I had such a blast running the Pseudo Skunk on Tuesday that I went back again on Wednesday for another go. I had a few hours to kill after work and before picking up the kids from daycare and couldn't think of anything better to do. With temps in the low 50s, most of the snow, ice, and slush had melted off the shoulder of the roads, so the running was much easier and more enjoyable. I don't think Ithaca's had a day this nice for running since November.
On Wednesday's run, a massive wind to the northwest made the run down Thomas Road slow and miserable, but I got a nice tailwind boost heading back up Ellis Hollow from 79. I enjoyed the shorts-and-tee-shirt-in-February aspect and left my phone in the car, manually entering my correct time afterward. After destroying my quads on some hill repeats over the weekend, I was in no position to run fast and compete with Aaron King's benchmark time. I'll give it a better effort sometime in the next few weeks, but for now I'm enjoying a rest day.
I think it would be fun to get a group out there the morning of April 4—the day the Skunk Cabbage race would normally be run. I (or anyone that's tech savvy) could give a brief tutorial on the self-timing at the start for anyone new to the concept, and I could try to get out early and spray arrows at the turns so people can follow the course without carrying their phones.
On Wednesday's run, a massive wind to the northwest made the run down Thomas Road slow and miserable, but I got a nice tailwind boost heading back up Ellis Hollow from 79. I enjoyed the shorts-and-tee-shirt-in-February aspect and left my phone in the car, manually entering my correct time afterward. After destroying my quads on some hill repeats over the weekend, I was in no position to run fast and compete with Aaron King's benchmark time. I'll give it a better effort sometime in the next few weeks, but for now I'm enjoying a rest day.
I think it would be fun to get a group out there the morning of April 4—the day the Skunk Cabbage race would normally be run. I (or anyone that's tech savvy) could give a brief tutorial on the self-timing at the start for anyone new to the concept, and I could try to get out early and spray arrows at the turns so people can follow the course without carrying their phones.
So what's this FLRC Challenge?
The Finger Lakes Runners Club has organized a year-long virtual series, comprising 10 set race courses around the Ithaca area, one of which is titled Pseudo Skunk Cabbage. Runners register for the race, run the courses whenever and however often they choose, and use the Webscorer app to self-time their runs and submit them directly to a live results leaderboard page. At the end of the event, prizes will be awarded for the overall fastest runners on each course, age-graded performances, most cumulative mileage, and most completions on each course. It also includes a team aspect, with each age-group team equalized via an age-graded performance points-based system. In other words, there are awards for "the speedy, the consistent, and the deliberate." Anyone who completes all 10 courses gets a finishers medal, and you can nab some option swag upon registering. Check out the race web page for more info and registration.
A few course metrics:
Over the two runs, I recorded 13.10 and 13.08 miles with my Suunto 9. The RunGo app measures exactly 13.1. Due to fluxuations in the GPS signal, running tangents, and variability in rounding curves, it's rare that I record anything so close to the advertised distance. Suunto gave me 461 and 507 feet of gain, but I know from running some tests on the watch that it always shorts me on the vert. When loaded to Strava, I got 838 and 837 feet, which might be an overestimate, but is probably closer to the actual amount. Descent is the same as ascent since the start and finish are in the same spot. Strava typically gives me 750 - 800 feet for the actual Skunk course, so the elevation change is about the same even though Pseudo Skunk feels like a lot more.
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