This is based on a run that took place in July 07 before I got serious about running but is the very run that made me love it again. Since then I’ve run there 3 more times and the route was recently featured in a recent issue of Runners World.
I don’t look like much of a runner…but I am. Not insane distance things but 2-3 miles go by easily. I do it for health reasons. I do it to escape, most often on a treadmill when at home and wondering city streets, block after block and mile after mile when traveling. Why don’t I run outside where I live? In the summer one word sums it up HEAT!!!!
As I checked into a hotel that was on Lake Natoma in Northern Cal not far from Sacramento I noticed a sign stating no trail head parking. And a bicycle rental place. The next morning at 5:30 I wondered to the entrance and find a nice paved trail 2 lane bicycle trail.
I’m rarely intimidated but had seen in the first ¼ mile 3 serious looking cyclists went whizzing by and no other runners. So rather than continue to brave the paved surface I decided to take a makeshift railroad tie stair case toward the water and discovered a narrow dirt and stone trail through the brush and trees. Turning to the right I hopped a small creek and after a little while ran like a wild man toward a hill that was all dirt and too steep to make it to the top with out grabbing a near by tree no matter how hard I pushed with my thick little legs. It led to a dead end a few minutes later and I proceeded to slide and fall down a hill mostly feet first before landing on the stones and the trickle of water at the bottom.
My shins were screaming from the angle my feet went down the slope compared to the rest of me. My hand hurt from dragging it across the soft dirt as a pathetic and flawed means of steering. Gravity took me and had her way with me as I finally stopped. I bet I hadn’t come down a hill like that in 20 years was the first thought, not am I hurt, boy was that stupid, or anything of the sort. I bounced up and did what else but run in the opposite direction from where I had started. It was great I was revitalized, I loved that dirt and dodging the stones with every fourth or fifth stride. It was like I was 12 and in the woods behind my parents playing war again.
It might not be popular in today’s society to play war as little boys but when I grew up we played war, and cops a Casner Brothers. Not robbers but Casner Brothers who were at the time I was about 8 a couple of local red necks who were robbing banks. The police knew who they were but took forever to catch them even though everyone in my little town knew they drank at the bar around the corner on Wed. and Thursday night. No one turned them in. It was a different time. And we were running through the woods launching assaults with bottle rockets over head and cap or BB guns in hand long before the invention of paint ball and air soft guns which both still hurt and are slightly less idiotic to shoot at each other with.
As I bounded up the trail through the dew covered spider webs of dawn I looked at the water of the lake to one side and the comforting knowledge of the paved and populated bike trail to the left incase I should misjudge a stride and slip and fall on a rock shattering my ankle. After all no one in the world who knew me knew where I was or what I was doing. I had no ID, no cell phone, just a hotel room key tucked in a pocket, a pair of shorts, a cotton T, and running shoes.
Hopefully should anything ever happen to me and some one call my wife to see if she knows anything she’d know to ask. Are his running shoes in his suitcase? If not he’s with in 5 miles of the hotel look for the dumbest place to run he’ll be some where along that route.
At this point note to self. Spend the 10 bucks and buy a pair of those stupid runner ID tags that go on your laces. (FYI Santa brought me a Road ID for Christmas, see I’ve come a long way). What if a bear ate me, or a gang member shot me, or I quite literally got hit by a bus running through some city street or more likely an old lover who happened to be passing by in her soccer mom mobile and decided to even the score for my youthful and often misunderstood philandering by running me down with her dodge caravan on the way to precious’ soccer practice.
A simple 30 minute run turned into an hour out and an hour back. I committed the times foolishly to my mind 15 minutes in and once I do that there in no altering the objective unless it is making it harder or dying in the process. Besides I felt great, I was on an adventure, and I felt quite literally like a kid again. No one would miss me before 10 and it was at most 5:50. As light of day began to break through I could see others on the path above me from time to time but was mostly alone darting up even the slightest incline. I’ve always run harder up hills than I ever do on flats and declines. There’s something primal to it as my legs would burn with lactic acid and my heart would jump in my chest it was me against the hill.
I got pretty good at it as a kid since my backyard was all up hill. At one point my parents begged me to stop running up the two short steep paths which I had worn down to dirt. I never listened and some of my best memories are of crushing my childhood play mates up that hill after lighting an M80 in my sister’s sandbox and blowing small meticulously arranged plastic soldiers to bits in the name of a military offensive. Perhaps that is why she’s a pacifist and didn’t want to let her boys play with toy guns, a topic for another time.
45 minutes in I ran behind where my 10:00 meeting was looking at the back of the building. I passed a few others who looked and ran like regulars on the trail. As I began to get thirsty, always a sign that you’ve waited too long to hydrate I remembered that I didn’t have any water. Why because I going to trot along for a little while and head back to my hotel where water was plentiful. Not long after the hunger and energy crash started. Sure I had 4 Cliff bars in my suitcase, I had failed to prepare. I never was a good boy scout. No food, no water, and not going to give in. I was by god going to run, shuffle and if need be crawl for 60 minutes at whatever pathetic pace I could each way and who cares if I was a bit parched, I was dripping with sweat and it was a cool morning or it might have been worse.
At 62 minutes I turned back. My belly protesting a bit along the way I picked up the pace except for when running through the berry bushes I’d slow sometimes even walk when I could smell fresh black berries in the morning air, admiring them as they hung there in varying stages of ripeness. I could have picked a few but let’s face it I had dinner the night before so I wasn’t literally staving. The return trip was 4 minutes, less the 10 I lost by running the wrong way in the beginning it was still an improvement.
Huffing I walked across the parking lot into the lobby and watched all the people eating breakfast in the restaurant who were wondering what the cat had just drug in based on my appearance. Covered in dust and streaks of sweat. My shoes were trashed, they have over 400 miles on them and I’m due to break in a new pair but were just fine prior to the run now the outer sole was scrapped up parts of the tread torn. Later I found pebbles in the nubbies, I was so proud I called my wife. I remember the girl at Fleet Feet asking if I ran trails or outside. I all but scoffed at her “trails, for God’s sake no I run on treadmills in hotels and the occasional city street’.
So what Did I learn? Buy a geek water bottle holder thing and pack it , take my polar watch to make sure my heart rate is high enough to be getting the benefit from my effort,
Cliff bars aren’t just for lunch on crazy travel days any more put one in my pocket.
Perhaps the most important thing, I remembered why I started running in my teens. It wasn’t because of my marathoner aunt and uncle, it wasn’t just for conditioning for my other sports, it wasn’t to trot by Missy’s house and hope to see her and fall into a conversation, and it wasn’t to watch girls at the gym while trying to fight aging with every last bit of my being. I started running because I liked it and it felt good, and perhaps if done right from time to time still does.
Next time I’m going to rent a bike and ride the lake in the afternoon and run the trail the following morning and I might just run the wrong way and go up the same steep hill and come down it with the same lack of grace. So if you’re near Lake Natoma or Folsom Lake in early September I’ll be the guy who looks like he had no business running any further than the nearest burger joint but is loving it all none the less.
Now about those trail shoes….and we sang together “happy trails to you.”
Since this run I’ve run the 12 mile loop ,on another occasion logged 10 and make it my long run for the week when I’m there scheduling my business meeting around it. The next time will be January 8th when a local friend is going to take me on new parts of the trail I haven’t explored. If you happen to be there about the break of day I’ll be the fat guy in tights who looks like he’s having way too much fun running next to the tall thin guy that looks like a runner.