The trails are a nice mix of dirt, packed sand, gravel and tree roots. There were enough hills to make things interesting, but not so much to really beat a person down. It had rained Friday night, but the trails were in great shape today. Just a few muddy spots.
The weather was cool and sunny, maybe about 55 degrees at start time. It was a perfect morning for running. What a difference from two weeks ago.
Since my entire family was involved in this event as participants we have no pictures. Sorry.
We got up at O-dark-thirty, loaded the kids in the car and headed off for the race site. Race time was at 9:30, but the info said to be there early for check in and body measurements. Apparently they don't use the traditional age groupings to determine awards. People are scored based on a combination of age and body type. So, we got there at 8 and were almost the first people there. We got through the check in process quickly. We found out the body fat measuring equipment didn't know how to handle a skinny 10 year old and a skinny 6 year old. I, on the other hand, could probably do with a little less ice cream :-) Once we were though the check in process we went back to our car to get warm and hang out. Good thing we got there early because by the time we were done more people had arrive and the line to check in was pretty long.
So, on to the start. For the first 3 km I ran with my 10 year old. This made me happy.
She is really improving as a runner. We're still working on pacing, but she'll get there. She told me her goal was 45 minutes and she ended up finishing in 37 minutes. She did great. I think it finally clicked for her that to go faster, she needs to go slower.
After the 3 km marker the 10K and 5K runners split. I quickly caught and passed one lady, but then I was alone.
I was by myself for only a mile or so, but it seemed to go on forever. It's much more difficult to stay in a racing frame of mind when there's no one around me. I tend to slip into my normal weekend long trail run state of mind. I was spending time admiring the trees, looking at the creek, listening to birds, etc. Every so often I would look at my watch and realize I had slowed way down and be like "Oh Crap!" and speed up again.
Then I saw them. The pack. Woot! I started working my way up through the pack. I don't know how many people I passed, but it put me from DFL to the front of the midpack. This section of the course was my favorite. It was like a roller coaster with all the up and down and sharp curves. Beautiful. I can't wait to go back there and run those trails again.
Then it was over. One last climb to the finish chute (evil RD! hahaha) and it was over. I finished in 1:05 which I was more than happy with. It was my first ever trail 10K and the first 3 km I was running with my daughter. I really didn't treat it as a goal race or a PR effort.
After I finished I found out my 6 year old daughter had finished her first 5K ever with my wife. She was pretty excited. She even got mud on her legs and was pretty stoked about that. It made her feel more like an official trail runner. LOL! Both daughters are already bugging me about doing another trail race. I think that's a good sign.
No shirts for this race (which is fine with me) but we did get really cool aluminum water bottles. My wife and 6 year old chose some cool hats with pink "Mud Creek Crawl" logos. The event was well organized and I appreciated the reasonable cost in this age of spiraling race entrance fees. If it fits my schedule next year, we'll be back. I love quirky smaller events like this.
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