Saturday, March 30, 2019

River Walk, Fiesta Dancers, and Tex-Mex Food - RNR San Antonio RR

There is a lot of history in San Antonio with the Alamo taking place in 1836, and the city celebrating it's tricentennial.  Jen and I had visited New Orleans for their tricentennial in March, so it seemed fitting to complete the 2018 race season with another milestone.  San Antonio is an under-rated Texan city.  They have a strong Mexican influence (best tacos I ever had!) and certainly take their Christmas festivities to a whole new level.  Jen and I learned that San Antonio starts in Septermber to put out Christmas lights along the urban riverfront known as The River Walk (El Paseo del Rio). During this time of the season the 35 minute boat tours are popular must dos and they extend tours to during the night as well to see all the christmas lights. Jen and I got a sweet look of the city's skyline from a different perspective both on the road and in the canal which was very neat to see.

With Jen, hours pass by quickly at the expo.  I thought that 1 hour would be plenty to pick up our bibs and check out a few vendors.  Wrong.  Jen needed almost 3 hours!  As I was running back to the car to add more time to the parking meter, Jen met Meb and Desi Linden and got selfies with both.  When I finally returned, there was an announcement that Kathrine Switzer was doing a meet and greet at one of the booths (they were both handing out medals at the 5K/10K races Sat, and Meb paced the 1:45 group in the half).  Jen excitingly ran over to get a picture with one of her idols.  We learned that Kathrine and her husband, Roger, enjoy traveling to Vancouver.  Kathrine introduced us to Roger, who signed a copy of his book for the two of us and Jen's coach.

We also learned that San Antonio knows how to put on a marathon! We start on Market Street, which is smack centre in downtown near The River Walk. The route meanders in a clockwise direction reaching the furthest north point at Brackenridge Park near the Zoo. San Antonio is known as a military base so we ran through the blue mile in Brackenridge park.

Side note: conveniently Jen and I stayed close to this neighbourhood and we weren't that far from the airport as well - very little driving distance required.
The route continues down south on Broadway Street. 


This photo of San Antonio is courtesy of TripAdvisor.  But it gives you an idea of what the on-course entertainment was like.

Underneath the highway and along the river front you could see entertaining musicians and Fiesta Dancers sprinkled along the route to cheer runners on. 

Eventually at the half and full turnoff point, us marathoners continued further south and along the River Walk where the path are wider than its downtown core counterpart.

It was a gentle slope down mid way and then a gentle up slope. The path we ran in the second half crisp crosses each other with scenic little bridges designed for pedestrians and cyclists. This reminds me of the bike-highway system known in Boulder, which gives indication why people are so drawn to live in both those areas. 

We finished on Alamo Street which was nice as both start finish were next to the race expo at the convention centre. 

Finished in 3:09 with a 10 minute positive split. It was a struggle to the finish, luckily only a few runners passed me in the last few km struggle on false flats to the finish. 





Thursday, March 7, 2019

Celebrating Dave's 2x50th (bday+marathons) and clockworks pacing with David - Amica Seattle Half Marathon RR


Over the American thanksgiving long weekend, the Seattle Marathon marked a very special and social occasion. A group of 30+ of us from Vancouver, BC toed the line for this race to support our friend Dave Papineau's legendary journey to finishing his 50th marathon on his 50th b-day. The idea of 30+ of us running the marathon together was going to be epic!!

Despite having this race one week before my own marathon in San Antonio, I decided against my better judgement to not be anti-social and shamelessly cash in on this extreme savings by signing up early with Kevin Schwab...and for the marathon distance...dun dun dun. My original plan was to run with the group and then DNF at 15km.


Since all 30+ of us were heading down, it was a high probability of bumping into friends. Dimitri found me on some random streets near the Westin hotel, while I was arm wrestling with the parking meter. I heard rumours that a few runners had already wisely downgraded their distance at no extra cost. And then when I found out one of them was David Tapia, my gut knew 100% I had to run the race with him!! Sorry Dave. David was easing back into the distance, and I needed to not over do it for the following weekend.

2019 version of the course introduced a new route with a familiar start location at 5th and Harrison near the Seattle Centre. It was advertised as a friendlier course with 25% less elevation gain on the half from 1075ft to 807ft.

The route is mainly a counter clockwise loop, starting SE along 5th (mile 1-2), sneaking N onto the I-5 express lanes and Ship Canal Bridge (mile 3-5), hugging the water on Burke Gilman Trail (mile 5-8), climbing the gradual approach to Aurora Bridge, and finally completing the final kicker climb at Aloha Street and stadium finish. The website also has a interactive map: http://www.seattlemarathon.org/amica-seattle-marathon#marathon-course-info-maps      



David and I eased out of the start behind the 1:30 half pace bunny. Going into the tunnel, we pass the 1:30 pace bunny and gradually picked up Kang and Alexis before the Ship Canal Bridge. The sharp downhill to the water on Burke Gilman trail, David and I started picking up the pace since it was more flat. As we pass each of the photographing locations running together, it certainly means we get a 50% discount on our photos.
The final bridge climb at Aurora, David gradually jumped 5m ahead of me. Once crossing the bridge, I was able to push a little harder to keep up with David. The final kicker climb at Aloha St, I struggled slightly again and then managed to pull back on the downhill. David and I crossed the finishing mat together.  

This was one of the few times I was able to run with a friend basically the entire race. It was a fun race with perfect conditions. David and I finished in 1:25:11 in pretty even splits avg about 4:00/km for first half and 4:01/km for second half.