Skip to main content

Cowbells and Wild Flowers: Sun Mountain 50k Race Review.

Basically I earned myself a spot in the Saturday 50k by ringing a cowbell and calling numbers over a walkie to the finish crew. And this my friends was my reward:

The Sun Mountain 1k, 25k, 50k, and 50mi is going to go down as my favorite trail trace of all time. It may be beat sometime soon, but for now it holds absolute reign at the top. And this even after an amazing time at the Yakima Skyline Rim a few weeks back. The 50k course was indeed "very runnable" as many who were there were fond of saying. Not overly technical my only very slight complaint was found in the rare but occasional mountain bike eroded downhill trails. That said the erosion was minimal for an area heavily used by bikers. What makes this my favorite race so far was the combination of North Cascades scenery, well pitched high quality trail, and perfect weather. I would like to say it was a bit too sunny for my glowing white body but that would be a disservice to the great weather this race often enjoys. It was indeed mostly sunny with a high of maybe 65 degrees with a perfect cooling breeze. Yet even with that my Seattle tolerances for sun were tested. I drank through about 5 liters of water during this race.


The course and the scenery: Gentle uphills and downhills yielded a perfect blend of running through cool shaded forests and running through dazzling green grass fields spotted thick with blindingly bright wildflowers. The colors on this race - between the deep blue skies, vibrant yellow and purple flowers, deep green grass, and brown pine bark made the entire race look like a supersaturated HDR photo. You know, like someone over Ansel Adams-d your favorite photo to make it really pop. The colors combined with my intake of caffeine infused guu shots to produce enough crack-cocaine for my brain to enjoy this race from start to finish. While there were a couple steeper climbs they came at just the right time and were just the right length to give some of my muscles a rest and to stretch out the others. And when I started wishing for a nice gentle downhill to fly down it was almost as if James had read my mind and provided me one. Boom! There it was, served up with a garnish of wildflowers. When I thought to myself yet again, time for another nice rolling downhill *snap* I asked and James provided. Good guy that James fella.


So really don't just take my word for it, sign up for next years Sun Mountain series and find out for yourself. You won't be disappointed. And if for some reason your race isn't quite as nice as mine was, the pizza, the local beer brews, and the Pine Hearts will make all right as rain.

Comments

  1. You saved my bacon on Mt. Patterson this weekend! Your jokes about my sexy calves pulled me out of my brain and my nausea on the last pitches before the summit. Thanks for your good humor and the competition. What a great day of running.

    --Faron

    ReplyDelete
  2. You are welcome! I think I was doing that for my own mood as well. Talking with folks is always a help.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Luna Sandals - An Evolution in Running

In short my story of running has been essentially a story about me getting out of the way of myself. But before I could learn about getting out of my own way I had to get rid of the technology that was getting in the way of me discovering myself. And if that sounds like nonsense I won't be surprised, for in some ways sense had nothing to do with it. This story like all the best stories started with a girl. It started with a girl I once liked and the shoes she wore. Enter the five figured Vibram. Vibrams When I first donned Vibrams, my first pair of minimalist running shoes I had no idea they were even made for running. Nor did I have any inkling that this weird guy named 'Barefoot Ted' (who lived only a few miles to my south) had a hand in persuading Vibram into making a running 'shoe'. At the time I hadn't even heard of ultra-marathons or running Tarahumara Indians or crazy Eat and Run vegans named Scott Jurek. No, I just liked a girl who ran b...

The Tukson 50

The FKT project, here known as "The Tukson 50" has been a life-time in the making. My earliest memories include drawing maps of our local ski mountain pixel by pixel. I grew up hiking in Montana's US Forest Service and Wilderness lands, which required a deep knowledge and skill in reading topography maps in order to find my dad's favorite fishing spots. My interest and love of maps has always been there, my skill in reading and imagining them, my super-power.  I dream in "topo". Cat Mountain Fast forward to today, and Strava has put that love of maps and topography on crack.  That heat map, is the best thing ever created! I have got dozens of variations of the Tucson 50, remembered in a half dozen published maps on Strava.  These days I'm using maps to motivate and explore. As some elite racers will recite, in reference to their Why, "I race to train." In other words, for many it's about the running, the views, and less about finishing comp...