Category Archives: Trail run

June 23-29, 2014 Practice Running

My muscles recovered pretty quickly from the Rattlesnake Ridge 50k. My knees were kind of sore most of the week from pounding the descents, but mostly only when bent further than they normally are when running. My form got kind of sloppy and I had to break a lot on the last descent with all the hikers around. I had planned to run both Saturday and Sunday, but decided to take an extra rest day, for my knees and I was feeling a bit run down.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014. 7:03 pm
6.1 mi, 737ft gain, 1:16:36. Kellogg lake Tree Farm Gate #1. With dogs. Altra Superior 1.5

The dogs and I were a bit restless, and I wanted to get out and get my legs moving. Really the only muscle soreness left was in my glutes. I warmed up after a couple miles. Knees felt fine while running. Let the dogs splash in Olney Creek. Left after the bridge. Right at the rock pit. Left shortly after on a road I haven’t been up. Lots of huckleberries along the logging roads in the the clear cut on the south-facing slope. Stopped for a snack a couple times.

Wednesday, June 25, 2014. 7:53 pm
6.3 mi, 330ft gain, 1:06:53. Kellogg lake Tree Farm Gate #1. With dogs. Altra Superior 1.5

Took the left toward the connector hill, turned around at the first turn on the hill. Then out to Olney Creek for the dogs to play a few minutes. Legs were feeling pretty good, so I pushed the pace a bit finishing the loop and back to the car. The 2 mile split for miles 5 and 6 was faster than I ever ran the Army PT test 2 miles.

Thursday, June 26, 2014. 8:30 pm
3.3 mi, 34ft gain, 28:28. Short road run from home. With dogs. New Balance MR10v2

Really wanted to get out for a run, but knees weren’t recovering as quickly as I had hoped, so I didn’t tempt myself with hills and stayed on the flat roads/sidewalks. Took it fairly easy.

Sunday, June 29, 2014. 3:45 pm
13.8 mi, 2826 ft gain, 2:33:13. Upper Wallace Falls, Wallace Lake, Jay Lake. Solo. Altra Lone Peaks

Should have warmed up first. Lower legs were a little tight until about 4.5 miles in. It had rained the last couple days. Stopped before I started the run, but the trail was still a little messy. Shoes did well in the mud.

Drove to the trail head. Made it to the upper falls in about 35 minutes. Pushed up that last steep climb, so I caught my breath a couple minutes. Continued up the trail to the dnr road and out to Wallace Lake under an hour. Took some pictures, looked around a bit. Stopped at the “pebble beach” at the north end of the lake and ran into a couple of hikers. Went on to Jay Lake, a little bit more climbing. Some nice looking camp sites around Jay Lake. Didn’t find as nice of a beach though. On the way back, I passed the hikers about halfway around Wallace Lake. Return trip from the Upper falls to the trail head was about 23 minutes.

Brought 2 water bottles, a couple ounces of baking dates. Drank about half by the Upper falls. Sipped the rest of the way, finishing just a little before the end. Had a couple bites of the dates at Jay lake. Had one salt cap there as well.

Sunday, June 29, 2014. 8:11 pm
3.2 mi, 33 ft gain, 30:02. Easy Road and Green Belt. With dogs. New Balance MR10v2

Legs a little tired. The dogs were a little disappointed when I didn’t take them on my earlier run. I knew they’d enjoy it and I wanted to stretch out my legs a bit. My legs loosened up a little after the turnaround.

Last year, the city let the grass in the green belt grow high, only cutting it once, and not very short. They’ve had a bit more work done this year. The grass was short enough today that with the few hours of dry weather, it wasn’t too wet and didn’t soak my shoes. I didn’t particularly enjoy running through wet knee high grass last year.

Weekly totals
32.6 mi, 4h 55m, 3959 ft gain

Even if I don’t run Monday, June 30, I’ve hit a personal best for total monthly mileage at 166.3 miles in 28h 35m, and most gain at 33,423ft.

Rattlesnake Ridge Run 50k Race Report

I ran my first 50k in 2010, and second in 2011. I had injury and illness issues the next two years. The Rattlesnake Ridge Run 50k was my third in as many months, bringing me up to five. They’ve been increasingly difficult races as I prepare for potentially running my first 50 miler at the White River 50 Mile Endurance Run.

I woke up at 4:50 am, not much later than I had been getting to sleep. It wasn’t too bad after taking a few days getting up earlier and a little melatonin. I prepared everything the night before, as I am not much of a morning person.

I had my usual 1 quart glass of water with some rosehip powder. I blended up a small smoothie of two frozen bananas, one beet, some spinach and water to take with me. I loaded up all my stuff, got the dogs in the car and headed out by 5:30.

My yard isn’t fenced, and I didn’t want to leave my dogs locked up in the house for potentially up to 10 hours. A friend from my old neighborhood just down the road from the race location dog sat for me. He owns my pups’ mom and some other dogs so they got to play for the day. I arrived there to drop the dogs at 6:45.

I reached Rattlesnake Lake and parked just before 7:00, checked in, put my drop bags in the proper spots and got ready. The drop bag going to aid station two at the turnaround on the other side of the mountain had two bananas, a bottle of homemade dateorade, some salt caps, sunglasses, and a hat. The drop bag staying at the start/finish line, also aid station four, had two bananas and a bottle of dateorade.

It was a little chilly when I got there, but was supposed to be in the mid to upper 70s later in the day. I decided to wear thin gloves to start the race. My hand sometimes get cold and stiff even when the rest of me warms up from running. I had two 20 ounce handheld water bottles, one water, one dateorade. The handheld straps have pockets. In one were five pitted dates in a sandwich bag. In the other were salt caps in a sandwich bag and my car keys. I also wore my Ultimate Direction Scott Jurek Essential belt. I don’t use both large pockets because it always sits off-centered, throwing off weight distribution, which caused some calf problems earlier in the year. But it’s great for carrying my phone in the water resistant pocket and ID in the small pocket. Then it rides with my phone centered in the back and the small pocket centered up front.

The race got started a few minutes late. I think there were 47 or so runners starting. The course began with a short out and back on the gravel railroad grade Snoqualmie Valley trail before going around Rattlesnake Lake to start the first climb.

I tried to take it easy early, but found myself passing people anyway. I think I was just a tad overconfident about the climbing and maybe a little caught up in the competition. I probably should have hiked more earlier in the race. That first climb is fairly steep at about 1100 ft over 1.5 miles. Then it lets up a little bit, but continues rolling generally upwards until topping out at a bit over 3500 ft elevation. For a few miles, I and several other guys ran within sight distance for the most part.

A little less than 6 miles in was the first aid station. I was there with two other guys. I had just about finished both bottles, and refilled both with straight water, drank water from one of the paper cups they had on the table, took a salt cap, grabbed two dates to chew on and headed out. Just as I was leaving, another guy with a hydration vest came through the aid station without stopping. I could hear him close behind me. The trail soon started descending, and I let gravity take over.

I started flying downhill, and I soon lost contact. There was another climb before the big descent down toward the turnaround at the second aid station. By this time I had gotten into a run/hike rhythm for the steep sections that I should have started from the beginning.

At 9:30, the half marathon was scheduled to start from Snoqualmie Point Park, where the 50k turnaround point was. In order to try to minimize traffic jams, the 50k turned onto a gravel road for the last part of the descent. It came out just downhill on to the road into the park. The short hill on the road up to the park was tougher than it should have been. As I turned onto the road, I caught a glimpse of the guy with the hydration vest gaining on me. I gained a little ground on that small hill, but he blew through the aid station again.

I finished both bottles again. I refilled one with water. I got into my drop bag, swapped the dateorade bottle, ate a banana, and grabbed my sunglasses. I started back out walking to finish my banana and took two salt caps.

The trail immediately started heading back up. At this point, I realized I went out too hard up that first climb. A few minutes in, I started passing half marathoners. I started hiking more of the steeper sections. I was able to hike pretty efficiently and looking at my GPS data afterwards, I didn’t lose much time over those sections compared to running them.

Somewhere before hitting that first aid station again, my mental state started going pretty low. I hadn’t felt that great the whole race, even though I hit the turnaround well before I expected. I entertained thoughts of quitting a number of times, but I wasn’t hurt or really suffering that much physically. At one point, I even questioned if I ever wanted to do another long race, and possibly even quit running completely. Unfortunately, I was in and out of that mental space for a lot of the last half of the race.

When I hit the first/third aid station, I refilled both bottles with water again, ate two dates, took two salt caps and continued on.

I can’t remember exactly where, but one of the guys who was at aid station one at the same time I was caught up to me somewhere in this section. We ran together and chatted for a little while. It was a nice pick-me-up. I doubt he’ll read this, but thanks Jeff. Soon, I could tell that I wasn’t going to hang with him and still have enough left in me to finish well. So I bid him good luck and resumed my own run/hike strategy.

The next couple miles are a bit of a blur. I know I passed a few more half marathoners. I alternated hiking and running on some of the steeper sections. Then finally I hit the descent of the initial climb.

By this time, hikers had just about taken over the trail. The vast majority were very courteous, allowing runners to pass. Unfortunately, they often stepped aside on the smooth, level part of the trail, leaving the rocky and/or rooted portion for passing. A combination of tired legs and trying to pay attention to what or who was ahead on the trail lead to me tripping four times on the descent while passing people. Fortunately, I was able to keep on my feet the first three times. I fell the last time, though. Thankfully, I didn’t fall hard and landed on my backside in the bushes on the uphill side of the trail. The soft landing wasn’t bad at all, but my left calf immediately cramped up. The young woman who I landed next to asked if I was alright. I think I said I was fine, but I don’t know how coherent I was as I tried to get my calf to unseize. I got back up, it relaxed, and I went on my way much more attentive to the trail.

There were a couple occasions that I had to stop and wait for hikers. The first was only a few seconds as one small group coming up passed another going down. The next time, though, it was a very large group of probably about 30+ hikers coming up past a group of about 6 in a narrow section of trail. It seemed like it took about a minute for the stream of people to finish. Meanwhile, the half marathoner that I had passed a while back caught up with me. After that delay, I started calling out “runner” much earlier and more loudly than I had been previously only calling out “on your left.” There were a couple small children that I had to dodge after that, but no more delays.

Once at the bottom, I had to use the restroom and decided to use one on the trail side of the lake, in case there were lines at the start/finish/aid station four.

At the fourth aid station, I refilled my water bottle. I replaced my dateorade bottle and grabbed a banana from my drop bag. I took two salt caps. I also left my shirt there, as it had warmed up a bit. The other guy came through who had also been at the first aid station at the same time as me. I left just before him.

The last approximately 9 miles were on the Snoqualmie Valley Trail. It was about 400ft descent out to the turnaround and final aid station, then ascent on the return. Within the first mile of that, the guy from the aid station slowly passed me. I thought about trying to keep up, but I was feeling pretty low again and just wanted to keep the pace I had going. I was running around 9-9:20/mi pace on the way out.

After another mile or so, I started seeing the 50k leaders returning. First was a guy that had been in the group that was loosely together going up the first ascent. Then a few more. Then Jeff. Shortly after that, I saw a guy who was obviously having a rough time. He was alternating walking and running, but when he was walking, he’d reach down and massage his calves. As I passed, I asked if he was cramping and wished him good luck.

I finally made it to the turnaround, which happened to be where the trail intersects with a road in the neighborhood in which I grew up. I dumped the small amount of water left in my water only bottle over my head just before the aid station. Again, I refilled both bottles with water, drank another small paper cup of water, ate my last date, and took two salt caps. The guy who had passed me was there when I arrived and another guy got there shortly after I did. The guy who passed me left, with me following shortly after.

I really wanted to give chase, but I just didn’t have it in me. I started slowing down to around 10-10:30/mi pace. A mile or two later, I glanced back and saw the other guy from the last aid station only about 200 yards behind me. Only a few minutes prior, I couldn’t see him when I looked back. So, I forced myself to run faster, when I really wanted to walk instead. I got back down to around 9:30/mi pace. I was still feeling pretty low, but I was in a race. It gave me something else to concentrate on for a while, which helped a little.

I know that section of trail quite well from back in the day, but I remembered it being much flatter than it seemed on the final leg of the race. I was going to do what I could to not get passed again. This was not like some of my long runs where 3-5 hours seems like no time has passed and I couldn’t recall any specific thoughts. There was no losing myself in the moment on those last 3-4 miles.

It turned out to be fast enough to keep my spot. I finished 10th overall in 5:31:15. It was a few minutes faster than my first 50k, which was on the Snoqualmie Valley Trail with only 1000 ft gain. The Rattlesnake Ridge 50k had 6500 ft gain. I went in with a goal of finishing under 6 hours. I’m incredibly pleased with how well I ran, especially given how awful I felt at times. But I guess that’s what happens when you push your limits.

After the race, I met and spoke with some other runners. Several talked about running White River and asked if I planned to. I’m pretty sure I’ll give it a shot. I hope to see them there and maybe run with them.

Now, several days removed, all the discomfort and negative thoughts have been dulled by time. Remaining is the joy of running in the woods, running up and down mountains, the competition, and the sense of accomplishment. Northwest Trail Runs put on a great race. The course was well marked. The aid station volunteers were helpful, and the aid stations looked well stocked. The volunteers at the road crossings did a great job too. And at the finish line, they had quite a spread of food, with a volunteer manning a grill. I stuck to water and watermelon myself.

I think I’ll go back for more next year.

What I Used
*Altra Lone Peak 1.5 shoes – I was very happy with the shoes.
*Garmin Forerunner 305 – GPS turned itself off and missed a little over a mile and a little gain.
*Discontinued Ironman handheld bottle carry straps
*20 ounce Water bottles made by Trek for Road Runner Sports
*Dateorade – 13 ounce baking dates, 1 yellow beet, 2 bananas, small handful spinach, water. Blended in my Vitamix. Evenly poured into 3 water bottles, topped off with water.
*Saltstick Caps
*5 medjool dates
*2.5 bananas
*180 ounces water – This may seem like a lot, but I normally drink a lot of water. I only peed once during the race and once shortly after the race. I drank another 40 ounces or so after the race, which resulted in stopping twice for a restroom on the drive home.

Run to Shaw Lake May 20, 2014

After an aborted attempt to run to Shaw Lake last week, I made another attempt. Shaw Lake is the source of the North Fork Wallace River. It’s entirely logging roads up to the lake. But some have been abandoned, blocked off and become overgrown, so it’s now single track. Up until several years ago, it was still open as a 4×4 trail. Motorized vehicles are supposed to be prohibited, but some people still find their way around the gates. And many people ignore the no shooting signs in the area as well.

I parked at the gate at 6:30pm. A few minutes of getting everything situated, and we were off. I let the dogs, Sigurd and Vida, go off leash, since there were no other cars, and I rarely see other people in that area in that case.

Just a minute or so in, I had to turn back around. I forgot to put out my parking pass, and I didn’t want to chance a ticket. So, I added an extra 0.3 mi to my run.

The logging road forks about 0.2 mi in, and the left goes towards the lake. Shortly after the turn, there is an older bridge over a small creek, then the road starts to climb. It’s not really steep, but keeps a pretty steady grade for the most part. There were several streams coming down the mountain and passing through culverts under the road. On warmer days, Sigurd and Vida make use of several of the streams. Even if they don’t stop for a drink, Vida loves to run splashing through the water and mud.

The next fork in the road, about 1 mi from the gate, is where I made a wrong turn last time, going straight, which eventually lead to me turning around. Instead, you turn right, continuing up the mountain. This next section of road has a number of shallow mini tank traps in the road. At the next switch back, there is a trail that is usually hidden by overgrowth leading to the end of another logging road that comes in from another gate. However, keep heading up the road.

Turnoff  onto abandoned overgrown logging road
Turnoff onto abandoned overgrown logging road

Not much further, there is a large log on the right side of the road blocking what appears to be an abandoned logging road. There is a trail around the road block on the left side of this log. It’s a little boggy in a couple spots just after this log. This road has become very overgrown with alders, salmon berries, coltsfoot, and some blackberry. It’s just about single track for a while. There are also several tank traps cut into the road, deeper than the earlier ones, that can have water flowing through them after rains.

Trail up abandoned logging road. More overgrown later in the spring and summer
Trail up abandoned logging road. More overgrown later in the spring and summer

The road will eventually open back up after a little while as it heads back into a little older regrowth forest. There are several blowdowns in this section, but they are easily passable. As the road continues up over the crest into a small basin, it runs into a small pond. The road splits going both directions around the pond. Continue left towards Shaw Lake.

Beaver pond just over the saddle
Beaver pond just over the saddle
Continue left at the beaver pond
Continue left at the beaver pond

The road is level around the pond then starts to descend a little to about 0.3 mi past the pond where it reaches the upper part of the North Fork Wallace River. This was where I turned around the first time. I wasn’t sure how much farther and was already going to be over my planned distance. It’s easy enough to cross, but rainfall and time of year will dictate. I was able to cross without getting wet feet. The road then starts a short, gentle climb.

Headwaters of the mighty North Fork Wallace River. Can dry up later in the year.
Headwaters of the mighty North Fork Wallace River. Can dry up later in the year.

About 0.1 mi farther, you come into view of Shaw Lake. There are beaver in the lake, and they have a dam at the south end. If you’re going to use the water, make sure to treat it. The road continues around to about halfway up the lake where there is an old campsite and trail down to a small beach. There are other spots to go down to the water, but a lot of the shoreline has logs in the water.

Beaver dam at the south end of Shaw Lake
Beaver dam at the south end of Shaw Lake
Old camp site above the lake.
Old camp site above the lake.
Trail down to a small beach.
Trail down to a small beach.

The bugs were starting to come out in force when I was there, but still tolerable. Sigurd and Vida loved splashing, swimming and playing fetch. Sigurd likes to just go out and swim around, going nowhere in particular. I have to be careful about throwing rocks and things. They will try to go after it, even if it’s just a rock and thrown way out in the middle of the lake. I saw fish feeding on the bugs and heard a beaver’s tail slap a couple times. Unfortunately, there is some trash around the lake, which is probably part of why they closed it to vehicles.

Sigurd and Vida love water.
Sigurd and Vida love water.

It’s a little shy of 7 mi round trip with approximately 1800 ft of elevation gain.