Showing posts with label McDonald Forest 50k. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McDonald Forest 50k. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Garmin vs. Nike+



Head to Head.

Mano a Mano.

Well, actually it was the Garmin 110 watch on my left wrist and the Nike+ plugged into my iPod Nano on my right arm.

So more like "Mano a Nano..."

Ha?

Nevertheless, they both made the entire 50k trip with me last Saturday as I ran the McDonald Forest 50k. So let's check the numbers and see which one we trust.

Mileage:
Well, officially the McDonald is a 50k. I'm guessing the course was actually just a touch short, but I can't confirm that, so we'll just say it's 31.4 miles. And what did the competitors say?
Garmin: 30.76 miles
Nike+: 34.23 miles
Yeah, the Nike+ wasn't even close. Admittedly, that isn't the right kind of course for the system it's using - it's better suited to nice, smooth roads and even pace, but it's got to do better than that. The Garmin looked to be a little short, but it matched the race mileage signs perfectly through about 25 miles, so I'm wondering if the course itself was a touch short.

Time:
Now, they should both keep time, but I've complained about the Nike+ here before, so let's check.
Garmin: 7:16:19
Nike+: 7:16:23
Close enough. I actually turned off the Garmin first, then the Nike+, so that's probably pretty good.

Calories:
Garmin: 4115
Nike+: 4993
I don't know how they each figure the calories, but since the Nike+ had me going four extra miles, it's not a surprise that it thinks I burned 800 more calories.

Pace:
Garmin: 14:11/mile
Nike+: 12:45/mile
Again, the Nike+ thinks I went over 34 miles, so clearly the pace is going to be way faster than the Garmin.

Elevation:
Well, the Nike+ doesn't have elevation readings, but I must mention that the Garmin found 8202 feet of elevation gain on the course, while the race directors said it was 6700 feet. That's a pretty big difference. Is the Garmin off by that much? I hope not, but I don't know for sure.

Website:
This is where it gets scary different. The Nike+ is just old technology. That said, it's also around $30, while the Garmin was $200, but here are some screenshots and you can decide for yourself.

Winner?
If you've got the money, it's not even a contest: the Garmin leaves the Nike+ in the dust.



McDonald Forest 50k Playlist!


As promised, here's the iPod playlist that carried me through the long, long hours of the McDonald Forest 50k Trail Run. It runs about four hours, so yes, I definitely heard a few songs twice. But this is quality stuff.

Enjoy.

Changing The Airborne Toxic Event
One Month Off Bloc Party
Love, Reign O'er Me Pearl Jam
Cinnamon Stone Temple Pilots
Knife prty Deftones
Talons Bloc Party
Twist and Crawl The English Beat
Weapon Matthew Good Band
Bacchanal Lady David Rudder & Charlie Roots
Guilt By Association Louis XIV
Ain't That a Shame Cheap Trick
Sugar And Stress The English Beat
Gamma Ray Beck
Mirror In The Bathroom The English Beat
L.E.S. Artistes Santigold
Lisztomania Phoenix
Here It Goes Again Ok Go
Hush Kula Shaker
Inside Out Eve 6
Save It For Later Harvey Danger
Sweet Al George Brad
1901 Phoenix
Rexall Dave Navarro
Pardon Me Incubus
Head Over Heels Tears For Fears
Lift Brad
Oh Lucky Man The Grapes Of Wrath
Something Good Can Work Two Door Cinema Club
Bones + Joints Finger Eleven
Pictures Of Matchstick Men Camper Van Beethoven
Bohemian Like You The Dandy Warhols
So Here We Are Bloc Party
Bawitdaba Kid Rock
Daylight Coldplay
Luno Bloc Party
Luchini (A.K.A. This Is It) Camp Lo
Carnival Of Sorts (Box Cars) R.E.M.
Jeanette The English Beat
Clocks Coldplay
The Pioneers Bloc Party
While We Go Dancing White Rabbits
Sail AWOLNATION
Two Weeks Grizzly Bear
Crosseyed Imperial Drag
Like Eating Glass Bloc Party
Scaredy Cats and Egomaniac
Imperial Drag
Daylight Matt & Kim
Helicopter Bloc Party
Day By Day Generation X
Gold Guns Girls Metric
One More Time Full Time Men
Bandages Hot Hot Heat
Help I'm Alive Metric
Fun, Fun, Fun Pharrell
Back To School Deftones
I Confess The English Beat
Banquet Bloc Party
This Modern Love Bloc Party
Stepping Out Joe Jackson
I Got Wheels Full Time Men
Low Cracker
40 Day Dream Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros
The Golden Age The Asteroids Galaxy Tour

Sunday, May 15, 2011

McDonald Forest 50k Trail Run Review!


Or...

-Goodbye toenail, it's been nice knowing you.
or...
-It's nothing personal quads, I still love you.
or...
-His father was a mudder, his mother was a mudder. His mother was a mudder? What did I just tell you?!

OK, the Mac 50. Wow. I'm so sore I can barely sit here and type. I should be in a tub full of warm water and crushed ibuprofen. But I care too much. The R's readers come first!

Well, I arrived at the start, the Forestry Cabin at Peavy Arboretum, just before 7:00, so I got to see the early starters. You could take an hour head start if you didn't care about your time. That's probably where I should have been, but I wanted the pomp and celebration of the regular start. Anyway, there were more people at the early start then I thought there would be - probably around 50, including the bride. The groom took the regular 8:00 start. Yes, you heard me right: the bride and groom. Read about it right here.

So after the early starters took off, I just hung around in the Forestry Cabin with the rest of the Trailers and waited for the start. Yes, Max King was there. He always looks normal-sized on the magazine covers, but seeing him in person made it clear that he has one evolutionary advantage over me in the sport of running - he's tiny. I could pick him up and carry him around like a suitcase!

At about five minutes before the start, runners started mingling, loosely, around the start area. Definitely a trail race. Definitely an ultra. Nobody crowding the start line and bouncing up and down waiting for the gun. It's just a different crowd.

The bell rang and we were off. I started in the back of the back. I didn't want to be anyway near the front of the crowd - or the middle for that matter. Any minute I went too fast in this one would be a minute I paid the price toward the end, I knew that. It went pretty well to start. You'd think they'd give us a little chance to get our legs under us before the hills started, right? Yeah, think again.

By mile three, we were headed up. And it wouldn't stop for the next 28 miles. This course goes up or down. It never has a flat section. Never.

The first aid station, at Lewisburg Saddle, came up pretty quickly, about seven miles in. I had already downed one GU on the way, and I grabbed a quick Heed and a few pretzels at the stop. And got the water bottle refilled. Don't forget about that. It will come back into the story later.

Between Aid Station #1 and Aid Station #3, at Dimple Hill, we went through some serious mud. There were a number of sections where you had to slow to a mincing jog just to stay on your feet. I slipped one time and would have been flat on my back in a mud pit but caught myself with a hand. A guy passed me on a particularly muddy single track trail, then I passed him back up about five minutes later as he tried to dig his shoe out of a mud hole. It had been sucked right off his foot as he tried to run through it. It's been a wet Spring and it showed in this section.

So we hit Aid Station #3, Dimple Hill, after an absolutely grueling, slow climb. And man, it was festive up there! The wedding was just wrapping up and the crowd was pretty big. The bride and groom must love "Fletch," as there were numerous signs with quotes from the movie around the aid station. My favorite, "Yes, charge the whole thing to Mr. Underhill." Runner up: "Sure, give me a Bloody Mary, a steak sandwich...and a steak sandwich." I grabbed what was quickly becoming my favorite aid station pick-me-up: Coke and Oreos! Probably the first full-strength Coke I've had in literally 20 years, but man, that sugar rush hit the spot. The pretzels started getting drier and drier at every aid stop and I couldn't do them after the third stop. I was drinking half of my water bottle trying to choke them down. I needed salt, but not that bad.

After Aid Station #3, we hit the longest downhill of the course, and it was welcome. As you can see on my pace chart, it was also the last time I had a sustained effort under ten minutes per mile. The combination of the food and drink from the aid station and the downhill actually brought a second wind for a couple miles, but it was short lived.

Then we began the real race. After that nice downhill, we were just past 20 miles. Two-thirds down. About 10 miles to go. And my legs were just about done. I was really starting to struggle right around the 22-23 mile point, when we started going uphill again. Plus, right about there, the extremely steep downhills had finally come to roost on my big toe on my right foot. It was hurting on all the downhills, to the point where I started running really steep downhills with a weird sidestep move instead of running straight ahead like a normal human. Yeah, that doesn't affect your pace, right?

When I had been on the course for about five hours, I thought I still had a shot to bring it home under seven hours. A number of 12 minute miles would have done it, but my legs were just gone. At about six hours, I went into the "just get to the stinking finish line" mode.

As the final injury inflicted upon me by the Mac 50 course, about a mile from the finish line, I got a rock in my shoe. It was tiny, but sharp, and of course, it went directly to the toe, where it jabbed me on every step! I hadn't taken my shoes off for rocks or blisters or any other reason the entire course - except for the one big toe, the Nikes were performing admirably. I decided just to tough it out and kept running, stopping for a second a few times to try to tap my shoe to get the rock back to my heel. Nope. It kept coming right back and jabbing me in the toe. Finally, less than a half mile from the finish, I just had to stop and get it out - I couldn't take it any more. While I sat on the log and took off my shoe, two people passed me. Ugh. Not that I was going for any awards here, but come on!

Got the shoe back on and ran through the finish line. I've truly never been happier to finish a race. I almost teared up. No, really. That was a tough haul. And all for EPIC. That kind of race isn't for me. I think I could be a big fan of the trail run, but not the 50k trail run with 6700 feet of elevation and miles of mud. That was brutal.

Max King, of course, ran the stinking thing in under four hours for a new course record. Wow. Read about it here.

Oh, the water bottle. Hey, I don't come from the ultra running school, and I freely admit that I don't have a lot of experience with it, but holy crap, does your right shoulder always hurt like hell from carrying a water bottle for 31 miles or is it just me?

Go ahead and check the results right here. Notice that stud in 159th place. Boom baby!

Stay tuned this week to see my playlist that totally carried me through 31 miles and to see how the Nike+ system compares with the Garmin system (Yes, I used them both so I could compare).

Now, please join me in two sweet weeks of rest before EPIC rolls on Memorial Day with the HOTV Triathlon.

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Elevation Profile for McDonald Forest 50k


Yeah, this is on the EPIC 2011 calendar for next weekend.

Yikes.

Let's race!

RACES FOR WEEK OF MAY 16th TO MAY 22nd

May 21st / Cannon Beach Elementary School 10k and 5k / Cannon Beach, OR

May 21st / Girls on the Run 5k / Richland, WA

May 21st / Run the Trail 8k and 5k / Gresham, OR

May 21st / Keizer Iris Run 5k / Keizer, OR

May 21st / Explorer's Run 4 Fun 5k / Dupont, WA

May 21st / McMinnville Parks and Rec Sprint Triathlon / McMinnville, OR

May 21st / The Friar Trot 10k and 5k / Sherwood, OR

May 21st / Joggin' for the Noggin 3.5m / Spokane, WA

May 21st / Walk and Roll Run 10k and 5k / Arlington, WA

May 21st / City of Stayton Sprint Triathlon / Stayton, OR

May 21st / Auburn Petpalooza 5k / Auburn, WA

May 21st / May Day 5k / Garfield, WA

May 21st / Fly Day 5k / Everett, WA

May 21st / Rhody Run 10k and 5k / Florence, OR

May 21st / Girls on the Run 5k / Seattle, WA

May 21st / Born to Run 15k and 5k / Eugene, OR

May 21st / Ironheart Classic 8m and 4m / Redmond, WA

May 21st / Pompadour 9k and 5k / Ashland, OR

May 21st / Seattle's Best 15k / Seattle, WA

May 21st / Hovde 5k / Vancouver, WA

May 21st / Student Stride for Education 5k / Washougal, WA

May 22nd / Big Backyard 5k / Redmond, WA

May 22nd / NW Trail Runs Lord Hill Park Half Marathon and 10k / Snohomish, WA

May 22nd / Run Girlfriend Run 10k and 5k / Sandy, OR

May 21st / Rhody Run 12k / Port Townsend, WA

May 22nd / 10 Cane 10k Rum Run (with free Mojito!) / Tualatin, OR

May 22nd / West Seattle 5k / West Seattle, WA

May 22nd / Sun Mountain 50mile, 50k, and 25k / Winthrop, WA

May 22nd / Running Water 5k / Sherwood, OR

May 22nd / Keizer Iris Half Marathon and 10k / Keizer, OR

May 22nd / Great Kilted Run 5k / Seattle, WA

May 22nd / Hood River Twin Tunnels 12k and 5k / Hood River, OR

May 22nd / Duck Bill Thrill Sprint Triathlon / Fall Creek, OR

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Jeff Galloway Method at the McDonald Forest 50K?


As my man Manny B has been telling me for years, the Galloway run/walk method is the way to go on a long race. Of course, it flies in the face of most runners' egos because it forces you to walk, and walk early.

But, as I'm staring the evil that is the McDonald Forest 50k in the face, I figured maybe I should give Galloway a chance.

So I headed over to Willamette Park today and did a very simple, and very easy, one hour run using the Galloway beginning method of one minute running and one minute walking.

The results?

Pretty amazing: about 5.5 miles in 60 minutes for just under a 11 minute pace. That's half run and half walk!

Now I'm not saying it's necessary for the many 5k's and 10k's and even the one half-marathon that I'll have to do to Run Every Race in Corvallis in 2011!

But for the McDonald Forest 50K? Yeah, we might be onto something here...

Stay tuned. More results to come...

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Ah, for the love of Cheese!


Why didn't anyone tell me about the McDonald Forest 50k?

As you know, I have an awesome plan of running every single race in Corvallis in 2011. As you also know, they snuck in a new half-marathon after I had announced my plan. And now...

Oh boy, now...see, I was under the somewhat naive misapprehension that the Mac 50 also had a 15k race at the same time, which, obviously, was the race I was going to run. Nope. The 15k is apparently run in October. Meaning the 50k is run all by itself. Just sitting there. As a race in Corvallis. In 2011.

So I guess I'm running a 50k. Even though I've never run anything longer than a marathon. And even though I've never run a brutal trail ultra, like this one apparently is...

Seems like a good time for a new Corvallis 5k to spring up on May 14th...

Which race would I pick? OH NOES! Well, let's just hope that I'm not forced to choose.

Let's just hope...