Monday, June 2, 2014

Nanny Goat Ultra: Lessons Learned


After running 61 kilometers (38 miles) for my birthday last January I decided that I would like to run an ultra marathon race. A local one if possible and the Nanny Goat 12/24hour 100mile race in May fit the bill. It is a one-mile loop course on a horse ranch dotted with lots of orange trees and other assorted trees like Eucalyptus along Victoria Avenue.

I did not sign up right away as I was intimidated by the prospect but did start training as if I were going to run it. I started ramping up my distance and working into doing back-to-back long runs on the weekend. It was hard at first running at the slower pace but I did finally adapt to it. The toughest part for me was when the weather started getting warmer. I found it hard to be out on training runs of 4 hours or more in the hotter weather but I knew that there was a great possibility that I would be running in those very conditions during a 24-hour race.





In the Goat Pen just before the race!


 I found that I really struggled after the 3.5 to 4 hour mark on warm days but did not link this with a lack of salt. I simply thought I was not acclimated to the warmer climate as yet and just needed to run in the heat more. I did find that dry heat with a 20-degree dew point or lower did not bother me nearly as much as say a 50 or 60-degree dew point day with overcast and relatively low temps in the 70’s. While above 60 degrees is not really ideal for running anyway there was a huge difference between running at 70 degrees with a 40-degree dew point and bright sunshine and 70 degrees with a 65-degree dew point and overcast. For me the difference was astounding. I have come to believe that heavy sweaters have the most trouble with higher dew points than average to low sweaters.

I found that I needed to take in 50 ounces or more of fluids an hour to try and stay fully hydrated in this kind of weather as opposed to only about half that in 50 degrees and a 40-degree or lower dew point. This is apparently why I did not have that much trouble running 38 miles in 7 hours and 20 minutes back in January starting at 4:30am. I was hoping with the extra training to be able to do close to the same at Nanny Goat in the 24-hour race.

My last two long training runs of 27 miles were an omen of things to come. The first one was actually planned as 27 but I really fell off during the last 7 miles. The next one a week later was planned as 30 miles but my ankle and heel were killing me by mile 17. I also wasn’t feeling so great at that point but kept on running. By mile 26 I was really struggling and my left heel and ankle were really getting tight and sore. I decided that if I could get my wife to pick me up at the 27-mile mark, with an easy access to the trail for the road, that I would take her up on it. Truth be told, if I weren’t feeling so badly other wise from dead legs and stomach problems I probably would have gutted it out even with the heel and ankle problem.

That was three weeks out from the race and I did not run again for 5 days do to my heel and ankle being sore. Then next few weeks I did not get in nearly enough running. I know I was tapering but with the little running I did it was a super taper. This was mostly due to the weather combined with my heel and ankle problems not healing as quickly as I would like.

The day of the race came and most were relieved to see that the morning would be mostly overcast. I on the other hand was not excited about that at all as along with the 60+ degree starting temperature and overcast was a 60-65 degree dew point. When the dew point and the temperature are almost the same it means that the humidity is pretty close to 100%. Also when I am able to stand around in my running clothes feeling perfectly comfortable before a race it does not bode well for me. Those were the exact conditions that occurred.

Other than some initial intestinal problems and maybe drinking a little too much during the first 2 hours of the race I managed to stay fairly comfortable for the first 5 hours albeit at a much slower pace than I had hoped for. Somewhere between 4 and 5 hours I started having stomach problems and preferred water over my Perpetuem sports drink. I was taking electrolyte capsules every hour but between the capsules and what my drink provided I was only taking in about 450mg per hour of sodium. Because of my sweat rate and the fact that I leave a lot of salt on my skin it would appear that I should have been taking in close to 3 times that amount of sodium.





Me at mile 25


I was falling into a brain fog and I was really forcing myself to take in any nutrition at all. My urine output and color was fine yet I was feeling extremely hot even when I was just sitting for the 20 minutes rest I took at about 6.5 hours into the race. I was walking as much or more than I was running by that time. This was my first time having gone that long of a time in these weather conditions and while I could get away with it in a 4-5 hour marathon I was not getting away with it here.

In hind sight I wish I would have known that it was a salt problem and I would have sat or walked slowly for an hour or two while I built my blood sodium levels back up. I, however, was not thinking clearly and was in such distress that I could not imagine keeping this up for another 16 hours or more.

At just a little under 8 hours I decided to sit a while and see if rest would revive me again but after about 30 minutes or more of sitting and trying to drink I felt it was best to stop and live to fight another day.

I had made it 30 miles in just less than 8 hours and yet 4 months earlier I had run 38 miles in just 7 hours 20 minutes and did not feel at all bad at the end. In fact I was able to give a 200-yard sprint at the end of that long run. Here I was all spent and 8 miles short of my longest run and that wasn’t even a race.

It took until noon the next day before my brain fog lifted. I weighed exactly the same when I got home as I weighed when I left home that morning. I, however, could not eat a full meal all evening. I could only manage small snacks here and there. I really did not want breakfast the next morning but forced myself. By noon my demeanor was returning to normal but my legs still felt like lead and I was extremely sore. This all leads me to believe that I was in the early stages of hyponatremia from my blood sodium levels being to low. I did have some of the classic symptoms, although I was not cramping, but not everyone does.

I am anxious to test out my hypothesis of too little sodium, but the experience has left me with a feeling of anxiety about doing another long run in the heat. I am sure that will wear off soon and I will be able to test out my theory as there is plenty of summer left, although we don’t often get 65 degree dew points during the summer months in the inland Southern California area.

I hope my story can help someone else diagnose a problem they are having doing long runs in the heat and or high humidity and solve it before they have a disappointing result in a race because of it.

Happy Trails,

Russ Barber

Saturday, April 12, 2014

My 38 Mile (61K) Birthday Celebration Run


Well it has been way to long since my last blog post so it is high time I write about one of the most epic runs I have done to date. I have always wondered what it would be like to run an ultra distance and decided that this year I would give it a try and run 61K for my 61rst birthday. I turned 61 on January 14 this of this year and ran the distance on January 18th. You can view my Garmin Connect stats of the route here: http://connect.garmin.com/activity/4319876

I planned out a relatively flat, nearly 10K course that I could run in the city of Redlands, CA. It was pretty well lit so I would not have to wear a headlamp. I would be able to refill my bottles with fluids with a minimum of disruption from the run and perhaps even run a bit with a few friend from the Redlands Runegades if I timed it right.

I was a bit apprehensive about the run but I had increased my weekly mileage to an average of 50 a week up from about 35, and had been doing back to back long runs on the weekends. This gave me a little more confidence but still it was unknown territory for me and I would be running the vast majority of the run all by myself.

I started the run a few minutes past 4am on a Saturday morning. The weather was nice and cool which was definitely in my favor, as I don’t do heat well. It is kind of weird running at 4am with almost no traffic and hardly ever seeing a soul the first two hours of the run. There were a couple of places that lighting was not all that good and I had to make sure I lifted my feet a little higher than normal at these sections.

I had decided that I would try and bank a little time by running the first 10K at my normal long run pace and heart rate (HR), which is about a 140-143HR. The first lap went well averaging a little less than a 9min pace. The next lap I decided to try and drop my HR down to about 130 but that lasted for only the first mile as it was hard to make myself run so much slower than I was used to and overall I was only about 3-4 beats a minute slower on average for the second lap.

I met up with some of the Runegades on lap 3 and we ran together for about 2 miles before they split off going a different direction. It was nice to interact with them and it gave me a lift to my spirits even though I was definitely not in any real distress at that point in my run. It was a little easier by this time to run at the lower HR and slower pace and I was feeling great the whole way. I guess I had over hydrated the day before as I had gone to the bathroom more than I was used to on a long run by now. The cooler weather was also making it hard for me to drink as much as I had wanted to and most of my nutrition was in my fluids.

By mile 19 it had turned full daylight and was beginning to warm up. I forgot to mention that there was close to a 10-degree temperature difference from the higher portion of the route to the lower portion during the first 3 laps. This would change somewhat as the run went on.

I did not have any trouble with loneliness as I have done quite a lot of solo running. However after I reached the marathon distance, even though I was not racing, I began to feel just a little lonely and it seemed that time dragged on a little bit more from this point on. My legs were definitely feeling a little weary by this time but I told myself that I only had 2 more laps to go.

From this point on it was not hard at all to run at the lower HR and even on the downhill sections of the run I was not tempted to run too fast. The warmth was beginning to affect me a bit at this point but just mildly. I also said hello and waved to a few of my friends just as I started my next to last lap, which gave me a little lift to my gait.

When I got back to my truck for my last pit stop I was joined by Robin Derdowski and Jim Glick for the last lap. It was really nice to have them join me for this lap and I am sure that I averaged 30 seconds faster per mile just because they were with me. I am very appreciative to them for running this with me after they had already run about 15 miles earlier that morning.

After we got to the top of the last uphill and turned to the last quarter mile of the run I decided to see what I had left in my legs and picked up the pace surprising myself with how well I actually felt. I then broke into nearly a sprint to the end. This told me that my mind had been lying to me about how I felt and it was just trying so save me by telling my body to conserve my energy, as it had never gone this distance before.

Overall it was not as hard as I had imagined it would be and I know without a doubt that I could have finished another 12 miles for a 50 miler. However that was not my intent and I had accomplished what I had set out to do which was run my age in kilometers. My total time, with no watch stoppage, was 7hours 23 minutes and 10 seconds. Average pace: 11:39 with an average moving pace of 10:27. My average HR was 129 compared with my usual long run HR of 141.

This had inspired me to sign up for the Nanny Goat 24-hour race in Riverside, CA on May 24th. I have been trying to up my mileage again to 50+ miles per week hoping to peak at 70 miles and doing several back to back long runs with my longest hopefully being 20 and 31.

As I write this I presently have had a little setback with sciatica again but feel sure I will be back at it soon. Last weekend I ran a 17 mile trail run on the PCT and followed it with a 15 mile run the next day in the morning and a 12 mile run in the afternoon.

Follow me on my journey as I prepare to run my first ultra marathon race on May 24 and 25.

Happy Trails,

Russ Barber