Monthly Archives: April 2013
Colon Cancer 5K
Race #8 Overall
After returning from San Francisco with my toe still intact I felt I could easily handle this race. This was the race I really wanted to do anyway since it had a direct correlation to my late father who spent nearly two years fighting colon cancer. I was hoping to have my aunt with me but some family emergencies kept her from coming up to the city.
The day started off interesting enough though. I didn’t sign up early enough and I couldn’t make to the packet pickups due to work and traffic. I had an hour to get from downtown to Perkins Road and on Thursday I couldn’t even do that thanks to constant construction on every other street in southdowns. Sometimes I really hate Baton Rouge traffic. So I just signed up Saturday morning. I knew I didn’t have the cash as I had forgotten to go by the ATM anyway, so I took my checkbook. Then as I open it up to write a check, I’m reminded that I didn’t replace my checks, so I had no blank checks remaining to use. Wow, I thought to myself. That’s what I get for rushing. But they were able to take credit cards too so I just used it. It’s a sad time where I don’t carry around $30 anymore.
The race was set up fairly well, lots of booths, snacks, water/juice and a band from Angola. Wow, we got our own prison band. They actually were pretty good. But the whole Dept of Corrections van and cops constantly watching them just felt strange.
The starting line wasn’t very pronounced and they had to remind people several times that runners go in front and walkers in back because it seemed they didn’t order a chip start, and only bibs with numbers less than 800 were getting chip finish times. So it was a gun time. It turned out to not be that bad. I probably crossed the start within 5-10 seconds. The finish line was orderly however. It just took a while to get our official finish times although I did notice that I was around 34:04 when I got to the finish.
They had 540 people in the 5K which was pretty impressive for this race. Way to go everybody! There were so many teams also that were raising money for various people. I honestly had no idea you could take the race bib and flip it over and write who you were honoring. No idea. I didn’t realize until I started seeing a few while on the course. I’ve never thought about looking on the back of a bib before. I guess I will from now on.
The run itself was very comfortable for about the first half. Then the sun came out for the second half and it got hot, especially hot for me because I was still recovering from a decent sunburn I got in California. So when the sun came out, I literally began to feel my skin sizzle. Great, I thought. I’m at a colon cancer run getting skin cancer now. What are the odds. Ha! Actually, I’ve been burnt so bad as a kid, I’ll be surprised if I don’t get melanoma sometime in my life. Hopefully God continues to watch over me.
So all in all, a very fun race. The course at Pennington is partially off-road however. But I’m already getting used to it, except we ran it in reverse from the Dietetics race back in March.
Change of plans again. Turns out I’m working over Memorial Day weekend out at the sinkhole, so no Mississippi run that weekend. I’m thinking of making that one up in December with the Pass to Bay run in Pass Christian. I’m also probably not going to do the run in Fort Worth this weekend while in the DFW Metroplex. Wouldn’t be fair on the parental units making them get up so early to drive nearly an hour from our hotel to downtown Fort Worth for a 10K race before the festival even starts. Nevermind it couldn’t be much more convenient and the weather in north Texas for early May couldn’t be more perfect, possible 50s in the morning, mid 70s in the day. That’s unheard of for Dallas in May. I’m not sure when I’ll make up the Texas race yet, but there are many good runs around Houston and perhaps I can find another during a cool month. There is a night beach run in Galveston and on Padre Island, just to keep my options open. I’m also still eyeing Alabama for sometime this year. So potentially five states in one year still isn’t bad. I just don’t know what I’m going to do when everywhere I have left to go is a three hour flight away. Do I just take off a month and travel around the country? I wish!
Race: Get Your Rear In Gear
Date: April 27, 2013, 9AM
Place: Pennington Biomedical Center, Baton Rouge, LA
Time: 0:34:04
Charities: Colon Cancer Coalition
Presidio10 – Golden Gate Bridge
Race #4 of the 13 in 2013
Race #7 Overall
So it seems that if it isn’t one thing, then it’s another. After fighting a bronchial infection for 6 weeks, I feel better and sign myself up for this run in San Francisco and in the same week I go out and break my right big toe. Do you want to know how? Ants. Yep. Ants! Damn ants broke my toe! And damn kickball too! Seems all my foot injuries (typically toe related) revolve around kickball as well. So on this particular occasion, I was at the kickball fields watching an earlier game when I noticed I had a shoe covered in ants. And ants certainly aren’t a huge deal. I’ve been bitten by many ants in my lifetime and I could be bothered less by them. I’m not bothered after I’ve been bitten by them. Same thing with wasp stings and spider bites. But if I see some crawly thing on me that hasn’t bitten or stung me yet, then I seem to go all girly over it. I freak out and try to shake it off as quick as I can, and obviously without thinking too much about it. So with the ants crawling around my shoe, I immediately initiate kicking my foot, toe head on, into a concrete curb. Well, I’ve kicked curbs many times in my lifetime also, to shake bugs or dirt off. But for whatever reason on this occasion, I kicked my foot in such a way that my toe immediately felt the impact. By the time our game started, I could barely walk on my right foot. I kicked with my left and hobbled around. I was still able to kick in a runner left footed which was a small victory.
I have another blog on travelpod with regards to the trip to San Francisco itself. This blog will concentrate on the race event. Likewise the travelpod blog references the race on this blog. As for the race event itself… The Presidio10 is an annual event held in Presidio (the area along the south bank of the Golden Gate) with support for The Guardsmen, a group of people who help at risk city youth. They’ve also partnered with the Ashlyn Dyer Foundation, which supports neurological research for traumatic brain injuries. Ashlyn Dyer was an avid marathoner and a Presidio resident who was hit and killed by a hit and run driver in 2006 while running along the streets of the Presidio. She died from severe head trauma.
The event itself seemed set up well. There were plenty of tents with all sorts of information, including a check
area for sweats (or anything really), just place it in a bag and label it. They seem to put their food and drinks stands together though so that made for long lines afterwards. The band played right in the middle which was perfect. The race started with the 10 milers. They went in three waves. A few minutes later, the 10K runners left, in similar waves. Sometime after that I think the 5K runners went. I ran with the 10K runners. The 10 miler looked interesting but I wasn’t sure about the hills. I come from such a flat geographical area and hills as steep as those around San Francisco just seem to be unrelenting.
This particular race basically started with a steep hill. About half a mile in, you had to run up to the bridge itself from sea level. That seemed to hurt many people (at least slower people near the back). I heard people near the end complaining about it (uphill at the beginning to get tired and then downhill at the end). I ran up well more than half of it but by the last third or so, I slowed to a walk knowing that it was still just the beginning and I needed to be able to make the remainder 8.5K or so.
Another factor was the turnaround spot across the bridge near Vista Point. The path turned tightly 90 degrees to the right a few times. At the first turn was the first water station. That was not the best place for a water station because you basically ran right into it. Then you turned immediately again to run down some ridiculously steep stairs to cross along a very narrow passageway underneath the bridge to the other side. We ran northbound on the east sidewalk. The run back was on the west sidewalk which were both closed to the public during the race. But the transition between the east sidewalk to the west sidewalk was not easy. This is another sign that this race is more meant to be for fun although still competitive. It’s just that road runners typically aren’t used to narrow sidewalks, sharp turns and steep steps down and back up. That certainly had an impact on final time as well.
Once back across, there were more tourists around to watch or to shoo us out of the way because they were beginning to reopen the eastern sidewalk. Once back underneath the bridge heading toward the finish, there was the winding downhill stretch through wildflowers and eucalyptus trees. It’s amazing how those trees smell. They have a pretty unique and pleasant aroma. We don’t have these in Louisiana, certainly not native at least. The downhill did hurt more than expected; I’m guessing because of added pressure on the end of my toe. But all-in-all the toe held up very well.
Race: Presidio10 (10K Race)
Date: April 21, 2013, 8AM
Place: San Francisco, CA
Time: 1:20:15
Charities: The Guardsmen, Ashlyn Dyer Foundation







