Where's the Donuts?

North Olympic Discovery Marathon

Recent EntriesHomeJoin Fast Running Blog Community!PredictorHealthy RecipesDavid Nelson's RacesFind BlogsMileage BoardTop Ten Excuses for Missing a RunTop Ten Training MistakesDiscussion ForumRace Reports Send A Private MessageWeek ViewMonth ViewYear View
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
2007200820092010201120122013201420152016
15% off for Fast Running Blog members at St. George Running Center!

Location:

WA,

Member Since:

Feb 10, 2007

Gender:

Male

Goal Type:

Local Elite

Running Accomplishments:

I was an 800/1500 runner in high school and college, with PRs of 1:55 and 4:08. I've run as fast as 16:15 for 5k and 1:20 for a half, but my bests in recent years are 17:07 5k (Dec. '11), 37:40 10k (Jan. '12), 1:23:49 half (Sept. '08), 2:53:12 marathon (September '10), and 4:45:06 50k (March '10).

Short-Term Running Goals:

Late 2015/2016 races: 

— Seattle Soltice 10k (Dec. 19)

— Nookachamps half marathon (Jan. 16)

— Toyko Marathon (Feb. 28) 

Personal:

I'm an editor at a newspaper in Bremerton, Washington and head coach of the Bremerton Jaguars youth track and field team.

Click to donate
to Ukraine's Armed Forces
Miles:This week: 0.00 Month: 0.00 Year: 0.00
Race: North Olympic Discovery Marathon (26.2 Miles) 03:01:42, Place overall: 3, Place in age division: 2
Total Distance
26.50

 

Didn't quite get the sub-3 (3:01:42 for those too lazy to read until the end), but a good day on the prettiest marathon course I've run, plus a lucky stretch of morning weather and a good finish makes it alright. Here's the details:

North Olympic runs from Sequim to Port Angeles on the Olympic Discovery Trail, a paved trail that runs across the top of the Olympic Peninsula. After a loop from the start on city streets and a quick tour through downtown Sequim, you hit the trail and pretty much stay there through the finish line in downtown PA. Rambles through lilac fields, past dairy cows grazing, through a pretty thick forest for a long stretch, across old wooden bridges (and new wooden foot bridges), and finally right along the shoreline of the Straight of Juan de Fuca so you smell the salt air as you finish. One really mild climb, three sharp but short uphills, and one really nice long downhill stretch at mile 20. It's beautiful scenery, and the next-to-zero traffic is a real plus. Sun came out in the morning just as we started, making it a little warm and muggy, and the clouds and a little sprinkle was back by the finish. Good timing. Well-aided also, my only complaints were the inaccurate mile markers (all over the place, I'll get to that during the blow-by-blow) and having to dodge marathon and half-marathon walkers down the stretch. (I finished side-by-side with a woman pushing a jogging stroller, so I had to negotiate her while straining to finish off the kick. Also, I called "on your right" to a trio of women blocking the whole trail once. And they all stepped *to* the right. making me step lightly back to the left.)

So Mike and I started together, planning an easy start to avoid our usual mistake of  too fast too early. The first mile was 7:57, purportedly. Then we ran a 5:43. See where I'm going with this? Couldn't really trust any mile markers until at least mile 8, where it seemed somewhat consistent. All over the place: another sub-6, then one almost 8, though I know we were running a consistent pace that felt conservative. So I won't bore you with all the splits, since I don't trust them. We were probably pushing a bit through the first half, and our 13.1 was approximately 1:28 and change.

I felt really good through there, and we picked up another guy at mile three who stayed with me until 19. Good guy, it was fun to have the company. The plan then was to reign in the pace a touch through 20, to make sure we were running smart. We dropped Mike at mile 16, then I ran two conservative miles around 7:30 (probably too conservative, in retrospect, though I did feel a twinge of cramping there and dealt with it with more salt tablets and a gu). I dropped the other guy at 19 and was on my own to the finish. After 19 I needed to be just under 7 per to go sub-3. I hit one kind of slow one, then another that was just a little over, then nabbed two miles at 6:50 to help close the gap again. I knew I was close. The trail levels there for the stretch run. I wasn't bonking or cramping, but my legs were beat up. Engine was alright and I had fueled correctly, but I just couldn't get the turnover going and seemed locked into a pace. Two 7:25s and I knew it wasn't going to happen. I ended with a 7:04 and 1:11 for the 0.2. I could see the finish as my watch closed in on 3:00:00, but there wasn't any juice for a kick that I would have needed. Easily held on to third place and crossed the line at 3:01:42. And Mike ended up taking fourth, which is kind of neat that we finished back-to-back in the top five.

So I had fun, and can't complain about a good morning. Don't even feel that bad now. And I still have my sub-3 motivation for the rest of the summer, now it's time to pick another one to take aim at (Portland? Top of Utah? Chicago? If you have advice, vote in the comments below). I think my legs are finally ok with 26 miles (or more), but I need higher volume speedwork at that pace to train them to get going when they are at that stage of the game. So that's next, and we're back on the train.

supernova glide -- 236

Comments
From Jon on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 08:39:32 from 75.169.145.159

Good to see you had a nice, very enjoyable marathon. Always a plus. Stinks about the mile markers- hard to do even pace with that.

I vote TOU, of course, since you know it and have a place to stay. And like you said, BW and more miles will likely get you over that 3 hour hump and keep you strong at the end. Nice job.

From ben on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 09:35:53 from 130.11.38.98

Nice work, David. Are you going to write a separate entry for post-race food?? I'm confused...

From Schramm on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 10:20:08 from 166.183.252.50

Very good recap, it sounds like a great marathon, i might have to put that on my list.

If the weather is ok, Chicago is a good sub 3 hr marathon, but it could be 85 degrees, or heavy winds, or freezing cold. I went one time, had decent weather, and made it under 3.

I am going to run TOU this year, and it is my first time running it, so i don't know what to expect, but also hoping for sub 3.

Cheers

Mike

From David Nelson on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 11:23:14 from 24.22.231.57

Great point Ben. That would probably be my only other regret: no notable post-race feeding. They were spooning out ramen at the finish, which was nice, except there was a huge pizza behind the table -- only for volunteers! I almost cried because you can only eat so many muffins and bananas. We were in kind of a rush home because some members of our party had a long drive looming, so no big sit down for lunch. I ate every leftover in my house though.

From Paul on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 12:04:44 from 65.103.252.214

Yes, I would have enjoyed a more thorough food report as well. No nacho table, no dice. Sounds like a beautiful course. Reminds me a little of the Park City Marathon, minus the 7000' altitude and big hill in the middle. You should definitely come out and do TOU. You can see our new baby then. And our old baby, too, since I don't think you've met Seth yet either.

From josse on Mon, Jun 07, 2010 at 18:28:10 from 75.231.80.24

So glad you had a good marathon and a huge PR. My vote would be for TOU too.

From Dale on Wed, Jun 16, 2010 at 21:09:08 from 64.206.238.30

Nice job. Sounds like a really nice course, but I'm always suspicious that the weather in late May/June will be too warm for a really good marathon.

Not a big Portland fan....the 2nd half is rolling and the climb over the bridge around mile 17 wasn't too much fun.

Add Your Comment.
  • Keep it family-safe. No vulgar or profane language. To discourage anonymous comments of cowardly nature, your IP address will be logged and posted next to your comment.
  • Do not respond to another person's comment out of context. If he made the original comment on another page/blog entry, go to that entry and respond there.
  • If all you want to do is contact the blogger and your comment is not connected with this entry and has no relevance to others, send a private message instead.
Only registered users with public blogs are allowed to post comments. Log in with your username and password or create an account and set up a blog.
Debt Reduction Calculator
Featured Announcements
Lone Faithfuls
(need a comment):
Recent Comments: