A view from Bannis Road in Savoy Mountain State Forest, March 21st, 2003.
Monday, March 20, 2017
Sunday, March 19, 2017
Saturday, March 18, 2017
Friday, March 17, 2017
Made my way to Shelbourne Falls today for the annual Mahican Mohawk partnership council. I imagine these have been going on for a good bit longer than the three-years I've been attending. It is enjoyable seeing many of the same people each year, and the collective desire and enthusiasm is excellent.
Afterward, rode over to DAR State Forest to do a short run along snowmobile covered roads. 3.2-miles total, map provided.
Thursday, March 16, 2017
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
MISSING AN OPPORTUNITY
(from the archives, 2000)
(from the archives, 2000)
I once kept a fairly detailed
running log, but have drifted away from it during the last couple years. It was never used as a dangling carrot,
forcing me to catch up to my "goal" mileage. Instead I would use it to track events in my
life, easy enough to pull out to refresh my memory over some happening from the
previous years.
As my running become less and
less disciplined (and less and less often), I began to show less attention to
the log. I realize now that this was a
mistake, and I hope to start being a little more orderly. Recently I had an experience that could have
been avoided if I had continued to keep an accurate journal or log. I believe I would have seen this coming, an
experience that I do not wish to duplicate.
It didn’t strike me until this
week, as I have finally recovered from close to three weeks of flu and
bronchitis, that I realized that I should have been able to see myself getting
run down and my resistance being lowered.
As I put together the final touches of the WMAC Snowshoe Series results
and stories, reading over the articles, I was suddenly aware that I pushed
myself too much without resting adequately.
While reading my race report for the Hawley Kiln Klassic and filling in
the gaps mentally there it was looking me right in the face…..
In a period of 11 days I had
snowshoed around the 7 mile Kiln course three times, marking the course and
cutting away blowdowns; snowshoed and readied the 9 mile Moody Spring Course
once; and ran the Moby Dick 16 miler.
While this may seem like nothing out of the ordinary for many
experienced trail runners, combined with all the travel from Connecticut and a
full work and home commitment it was just too much for me.
The real trouble was I had lost
track of what I was doing each day, and didn’t allow for proper rest. It wasn’t the time in the woods so much as
the early starts and all the driving. I
didn’t space things out very well, basically because I had no reference point.
If I had kept a running log or
journal, I think I may have been able to look back over those weeks and realize
that I was burning the candle at both ends.
I had used a logbook in the past for just that purpose while getting
myself ready for events. It makes sense
that I could have seen trouble coming.
So my suggestion to everyone is
to start a journal if you don’t currently have one. It doesn’t have to make you a slave to
mileage; there is no reason to use it that way if you don’t want to. But when things go right or wrong, at least
you will have a reference point to go back to, checking what happened during
that time in question. It is important
to fill it up with not only the running parts of your life, but the real stuff
as well. You never know when it might
come in handy.
March 15, 2000
Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Monday, March 13, 2017
Sunday, March 12, 2017
While driving to Adams for a visit with my folks, just a bit onto Route 116 in South Deerfield, I noticed a Roadside Memorial. I notice the effort involved, and sense the loss of a loved one whenever passing these memorials.
Stopped at Perkarski's Sausage and grabbed a few items. Wonderful spot always worth a visit.
On the way back to Connecticut, I stopped at the Tomb Cemetery on Route 116 in Savoy. Took the leader into Brown Road, and followed it north and south. Visited the Staples Graveyard, and explored several of the lengthy stonewalls along the route.
After the run was over, I snapped a few shots of the Tomb Cemetery as well. The "feeder" trail runs adjacent to the cemetery (just west) heading north along a trail that often doubles as a rocky brook.
Route for the day, with some tie in's from previous efforts. My total for the day was roughly 4.6-miles. There are three graveyards along the route that I know of.
Saturday, March 11, 2017
Just a bit under 20-degrees with 15-20 mph winds.... we didn't bail out, we persevered. Took a forest road out to the east of Hill 991', and followed the old path past the set-stone marker to the north. Bit of a climb and then west toward Pinnacle, and then straight south to Bald.
Finished up around 6.6-miles, and feeling pretty darn good.
Marker Stone (landscape details for navigating).
Wuzzam with the Pinnacle directly behind him.
Friday, March 10, 2017
Bit of a snowfall today, an inch or two covering the ground. Made it to Phelps after work, took the Metacomet south for and out and back 3.7-miles.
Also, from March 10th, 2002, Moby Dick 16-mile footrace was held on Rockwell Road to Mt Greylock summit (and back). Pop and Paul in a squall near the summit.
Also, from March 10th, 2002, Moby Dick 16-mile footrace was held on Rockwell Road to Mt Greylock summit (and back). Pop and Paul in a squall near the summit.
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Tuesday, March 7, 2017
THE WISDOM OF RACING
(from the archives, 2000)
It has been a really rewarding
winter so far in that I have had opportunity to participate at two 5km snowshoe
events, Greylock Glen and Saratoga Winterfest.
The evening before each I was asked to go out for a little snowshoe
action by two good friends, Paul H and the Bandit. Neither time did I ever think that not going
was an option. At this point in life,
losing a half-minute or so over the span of 3 miles in a race in exchange for
an evening adventure with two friends is a more than fair swap. It seems like I have reached a point where I
will trade potential quality for quantity.
I embraced snowshoeing many years
ago. Like others who snowshoe I try to
extend its short season longer than allowable by shuffling through the drifts every
possible chance. If this means suiting
up late in the night to frolic under the stars with short notice then that’s
just fine with me. If it means that I
have questionable "smart running tactics", that’s fine too. I realized long ago that I leave a lot to be
desired regarding serious running practices.
I really don’t have a clue
whether going out the night before a race to run a few miles on snowshoes is a
wise choice. Common sense tells me that
it might be better to just kick back and rest, leave the energy for the race
the next day. Wisdom of racing isn't why I passionately throw myself at
opportunities to travel the forest at night during the coldness of winter; the
stark beauty of snowcoveredsmoothrollingcurves and a sky decorated with enough
lore to fill civilization's journal is the vise that grips me.
I understand that snowshoeing is
a much slower activity than running. Add
in the darkness of night and it compounds the difference even more so. Your movement is about as slow as running can
be; sort of an efficient glide across space that allows everything to function
in slow motion except your pounding heart.
I also understand that it is the
woods that I love and not so much the running.
This is why it was an easy transition for me to start snowshoeing. I never minded slowing down due to the extra
effort snowshoeing took. The brilliance
of the many forest I visit during the winters is well worth slowing down
for. I have often read an account of a
race where the writer mentions the beauty of a course or forest, and that a
return trip was in order to make "time for the views… " I know from my own past experiences that it
usually never happens that you return to give proper time to these places. After all, the following week usually has
another race scheduled, or there is another trail to explore during
training. It's often a hurried life we
lead. I decided that I didn't want to be
handicapped that way any longer.
Loving the woods and not the
running also allowed me to make a seamless jump from once training at an all
out hearty pace to doing a lot of hiking with my soon to be 14 year old
dog. The years of each of us running 8
to 10 minute miles through the woods for hours on end together have been
replaced over the last few by slow jogging with walk breaks on the
uphills. Having this animals company
while enjoying the forest is a bonus that a chance at being able to run harder
or faster doesn't match. It is this same
principal that makes it easy to chose between staying in to rest for a race or
hitting the trails with friends.
Even in this age of growth and
many people's limited understanding of the value of open space, of trails being
lost to development daily, I feel that most forest will outlast those of us
playing in them. Snowshoeing opened up my eyes and allowed me
to hit a point in life where I feel it completely necessary to take a little
time to enjoy the ordinary things that for so long I had taken for granted.
I have learned to emphasize the
value of friendships. Along with that, I
have made an effort to not always think that "tomorrow" will be there
for taking time to "catch" that special view from that peak you
trained on last month.
In the end, I doubt that it will
be the 10th place finish or the 40th place finish I
remember. What I will remember will be
running along the Metacomet Ridge underneath Orion and the Milky Way with the Bandit sprawling headfirst into a snowbank.
I will remember Paul H and I blasting along under a full moon and
a frozen Greylock. I will remember the
smile on Dusty's face as we skip across fields snow covered and lit by the
stars on our way home. In the end I will
remember. Until then I will take the
time to do all those things that I always said I would come back to do.
February 9, 2000
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