The Destination Trail Fragrance Lake Half Marathon traditionally
takes place mid-February in the throes of winter. However, due to an incredibly
tragic plane accident that occurred on course days before the race, the race
was cancelled and rescheduled for June 9th.
Fragrance Lake typically has the potential to be chilly,
muddy, icy, and/or snowy with many downed trees to navigate around, over or under.
With this May being the driest month on record in Bellingham, the trails were
in prime condition for a course PR despite the day’s previous rain showers.
Damn roots. |
However, because the Marathon du Mont Blanc is three weeks
away, we made the decision to train through the race which meant running on
fatigued legs. The race fell at the end of a hard three weeks of training, and
my body could tell. The previous Saturday, I did a 4 ½ hour run with a lot of
climbing that totally wiped me out. The next day we were trying to take a photo
before starting my run and I tripped and almost fell on my face… three times… while
walking. We took that as a pretty clear sign to take the day off. Regardless of
the results of Fragrance, I hoped that my efforts over the past month will serve
me well at Mont Blanc. (To read about my experience last year, read here.)
Looking for the men ahead. |
The Fragrance Lake ½ course went the long way around the lake this year like in 2016. Otherwise, everything remained the same: still the same 3,300 feet of climbing in the first 7 miles, then a trip across the Ridge, concluding with spiraling down Fragrance Lake Trail.
Without David Laney present to take the start out screaming
fast, the first mile was relatively calm, and I kept the lead men in site
before catching up on the first climb to Two Dollar. I shared a couple of miles
with Paul Sage from Club Northwest, but once he pulled off to take the finish
for the simultaneous 10km, I was on my own. At one point on Lost Lake trail, I
saw a glimpse of the leader, Matthew Logan, but my climbing legs were screaming
“not today!” so I trudged on with only my past splits to use as a reference. I
knew two miles in it was going to be near impossible to run my best time today,
but that didn’t stop me from pushing my hardest.
Some video footage from the top of the big climb and the start of the Ridge.
Coming off the Ridge and on to Cleator Road for the final
bump up, Tad said that a woman was only about a minute behind me as I entered
the Ridge and I better push it from here to the end. Aw man! Not the news I
wanted to hear today. My legs were burning so bad on any slight incline. I gritted
my teeth and ran down Fragrance Lake Trail like a crazy person. Luckily, my
loud breathing warned hikers far in advance and they kindly stepped to the side,
and my downhill legs were surprisingly awesome.
When I bottomed out at Fragrance Lake Trail, Tad was there
and asked me if I passed the lead guy. I knew that I hadn’t, so I wasn’t sure
what he was talking about. I sprinted to the finish and embarrassingly missed
the finish shoot so I was spinning my wheels in the gravel trying to quickly make
the turn and cross the finish line. Eighteen seconds later, Matt came through.
He missed reading a course sign and unfortunately took a wrong turn. Had he not,
he would have gotten me by a couple minutes. It was Stacey Cleveland from BC
who was hot on my heels, finishing just 3 minutes back; she ran so strong!
I got lucky today, that's for sure! |
Full results here.
This is my fourth year in a row running the race and my
slowest time yet. Of course, that doesn’t sit well, but I know that had I
backed off on mileage and rested the results would have reflected that.
Girl Power |
Thank you to the whole Destination Trail Team who orchestrated
a flawless event, despite having to fight with course vandalizers the previous
day. The weather man called for rain and cloudy skies, but he couldn’t have
been more wrong. We were treated with perfect running weather: mid-50’s and
sunny. Also perfect for hanging out, eating, and drinking beer while we cheered
on our fellow friends and racers.
We leave for Europe this week, but before we take off, a
quick thank you to some of the people who have helped me prepare, kept me
healthy, motivated, inspired and who enrich my life on a daily basis:
Tad Davis
Kerry Gustafson
Chris Lockwood
Tonia Boze
Quinn Carrasco
Bellingham Distance Project ladies and gents
Jenn Love
Jeff Fisher
Jeff Boggess
Casey Szesze
Au revoir et à bientôt!
Bracing myself for the final push. |