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SURVIVING THE MONSTER: WHERE'S WALDO 2004by Peter Fish, Gold Hill, OregonWhere's Waldo 100K & Relay Willamette Pass Ski Area Oregon August 21, 2004 |
The Where's Waldo 100K, in the Willamette Pass area of central Oregon, is a very tough event, and my motives in doing it were three:
So Waldo was my "destination race" for this year, and my hopefully better preparation could again be considered from three aspects:
What more can be said? I ran and walked for 18.5 hours, it was a gas, and, as I said above, a wonderfully beautiful course. For visiting runners from the right side of the continent, Waldo would be a great chance to experience a western mountain course, not quite as arduous as Hardrock or Leadville, but plenty hard enough. The real plus for me was the people I met on the trail. I started out with one half of a relay team, Tom Janzen, and finished with the other, Wayne Anderson. On the last leg of the course, I was alone and feeling insecure about whether I was on the right trail, and finally saw a light ahead, which turned out to be Wayne, who had stopped at the junction. We walked the rest of the way, about 5 miles, and had a pleasant visit. After leaving Tom, I ran for a while with John Bandur, a young fellow (66) with a lot of talent and experience, who finished in 16:25! A while later, on the way to the Twins (first time), I had another moment of doubt about the trail, mostly because it was heading south and the next aid station was north (I was carrying a map, as recommended, but thought it had fallen out of the pocket of my shorts). After running a ways with that slightly discouraged off-the-trail feeling, I turned around and started back the way I came, and after a few minutes ran into Jeff Staiman, who pulled out his maps and spent some time showing me that I was, in fact, on the right trail (This, and the other spot I mentioned, could use a couple of reassurance pink ribbons: apart from that, the course is very well marked). Jeff is a very remarkable person. We ran together, off and on, for around 30 miles, and he never once mentioned his purpose in running Waldo, which was, I later discovered from the race website, to honor his friend Mark Bingham, who gave his life on 9/11 as one of the people who diverted the airliner in Pennsylvania. At 34, Jeff has been running for about a year, and has two 50Ks and the San Diego marathon under his belt as preparation for tackling this monster. He want ed a really tough race for Team Bingham, and he got one, but it didn't seem to faze him at all. He never complained about anything, occasionally dropped back, then popped up like the energizer bunny, left me behind at Maiden Lake aid station, and finished 22 minutes ahead of me. He mentioned that he would like to do the Plain 100, a race that has had 4 finishers in its history. I would bet on him. In between times, I ran for a while with (usually behind) Craig's brother Chris and his pacer and wife Alana (sp?), who were a lot of fun, especially after a friend (whose name I missed) joined them after Maiden Peak, when a lot of banter flew around that was very refreshing after all those miles and HILLS. Chris had knee problems toward the end (probably aggravated by the rocky descent on the Leap of Faith trail down Maiden Peak) and dropped back, but he still finished. Finally, congratulations to all the people from the state of Jefferson (southern Oregon and northern CA) who finished ahead of me: farthest ahead was Tim Turk, the winner in 11:15, and Rob Cain, Marcus Mayfield, and Melanie Johnson.
Thanks to Craig and Curt, the race directors, and their crew of about 120 volunteers, for putting on a great event!
Send Peter an email at wtc48@aol.com
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