A Map Showing A Sub-3-Hour Marathon In Each State

A Map Showing A Sub-3-Hour Marathon In Each State
Blue dots are the 50 sub-3 marathons and green are the 10 missed attempts since my 1st sub-3-hour marathon at the 2009 Boston Marathon

Sunday, September 15, 2019

46th Sub-3-hour Marathon State: The Wyoming Redo

Cowboy up!
I'm baaaack! To the Black Hills and to running and writing after finishing a marathon in every state this summer at the Anchorage Mayor's Marathon. I plan to revisit 5 states that were not under 3 hours... make that 4 states now after cleaning up my 2017 Casper Marathon. Though after forgetting my favorite pants and belt at a hotel this weekend, I would have returned had my travel buddies not agreed to go out of our way to get them. I love those pants and the Black Hills!

1st stop: Bear's Lodge, a.k.a., Devils Tower, in those pants
That belt buckle tho!
The Sundance to Spearfish Marathon - a USATF-certified WY or SD marathon was set up by a founder of the 50sub4 Marathon Club to circumvent Wyoming's elevation and scarce race options for his own goal and others within that club.

The problem is that it's STILL 26.2 miles, my 71st marathon, and I'm not getting any younger... also, the threat of roaming cattle which I dismissed thinking it couldn't be as terrifying on foot as that time I was chased by a herd while on a motorcycle down a gravel road during the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally in 2012.

From the 2012 archives: right before the cattle attack
The race begins high atop a fire mountain lookout near Sundance, WY at 6,600ft and spends 12 miles on a gravel road through remote pastures near the film site of Dances with Wolves
 - glad my race didn't take as long as that film - before turning onto the Spearfish Canyon Highway, a National Scenic Byway, for the remaining miles into Spearfish, SD. It's a beautiful course!

Our traditional pic of pics - Bridal Veil Falls along Spearfish Canyon Hwy
Downhill races at elevation are certainly more tolerable than the alternative but your quads will take a beating. This race was eerily similar to the Sandia Crest Marathon (New Mexico) downhill race Michael and I attempted on the same weekend last year: 90F sunny forecast, downhill race, the winner from that was also here. So much for one of us winning, or so we thought. My failure at that race was creeping into my psyche.

I'm here in good company with the New Jersey Marathon travel trio: Me, Michael, and Laurie. It's windy and cold, waiting for the 6:45am start. Port-a-potties can't be delivered up this road. We were huddled in a line for the one fire lookout bathroom structure in place. As the sun rose, giving light to an unobstructed 360-degree view, you realize why Cement Ridge Fire Lookout is located here and the important role it plays in forest fire remediation.

Cement Ridge Fire Lookout at sunrise, race morning
Could have used some of that fire; we were cold at the start
After a bit of rough terrain downhill, there's a half-mile climb at mile 2.5. Michael and I are together with about 6 people ahead of us. I started pulling ahead and found myself in 1st place at mile 12. From there on, it was a lonely trek down the Spearfish Canyon Highway, mostly shaded but getting warm in the sun. Then my watch died approaching mile 19. The thought of winning - 3 years to the weekend since my last marathon win - was exciting. However, the fear of not knowing my time while straddling a sub-3-hour finish was nerve-racking.

The start, with the fire lookout in the background
View along the 1st half of the course
I usually walk every aid station but this time, I was stopping so that I can put my trash in the garbage cans which were not set up beyond the tables. As I'm standing at mile 24, I look back to see Michael reappearing! We are going to win this race, something I had hoped for back when we registered.

He meets me at mile 24.5 and we run together until mile 25. "Michael, go get the win, there's no one ahead of us!" I exclaim. He says, "no, we're finishing together"... and then took off for the win. It was glorious!

After stealing the covers from me in bed, Michael "steals" the winning quilt
There were 56 finishers and 5 went sub-3, all within a minute of each other! At nearly 10%, that's the highest percent sub-3-finishers I've ever seen (I look for 2%). I came in 2nd place with 2:57:26 and Laurie bested her Vermont race back in May with a 3:45. With 48/71 marathons under 3 hours, my percentage sits at 68%.

Nailed it! With new race director, Mike Albin
A hike to Cathedral Spires in Custer State Park the next morning
The Black Hills are one of my favorite and most visited locations in the U.S. The discovery of gold in the Black Hills in 1874 and the story of Deadwood, the last lawless town in America, is fascinating. America has a troubled past and this location is the center of one of its tragedies. We stole this land and, to this day, have not done right by its native people (see the Treaty of Fort Laramie and this resulting 1980 Supreme Court decision).

Prominent figures from each side of this struggle are displayed at Mt. Rushmore and 16 miles down the road at the Crazy Horse Monument. One is funded by our government, the other is not.

In before Trump commissions his mug be added to Mt. Rushmore
Laurie taking a pic of Michael taking a pic of Crazy Horse Monument