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Across The Years 2004/5
Lynn David Newton
Most ultrarunners prefer to finish every race, setting new PRs,
making goals and cutoffs, avoiding injury, finishing strong, and
above all having fun. Yet, for persons whose objective in participating
in the sport of ultrarunning is to challenge their limits, it can
arguably be said that sometimes more can be learned from failures
-- from DNFs, injuries, and missed goals -- than from their counterpart
successes.
For the past two years I have cherished the inestimable privilege
of working with the superb group of volunteers who have helped to
plan and present Across the Years, mainly as the webmaster. At 9:00am
on December 29, 2004 until 9:00am January 1, 2005, my role transformed
from helper-outer to just another one of the 79 runners who gathered
at Nardini Manor in Litchfield Park, Arizona for the 22nd running
of Across the Years, a 72/48/24-hour race around the certified 500-meter
dirt track. It was my fourth outing at the 72-hour event, before
which I ran the 48-hour once and the 24-hour once.
When it was over I had completed 606 circuits, a total of 303.0
kilometers, 188.275 miles, a PR over last year by a margin of 8.075
miles. Despite a few difficulties, it was the best race of my life.
My goal at the start, decided upon the week after last year's race,
and publicized confidently to all who asked, was to run, walk, and
crawl 200 miles. It seemed that surely
I should be able to make that, particularly with the added incentive
of buckles being offered to each finisher who reached 100, 200,
and yes -- 300 miles. We had only one
300-mile buckle made because we had only one runner coming who stood
the remotest chance of earning it, but Rodger Wrublik (Lord of Nardini
Manor) was quite anxious to award it.
Despite not reaching my 200-mile goal, in retrospect I believe
I missed it by less than the 11.725-mile differential would suggest,
and in the process may have learned more about myself than if I
had breezed on to 200 miles and beyond.
Background
Recently some somber distractions have diverted my attention from
running. The last part of 2004 and until now I've had to struggle
once again with unemployment. Although I'm now working part time
at Runner's Den, the main running specialty store in Phoenix, retail
work does not pay a living wage, so economic worries are never far
from my mind
these days.
Added to that pressure was the distress of seeing my 92-year-old
mother die just a few days before the race. She was a great and
hard-working woman, loved by everyone who
knew her, especially her four sons. Our daughter Cyra-Lea, who,
as a registered nurse, was to assist Chris O'Laughlin in giving
first aid support throughout the race, missed the
first two days, as she headed up to Minnesota to help resolve family
matters.
Finally, there is the background of what is going on in the rest
of the world. In 2001 I ran in the USAT&F national championship
24-hour race at Olander Park in Ohio just four days after the September
11 attack. This week we are hearing that our planet hiccuped in
the Indian Ocean, leaving 150,000 people dead and millions displaced.
In the light of
such goings-on, the activities of a bunch of men and women running
around and around a track seem incongruous, of comparatively superfluous
importance.
Improvements
As an organizer I have known about most of the improvements that
would be coming this year over last year, although there were some
surprises even for me, as Rodger continues
to surpass himself in his hard work and generosity in making his
home and place of business a suitable site to run such an event.
The ChampionChip timing system has been replaced by a superior
AMB i.t. system. This manufacturer supplies equipment to time some
NASCAR and Olympics events. Rodger
bought the system, so it is permanently available to the race as
long as it remains at Nardini Manor.
The timing booth and aid stations were isolated tents with heat,
set up such that persons who were not supposed to be in those areas
would have to go out of their way to get into
them. The window of the timing booth reminded me of a White Castle
restaurant. I thought several times of saying: "I'll take two
with ketchup, mustard, and onions" as I passed by, but I never
did.
About 20 yards down the path from the timing booth, in both directions,
were covered video monitors that displayed the totals for each runner
as that person came across the line, color coded by event. There
were two monitors because we alternated directions every two hours.
Therefore, the idea was that upon finishing a lap, a few steps later
a runner could check his progress. It was certainly possible to
get too caught up in watching that, but it was nice to know that
an absolutely correct reading was available to any runner at any
time, without having to bother timers Scott and Laura Nagy and Steve
Finkelstein.
The elevated gazebo had a superb sound system that played tasteful
music from classical to rock genres continuously throughout the
race. The original plan was to have a band
playing on New Year's Eve, but the group that agreed to come broke
up, and it wasn't possible to find a replacement.
Runner access to the 100x60 heated tent was vastly improved, as
it was relocated on the north side of the tent, just a few steps
off the track.
This year we added buckles and progressive achievement awards.
Any runner in any race who reached 100, 200, or 300 miles would
get a 100-, 200-, or 300-mile buckle
respectively. In the end, 9 24-hour runners, 13 48-hour runners,
and 18 72-hour runners were awarded 100-mile buckles, 3 72-hour
runners got 200-mile buckles, and the
great elite runner and 48-hour national record holder John Geesler
forged ahead to 300.122 miles, breaking the event record by an astonishing
38.90 miles. John's last lap was completed at 5:45am on the last
day, so he could have run another three hours and fifteen minutes
if he had wanted to.
There are longer races for which national and world records are
kept, but the 72-hour race at Across the Years is a one of a kind
race, like the Dipsea race in California. The key to making it competitive
is to make the event itself great so that good runners will show
up wanting to set the event record as something they can be proud
of. We saw the start of that this year with John's superlative 300-mile
run.
Because race founder Harold Sieglaff has been careful to keep printed
copies of complete race data from all Across the Years races since
the beginning in 1983, this year we were able to assemble all the
information into a database, from which we are able to make a wide
variety of queries and analyses. One item of interest is that we
are now able to
determine the lifetime total miles of all runners who have ever
participated in the race. In this Harold himself holds the lead
by a wide margin, with an accumulated total before
this year's race of 2223.966 miles. Second to him is the total of
1264.790 miles run up by David Upah. At the pre-race meeting on
the first day, Harold was presented with a 2000-mile jacket and
David with a 1000-mile jacket. It is our intent to award more such
jackets to other runners as they pass those totals.
This year each runner received both a hooded sweatshirt and a beautiful
Patagonia long sleeve capilene running shirt. Women received a different
model shirt than the men, one
designed for the shape of a woman. A number of female participants
have expressed appreciation for this special consideration. The
one my wife Suzy got looks great on her.
(Suzy was an early start walker in the 24-hour race and also helped
at the aid station during meals.)
For social reasons, instead of the usual boring race bibs, this
year we provided color coded bibs with each entrant's name in large
print, also gender (for those who can't tell)
and age, and the bib number in smaller type. 72-hour runners bore
yellow bibs, 48-hour runners got green, and the rest got white,
so people could tell who their competitors were.
We supplied the bibs pre-attached to race number belts, to make
it much easier to transfer them when changing clothes, which happens
frequently in this type of event. We also
suggested that people wear them with the numbers to the back, because
runners always see other runners from behind. The bibs are not for
the benefit of timers and officials.
That's what we wear the timing chips for. These bibs are so everyone
can get to know each other. It worked superbly, and was favorably
commented on by many.
Rodger lined the route in front of the house and along the gazebo
area with tall flagpoles and flags from every state represented,
and also the seven foreign countries from which
international runners arrived: Germany, Switzerland, England (two
runners), Brazil, Spain, Japan, and Scotland -- a total of 29 flags
in all.
Later in the race someone showed up to give massages. I never did
find out who that was. We had looked for someone to perform that
service, but last I had heard no one was
available.
Not exactly a planned provision of the race, but a huge benefit
nonetheless, was the presence of Dr. Andy Lovy, who is well-known
in the world of multi-day running as both a psychiatrist and one
of the best sports physicians in the world. When Andy does a race,
it is his habit to show up, run when he can, and to be available
to provide medical
assistance of all sorts to ailing runners, including osteopathic
adjustments. The man is much beloved by ultrarunners for his generosity,
wisdom, and good humor, and a real treasure for any race fortunate
enough to have him show up.
Part 2 ...
The food at this year's race may be the best offered at any ultra.
In addition to the usual grab-and-eat cookies, candy, snacks, and
drinks, we had abundant real food. Dad's
Catering provided catered evening meals. Included on the menu was
turkey, chicken, egg, cheese, and peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
breakfast burritos with eggs, ham, cheese,
tomato, and onions, green and red chili burritos, lasagna, chicken
cordon bleu, gallons of potato soup, lentil soup, waffles (optionally
with M&Ms), bagels with cream chese,
boiled potatoes, cheese crisps, fruit and fruit juices, oatmeal,
pancakes, pizza, vegetable noodle soup, yogurt Hammer Gel (donated),
and ... believe it or not ... sushi!
(I passed on that, but ate most of the rest.) And that's just what
I can remember.
After the race there was an awards banquet with chili, subway sandwiches,
and drinks, including beer, while race director Paul Bonnett, showing
the excellent presence of the
fine teacher that he is, entertained everyone while efficiently
handing out awards to everyone who participated.
Each runner was provided with a newly written Runner's Manual,
which includes the usual race information, also a history of the
race, and a compilation of various
interesting race statistics. To keep costs down we emailed these
in PDF format to runners with email addresses, but we also printed
a few and mailed them to others who were not
able to print them for themselves. They were also available from
the Web site.
On the third day Rodger built a bonfire area in the the yard next
to the gazebo. On New Year's Eve, as runners continued to circle,
a crowd of twenty or so friends and relatives of the Wrubliks assembled
for the New Year's Eve party in the middle. Their presence added
a special measure of class to the occasion that you had to be there
to appreciate.
The decorations and other accouterments of the New Year's Eve celebration
surpassed those of any previous year. This year Rodger even got
a permit for fireworks. While I do not personally participate in
that feature of the race, I have to admit that it all adds a special
touch that is unique among ultra races.
As part of the pre-race meeting an announcement was made regarding
a bench with an engraved plaque to be permanently installed by the
track in memory of ultrarunner Mark
Heinemann, who died in his hotel room the day after running over
200 miles in last year's 48-hour race. A moment of silence was observed
in his honor.
Last but not least, on the third day Elvis himself showed up in
his finest red suit to entertain the runners for a while.
Preparations
As a local runner I enjoy what may rightly be described as a home
field advantage in that I am able to arrive the day before the race,
pick a choice spot to set up, and sleep in
my own bed the night before the race. My car is a Mercury Marquis
with a trunk big enough to stuff a couple of corpses in. I suppose
I ought to sell it and get something more
suited to my present economic circumstances -- like maybe a Volkswagen
bus -- one of those with flowers painted on it. But with the Mercury
I'm able to bring all the gear I might possibly want to the race.
Some stuff I did not drag to my tent I left on hangers in my car,
which I was able to park a few steps off the track. By the end of
the race I had
retrieved and used all of it.
The last week or so before the race I had trouble focusing on the
upcoming race because of the difficulties I've described. I deliberately
tried a longer and deeper taper than I'd ever previously done. On
Thanksgiving I ran 30 miles and then nine days later, on December
4th I did 40 miles. After that I did one 10 miler, but nothing else
more
than a few miles, with five of the last six days complete rest days.
It started to feel more like letting myself go than tapering. But
I felt reasonably good heading into race day.
The Race
Weather predictions during the race looked ominous. Heavy rain
was forecast for the first day. It's one thing for a hardy soul
to head out for a couple of hours in inclement weather and then
come home to a hot shower, warm clothes, and hot toddy by the fireplace.
It's another to be out there in bad weather for three days. We didn't
know what to expect. Naturally, I brought my rain gear, which consists
of a lightweight hooded yellow raincoat.
It was not raining at the beginning of the race, but it didn't
take long for it to get started. The worst of it was in the morning.
For a while it came down in torrents. After a while it let up, but
rained more or less continually for the rest of the day until at
least 10:00pm, after which it began to clear up.
Shortly before the race Rodger had thrown down 25 tons of granite,
and rolled out and compressed the surface so the track was in fabulous
shape -- for about a dozen laps, until
the rain started to come down heavily. Before long, puddles began
to form. It was never really bad, but Rodger was worried about it,
and for most of the day he and whoever
else was available to help were out there hauling and shoveling
and raking wheelbarrows of fresh granite in all the low areas.
Through it all, I never heard one single word of complaint or misery
from any runner. It became a part of the fun and the challenge,
although even with rain gear we all got soaked to the skin. If we
had wanted to spend the three days indulging in mindless luxury
we could have gone to Disneyland instead.
After the first day far more filthy, soggy clothing than I had
planned on accumulated in and around my tent. Fortunately, because
Suzy had to leave the site to go pick up Cyra-Lea from the airport,
stopping home first, she was able to do a laundry run for me. Otherwise
I wouldn't have had enough dry clothing to get through the race.
By the end of the first 24 hours, I had accumulated 77.67 miles,
about eight miles further than I've ever run on a first day. This
was less than I was hoping for. I really wanted to get at least
85 miles, which would have constituted a 24-hour PR by a little
over a mile. But I thought I was capable of it, and more importantly,
that I needed at least that much to maintain my hope of getting
a 200-mile buckle. Certainly the rain was a factor in slowing me
down, but I think I may have also held back a little bit.
I slept less this year than any previous year. Last year I made
a big mistake in virtually going to bed the first couple of times
I needed rest. I went into my tent, took off my dirty clothes, and
curled up in my warm sleeping bag. It all takes lots of time, and
is a recipe for sleeping too long and too deep.
Although I had my cot and sleeping bag with me, this year I limited
my sleeping to sitting in a camp chair outside my tent, with a pillow
tucked between my shoulder and head. That way I had little to do
before heading back out to the track after waking up from short
naps. The technique proved to be highly effective.
On the first day I slept a total of one hour: 15 minutes the first
nap, and 45 minutes the second. On the second day I
had one 15-minute nap followed by a one-hour nap, and
finally another of about 20 minutes.
The third day I survived until after midnight on only 30 minutes
before my wheels fell just about off, by which time I was staggering
on the track, bumping into walls. The second day of the race the
weather was considerably more pleasant. We had no more rain after
the first day, but only an occasional glimpse of sunshine. The clouds
kept the temperature from going too low at night. It was never colder
than the mid-forties, which was quite tolerable. Cold is frequently
a debilitating force at Across the Years, causing some runners to
hole up and even to quit, but I saw little of that this year.
The addition of the 48-hour runners on the second day was a delight,
as there were some excellent runners in that group. Aki Inoue from
Japan, who has won the 48-hour before, went on to rack up a fraction
of a mile more distance in two days than I did in three.
The third day the atmosphere became festive as the 25 or so last-day
runners joined us. By the time it was over, William Sichel from
Scotland had accumulated an outstanding 136.391 miles, and Carolyn
Smith from Wisconsin had run 128.002 miles. I'll admit that when
I saw Carolyn go out as fast as she did I predicted she would bonk
soon. I should have remembered her as the determined runner who
was the third finisher at the inaugural Javelina Jundred in 2003.
Part 3 ...
The Big Change
After four times I've come to view a 72-hour run strategically
as a 24-hour race followed by a 24-hour recovery run followed by
another 24-hour race. I now *expect* to have a slow second day,
and to revive on the third day, and plan accordingly. I haven't
compared notes with others who have run, but I think that's what
most of us have experienced.
My second day I accumulated only 53.47 miles, which seems impossibly
slow given that the weather was much better, that I slept little,
and that I was in motion most of the time. But I've learned that's
just how these things work, and I shouldn't panic. Still, I wanted
more.
By the start of the third day I figured I needed about 69 miles
-- which I now realize is more miles than I've ever gotten on a
third day -- but was not worried about it. My confidence knew no
bounds. In fact, I figured I might be able to push it to 80 miles
and get to 210 miles.
Perhaps lack of sleep caused me to view matters unrealistically.
By 1:00am on the third night, it suddenly dawned on me: I still
had a bunch of miles to go and 8 hours to do it in. I've done as
much before, and way faster -- but not after 64 hours of sustained
trekking. More importantly, the sleep deprivation had caught up
with me, and I was starting to walk into the fence on one side of
the track and the bushes on the other. I could hold out no longer.
The inexorable need for sleep forced me to stop a while.
At that point I sat in my chair near the entrance to the big tent
and mulled it over. About that time Rodger passed by, and I felt
the need to talk over my situation with someone whose brain was
not quite as wiped out as mine. He agreed there was little chance
I would make the 200, but encouraged me to go for the PR which was
by then quite in range rather than just giving up. Rodger had seen
me go down a bit too easily under similar circumstances at Javelina
in November.
So I accepted the circumstances and changed my goal. But first
I needed sleep. There was plenty of time if a PR was my objective.
One short nap wasn't enough to energize me, so I went down again
for a while, and then a third time, a total of maybe 90 minutes
for all three together. That did the trick for me, and I began to
revive and enjoy myself again.
I passed my PR easily at 6:25am and continued on without pausing
to celebrate. Soon thereafter I noticed on the race monitor that
300K was in sight. It had gotten light out, which re-energized me
and motivated me to begin running hard once again.
The last few minutes of a fixed-time race are always the most fun,
as runners pick up the pace to try and squeeze in one or two more
laps, while those who finish their final laps gather around the
finish to cheer for those coming in behind them.
When I finished my next-to-last lap I thought I was done, and went
to the monitor to see my final total. Each 500-meter lap is about
0.31 miles. It takes about three laps and sometimes four to get
the miles integer to increment by one. I had 187.96 miles. Gary
Cross was standing by the monitor and urged me to go for another.
I thought there was not enough time. He insisted there was over
four minutes left. I didn't think I could do another one in four
minutes at that point. He pointed at the monitor and showed me my
previous lap had been run in 3:33.8. Like a startled rabbit I exploded
into motion, huffing, puffing, and gasping my way around the track.
I finished that last lap in 3:31.3, which includes the time it took
me to stop and discuss whether I should do it with Gary, and there
was still a minute and 43 seconds left in the race -- not enough
to do one more, but I had managed to chink my mileage integer up
one more notch.
And when I was done I felt just great, but couldn't see the last
persons come in because too many people were grouped around the
finish.
So I didn't get my longed-for 200-mile buckle, but I did get a
100-mile buckle (which looks almost the same), and got a PR by a
margin of 8.077 miles, which I'm pretty pleased with.
People Scenes
Here are some people-oriented recollections from the race.
Andy Lovy saved my race the first day. I woke up that morning
with a stiff back. Not long into the race my back started to lock
up, with the pain extending through my glutes and into my hamstrings.
Andy put me on a table and tweaked a few things. An hour later the
pain was gone and never returned. How does he do it?
Andy also kept an eye on me throughout the race, and noticed when
I started listing to the right. Once he caught me scooping up a
handful of M&Ms at the aid station and cautioned me that if
I'm going to eat nothing but M&Ms and sweets for the rest of
the race (it was the middle of the second day), then fine, otherwise
I should live on real foods. In that moment I changed my aid station
eating habits forever. Normally I have difficulty eating during
a race. This time I did not. Most of what I ate was delicious hot
cooked foods. I drank only water from the aid station except for
two cups of Coke, and consumed two gallons of CarboPro that I brought
myself. I could have stood to make up another gallon, because I
drank all I had. I highly recommend this product as a carbohydrate
replacement drink. I'll never drink Gatorade again.
Joe Dana, the maker of gaiters passed me by and said, "Lynn,
your physique looks a whole lot tougher than when I first met you
a few years ago." Indeed. I've been working at it.
The first day 48-hour runner Carl Hunt was walking around the track
with his little boy, to whom he'd obviously explained that he would
be coming to a race where everyone would be running. The boy asked:
"Daddy, why are all these people *walking*?" In his most
kindly and fatherly voice Carl replied, "Because some of them
are going a reeeeaaal looong way!"
I first met Gary Cross when he tracked me down by telephone just
a few weeks ago to tell me about the six-day race he is staging
in Douglas this April. Gary has a special presence. It was fun watching
him work his way up to 143 miles in the 48-hour race, variously
running normally, sprinting, and limping along like he was near
death, working with a crew that tracked him on all parts of the
course. Even though Gary was an early starter, he stayed around
the last day until the end of the race. Gary bears a special kind
of energy that must be experienced to be appreciated.
Legendary walker Ulrich Kamm spoke cheerfully about how he does
not train per se, extolling instead the benefits of simply living
an active life, as he walked his way to 208 miles, a 200-mile buckle,
and third place overall.
Cindy Lee, whom I had never met, told me she downloaded, printed,
and read every word of my book "Running Through the Millennium",
completed in 2000, largely about my training for and running Across
the Years for the first time. Writing is a lonely art. Writers appreciate
it when someone actually passes on positive feedback regarding something
they've written, because it rarely happens. (When was the last time
you wrote the author of a novel you've read to tell him you enjoyed
it?)
Heather Kick, only 27 years old and in her first multi-day, never
stopped looking like she was having fun, and finished with a creditable
156 miles, ready to return next year.
Perpetually smiling Kathleen Ruscoe saw the legs of the long Champion
Cool Liners that I wear sticking out beyond the leg of my shorts
and wondered if maybe that was a sign I am LDS. (She is.) Ummm,
no, it just means I wear long underwear that shows.
What It All Means
ATY 2004 was the best race I've ever run. It was not necessary
for me to reach some arbitrary goal for it to be that, although
it certainly would have been an added bonus to have made 200 miles.
Readers who are new to multi-day running should not confuse these
personal achievement buckles awarded with finisher's awards given
in other races, where most people are expected to get one. The buckle
standards were high. Most people did not get one, only three got
200-mile buckles, and only one got a 300-mile buckle. Six of the
fifteen 72-hour races in the history of ATY have been won outright
with far less than 200 miles.
For most ultrarunners running our big races is not primarily about
buckles or awards or winning or numbers. The reason most of us subject
ourselves to the rigors of training and racing is to see for ourselves
how much we can accomplish physically, even if it means that sometimes
we find out that what we can do is a little less than what we had
hoped and planned on.
Also involved is our sense of judgment and ability to adjust --
to re-evaluate and go on when things don't work out quite like we
expected rather than giving up in exasperation, much as we must
do in real life. That was the challenge I faced and successfully
overcame late on the third night of this race. In real life we don't
always get what we want, but life goes on despite it. The ways we
adjust are manifestations of our wisdom and maturity. And when we
fail, we can learn from that, too, and do better next time.
Another runner might be inclined to wax on about deeper meanings
to it all, but not me. As pleasurable and healthful and beneficial
an activity as it is, in the end it's just running. But when it's
good, it's one of the best experiences life has to offer.
Lynn David Newton Phoenix, AZ
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