training/climbing - 5 minutes

3) Jogging (or god forbid RUNNING) the whole thing - 10 minutes

4) Improved flow in/out of obstacles - 3 minutes

5) Speed on obstacles themselves - 3 minutes

6) Skip aid stations entirely - 1 minute

7) Improve low crawl (flats AND stairs) - 2 minutes

So if I manage to optimize every single area, I could conceivably "run Wrigley" in 38 minutes. That would have absolutely destroyed my age group, so this is all highly optimistic and approximate, but it lays out a solid 7-point plan for training for Notre Dame. I will be training stairs on a weekly basis. I will be getting my running back to where it was in the summer of 2020 when I was jogging a lot. I will get my obstacle proficiency even better and improve my cardio so that I can enter and exit obstacles at a run without a problem. I'll get my weight down to my absolute ideal.

I have plenty of time and lots of motivation. This is happening, dammit. This Is Stadion Age Group. (New vlog series coming soon, LOL)

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Race Recap: Spartan Midwest Beast and Sprint

 Spartan Beast and Sprint Midwest 9/18-19/21 Attica, IN


Weather: 90 degrees, sunny
Terrain: Sand (several types), forest, creeks
Distance: Beast advertised as 13.2, Sprint as 3.65
Garmin Data Beast: 14.15 miles, 859' gain
Garmin Data Sprint: 3.91 miles, 256' gain


 Course map

I was enormously looking forward to my triumphant return to Attica for the Beast and (two loops of) the Sprint. I ended up only doing one loop of the Sprint, but that's getting ahead of myself. Arrived at the venue on Saturday's Beast race day and saw that the festival was set up in its 2019 location, which is good. But the parking was positioned further away in an auxiliary field a bit of a walk from the entrance. It took about five minutes to get to the registration tent, which had a massive line. Turned out very few volunteers had showed up and this caused quite a bottleneck first thing in the morning. Thankfully the line moved surprisingly quickly and the race staff did a good job of making up for their late Elite start, running the Open waves right on time. Bag check was easy and bathrooms were plentiful. The 9 AM wave went off without a hitch.

Started off in the woods, then came down a rocky hill to the first obstacle, a Hurdle. Easy "flop and turn," then continued on to the 7' wall, and then later the 8' wall. I managed to get over both without assistance, although it took me three attempts to jump up and grab the top of the 8' wall. Pipe Lair came shortly after mile 2, solidly in the "giant sand dunes" part of the course (hint: this was most of the course). It was not even 10 AM and the heat was already feeling pretty outrageous. The high for the day was in the high 80s, but with a bit of humidity, not much shade or breeze, and the sand reflecting even more heat at us, it felt dang near 100 degrees by mid-day. After Pipe Lair I went to get my second cookie - my refuel plan was one cookie every 30 minutes - but half of it broke off and fell on the ground. Five-second rule, I decided. If this were not bone-dry sand, I would have left those calories behind.

Lots of up and down steep sandy hills. This would continue all day. Around mile 4 we hit Olympus, which was just as impossible as usual. It was in Beast mode (meaning no balls on the chains). I failed immediately and hit up the penalty loop, which replaced burpees at this obstacle. I was thrilled, because the penalty loop only took me two minutes to walk (up and down yet another sand dune). We re-entered the woods which was delightfully shaded, and strolled through a creek and the "water crossing" obstacle, which was a giant tunnel that resembled the film It. We all float down here.

Meeting up with where the Sprint would be on Sunday, we did a single overwall, then entered the big field by the festival area after mile 5. Spectators livened the place up, and the kid's race area was to our left. I went over the 6' wall, then went to the portajohn in the kid's area, which was empty. Back onto the course for the A-frame cargo net, which was immediately followed by monkey bars. I was pleased to see that the bars were completely dry and not sticky whatsoever, so I breezed through them quite smoothly. There were a few decent gaps but I've done so much "big gap" training that it wasn't scary. One less obstacle to worry about!

Leaving the festival area and back to dune country, there was the inverted wall, which was already quite hot. Took off my hydration backpack so I wouldn't feel like a flipped-over turtle, and that helped immensely with getting over the top by myself. Came up a big hill at around mile 6 to the rope climb, which also had a penalty loop. I put on my brand new Miracle Gro wet/dry gardening grip gloves which cost me $5 at Menards, and boy howdy do those things GRIP. There could have been Astroglide on that rope and I would have cleared it. No penalty loop for me! And I have found my new favorite gloves.

Down the dune to the sandbag carry, and the sandbag felt extremely heavy (at least 10-15 lb heavier than usual). Gritted my teeth and went up and down the dune with my heart rate well into the 180s. Thankfully I did not faint or vomit, but I did need a second at the water stop right afterward before proceeding through a giant puddle to the barbed wire crawl! Which was uphill through sand! This was all feeling quite familiar, and I realized that basically the last several obstacles were a total replay of the 2019 Sprint! Which is fine with me, because I enjoyed that race. But this crawl was as brutal as ever. This crawl is a big part of why I do not wear shorts, even when it's extremely hot outside.

Oh hell no.

Once we got through that, there was limited time to recover before Z-walls at the tippy top of the dune. I chose a lane and dove right in without considering my foot placement, which was a massive mistake. I ended up in the worst position before the blind corner. Somehow I got around it without slipping off. It was a miracle. And I was now, allegedly, halfway through the Beast! If the map was accurate! (Spoiler: it was not accurate.) I sat on a rock and cleared sand out of my shoes to celebrate.

Atlas Carry was pretty easy, since the ground was hard. Past mile 8 was The Box, which was impossible as usual (but this time had a penalty loop, at least). I accepted a boost from a nice lady and helped her up from the top, then we walked together chatting until the next obstacle. Along the way was a water stop with no volunteers. It had run out of water, but had a big reserve of it nearby, so Spartans were refilling the bottles for folks. That's the spirit! Got some and continued to Tyro traverse, which I have famously NEVER been able to clear. But I've been practicing in my backyard. I got on the rope and immediately got a cramp in my right calf. Go figure. Waited for it to subside, then started moving as fast as I could. Walked my hands and my feet. Move move move. Go go go. I could see the bell. Then I could ring the bell. Came down cheering and got a fist bump from the volunteer before laying on the ground in sheer excitement. My new friend failed so I kept moving forward.

Twister was next, and tragically my grip was sort of shot and I chose the wrong lane (the scaffolding between the three sections didn't line up well with the lane I was on), so I failed at the end of the first section. Found a bit of shade and did thirty slow burpees. My new friend offered to do some for me (she failed too but many folks were past the point of being able to do any more burpees, LOL) but I declined and she moved ahead. I at least wanted to do this one set by myself. I knew the heat was starting to get to me and I'd be lucky if I could do any more burpees at all today.

Bender was up next, past mile 10, on top of another dune. Everyone was clustered on the right side, so I went to the wide-open left side and climbed up and over with no wait. After coming down I realized: everyone was on the right side because there was a photographer, who was seemingly only focused on that half of the obstacle. Sure enough, THIS is the closest I got to getting a photo on Bender (squint a little, people): 

Officer, I'd like to report a ROBBERY

But as we say in Sparta, "shit happens." I continued to Armer, where I asked the volunteer how many "balls" puns she's heard today, and she said "TOO many." When I was finishing my waddle, she told me I looked sexy doing it. Moi? Do go on. It was my first on-course flirtation during this event, and at mile 11, or 12, or whatever the hell it was, I needed it. Beater arrived and I was thrilled to clear it yet again. I am undefeated on Beater! And there was only one overhead grip obstacle left. Also at this point in the race I was passed by a woman in an extremely sexy costume, which I complimented. It was basically a bra and panty set that was sheer in the back and these thigh-high fur boots. It wasn't what you'd normally think of when you think "obstacle race attire," but her photos probably look great.

At the top of another dune (drink!) loomed Stairway to Sparta. The penalty loop looked brutal so I accepted help from a strong dude. In related news, I hate that stupid slippery surface. So much. Next was the bucket carry which I had been dreading. We had just passed Spartan's 11-mile sign, which was mile 12.5 on my watch, and I was totally exhausted from the relentless heat. I didn't know if I'd be able to do this bucket, with the sandbag going so poorly. But the bucket felt easier than the sandbag somehow, and I managed to gut it out.

Behold, the fakest smile ever

Came out near the 2018 parking lots through the usual three enormous puddles in that sand field (a guy near me said "we could have done with just ONE puddle") and ended up at Helix. Which is an obstacle that I do not understand. I don't know what parts I'm supposed to touch and not touch. I got on with my right side leading and it went very poorly. I touched the ground at least twice. But I could barely think straight so I just continued on. Up the big-ass hill (which one? LOL) to the multi-rig, which - surprise! - had three big thick knotless ropes after the bar. I sat next to a couple women, one of whom said she felt nauseous (she refused my offer of chewable Pepto), and the non-nauseous woman said the bar was so hot it burned her hands. Considering this information, I got up, strode confidently to the first ring, and swung off it to take the L. I knew I would fail the ropes and there was no point in charring my hands before falling off anyway. Went to the burpee pit which was conspicuously empty because at this point NOBODY could do freakin' burpees anymore, like are you shitting us, Spartan? The volunteer was like "yeah, if you must, you can do 15 burpees, otherwise just go." I did 30 situps. Burpees were not happening. 

Past the rig was vertical cargo with the platform, and the women's platform seemed about 6 inches higher than it should have been. I still managed to flop and turn with a bit of extra difficulty, then got up and over the net. Down another hill to the dunk wall, which was tarp-lined, shallow, and extremely refreshing. On a hot day, nothing beats a relatively clean dunk wall. Don't get me wrong, the water was still opaque, but there were no chunks of stuff in it, at least. This was immediately followed by the slip wall, which had short ropes. The volunteer told me to run fast and not to grab the rope by the tip, because it was slippery. Which, of course, I had to make jokes about. Then I ran at it slowly, to gauge how slippery the wall was, and it wasn't bad despite being covered with wet sand. So I ran faster on the second attempt, made it onto the rope, then made it up without incident. Coming down I got wet sand all over my hands, so it was good that all the grip obstacles were done.

Up one last big hill back to the festival area for the finishing gauntlet, which again matched 2019 exactly: spear throw, herc hoist, and fire jump. I approached the spear, pulled the stuck one out, aimed, fired...and missed to the right by 4-5 inches. Dammit! Went to the burpee pit and started doing situps when I heard Wes yelling my name from the sidelines. He said "you missed your spear! You know what that means!" And of course, he'd hit his spear. Only one of us is allowed to clear the spear in any given race. It's a curse. After my thirty situps, I did the herc hoist quickly and easily (I saw two people fail it, which was very surprising, but they may have been exhausted), then jumped over the fire to finish in around 5:41.

Do I look energetic? I was trying REALLY HARD


After the finish line they had the photographer BEFORE the medal handout. They'd put the medals way back by the shirts. A bizarre choice and I hate it. I backtracked to get my pic. Hopefully that was just an error for this event and not a new configuration for all races. Got my shirt and medal, got my 2x trifecta medal at the results tent, hosed off, and headed back to the hotel to try and eat an entire pizza.

I had to save the last slice for breakfast


Is that...Bigfoot behind us?


On Sunday I woke up feeling fairly sore, but no matter. I figured I could at least do one lap of the sprint, probably not two. Packed up my stuff and drove to the venue, where the check-in line was way shorter than Saturday. Found Wes and we started together in the 9 AM wave. Today was all about finishing as a team! I even brought my phone so we could take videos of each other on the obstacles. 

Started off again with the Hurdle, then we cut off some of the Beast course and went straight to the overwall. Then out into the festival area at around mile 1.5 for the 6' wall (no assistance required, naturally), then the A-frame cargo which was somehow EVEN LOOSER than the previous day. This was the loosest net I've ever seen. It was so loose that it was difficult to summit because the net shifted so violently from one side to the other. A woman was freaking out at the apex and I don't blame her. Yikes. 

Got down without dying and went to the monkey bars, which we filmed. We both did great! Thankfully the bars stayed dry both days. My theory: nobody was sweating anymore because it was so hot we were all permanently dehydrated, or we were storing the water deep inside like cacti.  Went down to inverted wall, then to rope climb which went off without a hitch for both of us. The sandbag somehow felt WAY easier than the day before. The bag was a normal weight. Maybe I just got unlucky during the Beast.

Back to the barbed wire crawl, which was more brutal than Saturday. The sand had shifted in such a way that we were crawling more on packed, rock-like sand than deep, loose sand. It was absolute murder on the hands, arms and legs. I honestly don't know how people in shorts did it. Never, ever wear shorts to a Spartan race, was the lesson I hope others take from this. 

This sand is my only reality


Z-walls went better because I planned my route for my feet and did the blind corner first instead of second. Then we skipped even more of the Beast course and went directly to the bucket carry, which felt somehow worse than it had the day before. What's with these heavy carries being so random? Wes had to wait for me and was like "let's get a picture together!" then he was like "what pose should we do" and I said "ONE WHERE WE DO NOT STOP WALKING." The photographer laughed at me. I hoped the picture would capture the general tone of the moment.

Nailed it.


Through the giant puddles again to Helix. I was fully prepared to cheat my way through Helix again. Got into a lane with my left side leading this time, then started across. And holy guacamole, I was getting it. It was clicking. I wasn't grabbing illegal parts. I could make it through the gaps with a side split. "Wes! I think I'm doing it right!" I called out. That caught the attention of the photographer, who I hadn't realized was there, and he came over and was snapping photos of me left and right. I continued through, trying to pose and having a blast. I imagine this is how Kate Moss feels all the time. 

Scroll quickly for the flipbook GIF


After that enormous success, I felt rejuvenated for the walk up the giant hill to the multi-rig, which blessedly only had rings today. Easy clear for me and Wes. Vertical cargo had no platform and was a very tight net, so that was easy too. Then dunk wall (again: refreshing), and slip wall with longer ropes. This was going great! I can't wait to tell my grandchildren about this race someday!

But we both knew the spear throw was coming. As we climbed that last terrible, long hill back to the festival area, we decided that Wes should go second, because if I hit my spear, he would be better able to handle the pressure of "breaking the curse," which was our number one priority for the day. We would not let the sun go down on this dreadful curse. We would BOTH hit that damn spear. I handed Wes the camera. I grabbed the spear and rope in my hand. Aimed. Threw as football-like as possible straight at the target. And stuck it. Left of center, but still. "THANK GOD!" I yelled. Caught on tape. I took the phone so I could record Wes. He threw. And MISSED. Are you kidding me?! We were both aghast. Until that moment, I hadn't really believed in curses. I thought it was just an insane coincidence. But then Wes did something that cemented my belief in The Curse. He tried again. And missed again. Then he tried a third time. And missed. This was too much. A man who is this good at the spear throw, missing three times in a row? It must be because I had hit it. Crazy.

After Wes's penalty, we both banged out herc hoist and crossed the fire in about 1:45 or so. My third clean race, and almost Wes's first clean race. I got cleaned up as best I could in the now-only-trickling hose wash and left, while Wes stayed to do another lap of the Sprint. He hit his spear that time.


ATTICA!!!


Pros:
-Awesome use of very diverse terrain. So unique, especially in the Midwest.
-Obstacles had the best spacing of any race I've ever done.
-Four penalty loops! More of these, please!
-Photographer at Bender. Good to mix it up. But next time take my picture!

Cons:
-Parking not as convenient as 2019.
-Don't like the "medals after the finisher photo" set-up. Requires backtracking.
-Finisher food/drink spread a bit sparse (wanted BodyArmor or at least some canned/bottled water).

Race Grade:  A-. An excellent challenge.

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Spartan Midwest Weekend Video Recap

 


My weekend in Attica, Indiana! Includes map analysis, Beast recap, and highlights filmed during the Sprint!

Link on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3IhiPFZqMU

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Restoring Rusty Monkey Bars

 I spent some time this weekend restoring my backyard's adjustable monkey bars and multi-rig bar attachment. In this video I document the whole process, from rust "removal" to painting to re-hanging! 


Wednesday, July 7, 2021

How to Clean Your GPS Watch (Post-OCR)

 


YouTube link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nMSrBkVp5oA

Learn how to clean your GPS watch from mud and grime! You will need: alcohol wipes, and a pin. Optional: new screen protector and watch band.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Race Recap: Sturgis Falls Half Marathon

Sturgis Falls Half Marathon, 6/27/21 Cedar Falls, IA

Distance: 13.23 miles (a bit long)

Terrain: Paved recreation trails and roads

Weather: 70s and sunny

Here we go again with the Sturgis Falls Half Marathon. This is a race that I do every single year that I'm in town. This year, I was in town. No excuses. It's a cheap local race and I have nothing better to do. Plus this year my mom was able to come to town and babysit, so my husband Eric could also run. Huzzah!

Pre-race selfie, repping Spartan Ohio

I drove to the Rec and parked at 6:50 AM for the 7 AM start. Plenty of time to use a port-a-potty with no lines and get to the start line. We started off on the new course, which was great. In the first few miles we did the out and back on Grand Boulevard that usually comes between miles 8-11. It was nice to 1) get the biggest hill on the course out of the way early, and 2) not have to do that out and back while exhausted and boiling hot. Water stops had blue Gatorade (inconsistently mixed, but that's okay) and cold water. Came back down Grand and took a right at Pfeiffer park to go out and back on the South Riverside Trail, which is usually at the beginning of the race. I loved that it was a shorter version of the usual out and back, and that we got to do the bulk of the race (miles 4-9) in a very shady area.

With all the out and backs, I did get to see Eric crushing this race in two locations. He claimed he'd be very slow, but on this Riverside out and back I told him he could get an age group award. Another fun thing about out and backs, though, is seeing the leaders. And on this occasion, I saw the race leader flying by (he was at mile 9 when I was almost at mile 4). And then nothing. Nobody. For at least five minutes. Holy crap. Checked later and he won the race by TEN MINUTES. That is unheard of, y'all. I've never seen anyone just totally smoke the entire rest of the field like that. It wasn't a 100-mile ultra, it was a HALF MARATHON. You generally don't see leads of over a couple minutes.

Anyway, my race was also going fairly well, relatively speaking. I felt energized and was able to jog a good amount. I started doing an interval where I'd jog 45 seconds every quarter mile. It worked very well heading out and back. Got back to Krieg's Crossing (a huge pedestrian bridge) at mile 9, and at the end of the bridge there was a group of women mountain biking who it turns out were clients of mine from my OCR class! It was a great boost to have a random cheering section in the middle of nowhere! Especially since I was very spaced out from other runners and near the back of the pack. I'd passed a couple of people, but now there was nobody around.

Took the North Riverside Trail west towards downtown. When I came out into the sunnier areas, I started to feel pretty tired. It wasn't super hot (maybe mid-70s) but it still sapped my energy. The course also wasn't extremely well marked but fortunately I knew exactly where to go. Made the turns I needed to and eventually ran through Washington Park, where I caught and passed one last person. Dug deep to maintain my now-slower pace and finished near the Rec in 2:57, which was faster than my goal of three hours! Turns out Eric ran in 1:37 and did get an age group award. Good day for the household!

Pros:

-Love the new course. It takes us past downtown for the first time in many years. 

-Gatorade and COLD water at every water stop is a nice touch.

-Several flavors of donut holes at the finish line.

Cons: 

-Could've used another water stop between miles 9 and 11.5. They should have set one up downtown instead of having two at Washington Park.

-Course not well marked between Krieg's Crossing (mile 9) and the finish. People who don't understand "just go straight until told otherwise" might have trouble.

Race Grade: A-. Probably the best Sturgis half marathon on record!

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Race Recap: Spartan Trifecta Weekend Ohio (Trifecta: A Short Story)

 Spartan Trifecta Weekend Ohio, June 5-6, 2021

Southington Off-Road Park, Garrettsville, OH

I have written this race recap as a short story. All pictures and Garmin screenshots are posted at the end. Enjoy!

***

Trifecta

Thursday Evening

I eat my Noodles mac and cheese in my hotel room in Indiana. The drive here was about 6 hours. Six hours closer to Streetsboro, Ohio, and my hotel for the trifecta weekend. My first trifecta weekend. I check Instagram and see that the maps were posted at last. Grabbing my notebook and pen, I save the maps and zoom in to see what I’m in for.

The Beast is 14 miles, according to the map. There are 36 obstacles. Twelve of them are in the last mile. Typical Ohio layout. There’s big fields near the finish line-slash-festival area. They can fit a lot of obstacles there. Which is good, because the middle ten miles of the race are in far-flung areas of a flooded off-road park. Hard to erect a rope climb in 20 inches of watery mud.

I make note of the obstacle placements. Monkey bars are early, in the first mile. This is good. No, GREAT. Get them out of the way before my hands sweat too much. Temperatures are expected to top 90 degrees both days. I’ll either be sweating a lot, or dehydrated to the point where I’ve stopped sweating. Kind of a lose-lose proposition there. Tyro traverse, Olympus, and the multi-rig are all present, as I expected. Those are the three obstacles I’ve been focusing on. My goal is to clear one of them. Any of them.

There are some obstacles I’ve never done in a Spartan race before, which is unusual at this point in my OCR “career.” Farmer’s carry? Irish tables? Helix? I know what they all are, at least. There are two sandbag carries, which are always easy for me. Spear throw at the end. 

I write down how the obstacles line up with the mile markers. As I suspected, miles 3 through 11 only have a total of eight obstacles. The challenge in this section will just be the terrain. I’ve been watching Steve Hammond’s social media stories to get a preview of the course. It’s horrifying. But it was horrifying in 2019 and I finished.

I finish the mac and cheese and start in on my chocolate chunk cookie for dessert. Driving long distances gives me anxiety and a high heart rate, high enough that I actually burn about 200 calories per hour just by driving. I want those calories back. I need them back for the weekend ahead. I’ve been drinking a lot of water, too. Preparing for the relentless heat of eastern Ohio in June. 

The preparation started a year ago, when the pandemic hit and Ohio 2020 was cancelled, with the promise of a Trifecta weekend offering in 2021. I wanted to become one of those people who can do three obstacle races in two days. I trained for this. I feel ready. As ready as I’ll ever be. 

For now, I need a distraction. I recently read The Handmaid’s Tale. It’s time to start watching the series. 

Friday Afternoon

Wes joins me at an outdoor table at the Ohio Turnpike mile 140 travel plaza. I have already finished my Panera soup. “’Fast’ food, my ass,” Wes jokes as he plops down his Burger King bag. He will be doing his first Beast tomorrow, with his first Trifecta weekend. Salty foods are required. He leaves again briefly and returns with his dog, who is spooked by every small child who walks by. I give her a slice of cheese to calm her down.

We discuss the course. We discuss the weather. We discuss post-pandemic life. I try to warn him about the realities of this race venue, how wet it is, how muddy, how the flooded areas have uneven ground at the bottom that you can’t see. We are both trying not to seem nervous. We don’t discuss being nervous.

Finally, we part ways and I continue to the mile 187 exit and the Streetsboro Hampton Inn. I’ve pre-selected my suite, room 201. Sadly, it isn’t ready yet. I wait in the lobby with my luggage and a complimentary hot chocolate until my digital key is delivered to my email. My room is huge, with a separate living room and bedroom and a large bathroom. 

I set up the living room to my specifications. SpeedHound recovery system on the floor, with a pillow against the couch that I can lean on. Ottoman holds a massage gun, Wave tool, lotion, and a tennis ball. I put groceries that I purchased in the fridge. Essential provisions, such as Gatorade Zero, between-race Lunchables for Sunday, and my mid-race Nutter Butters. Equally essential treats, like Doritos and Snickers bars. I lay out my clothes for each day. I put stickers over the blinking red light of the smoke alarm so it doesn’t keep me awake at night. I think of everything. The more I control this room, the more in control I will feel.

Friday Evening

My pre-race tradition is to order spaghetti and meatballs from whatever local Italian restaurant will deliver. I am breaking tradition slightly today by going to the restaurant, in this case Blasiole’s, myself to pick it up. For a mere $10 I have gotten two meals’ worth of spaghetti and meatballs (thanks, huge portion sizes), garlic bread, a dinner roll, and a side salad. It takes two paper plates to hold half of the food I bought. The other half goes into the fridge for tomorrow. It is delicious. Especially the garlic bread.

After dinner I check my lists and pack my race bags. I must make sure the right stuff gets into the right bags. My hydration backpack requires my cookies, ID, credit card, cash, first aid kit, and a full water bladder. My pink backpack will be checked at the festival and needs flip flops, a towel, comb, sunscreen, some food, water, and more. I wrote everything I would need down weeks ago. I just have to execute.

This is my approach to the race weekend. Plan. Practice. Execute. I’ve been doing it for months for those three main obstacles. I’ve been doing it for my recovery strategy. This will be the ultimate test. Can I do something this massive? Can I stick to the plan? Can I improvise on the fly if needed? Can I maintain my focus?

Two Weeks Ago

I tell the psychiatrist everything I came here to tell him. How I’ve been intelligent and good at taking tests my whole life, so my teachers considered me a great student with no difficulties. “Conscientious and diligent,” they wrote on my report cards. Even the teachers who regularly gave me detention for not doing homework assignments. They didn’t see the six cans of Coke I was drinking every day, which made me feel calm and borderline sleepy, but I somehow intuitively knew I needed them to be productive. They didn’t see my room, which was always either immaculately clean (after an hour of focused tidying up) or looked like a tornado hit it. 

They didn’t see how, if I didn’t feel like doing something, I just couldn’t get motivated to do it. Yet I could literally play Final Fantasy 7 for twelve hours a day, in a state of hyper focus. They didn’t see how I was terrible with names and faces. How I needed to always be doing two or three things at once. How my toes and feet jittered and bounced constantly. How if I was terrible at something right away, I wouldn’t be able to put in the work to improve. How I need to make lists for everything, or it won’t happen.

I just thought I was lazy. Getting into fitness was my way to prove to myself that I wasn’t lazy. But there was still something there, something that couldn’t manufacture motivation or enthusiasm. 

The psychiatrist sees it, too. And he tells me what I already suspected: it’s attention deficit disorder. He says I “definitely have all the signs.” He praises me for using my gifts to get through school and life and find a way to make it work for me. Finding a career that I enjoy. Finding activities that are productive. I feel seen. I don’t feel lazy. I might have a different type of brain, but I can make it work for me. It’s what I’ve always done. 

Saturday Morning

I shut off my car, silencing the “Monsters of Rap” CD I’d been playing, and get my stuff. I walk across the slightly squishy field that is serving as a parking lot today. Towards the registration tents. There are lines of people. I stand at the end of one of them and overhear two people in the next line talking about their trip into town. “I came in from Waterloo, Iowa,” the man says. 

“Waterloo?” I call over. “I’m from Cedar Falls!” We immediately bond. He is in my wave. Maybe I’ll see him out there. I make note of his outfit (long sleeves, long tights, spandex) and facial hair (burly). I may be lousy with faces, but I can remember stylistic choices.

I check in and find an open area in the festival to put on my headband, wrist bands, and timing chip. The dinner roll from Blasiole’s will make a lovely snack before my wave starts. I check my backpack and use the port-a-johns before getting into the start corral.

The hype man is high energy on the mic. He has had his coffee today. He mentions people from Pittsburgh being there and says “oh, Steelers fans. Yikes. What have you won lately? Tell me that!” I join the sea of groans. This guy’s got balls, apparently. He approaches a male racer and tells him “you obviously skipped leg day.” Holy shit, the cringe. I immediately diagnose the hype man with attention deficit disorder. We can spot our own.

He sends us off at 8:50 AM, but not before insulting the Cleveland Browns and the Dallas Cowboys. As I make my way towards the first obstacle, I wonder what team he roots for, based on his dislikes. Hard to say. At first I thought the Ravens, based on his AFC North hatred, but the Cowboys are a curveball. Must gather more information.

The initial segment of woods is not as muddy as I feared. I come out and find two overwalls by a road. Easily hop them and continue along the shoulder of the road to a 6’ wall. I see two men standing next to it, seemingly taking a break or waiting for a straggler. “What’s up, fellas?” I ask. 

“Not much! Need any help?” one guy asks. 

“I hope not,” I jokingly reply. Grab the top of the wall, walk my feet up, and hook my knee easily, straddling the top.

“No, you don’t need help. That was a silly question,” the guy says. I laugh and continue. The path takes me down a rocky slope to a set of monkey bars. They are all the same height, with some decent sized gaps. I climb onto a stool and feel the first bar. It feels greasy. Oh, no.

Deep breath. I swing from the first bar, grab the next, match hands. Use my swing to get to the next bar. Match hands. On one bar I stick to it slightly and the next grab is very inelegant. But for the other transfers, I am doing it. It’s going well. I feel amazing as I reach out and ring the bell. I got the most nerve-wracking obstacle out of the way in the first fifteen minutes. Whew. The nearby volunteer says he thinks that the bars are greasy from sunscreen and sweat. I suspect he’s right.

The sandy slope past the monkey bars leads down into a field of water about knee deep. I wade through, enjoying the cold, and my Garmin chimes with one mile completed. Two guys near me splash into the water to cool off. So refreshing. The barbed wire crawl after we emerge is split into two sections, each one blessedly short. I hold my hydration backpack and roll through the first one clockwise, and through the second counter-clockwise. I continue through a muddy section. This terrain is tough on the ankles. I’ll need to watch where I step.

They constructed a two-section Twister on a gun range. There are spent shells scattered all over the place. I grab the first handles and thank the lord that they don’t feel as greasy as the monkey bars did. I work my way through sideways, needing to get the second section helix facing down, but I manage to easily clear the obstacle. It’s time for my first cookie. I sit on the ground near the finish and watch people while I eat. A guy with no shirt on rings the bell. “Good job, No Shirt!” I call out. He looks at me, bemused, trying to figure out if I’m mocking him. I assure him I’m not. “Yeah, Yellow Shirt!” I yell to the next guy. No Shirt seems to understand me now.

Bender is a bit further along, past mile 2, on the same sandy terrain. I get up to the top, climb over, and sit on the bottom bar, six feet off the ground. I jump down and land perfectly on bent knees. The 7’ wall is nearby and I again am able to grab the top and get over it by myself. Beater comes next, and this time the second beater is set quite high and requires big momentum. I am able to clear it. It occurs to me that I’ve already done three of the four overhead grip obstacles that are out here today. The last one, multi-rig, is one of my big three. And I won’t see it for many miles. The aid station behind Beater has electrolyte tablet packets and pickle juice. I put a bunch of the tablets in my pack and take a few gulps of pickle juice. I hate pickles. And it turns out, I hate pickle juice. But I immediately feel the sodium enter my blood and I feel invincible.

Right before Stairway to Sparta I see a mile 3 sign. My Garmin says it’s more like mile 2.6. I make a mental note of how badly placed that is, then focus on the obstacle. It’s in Beast mode, with 8 feet until the first handholds and a new, slick, Olympus-type surface. I try to get up there and it’s hopeless. My feet cannot stick to this wall. A couple of people give me a boost up several feet until I can grab the top of the wall above the handholds. I then get my feet on the handholds and try not to slip off before reaching the A-frame ladder portion. I do not slip off. I live to face another day.

Up a rocky slope to find tyro traverse. The first of my big three. I take off my hydration backpack, remove my rope gloves, and toss the backpack to the side. I don’t want any extra weight on me. Especially since these ropes are so slack that there are large men whose backs are scraping on the ground. They could have really tightened these ropes up. Oh well.

I mount the rope and hook my feet over the top, pulling myself along with my hands. It’s slow going. My legs do not glide easily. I can move only about a foot and a half with each pull, and I need to move about forty or fifty feet total. I keep pulling with my arms, then crunching my legs up. Repeat. Repeat. I accidentally open my mouth and a clump of dirt from the rope falls in. I turn my head to spit it out but gravity is not on my side. A wad of dirty saliva oozes down my cheek. Pull. Crunch. Repeat. 

My hands freeze up. I can’t move my fingers. I crane my neck up. There is a long way to go. My hands will not grip the rope anymore. I drop down and sit on the box where I left my backpack, eating a cookie and emptying some of the gunk from my shoes. Then heading for the burpee pit, which is suspiciously empty. The guys that are there sarcastically note that everyone must be clearing the obstacle (they aren’t) because nobody else is doing burpees. It is clear that there are a lot of burpee-skippers today. I try not to think about it. I’m doing my own race. Another man enters the burpee pit and says “I just cannot get this obstacle, I don’t know why.” Same, man. Same.

As I walk to the next obstacle I take some electrolyte tablets. I’m feeling a bit woozy from the heat. Hopefully this will help. I see the mile 4 sign, which is at mile 4.5. Yep, 1.9 miles between mile markers is definitely a Spartan record. As I start to feel better with the additional sodium influx I come across Armer, and easily pick up the handle and waddle with the ball out to the flags and back. The terrain becomes more wet. There are long stretches through a flooded ATV road. There are deep ruts underwater that I cannot see. With each step, I don’t know which way my ankle will go. I must be careful. We are only at mile 6.

There is a pile of sandbags. They are all the same size and look like the sort you’d use to reinforce a levee. I grab one. It’s wet and weighs around fifty pounds. I turn around and enter another flooded road full of floating debris and follow the line of people. People are falling. People are slipping. I maintain my footing. Until I don’t.

My right foot strikes the rut on the bottom at an awkward angle. My ankle twists completely sideways. I have to hitch the sandbag back up to my shoulder to correct myself. I know immediately this is an injury. The pain squeaks through with each step. I exit the water and walk through mud, still with my sandbag. It gets worse. Cold fear runs through my blood as I visualize myself needing to be carted off the course in an all-terrain vehicle. If they can even get one out here.

I cannot panic. Not now. I cannot give in to these thoughts. I must continue, one step at a time, for as long as I can. I have no choice.

I limp through the mud and deposit my sandbag back on the pile. I turn away from it and step wrong, wincing in agony. I look up. I see an old friend. “No Shirt,” I say, forlornly. He looks at me, pity in his eyes. He says nothing. There is nothing to say. No Shirt knows I must figure this out on my own.

Saturday Afternoon

As I continue through the sopping wet course, I watch my feet intently, making sure my ankle stays as straight as possible with every step. Sometimes it jerks a bit sideways, and I wince and limp a bit. Fortunately, this passes fairly quickly. This sprain is not severe. The difficulty will be in not injuring it further in the many miles that remain in this race. And this race weekend. If it gets injured any worse…I try not to think about it.

Past mile 7. Halfway done. There is a bank of port-a-potties near the next obstacle, a single hurdle 5 feet off the ground. I use the port-a-potty despite not really needing to, because I know it’ll be the only one on the course. It is so hot that the water I drink is immediately exiting my body via sweat glands. There’s not much left for urine. I flop and turn (the “flop and turn” is my patented, fool-proof method for these sorts of things) on the hurdle and dismount gently. One obstacle at a time. Easy does it. Do not make things worse.

A mile of wet terrain. Irish Tables. These are foot-wide platforms, set about 5.5 feet off the ground. Basically another hurdle, only taller and with a flat top. I jump up and flop and turn on top. Dismount. Gently. More wet terrain. I empty my shoes of muck again. The obstacle density here is very low, about one obstacle per mile. Lots of time to think. Lots of opportunities to twist my ankle again. Or twist the other one. Don’t think about that.

“Clare!”

I know that voice.

I turn to face Wes. “I sprained my goddamn ankle on that stupid sandbag carry!” This is no time for subtlety, stoicism, or beating around the bush. I must give Wes all of the information immediately, before he leaves me in his dust. 

“Oh, shit,” he replies. What more is there to say? We walk together for a while. The 8’ wall looms. It’s probably nine feet, actually. Spartan loves to lie about the 8’ wall. Wes gets over the top, then comes back around and gives me a boost. I straddle the top of the wall and look down. Oh god. 

“WES! MAKE SURE I DON’T FALL TOO FAST!” He comes back around and grabs me around the waist to slow my descent. Thank god, I land okay. This was the farthest drop remaining in today’s race, and I did it. Wes goes on ahead and I proceed with caution to the next obstacle, another hurdle. Flop, turn, dismount. I’m past mile 10 now. 

The terrain dries out. The major flooding is largely behind me. Back into the sandy quarries. I see logs with small chain handles on the ground. Farmers carry. I grab two in the women’s section. They’re light. Only about 25 pounds each. I walk out and back to the cones about 30 feet away. Easy. As I walk away I see a photographer snapping pictures of some men. First photographer I’ve seen today, and I didn’t even realize he was there. I briefly wonder if he got my picture, too.

As I walk to the next obstacle, I see a woman walking with arms akimbo, struggling. I ask her if she needs anything. I have everything one could need in my pack. Except for a chiropractor, and this woman has thrown her back out and is deep in the pain cave. “I came here to do an obstacle race, not this bullshit mud and water shit. But I’m finishing this,” she grits, hating every second. I know, as a personal trainer, that this woman does not want or need a cheerleader. She needs commiseration and agreement. “That sucks. But you will finish.” She nods. I continue past.

There is an aid station by the next obstacle, The Box. It is the same aid station we passed by Beater, with the pickle juice. I take another swig. It doesn’t taste any better the second time. I chase it with water and head toward The Box. My attempt to lock in my feet on the rope fails, and I request a boost. Two women say “we’ll boost you if you help us from the top.” Deal! They get me up there, then I grab the next one and help pull her up, along with another guy. The Box, along with Stairway to Sparta, will always be a Tough Mudder obstacle in the Open heats. It requires teamwork. And that’s okay.

More terrain. Pipe Lair. I make my way through the maze of pipes as straight as possible, without having to turn my ankle. It hurts off and on. Its presence is always known, but can sometimes be ignored. And coming up next is Olympus. The obstacle I’ve prepared for the most. I’m finally facing my Waterloo.

“Oh hey! Waterloo!”

I call out to my buddy from the check-in line. “Cedar Falls!” he responds cheerfully. We catch up with each other and agree that this race is nuts. We hit Olympus at the same time. I try it with my left arm leading. I’ve planned to do the top line of holds and holes and try to scramble my feet. Ankle won’t cooperate so I decide to try it with knees in the wall. I use the holes. I stay in the holes. The holes are getting lower. I am too low. I can’t save it. I give up, gently, after two of the six panels and head to the burpee pit to do extremely slow burpees. I lay down. I get back up. Repeat for thirty reps. Waterloo has also failed. Lots of people have failed. Most of them are skipping the burpee pit.

Waterloo and I spend ten more minutes discussing the local soft trails in our hometown area and exchanging our actual names when he decides to jog ahead. I pass the mile 12 mark and find the infamous Ohio sandbag carry, up and down the steep, slightly gravelly hill. I grab a bag, shoulder it, and head up the first steep hill. My shoes have incredible grip. I push people from behind who are sliding backward. I do not stop. If I stop, I will not only be blocking the path, I will never get going again. I press my heel into the hill to stretch my ankle gently. It can move in this direction.

At the top of the first hill, I drop the bag, gasping for breath. My heart rate is about 200. This carry gets me every time. When I’ve recovered a bit, I pick the bag back up and descend the steep hill, keeping to the left side where there is less gravel. I cannot slip. I do not slip. I circle around to the next uphill and climb up. Rest. Climb down. Drop off the bag in the bins. Another obstacle down.

A relatively short walk to the Atlas carry, where I pick up the ball without using my right ankle. I walk around the poles on the far end, and they force me through a huge patch of poison ivy. I don’t even care at this point. I’ve touched so much poison ivy today. If I die, I die. Itching is the least of my concerns. I drop the ball back at the start and watch the entire ground vibrate from the impact. Through more sandy puddles. And there it is. The multi-rig.

Wait a minute. The monkey bars are next to it. The multi-rig was next to the monkey bars? How did I not notice this before when I DID THE MONKEY BARS? I have been dying of curiosity this entire race to find out what the multi-rig configuration is, and I could have learned it 12 miles ago?!

And the configuration…is not expected. I’ve prepared for, I thought, all the possibilities. Rings, bar, ring, two ropes. Rings, bar, rope, ring, rope. Rings, bar, two rings, rope. But here before me…three rings. A very high horizontal bar (about 1.5 feet higher than the rings). And three ropes in a row before the bell.

SHIT. This is, by far, the most difficult multi-rig I have ever seen in a Spartan event. Even the televised ones.

Okay. Don’t freak out. I look at it. I look at the ropes. I see which have solid knots on the bottom. I find a good lane. I grab the ring. It feels dry as a bone. Thank god. I swing, grab the second ring. Swing, grab the third ring. Get backswing. Swing for the bar.

Miss.

Swing back, grab the second ring with my back hand. I swing back and forth a few times, generating height. I need to make a HUGE grab for the bar. I pull back as hard as I can and swing up. 

Fingertips.

I hold on. I hop my hand a bit farther onto the bar. My fingers are latched on top, but no part of my palm is on it. I have to go for it. I let go of the ring still on my back hand and reach up. 

Grab the bar.

Phew. I shuffle sideways. I try not to think about how high off the ground I am. My feet are probably dangling about 4 feet off the ground. I cannot fall from here. But I trust my grip and ability on a bar. It’s the ropes that scare me. 

I get to the absolute end of the bar. My plan is to skip the first rope. I grab for the second rope, which is a good foot or foot and a half below the bar. I hang with one arm on the rope and the other on the bar. I steel myself for the force of the downward swing. I let go of the bar, match on the rope, and grab the last rope in quick succession. I have one hand on each rope. I swing myself side to side. I need to generate a lot of momentum. The bell is three feet away and a foot higher than the rope. Swing several times. Let go, match, and reach for the bell.

And I miss it. 

My one shot. I don’t have the steam to reach back and regroup on the ropes. I didn’t even have the steam to do the little pull-up hop I apparently would have needed to reach the bell on my first swing. I drop to the ground, simultaneously defeated and incredibly proud of myself for getting that far on the rig. There is a man in his twenties nearby who looks just like OCR pro Ryan Atkins. He looks at me, impressed. And a bit bummed. His eyes say it all: “damn, I thought that’d work.” Me too, Atkins. Me too. 

As I do my burpees, a blonde woman with a sports bra, booty shorts, and very unnatural breasts gets on the multi-rig and hangs from the first ring. She doesn’t swing. She hangs. She screeches. She makes a spectacle of herself. She falls and gets right back on, refusing to go to the back of the line. She does it again. I watch, fascinated. She is truly terrible at this. But the worst part is that she is not yielding to other racers. Finally she gives up and heads towards the burpee pit as I’m finishing. I move along gladly.

Next up: bucket carry. I shoulder a bucket and start walking. I feel exhausted. My lower back is killing me. I stop a few times to give my back a rest. There is a log I need to step over in the middle of this carry. Ugh. My ankle hurts. It is getting harder to stay positive.

I drop off the bucket and continue past mile 13. The map said the course was 14 miles. Oh man, the last mile. Thank god. There’s a vertical cargo net with a platform. I easily flop and turn onto it and climb up and down the net, watching my feet. The view is lovely. A gravel road leads down to Herc Hoist, which overlooks a picturesque lake. I get the rope gloves out of my bag for the second time today and haul the bag up and down easily.

The gravel road continues. I walk around the dark puddles. I want to see where I’m putting my feet whenever possible. We are approaching the festival. I know because I can smell the smoke from the fire jump, and I can hear the music. “Yakety Sax” is playing. That’s hilarious. I can’t stop chuckling. Nobody around me thinks it’s funny.

I exit the road and enter the forest via a muddy ditch. The man in front of me chooses the closer path, and when he steps into the dark water he sinks down to his waist. I pause, then proceed to the farther path. I only submerge a few inches. I have chosen wisely. Through a long stretch of muddy forest. Mile 14. We are not at the finish. The map lied.

Finally, I emerge into the big fields near the festival area. The final gauntlet of obstacles. There is one last water stop next to the Z-walls. I get through the walls with some difficulty, trying to balance on the small footholds without straining my ankle any further. Next is the inverted wall, which is normally easy for me. I climb up, then try to sling my left leg over the wall. This is much harder than usual. My right ankle refuses to turn out enough to give my hip the flexibility. I am stuck. I start to freak out. I see a man at the bottom of the wall in front of me. 

“Help!” I call out to him. He comes up and grabs my arm so I can risk throwing my leg over. I am very grateful to this random man. Carefully I slide down the wall and get down. I walk towards the next obstacle. The cold wash is to the left, and I see a bunch of people who have already finished hosing themselves down. 

Rolling Mud. Oh god. I am already limping. I can’t do this. I walk past the three muddy banks and water pits of Rolling Mud, only to see a photographer at the end behind the dunk wall. Ugh. FINE. I’ll do the stupid dunk wall. I take off my backpack and sunglasses and set them in the grass, then enter the water before the dunk wall. There is a girl next to me trying to psych herself up. “I’m scared of going underwater!” she says to me. I tell her “it’s kind of far. A couple feet. Just plug your nose and keep moving, and don’t dawdle at the end because someone might ram you from behind.” She nods. We go under at the same time. We emerge. “Thank you so much!” she tells me. Thanks for what, who can say for sure, but I think I know what she means.

There is a short walk back toward the cold wash, through deep, nasty mud. Then the slip wall. People are falling on it. Hard. I cannot attempt this. To risk slamming into the wall, sliding down fast, and hitting the ground at an awkward angle would be idiotic on this ankle. I walk past. I don’t even consider doing burpees. I am exhausted and consider this an ankle-saver rather than a failed obstacle.

Through a tree line and I see Helix. It is a metal X-shaped traverse wall. I work my way through it, not sure if I’m doing it right. I try not to tweak my ankle. I do anyway, a few times. But I make it to the end without touching the ground. One last short patch of woods. I’m almost done. Almost done.

Out of the muddy woods and looming above me is the rope climb. I am so tired. I get my gloves out of my backpack and grab a good-looking rope. My hands slide right through. Huh? I try again. I have no grip. I try another rope. No. “The gloves do nothing!” I think in Rainier Wolfcastle’s voice. “What the HELL,” I say out loud, and walk toward the burpee pit. There are a couple guys already there. “Hope you don’t mind if I do bicycle crunches instead, I sprained my ankle,” I tell them. “I am not offended,” one guy replied.

After my bicycles, I get up and stagger over to the spear throw. Boob Blonde is there (she must have passed me at some point), hogging a spear throw station by throwing over and over. I get in line behind some dude. He takes a shot and misses. He immediately takes another shot and makes it. I walk forward and he reels it in to take ANOTHER shot. “Dude, let someone who hasn’t gone have a turn.” He stares at me. How dare a woman speak to him like this. “I just got here,” he says. He is incredulous. I raise my eyebrow at him. He walks away to stand in line at another spear station. Jagoff.

I reel in the spear. I balance it in my hand. I take a couple deep breaths. It’s not that far a throw. Wind it back. The spear feels heavy. I toss it and miss, short by several feet. DAMMIT. I do more bicycle crunches at the burpee pit. People are watching. I thank god I’m almost done. 

I struggle to my feet and lightly limp toward the A-frame cargo net. I climb up, turn myself around at the apex without moving my ankle sideways, and climb back down. I walk toward the fire on a pile of loose rocks. I cannot run. When I get to the flames I hop over, leading with my left leg so I can land on a decent ankle. I walk across the finish line. My Garmin says 14.9 miles.

The volunteer hands me a medal. I get a photo, my chip removed, a FitAid, and my shirt. I see Wes before he has to leave. He finished a while before I did and seems to be doing okay. I get my bag and hose off, stopping by the medical tent to get a bag of ice so I can start treating this sprain immediately.

It’s late afternoon. I have no idea how I’ll come back tomorrow morning. Let’s just hope I can get this sprain healing tonight.

Saturday Evening

I have iced my ankle several times. It doesn’t feel great. I’ve used a massage gun on my calves a lot. They’re not in great shape. That much mud and water used my muscles in weird ways.

I’m scared. I have no idea if I can even attempt the races tomorrow. 

If I wake up and this ankle feels worse, then no.

If I wake up and this ankle feels better, great!

If I wake up and this ankle feels the same…

…I don’t know. I have no idea what’s going to happen. 

This will be a game-day decision.

Sunday Early Morning

My ankle feels…the same.

I eat breakfast. I don’t know. UGH. Fuck. FUCK IT. 

I have to go for it. 

I did not drive ten hours to get to Bumscrew, Ohio, to just attempt to get ONE measly finisher medal. Oh no. I did not. 

I don’t care if they have to drag me off the course on a stretcher, I have to TRY to finish this trifecta weekend. 

Wes and I will stick together today. We are the walking wounded. I’ll start a bit later to get into his wave. I can skip obstacles that aren’t safe for my ankle. I can make him boost me over things that are sort of safe for my ankle.

Just about ten more miles to go today. I can do it. I have to at least try.

I ice and use the massage gun again.

Sunday Morning

Standing in line to register again. I see Wes up ahead of me in line. We eventually both get our stuff and check our bags and get into the corral. We have agreed: we are a team today. No man left behind. The hype man is making fun of the Cowboys again. “What do you think his team is?” I ask Wes. “Probably the Eagles. Who else would hate the Cowboys AND the Steelers?” Wes says. This is an excellent theory.

We start shortly before 10 AM. We walk. Most other people are running. Most of them probably didn’t do that crazy Beast yesterday. But we know some people did. Walking near the back with us is a woman who is also moving slowly. “I sprained my ankle yesterday,” I tell her. “I sprained my ankle too!” she replies. 

I pause. “Was it on that damn first sandbag carry?” “YES!” Holy crap. Turns out H is also doing the trifecta weekend and has a few other nagging pains. We invite her to stick with us and we form Team Survival Mode, aka Team Strugglebus. It’s good to have a team before the first obstacle.

We hop the overwalls carefully, then hit the 6’ wall. I walk my feet up and hook my left knee, coming down carefully. And I notice immediately – my left knee hurts. I must have hooked it funny or something. It feels like I pulled a hamstring. Dammit all to hell. As if I need more injuries today.

We get to the monkey bars. I feel the first bar. It’s even greasier than yesterday. I can’t risk a fall. I head for the burpee pit and do bicycle crunches. I’ve already decided I am not doing any burpees today. I’ll do different penalties, but I can’t get up and down that much. There are too many opportunities to bend my ankle as it is. And I don’t feel bad about it because at least we’re doing SOMETHING as a penalty. Lots of these folks just fail and move on.

We stroll through the water and go under the barbed wire again. This time there’s a photographer! And the walk to Twister has been in hot sunshine for an extra day, so is slightly firmer than yesterday. I continue to watch carefully where to place my feet. Perhaps the farther along I get, the less careful I’ll have to be. But there are still a lot of miles left.

I grab the handles of Twister. They feel slippery. I slide right off and almost stumble over the starting blocks. I do sit-ups in the burpee pit, which is full of bullet casings. At this point Wes gives up on burpees as well because his bicep is majorly screwed. Squats it is! When we get to Bender I just lay in the grass immediately and do a penalty while H and Wes climb over. That 6-foot jump is not happening today. 

I get Wes to boost me on the 7’ wall, now that my knee is out of commission. I land as gently as possible, but it still hurts a bit. I think this is the tallest wall remaining today. I hope so. Beater is a no-go. I don’t even try it. Sit-ups. Oh look, they’ve modified Stairway to Sparta! It’s not in Beast mode anymore. They removed the panels that have the rock climbing holds. I try to get over the initial 8’ panel by myself. Nope. I need a boost. This surface is so slick, they should be selling it in the family planning aisle.

We loop back to The Box. I am pleased to see that we basically teleported past eight brutal miles of the Beast course. No long stretches of flooded ATV road today! Just some big puddles, basically. Much more manageable. Much less ankle-breaking. Wes and H haul me up The Box, then we get Wes up there, then we get H up there. H is former military and is one badass chick. Definitely a valuable asset to Team Strugglebus, even with aches and pains.

Pipe Lair goes smoothly. The team sort of races to get through it, since we all go at the same time. I don’t win the race. We walk along the gravel road towards Olympus and H yells. I look down and see a four-foot black snake slithering across the road several feet in front of us. “WHOA!” I say, watching it slither into the grass along the side of the road. Apparently sudden large snake appearances are one of the few things that can catch H off guard.

Olympus looks different. The chains didn’t have balls yesterday, and they do today. I half-heartedly attempt it but quickly give up and do my sit-ups. There are several people on Olympus who have absolutely NO idea what they’re doing. They’re trying to climb along it with their feet in the holes, bending to put their hands on top of the wall for balance. It looks incredibly dangerous and stupid, but there is no volunteer to tell them to stop. It also is taking them forever to get across. We finish our penalties before they can finish the obstacle.

The sandbag carry. Thankfully we don’t have to do the mucky one again, just the crazy hill one. H struggles to maintain her footing up the hill. I push on her back to help her out. We descend as safely as possible, then go back up. This time there is a guy in front of me who is probably 6’4”, 260 lb. He starts sliding backwards. I do not want to die. I reach out immediately, shove my hand into the small of his back, and yell “GO GO GO GO GO GO GO!” He quickly steps up to the top of the hill. I don’t know if he thanks me. He doesn’t need to. I didn’t do it for him, I did it to save my own life from having over three hundred total pounds of mass (him plus sandbag) falling backwards on me. 

The sandbag carry finishes without further incident, and we get through the Atlas carry fine as well. The holes the balls sit in are getting deeper. We continue to the multi-rig, which has been changed to rings only. I reach out and grab the first ring, and it feels dry, just like yesterday. I swing through fairly easily, matching my left hand because my grip is a bit weaker on that hand today. I ring the bell. I land mostly gracefully. Wes fails, H clears it. I take my time at the water station as he does a penalty.

Ah, here is the bucket again. We start walking. “Elites on your left!” we hear, as the elites running the afternoon Sprint race come jogging past holding buckets. Hey, I’ll try to get out of your way, but I can’t make any promises. It’s not like I have a lot of “juke” holding a fifty-pound bucket with an ankle sprain. I am not Barry Sanders up in here. I refuse to stop and rest. Ditch the bucket at the end and breathe a sigh of relief.

Vertical cargo has been altered as well – no more platform, and there’s a photographer today. I climb over and down. Then the scenic Herc Hoist again. It’s nice to have a team today. It’s nice to not be at mile 13 today. We can smell the fire again as we make our way towards the finishing gauntlet. The muddy ditch has changed today. The far side is getting worse, and the close side is getting better.

We emerge at the Z-walls. I manage to clear it a bit more easily today. The inverted wall, though, I will not attempt. I do a penalty as Wes and H make it over. I also don’t attempt Rolling Mud, although I do go through the dunk wall again. I’m determined to get at least one decent dunk wall photo this weekend. I emerge, completely disgusting, on the other side. I spit out dirt for the next quarter mile. I hope I don’t have too many open wounds.

The slip wall looms. It isn’t any less nasty on day two. Wes and H attempt it. Wes gets over. H slips and hits the ground fast. She gets up. Thank god her ankle seems okay. She joins me for a penalty. I ain’t doing that thing. I couldn’t handle that fall. Today there’s a volunteer at Helix! She’s telling us we cannot touch the top of the obstacle. Oh. Yeah, yesterday I definitely touched the top. There was no volunteer then. I try to get through today. It’s twisting my ankle up too much. I have to step down to the ground a few times. 

Team Strugglebus skips the rope climb in favor of the burpee pit. Then the spear throw. I gear up. I tell myself “remember: this spear is HEAVY.” I throw it with power but ease. It sticks. Huzzah! I turn to Wes to celebrate only to see him walk to the burpee pit. “How come we never both make the spear in a race? If you hit it, I miss it,” he says. That is…true. Wow. Only one of us has ever made the spear in the same race. Yesterday he apparently hit it and I missed. Plus the three other races we’ve done together, only one of us has hit it. That’s some crazy luck. 

We head for the A-frame cargo, only to be stopped in our tracks by a pack of people sitting on the apex getting their picture taken. They’re holding an American flag. It is taking forever for them to get this picture. WHY is it taking so long? “Can we MOVE?” Team Strugglebus is all saying to these people. Finally they climb down. I know we will complain about these douchebags through the entire Sprint.

We tenderly hop over the fire and collect our medals. We get a team photo. We make plans to reunite in the festival area before the Sprint. H is with us. We might actually pull this off today.

Sunday Afternoon

Dude, where’s my car?

The parking lot is a field with no landmarks. I feel like I overshot my car. I turn around. I walk forward. I finally see it. THANK GOD.

I reapply sunscreen and lubricant, and change my socks and shirt. I can’t believe I’m gonna do this. My ankle feels no worse than it did this morning, by some absolute miracle. I just did a seven-mile Super. Now I just need to do about 3.5 more miles.

I can do this. I will do this.

I meet up with Wes and H back in the festival and eat lunch. We get into the start corral for a 2:30 start time. The hype man is still lit. We tell H our theory about the Eagles. Wes’s backup guess is the Giants, since he hates the Cowboys so much. But that wouldn’t explain the Steelers hate. I tell Wes I will ask the hype man. I will not leave Ohio without this information. I would regret it forever if I did.

Before I get the chance to ask, though, the hype man grabs two teams – Team Barbie (clad in pink) and Team Unicorn (bronies clad in unicorn tank tops). He identifies the “team captains” (a 14-year-old girl and the handsomest brony, respectively) and makes them do a dance battle to “Scenario” by A Tribe Called Quest. Although I wish we could just start the race already, I do appreciate this song, which is of course on my Monsters of Rap compilation that I listened to both mornings on the way to the venue. I bop around to keep limber while the hype man declares Team Barbie the winners. After he starts us on our way, I hang back in the corral. “My friends and I want to know what your team is! We think it’s the Eagles.” He looks like he sucked on a lemon. “Hell NO! The Giants!” he calls into the mic. Wes and I laugh and Team Strugglebus is on our way. “I should have asked him what’s the last thing the Giants ever won,” I say.

The obstacles tick by so fast. Even more of the course has been chopped off. It’s the same path through the overwalls, 6’ wall (I get a boost), monkey bars (I skip them again), and the barbed wire crawl. Then we take a hard right and skip eleven full miles of the Beast course to eventually re-emerge at the second sandbag carry on that diabolical hill again. It goes even better than the Super, as there are no big dudes threatening to bowl me over. The pits with the Atlas carry balls have gotten so deep they’re almost halfway underground. On the multi-rig the team celebrates a triple clear as we all make it through. You can tell we are almost done and we are catching a second wind. We feel beaten up, but great. Mentally, you cannot beat the feeling of having come so far and not having much farther to go. And having not made our sprains worse after so many more miles, we are feeling confident about our strategic movement.

The bucket carry. Upon finishing it I feel a huge sense of relief. My lower back won’t have to struggle anymore today. On top of vertical cargo we pose for a team photo. We are close to the end. We can taste it. Herc hoist, no problem. Through the muddy ditch and woods. Back to the final gauntlet, for the third and LAST time of the weekend. 

Z-walls are a struggle at this point. I have to re-mount but I fight through. Inverted wall is another penalty. Rolling Mud I skip. Dunk wall. I’m so over this dunk wall. It’s somehow getting more disgusting by the hour. Slip wall, Wes does. H has had enough sliding and falling for the day, so we do penalties together. 

Almost done. Holy moly.

Helix. I do not attempt it today. I do squats instead. Wes and H make their way through. More woods. “This is the LAST MUD OF THE WEEKEND!” I yell. We come out to the rope climb and all do penalties immediately. We don’t even make a half-hearted attempt to climb the rope. We are beyond exhausted.

At the spear throw I have to inform yet another man that he cannot take tons of shots while people are waiting, then I promptly miss. As I’m doing squats, H and Wes approach. They’ve both hit their spears. Of course. Wes knew he’d hit his as soon as I missed mine. I’ve done about 22 squats. “Fuck it, let’s finish this shit,” I say, and we walk together to the A-frame. We climb up and down. We leap majestically over the fire (LOL, psych). We cross the finish line. The Sprint was 3.7 miles.

We finish. We finish the whole damn Trifecta Weekend. 

Photos. Trifecta medals. More photos. Promises to reunite Team Strugglebus in Attica this September. Goodbyes.

We did it. I did it. 

Twenty five point six miles. Eighty four obstacles. Two days. One ankle sprain. 

Several new friends. H. Waterloo. No Shirt. 

I’ll probably do this again next year.

***

Garmin data (Beast, Super, Sprint): 




Beast Pics







Super Pics







Sprint Pics







Trifecta Weekend Finisher Pic