Showing posts with label running. Show all posts
Showing posts with label running. Show all posts

Hapalua Half Marathon

April 13 was the Hapalua Half Marathon in Honolulu.  My running buddy, Laura, made the trip to Hawaii to run it with me.  This was my 7th half marathon, Laura's 12th, and the 5th one that we have run together.  Both of us have goals of running a half marathon in every state, so we try to get together once a year to run one!  We always color coordinate our race outfits.  This year, for the first time, we got the exact same shirt and sports bra (from Kiava), and had the same color running skirts though they were different brands (Laura's was Kiava and mine was Nike).


Our past half marathons - Virginia, Texas, Washington, and California:


The Hapalua Half Marathon was an awesome race to run and it was incredible because there is no reason we should have done as well as we did!  It was the fastest half marathon that we have run together yet, I felt amazing the entire time running, and we were barely even sore the next day.  Why is that incredible?  Because neither of us trained properly for this, we didn't get enough sleep the night before, and we fueled our race with beer and cookies.

I started training 9 weeks before the race.  A half marathon is 13.1 miles so I should have started at least 13 weeks before.  I am an experienced runner but I hadn't run in a few months so I started my training at 1.5 miles and increase slowly from there.  I started out strong running consistently for the first 4 weeks and then I got lazy busy and slowed down to once a week... oops!  I was supposed to have built up to 11 miles but the farthest I ever got was 5 miles - once pushing a stroller and twice without.  There was obviously poor planning and poor training on my part.  Laura didn't do much better with her training as the farthest she ran was 6 miles.  We are quite the pair of running buddies :)

I obviously don't recommend running a half marathon without properly training for it - my first half was like that and it was a horrendous experience.  Laura and I both ran multiple half marathons last year and have been active with other exercise as well so we are both in pretty good shape.  Still, we didn't expect to do nearly as well as we did!


We live on the North Shore which is an hour drive from Honolulu with no traffic.  We decided at the last minute to book a hotel room downtown so that we didn't have to wake up crazy early to get to the race on time.  We got a room for only $100 at the Ohana Waikiki West that was within walking distance to the start and finish of the race - score!

On Saturday we drove to the Hawaii Convention Center to sign in and get our race bags.  It was a pitiful race expo with no free samples and very few vendors.  After the expo, we went to Sports Authority to get Laura a hat for the race and I got one as well since the rest of our outfits matched. From there we went to Savers, a thrift store, to find some throwaway shirts.  We each got a cheap sweatshirt to keep us warm in the morning until the race started.  After that, we drove the race course so we would know what to expect.  This was the first time I've ever done that for a race and it was very helpful, especially to see the hills that everyone was commenting about online.

The last place we went was to Whole Foods to get things for breakfast.  We stocked up on water, whole grain bread, packets of nut butter, bananas, and cookies.  The cookies were not on our shopping list but they were from the Whole Foods bakery and were flat, brown, crispy deliciousness that we couldn't pass up :)

The Whole Foods is attached to a mall which has an Apple store.  My iPhone stopped working properly the night before so it was the perfect opportunity to get it fixed.  Turns out that getting it fixed was quite an ordeal and it ultimately needed replaced... this took hours but now I have a new phone that works!

It was after 9pm by the time we reached the hotel and we still hadn't eaten dinner yet!  The hotel has two extremely tiny parking garages that were, of course, full so Laura stayed with the car in a no parking zone while I checked in.  We were given a map to park in a garage two blocks away but the map took us to the garage location, not to the garage entrance.  We had to circle around three times before we went down all of the correct one-way streets to get us to the garage entrance.  The hotel was not the greatest for multiple reasons (including the parking and their bad map) but it was cheap and only for one night.

Once we parked, we walked two blocks back to the hotel to put our bags in the room and then searched for a place to eat.  We then found a bar/restaurant within walking distance that was still open and serving food but we had to pay a $5 cover charge because there was a DJ - a cover charge for a DJ in a practically empty bar?  Seriously?!  We couldn't hear each other talk but we enjoyed some huli huli chicken with rice, and had our traditional night-before-the-race beer.


After dinner we went back to the hotel and chowed down on those crispy cookies from Whole Foods while getting our things ready for the morning.  I always run races with sneakers, running skirt, tank top, undergarments, hat, sunglasses, GPS heart rate monitor, iPod Shuffle and headphones, two GU gels (for energy during the run), two pieces of mint gum (keeps my mouth moist), my race bib, my ID, and a $20 bill (just in case).


On the morning of the race, we were slow moving from having stayed up so late.  We ate our whole grain bread (yay for a toaster in our room!) with bananas and nut butter... and also had a few cookies.  The race started at 6AM.  We walked out the door at 5:50 and got to the starting line just as the singing of the national anthem was finishing.  There were no corrals for the runners so you could get in line wherever you wanted.  We stayed on the sidewalk stretching while the other runners took off. When we saw the end of the line, we realized that we better jump in!


The first 8 miles were flat (except for a small bridge) so it was easy running.  It was a cloudy morning which kept the temperature cool which also helped.  It drizzled a few times and it rained hard a few times but it never lasted long and we were wearing hats which kept the rain off of our faces.  There were drink stations every two miles with both water and gatorade so it wasn't necessary to carry a water bottle.


At mile 9 there was a half-mile hill followed by a level break and then another hill.  We walked some of the first hill but ran the second one.  Mile 12 was the most memorable and perfect mile that I have ever run in my life!  It was all downhill with the ocean to our left, Diamond Head to our right, a huge rainbow in front of us, and wind at our backs...  it doesn't get any better than that!




The finish line and post-race celebration was at Kapiolani Park.  There were fresh hot malasadas, shave ice, bananas, moon pies, and cold water.  The results of the race were printed out and taped up for all to see while we were there.  We stayed for a while to bask in the post-race euphoria and then walked back to the hotel, showered, got coffee, and ate more cookies on the drive home.  Despite the craziness, this turned out to be the best race we've run yet.  I love our race adventures!



*******
"The finish line doesn’t care how many miles you have run, how fast you’ve gone, 
how many people you’ve passed, or who may have passed you.  
It only cares that you arrive... that you finish what you started."


Spartan Race Hawaii

On August 17, Hawaii had its first ever Spartan Race.  The race was held on Kualoa Ranch which is the extremely scenic, undeveloped area where many movies (Jurassic Park, 50 First Dates, Godzilla) and TV shows (LOST, Hawaii 5-0) were filmed.

Spartan Races are obstacle races that are held worldwide.  They combine running with physically challenging obstacles that include a lot of water, mud, barbed wire, and fire.  The course was over 3 miles long (up and down many steep hills) and had 15 obstacles to complete.

I joined a group of ladies from my neighborhood to run the race.  We actually trained for this and prepared matching costumes.  We went as a group of Spartan Cheerleaders from the Saturday Night Live skits.  The outfits, bought from Amazon, were polyester disasters so we did a lot of alterations to make them work for this race.  I think we looked pretty good... especially with that incredible view behind us!


The parking lot was 1.5 miles from the start of the race... it was a nice warmup on the way there but not so much fun on the walk back after the race.


We had some gorgeous views near the end of the trail!  This is the East side of the island - so beautiful!






The few first obstacles we encountered included walking through a chest-deep river, walking through three mud pits of varying mud consistency, and crawling through mud under barbed wire.  We were wet, smelly, and dirty for the entire race.






Seriously... the view was incredible all around us!  In case you are wondering, most of this island does not look like this.  It was such a treat to be surrounded by such beauty.


I successfully completed all of the obstacles except for the last one... a rope climb.  I was going to at least try but changed my mind after seeing muscular people struggle and fall into the waist-deep mud under the ropes.  Two of the girls in our group tried and one actually made it very close to the top.





The scenery was a-maz-ing the entire race which made up for some of the race's downfalls.  This was the first year for the race and it definitely has some improvements to make for next year.

It was disgusting, it was smelly, and it hurt... but it was fun and we all feel pretty badass for finishing :)


*******
"What mattered was the joy, the fun, the sheer thrill
and the accompanying realization of 'I did it'!"
~Jessica Bellofatto

Seattle Rock 'n' Roll Half Marathon


On June 22, we ran the Seattle Rock 'n' Roll Half Marathon!  This was my 5th half marathon and Johnnie's 2nd.  Rock 'n' Roll Marathon Races are extremely popular and hotels fill up fast.  Therefore, we planned this trip, signed up for the race, and booked a room last year.

10 Reasons I love to run the Rock 'n' Roll Marathon Series races:
  1. There are thousands of people who run, creating an exciting race atmosphere
  2. There is a big health and fitness expo in the two days before the race
  3. You get a technical t-shirt and medal for participating
  4. The races are well organized
  5. There are bands and cheer squads all along the course to keep you motivated while running
  6. There are drink stations all along the course to keep you hydrated
  7. There are medical stations along the course if you need them
  8. There are many photographers all along the course to provide you with photo memories
  9. There is a festival and headliner concert after the race
  10. You get a special extra medal if you run two or more races in one year


There were an estimated 20,000 runners signed up for this race!  Everyone was organized by corrals, corral 1 being the fastest.  We were waaaayyy back in the corrals so it took about an hour before we even reached the starting line.  Johnnie had signed up for a faster pace than me and my running partners so he started further toward the front, crossing the starting line a little under 20 minutes from the first corral.  Everyone gets an electronic tag to wear on their shoe so your race time doesn't start until you actually cross the starting line.


It was a chilly morning so Johnnie and I both wore a shirt that we were willing to part with.  Near the starting line, there were places to discard any clothing you didn't want to run in.  All of this clothing was donated to a good cause after the race.  It was so nice to have something to keep us warm until we started running and great that we didn't have to run with it tied around our waist.  Once we started running, it was the perfect temperature for shorts and a tank top.


My running buddy and I each have goals of running a half marathon in each state, and hope to run many of them together.  Whenever we do run a big race together, we coordinate our outfits... for this race, we picked purple.   I always run races in running skirts because they are comfortable and cute.  Running skirts have tight shorts attached underneath so you don't have to worry about flashing your underwear to anyone.  I loved the hidden pop of yellow under the skirt I wore!


The race course was great!  We ran on the streets of downtown Seattle, along streets of quieter neighborhoods, through some residential areas, along the shore of a lake, through two tunnels, on the express lanes of the highway, and on the viaduct above the waterfront.  There were many hills on the course but most of them were gradual inclines/declines.



There were a lot of water stations along the course.  Every other drink station also had Gatorade available.  There was one GU station around 8.5 miles.  The drink stations were manned by companies or groups.  This station was manned by Alaska Airlines - they had fun airplane hats!


This drink station was manned by pirates... Arghhh!





The course took us on the tree shaded boulevard along Lake Washington.  This was so beautiful!


This road was lined with members of the Wear Blue Run to Remember group which is a running community that honors the service and sacrifice of the American military.  The road was lined with photos of military members who died in combat and dozens of people holding American flags.




We ran through the I-90 Express Lane Tunnel.  It was slightly uphill but very neat to run through!  The GU energy gel station was inside this tunnel.







The end of the course took us down the scenic Alaskan Way Viaduct which follows above the Waterfront area.  The Seattle Great Wheel is a new permanant ferris wheel on the Waterfront.  It is the largest observation wheel on the west coast, standing 175 feet tall.



The weather was perfect and the course was beautiful.  This was a really fun race that we will definitely run again someday!


Another finisher's medal to add to our collection!  This won't be our only one for the year.  I plan on running two more half marathons this year and Johnnie will running his first full marathon.  We are running fools this year :)


*******
"It's very hard to understand in the beginning
that the whole idea is not to beat other runners.
Eventually you learn that the competition is against
the little voice inside you that wants to quit."
~George Sheehan