Fullerton Loop


Friday afternoon I ran the Fullerton Loop trail, an informal concatenation of trails that meanders around the Coyote Hills of Fullerton. The “official” loop is about 11 miles. I started at my house in east Fullerton – so the loop was 18 grueling up-and-down miles. It took me over 3 hours to complete (not including stops to buy Gatorade and to enjoy the view along the way). 

Getting ready for a run like this is not trivial. I have no pit crew – no one will be waiting along the way to hand me a drink or banana – I have to be self sufficient. The photo here shows and explains my critical gear. 

Compared to running the Fullerton Loop solo, the actual marathon will be easy. At the Rock N Roll Marathon there will be drink tables every mile or so, rock bands playing along the route, helpful volunteers standing by with cotton swabs saturated in Vaseline to help with bodily lubrication, port-a-potties galore, and all manner of emergency medical staff and facilities standing by. I can’t wait!

Originally published on my Team In Training fundraising page in 2011. Archived here from a saved webarchive file.

Heat, Jet Lag, and Cold

Sorry for the long delay between posts here. Its been an epic 3-4 weeks. But first things first….Thanks to all the generous donation we have reached nearly 60% of our goal to raise $5000 to fight blood cancers! The goal is now within sight, but I need your help to reach it. Please forward a link to this page to all you friends and ask them to join our team!

I am now back in California after spending three weeks in Thailand. During the first half of this time I was on a research project in southern Thailand searching for evidence of prehistoric tsunamis. Sounds adventurous, but mostly it consisted of digging trenches in the tropical heat. I did find time for some training runs (see the previous post). One of my last runs in southern Thailand was an epic 12 mile round trip from Kamala Beach up and over a high headland to Pathong Beach on the resort island of Phuket. I left at 7 am, but still that was the hottest I have ever been in my life. I drank nearly 12 oz of fluid per mile and still spent the rest of the day trying to rehydrate. 

Following the field work, I travelled to Chiang Mai in the north of Thailand for some R&R which included daily runs in some unusually cool weather, including my longest run so far – 17 miles. I got a couple of rounds of golf in too. 

The worst part about this trip, as usually, was the homecoming. For some reason, jet lag hits me much, much worse traveling east. I was completely worthless for over a week. To add to the misery, I picked up a UR virus – probably from the nasty recirculated air that I breathed for 15 hours on the return flight. Finally, over the last couple of days, I’ve begun to feel like my body and mind are in the same time zone. I’m looking forward to the next 6 weeks and some hard training! 

Go Team!

Originally published on my Team In Training fundraising page in 2011. Archived here from a saved webarchive file.

Hello from the Land of Smiles!

A quick update from Thailand’s Andaman Coast. But first, I want to give a shout out to my buddies at the Anaheim Golf Association – they voted collectively to make a very generous donation to the LLS! Thanks to them and all of my donors I have surpassed the 50% milestone toward my goal of $5000! 

I am now in southern Thailand for field work related to a National Geographic Society sponsored project to study ancient tsunami deposits. Long days in the field, temperatures in the upper 90s (with humidity to match) and some of the most intense rainstorms on the planet have not been conducive to marathon training. I did get in an 8-miler (captured in the photo by one of my co-researchers ) our second day here. The last 4 miles were through a deluge that flooded the streets. Our field work is now over so I should get back to some long runs later this week. 

Go Team!

Originally published on my Team In Training fundraising page in 2011. Archived here from a saved webarchive file.

The Runner’s Malady No One Wants To Talk About

Runners are afflicted with all sorts of injuries, conditions and aches and pains. Shin splints, side stitches, muscle cramps, blisters, bleading nipples, jock rot, Achilles tendonitis, blood in the urine, and soreness in all the moving parts. I’ve suffered most of these, but none of them has really been a show-stopper. Except for one. This malady will be my greatest challenge as I train for, and compete in the 2011 San Diego Marathon.

Warning: If you are squeamish with blunt talk about bodily functions, stop reading and close your browser now!

Runners trots. Seems redundant, but it is aptly named. Running is the best laxative ever invented. I seem to have an especially bad case. Usually within the first mile, but sometime later, or at multiple times in the run, I MUST find a loo. Or bush. Or else. Both of these are in short supply along the most popular running routes in Orange County. I know every gas station, every fast-food outlet, and every possible bush, ravine, or patch of high grass in northern Orange County. Even with my photographic memory of all these spots, sometimes I am caught in-between. Shit. Literally.

Now that I have joined Team in Training, I have started running with my team every Saturday morning. On these runs its worse because I cannot plan on a known point of relief when I need it, and running bowlegged with a load risks significant embarrassment. After two weeks of this, something had to change. Either I was going to become the loneliest long-distance runner, or I was going to lick…errr beat the Runner’s Trots.

First stop Google. I found many remedies – eat this or that, don’t eat this or that, drink coffee before the run, don’t drink anything with caffeine. I quickly got the idea that there was no universally accepted cure. 

I have never been particularly “regular”. My father used to disappear every morning with newspaper in hand, and come out ½ hour later with the day’s job done. I never recall him ever having to go #2 at any other time of day. I tried this. My legs went numb from the sitting, to no avail. The older I get, the worse it becomes. Now that I am training nearly every day, DURING a run is the ONLY time I go. My digestive track seems to shut off accept when I jar it awake during a run.

Finally I had enough – I went to the doctor. He sympathized (and probably snickered to himself when I was gone). He did prescribe some drugs. Lets say one was an “on” drug and one was an “off” drug. I had my first chance to use them this past weekend – so far so good – but we will see about the long term. My Plab B is Depends – do they have a fitness model?

Originally published on my Team In Training fundraising page in 2011. Archived here from a saved webarchive file.

My Mentor

Each new member of Team in Training is assigned a mentor to help guide and motivate you to the finish line. Mentors have run a marathon before with TnT, and they know what it takes. Last week at our first Team in Training workout, I was introduced to my mentor, Carlos de la Feunte. For Carlos, the pain of running a marathon is trivial. Here is the short version of his story in his own words:

“I was introduced to Team in Training in 2006 one year after losing my precious 28 years old daughter Michele to Lymphoma. At the anniversary of Michele’s passing I was still trying to come to grips or make sense of a senseless lost? My heart was broken, but I had the wonderful strong spirit of my beloved Michele that kept me grounded. Michele was the strongest, bravest fighter I had ever met, and I knew that I had to make her proud and help find a way to help other families and patients of blood diseases to find a cure in our lifetime.” 

I need no further motivation.

Originally published on my Team In Training fundraising page in 2011. Archived here from a saved webarchive file.