Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Camping at Douthat State Park




















We decided to throw caution and common sense to the wind and load up six people into a jalopy of an RV and drive 4 hours across VA to Douthat State Park. Luckily, the RV, and all six crew made it safely to our destination...and without a single stop! Gotta love that mobile toilet.
The weather was perfect and the mountain scenery, along with miles of trails and a pristine trout-stocked lake, made for a memorable weekend.

We stayed in Beaverdam Campground inside the park, with full electric and water hook-up. The facilities were very well maintained, clean and in good working order. This park has it all; challenging running and mountain biking trails, boat rentals, a beach with playground, a restaurant overlooking the lake, 1 and 2 bedroom cabins and a fully stocked camp store for necessities like Snickers bars and fishing bait!

Saturday was "Apple Day" at the park, an annual fall festival with apple butter making, a pig roast, demonstrations, workshops, bands, cloggers and more. It was a quaint little family-oriented event and we thoroughly enjoyed it.

Sunday was our big fishing expedition. By "big" I mean anytime that we pack up all four girls and set out to do anything. The park has an awesome fishing hole for kids twelve and under. The girls caught nine beautiful trout and were so excited. This was definitely the highlight of their trip!

Nikki and I got a chance to steal away for a few precious moments to run, and the trails did not disappoint. At one point I was running through the woods with two white tailed deer and the next moment I was headed straight up a steep trail toward the top of the mountain. We definitely worked off a few of the many smores that were consumed over three nights by the campfire.
Douthat State Park is a small hidden treasure of a place. I would recommend it to families, fishing enthusiasts, mountain bikers, hikers, or people wanting to just get away. We'll definitely be back!


















Thursday, October 9, 2008

The numbers

Here are the official results: Ft. Eustis mixed team was 8th out of 47 teams. I was 1057 /18857 overall, 954/10584 male runners, 153/1861 male 35-39 years. Time of 1:10:57 @ 7:06 pace.

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

2008 ATM...a beautiful day for a run

I couldn't imagine a more perfect morning for a race. Sunday in Washington D.C. was bright, clear and about 60 deg for the race start. My buddy Scott and I took the metro in at 0-dark and arrived at the Pentagon about 45min before race time. Plans to meet up with the Ft. Eustis race team were set aside quickly when we were confronted with the spectacle of tens of thousands of racers, spectators and support crew scrambling around like ants in the Pentagon's enormous parking lot. As usual, the lines for the port-0-potties were ridiculous, so it was off to find a place to take care of one last pre-race dehydration.



With the important stuff out of the way we got in a quick(3min) warm up and headed into the dense crowd of runners to find a reasonable place to start. For some reason, I had been seeded in the 8+min/mile area, and Scott just slightly further forward in the 7+min/mile zone. Unfortunately, there were at least 5 thousand runners between us and the starting line, so when the start gun went off, we didn't! By the time we reached the start line (2min later) we were ambling at around 9min pace and were starting to weave through the crowd to find our pace. The first mile went by at 7:15, so we were already at least 30-40 seconds behind the usual first mile pace, although only 15sec behind the 7min pace I wanted to run.



We spent the next 4-5miles passing at least 2-3 thousand runners, walkers...I think I even saw someone crawling! Although it felt significantly faster, probably due to the weaving, we were right at 7min pace through 5miles. The sun was bright, and it really felt a lot warmer than the low 60s as we made our way through miles 5 and 6 downtown. We were beginning to move into our pace group around mile 6, and were not passing or weaving nearly as much. The energy from the crowd was awesome and it carried us through those tough miles when the legs start to fatigue, but the end is not yet in sight.



We headed out of town and on to the finishing stretch on the freeway. Anyone who has run the ATM knows how the incessant undulations from mile 8 to 10 make it tough to keep your pace. Although I slipped a bit on mile 9, I was able to pick it up for the final mile and finished with just under a 7:06 avg at 1:10:57. I am very pleased with the result, and thoroughly enjoyed this edition of the ATM. Kudos to the race organizers for putting together another great race and keeping things perfectly on schedule!

Many thanks to Scotty B. and his wonderful family for hosting the Hendrickson 6 for the weekend! We hope to be able to return the favor next month.


Next up...the Cape Henry Duathlon (5K-30K-5K) on November 15th at Fort Story. It's time to dust off the bike and log some miles on the road...should be fun!

Stupid Tax...from daveramsey.com