I wanted to do one more great trail race before moving to
Vancouver to both capitalize on any remaining fitness from Sulphur Springs back
in May and enjoy the Ontario trails before leaving the province. The best race for me was The Limberlost
Challenge in Muskoka on July 11th.
This race is a 14km loop around 5 lakes and competitors can choose to
complete 1, 2 or 4 loops. I decided to
do 2 loops for 28km mainly because I knew I wouldn’t have the fitness to
complete 56km after my offseason.
Another early morning
After a 4am alarm and 4:30am departure I headed North on the
highway. Thankfully the race started at 8:20am
so I had plenty of time to drive, register, tape my feet and get ready. It was going to be a humid and sunny
day. I brought everything except bug
spray, and the mosquitos and black flies were out in full force. My race plan was to push relatively hard on
the first lap (160 bpm heart rate) then hang on for the second. I knew the second half wasn’t going to be
pretty as my longest training run since my May ultra was 10km.
Lap 1 – A place to
run, a place to grow, Ontar-iar-iar-io
The pack set out at a brisk 5:30 min/km pace. I held back at 6min/km pace to control my
heart rate. Within 500m we were on
technical single track with rocks, roots, mud, boulders and stream crossings. I was having a blast – the views were amazing
and the course was fun and really challenging.
Due to the technical nature of the course I wasn’t able to
open it up on the hills. My favorite
part of trail running is bombing the descents, however with so many rocks and
roots that would have been disastrous so I held back.
At 6km it got really muddy and this lasted until about
10km. Sometimes I was able to get around
the mud but mostly you had to pick a line, plow through and hope your shoes
stayed on. I was glad to have my Merrill
trail shoes with massive lugs.
The final 2km was on slippery boardwalks through
marshlands. The water levels were so
high that many of the boardwalks were underwater. Good way to wash off the mud, but impossible
to maintain dry feet. I finished lap 1
in 1:49:40, definitely slower than expected but in good shape and spirits.
Lap 2 – Racing
without training
I refreshed my nutrition at the start/finish then set off
for my second and final lap. At Sulphur
Springs in May I raced after 20 weeks of training, which built upon 11 months
of Ironman training. I intentionally
decided not to train for Limberlost to see how much of my remaining fitness
could be salvaged. In summary I was good
for about 20km, then the wheels fell off hard.
The course was so well marked that there was no chance of
getting lost. This meant I could
actually enjoy the beautiful views for split seconds when not looking down to
avoid race-ending rocks and roots.
At around 20km my quads and calves stated twitching, just a
little bit at first then to the point that I worried they wouldn’t support my
weight. I stumbled a couple times going
up and downhill and knew the best thing I could do was get to the finish line
while minimizing the damage.
I was still having fun, despite the pain and slow pace. As I approached a 3 foot high boulder blocking
the trail I decided to leap on top of it in a single bound. When I pushed off with my right foot my calf muscle
completely seized. My momentum carried
me to the top of the boulder but I collapsed in pain and a string of expletives
on top of the rock. The rest of the race
wasn’t going to be pretty.
I hit 25km in 3:30 and knew I just need to run 10 min/km for
the final 3km to finish under 4 hours.
Based on my current pace and the shape of my quads and calves I knew
this was unlikely but decided to push to finish sub 4. I made it to 27km with 1km to go at 3:50 and
things weren’t looking good for the final km.
I passed a couple people in the final stretch but it wasn’t a glorious
finish and I didn’t go sub 4.
My lap 2 time was 2:11:24 for a total time of 4:01:03 and I
finished 58 out of 93 competitors.
Overall it was a fantastic race, a beautiful course and really
challenging. I loaded up on meat, carbs
and electrolytes, popped a couple advil then started the long drive back to
Toronto.
Regrets??
This was my first race where I didn’t specifically
train. I could have adequately prepared,
taken a half hour off my time and prevented the muscle cramps and fatigue but I
have no regrets. I wanted to run this
trail race before moving and needed the offseason after Sulphur Springs.
The Limberlost Challenge is a great race with fantastic
volunteers, beautiful scenery and amazing post-event food. I highly recommend this to anyone that’s
looking for a fun and challenging trail race, but hope all competitors train
more than I did for future events!
I am totally not surprised you leaped, mid race, on to a giant boulder. I actually would have been disappointed if you hadn't. Good luck in Vancouver, I'm looking forward to tales from the trails from there.
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