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, October 6, 2019

47th Sub-3-hour Marathon State: The Maine Redo

My Maine Objective: Get this done and eat lobster rolls!
The Maine Marathon in Portland, ME was a great race in 2014 when I attempted it as the 2nd day of a double weekend marathon (2:56 in NH on Sat and 3:03 in ME on Sun) and the only state redo to date in which I returned to the same race. I really wanted that double sub-3 weekend in 2014 but that's a tough feat! I'm over it... call it my only DNF.

It's been 3 weeks since successfully redoing Wyoming. Over the years, I've found a 3-4 week recovery time to be ideal even if the thought of this race in the hours after WY didn't seem like a good idea... and as such, wasn't booked. This is marathon number 6 for the year, on the downslope of a bell curve with 2016 & 2017 being the peak at 9 a piece. It is nice to approach the finish with a lighter schedule.

Also, we're here for the beer. Some of the Libertyville Running Club was tagging along this weekend. Ted and I arrived in Portland Friday afternoon and did some damage at Oxbow Brewing. They moved to downtown Portland from their old location in a garage by Allagash Brewing; their success is not surprising, it's good beer. Good thing we had Saturday to recover!

This is Ted carb-loading at Oxbow Brewing
Of course, after a shakeout run the next morning along the Eastern Promenade to The Holy Donut, one of my favorite donut shops in the country, we found ourselves at Mash Tun, a craft beer bar, where Charles and Andrew joined us. We kept it fairly low-key the day before the race with the expo, pasta takeout back at the Airbnb, then bed.

Shaking down the steam engine
The Holy Donut
A good night sleep is important!
There are two things about east coast running that I've come to love: they start their races later and they've got a lot of fast runners. There are many sub-3 runners at this marathon of about 750 finishers and my plan was to run with Ted to a 2:58, what would be his first sub-3-hour marathon.

We started at 7:45am with the 1:30 half marathon pacer since there is no 3:00 marathon pacer and ran the first 3 miles at 6:43/mile each. Consistent! It's a pretty out-and-back course with some rolling hills, the hardest being miles 9-11 then their return at miles 16-18. I was losing Ted at the halfway point and as much as I wanted to stick with him, I knew I'd be cutting it close. I lost my watches at this point. No need to panic, right?

For the past year, I've had a Fitbit Ionic. I really like its interface and app more than Garmin but Garmin reigns supreme for GPS watches. Hence the two watches in this pic, neither of which were working for most of this race. My 6-year old Garmin Forerunner 620 died at mile 8 and the Fitbit didn't get a signal from about that point on. Here I am, running naked again!

I did some mental math every mile marker to make sure I would be under 3 hours. The headwind on the return added to the difficulty. At mile 24, I was comfortable knowing that 7:30/miles would bring me into a 2:58:18 finish, 22nd overall and 1st place in the 40-44 age group. Who's smiling about that, me?

Mile 26, sub-3-hour state marathon #47
Once the fellas finished, it was time to celebrate. After showers, we drove up to Maine Beer Company for one of my favorite anti-NEIPA breweries; clean and simple beers, I love it! After that, we stopped into Allagash Brewing Company for some free flights, maybe because we were all wearing the marathon shirt? They had a food truck serving lobster rolls which almost mirrored the all-you-can-eat lobster brunch I hit up after the 2014 marathon at Harraseeket Inn near Maine Beer Company.

Maine Beer Company decisions...
Matching shirts, northeast fall foliage
After a brief stop at Bissell Brothers Brewing, we parked the car at our Airbnb then continued into the night with Liquid Riot Bottling Co. and Tomaso's Canteen, the dive bar across the street from our place... we probably didn't need that stop.

LRC Bros. at Bissell Bros.
3 more sub-3-hour state marathons to go! When I think back to my 3rd sub-3-hour state in 2010 at the Napa Valley Marathon, I never could have imagined I would be here. I'm grateful I've got friends that have tagged along for many of these races making the experience unique and more memorable.

Oh right, the lobster rolls were first-rate! I had 4 this weekend. See ya in 2020 to wrap up this 50 sub-3-hour state marathon goal!



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






Saturday, June 22, 2019

50/50 - Anchorage Mayor's Marathon

My last frontier and the family photo finish I hoped for!
This goal of running a marathon in all 50 states has been 10 years in the making, all of my 30s, in which so many life events have occurred: a marriage to the most supportive and wonderful woman with whom the above 3 spirited kids were introduced, a career change from corporate-suited-lemming to stay-at-home dad, and moving to Libertyville, IL and building a running community by starting the Libertyville Running Club who participated in and encouraged me for 2/3s of these states.

Now what?

Retire? Take up cycling? Redo the 5 states that are not under 3 hours? You guessed it, I'll redo marathons in WY, ME, NM, SD, VT - and DC while I'm at it - to tidy this thing up and become the 8th known person to complete that feat... or 9th... or who cares?! This isn't a race against others; I just want to achieve what I set out to do as A Bear On The Run... what? I like bears and I like running. Alaska was the perfect place for my 50th state marathon!

1st place Masters bear! 
So yeah, I ran Alaska in under 3 hours: 2:56:01, 4th place overall, for my 45th state marathon in under 3 hours. Though I had planned this EVENT for this race for 3 and 1/2 years, I did almost none of the planning. We were bringing the whole family, including my parents, along with almost 50 people from LRC to run a course that had its challenges for an 18-day vacation. I was too nervous about the race so my wife took charge.

This trip began on Father's Day, 6 days before the race. Traveling with my kids on Father's Day was not the gift you think it could have been but by playing a zone defense on the 6 and 1/2 hour flight, we managed to arrive in Anchorage intact to enjoy dinner and beers at Humpy's Ale House.

We drove to Denali National Park the following morning for a rare glimpse of Denali Peak, a family hike, and the kids' 1st Junior Ranger program - an activity offered by our National Park Service at each park to promote exploration, learning, and protection of our parks to the next generation of conservationists.

An easy 2-mile family hike at Denali Visitor Center
"As a Junior Ranger, I promise..."
Tuesday, Melissa and I took a light aircraft expedition in search for bears along the Cook Inlet, landing on the beach in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, and boy did we find them! How's this for A Bear On The Run - Melissa walking with bears video link HERE? Before relieving my parents of the kids, we snuck in another brewery, Glacier Brewhouse, for some Alaskan King Crab because... we're in Alaska! Oddly, it's no less expensive here.

The plane! The plane!
Should we be turning our back on a field full of bears?
The next morning's drive to Girdwood was magnificent. The views along the coastal highway present one awe-inspiring scene after another for the 45-minute drive to the Alyeska Ski Resort where we rode the tramway to the mountain top for lunch. Once off the mountain, we left my parents and kids at a park and found Girdwood Brewing, one of the better breweries in Alaska so far.

The kids are like mountain goats, climb they did!
30 minutes of kid-free "play"
In LRC, we do a Wednesday night fun run from a different bar or brewery each week and with some of us already in Alaska, we did one from 49th State Brewery to preview the last few miles of the courses, including the nasty uphill finish that both the marathoners and half marathoners would experience.
Making room for that yak burger - not worth $25
Thursday was dedicated to the Hops On the Rail Tour with our compadres, the Bartuschs. This 11-hour tour began with breakfast (and conductor hats!) in a glass-domed railcar that left from Anchorage and traversed the vast wilderness of Alaska to deliver us to the town of Talkeetna - a registered National Historic Place whose mayor was a cat named Stubbs from 1997 until his death in 2017. From here, Bryan of Big Swig Tours picked the 4 of us up for a private tour of 4 breweries (Denali Brewing Co., Arkose BreweryBleeding Heart Brewery (favorite), Odd Man Rush Brewing) along the drive back into Anchorage.

Our one other tour buddy, Kurt, assimilated quick enough
We made it back in time for my oldest son, Mars's 1-mile kids race, his 2nd state; like father, like son! After running along side him for about a block, he stopped and said to me, "Dad, my legs are tired," so we began to walk for a moment... "Ok, I want to win!" he stated emphatically, and we began running again! He finished in 10:31, his PR.

Mars's second state 1-mile race!
I was planning to get all my brewery visits in and relax Friday before the Saturday race. After our group shakeout run on Friday (ok, and a flight of beers at Moose's Tooth), I did just that; Melissa took the kids to see Toy Story 4 while I napped and hit the sauna in our Airbnb.

Shakeout run - we're almost all here!
There was a time I thought this race, previously referred to as the Midnight Sun Marathon, was actually run at midnight... alas, I was wrong. LRC was in force for the marathon start at 7:30am.

Pledging to not screw this one up!
It was a bit warm for Anchorage, 70 - 80 degrees this week; they would experience record high temps in the 90s the following week. Couple that with the course elevation chart fresh in my mind and I decided to run with music, something I've only done once before (at Richmond Marathon) in 70 marathons. With 650 marathoners and a different start time and route for the half marathoners, I had a feeling I'd be alone - and I was from mile 3 to the finish - and could use the motivation from my 2009 iTunes catalog: Coheed & Cambria, The Hold Steady, Baroness, Off With Their Heads, Led Zeppelin... the same playlist I've been running to for years. You kids and your new music!

The reviews don't do this course justice, it's beautiful and full of variety. Beginning at a high school, the first few miles transition from road to bike path then to a gravel road that carves its way through the foothills along Chugach State Park, diverging onto approximately 2 miles of single track trail that led us to the highest point on the course. Those 15 miles were rolling and climbing before returning onto the asphalt for a fast downhill mile 16. The rest of the course is downhill to flat except for that sadistic climb in the last 3/4 mile that I had previously scoped out.

Those old Nike 4% shoes got me 7 sub-3-marathons out of 7 races and a PR!
I had an average 6:30-min/mile pace at mile 19. I saw my wife and Amy, gave them my finish estimate of 2:55 - 2:58, then dialed it back. I was feeling good and pretty confident early on that this race would be under 3 hours. The music helped, as did the crisp, clean air. The thrill of knowing all that it took for all of us to get here together inspired me to be successful, knowing I wouldn't have a chance to recreate this moment with these friends and family.

With 50 states now complete, I've compiled a short list of stats via a post to Strava, linked HERE.

Family finish photo
Shortly after finishing, the weather that was sunny and warm took a turn to shady and cool (go figure!) as we lined the finisher chute to cheer in all of our friends: PRs, 1st timers, and finishers of hard-fought half marathon and marathon races that flew thousands of miles to be in Alaska together. In LRC fashion, we celebrated with a brewery crawl all afternoon, hopping (get it?) from King Street Brewing Co., to Anchorage Brewing Co. (probably my favorite), to Turnagain Brewing (wait, this might be my favorite). It was a late night; the sun hardly sets this time of year. 11:30pm still looked early.

We started on the rooftop at King Street Brewing Co.
Post-race LRC gathering stop #2 at Anchorage Brewing
Stop # 3 - Turnagain, where details get a bit blurry
The next morning, we boarded the train to Seward, AK - trail marker mile 0 of the Iditarod National Historic Trail and home of Mount Marathon, a crazy 5km footrace up a 3,000ft mountain and back down (an average 36% grade!) that takes place on the 4th of July - yeah, I wanted to do this pretty bad but it's difficult to get an entry and it didn't align with our cruise plans. Someday!

Where the Iditarod Trail begins
Mt. Marathon towering over a cute church-turned-coffee shop
Anyway, the train parallels the coastal scenic highway to Girdwood described above, then continues for 3.5 more hours into the Chugach National Forest for views of glaciers and mountains while periodically being alerted of animal sightings and given historical context along the way by the train narrator.

You'll love trains after this trip!
Seward is a beautiful port city where we would embark on our cruise ship Monday, the following evening, for a 7-day cruise exploring Alaska's Glacier Bay and Inside Passage, finishing in Vancouver. With a day and a half to explore this small town, we took advantage by booking a shuttle tour that picked us up from the train depot.

First stop: Iditarod dog sled tour! What's more Alaskan than learning about the dogs that compete in this grueling 1,000-mile race from Anchorage to Nome in March from the family that is accustomed to winning?


Next stop: Exit Glacier in Kenai Fjords National Park - where the kids earned their 2nd Junior Ranger badge. This short hike brought us to an overlook where we took in the views of a glacier literally melting before us; that heatwave was here!

Exit Glacier hike with the little mountain goats
The peak of salmon run season is July but by late June, we were able to stop and see salmon beginning their trek up stream from the ocean to spawn and die; ah, the life cycle of salmon, what a life! Afterward, my kids discovered king crab and loved it. Great, they have expensive taste. Mostly, I think they just liked the shells they took and carried with them for 3 weeks which I finally threw out - so long, "Crabby!"

Kid took half my dinner!
Catch and release, ha! Notice the crab leg shells.
And finally, a 4-hour boat tour of Kenai Fjords National Park before boarding a cruise ship... out of Kenai Fjords National Park.

Spotting beluga whales
You come to Alaska to see wildlife and that you will see: bears, moose, eagles, salmon runs, sea lions, sea otters (the cutest!), puffins, whales; we found them all via train, plane, boat, and automobile! My takeaway from the overwhelming amount of animal encounters is that eagles are basically the pigeons of The North... THEY'RE EVERYWHERE!

And then there was the cruise. Look, you just had to be there! This was my favorite part of the trip and the most relaxing way to finish. If ever you go to Alaska, you MUST do the cruise. I'll just leave these pics to tell a bit of the story:

Kayaking at port stop #1: Glacier Bay
Some of the LRC group before a run around Hoonah, AK.

Erika and I jumping into Glacier Bay, post run video HERE.

Hubbard Glacier
Port stop #2 - panning for gold in Juneau
A run up Mt. Roberts Trail, Juneau
We have unlimited drinks but... Devil's Club Brewery, Juneau
Dancing, a LOT of dancing
More dancing
And my parents dancing when they didn't know we were watching video HERE.

Brothel tour with matching Alaska wolf shirts in Ketchikan
Beer mile on the cruise ship deck
We even convinced a couple to join in on the beer mile!