Schaeffer Farms 10k+ Trail Run
Nov. 2, 2024
I'm happy to say that the short story is: I crushed this race!
I had originally been planning to do a 20k trail race in upstate NY with quite a bit of elevation gain. Because of all of the knee-related issues, I decided it would be better to scale back my goals. I chose a 10k trail race that was at a state park about 30 min from my house. Besides being shorter, it also had less elevation gain per mile, so easier in that way. The park/trails were the same location as my July trail 5k, which I recapped here:
https://www.disboards.com/threads/a...c-2018-comments-welcome.3725621/post-65636226
There was a half-marathon and 10k trail race today. The races were put on by EX2 Adventures, which is really a great race company. They are extremely well-organized, have good communication, and good venues. They might be a hair more expensive than some bare-bones trail races, but not crazy. They do a good job, I think, of pulling people from road racing into trying trail racing. The courses are always extremely well-marked, with lots of marshals to keep people on track.
For this race, a volunteer walked the entire course with a leaf blower a couple of days before so there weren't any leaves hiding the roots, etc. (Remember there was a HM, so it was about 10 miles of trails.) I can't tell you how amazing that was!!! If you don't trail run, you may not realize how many leaves can fall on the trails, and they bury the surface and hide the rocks, roots, holes, etc. I had been thinking before the race that II was going to have to meter my speed a bit depending on how deep the leaves were. I went to the check-in folks to thank them for removing the leaves, and it turns out that it was the husband of one of the volunteers there!
If you're looking for trail races in Maryland and Northern Virginia, I really suggest checking them out.
Back to my race. The start time for the 10k was a very civilized 10:30am (HM at 9am), so I didn't really even get up early! Full breakfast 2.5 hrs before the race. I got to the venue about 9:30am. Picked up my bib and used a potty. I take some caffeine pills about 1 hour before the race (I don't drink coffee or much caffeine normally) and then BCAAs closer to the start. I had 1.5 L of water + Nuun. I brought a Honey Stinger waffle for during the race, but didn't end up eating it.
I did a couple of my long runs on the course, so I was reasonably familiar with it. I did some walking and then about 10 minutes of running on part of the end of the course that was easily accessible from the start area as a warm-up. Finished that at about 10:10am, used the potty again, and then just kept moving a bit with some dynamic warm-up moves and walking.
The weather was perfect! At the start, the temperature was 52 F and the T+D 90. Sunny - but most of the course is dappled shade - and not really any wind. I was in my usual tank top and shorts.
Here's a screenshot of my route from the race, and then the elevation graph:
I should mention that the 10k was "10k+" because the course had been measured to be about 6.7 mi - trail races aren't usually "exact" distances.
We started in two waves: runners faster than 11:30 min/mi at 10:30am and then the rest of us at 10:32am. These races always start on time.
The first half mile is
uphill across a field and then along the gravel driveway to the trail. This is honestly annoying to start out with, but it does let people spread out a bit before single track. The key for me is to not go out too fast, which I'm good about doing, but I also don't want to get stuck on the single track behind people who
did go out too fast and then get gassed quickly on the single track. I did ok with this today. I got in with a group of about a half-dozen with a woman at the front who kept a pretty consistent pace on the trail.
The first ~1.5 mi has a lot of uphill, and those folks not used to trail running always get surprised by how hard it is, especially uphill. Got some people stopping for breaks and walking already. My first mile was 12:04! (GAP 11:35) At about 1.5 miles, we hit the top of a local high spot (actually, looks like the highest spot in the race), where there was an aid station, which meant I was able to get around several people because I didn't stop. After that, there is mostly downhill until about halfway through the race.
My second mile was 12:25 (GAP 12:02). During the next mile, we went out of the woods and through a field. Fortunately the trail was worn enough to be dirt (no grass) but unfortunately since it's open for mountain biking, the trail becomes a narrow rut in some areas, which means running alongside it. During one of my long runs, this is where I'd met some people riding horses, but no horses today. I was still running nearly everything, even uphills, and I was a bit worried that I was burning myself out, but I still seemed to have legs, so kept going. Mile 3 was 11:35! (GAP 11:25)
At the end of the field and back into the woods, we hung a left and had some more nice downhill. In fact, so much downhill that my time for mile 4 was 11:35 with a GAP of 11:45, showing how much the downhill helped me. I think it was at the end of this downhill where we had our first no-bridge stream crossing. Splish, splash, no problem.
Then I knew the rest of the course was mostly uphill, unfortunately. But somehow I was still going really strong. Some sections are pretty steep, so I was power hiking more of the uphills (rather than running), but still doing well. Somewhere around here was when I realized that I was well over halfway through the race and it had only been an hour. Given how my training had not been great, I was thinking it would be a long shot to finish in fewer than 90 minutes, but now it was looking highly likely. That was definitely motivating. We hit our second stream crossing, and I definitely plowed right through that and passed a couple folks worrying more about getting their shoes wet, LOL.
There were some annoying uphills here, and three downed trees to go over (uphill!). Readers of my training log will recall the vert I've been getting on training runs plus those treadmill walks at very high inclines...this is where that pays off. I was power hiking some of these uphills and passing folks who were "running" - gotta choose the best gait for the terrain. Mile 5 was 12:41 (GAP 11:58).
The race director had warned us that the course went by the start/finish area closely at a mile before the race ended, so we shouldn't get too excited there.

My watch was a little ahead of the course mileage, so I could see that I would finish when my watch said about 6.9 miles. Mile 6 was 12:45 (GAP 11:59) - lots of uphill there. We had to get back up to the elevation where the driveway was, where we originally entered the single track.
We got up there with about 0.5 mile left to go - then it's some field running (annoying grass!) as the course is routed around the parking to the finish. I finished the last chunk at a pace of 12:27 (GAP 12:08) - knowing the finish was coming up let me put out the last push, and at least that part was a bit downhill!
My official finish time was 1:24:18!!!! Still can't believe that. My watch said the distance was 6.91 mi, instead of the official 6.7 mi. With a distance of 6.7 mi, my average pace was 12:35, which is fantastic for me in a trail race. My corrected elevation gain was 627 ft, a bit more than the advertised 500 ft. The split times that I mentioned in my recap above are all based on my watch's time/distance, so obviously a bit off compared to reality, but close enough. My average HR was 159 BPM - got up there in about 10 minutes and really stayed there for the rest of the race. There was a bit of a bump around that big climb at the start of the second half.
My place was 103 out of 151 finishers of the 10k. I was 44th out of 81 women, and 7th out of 16 in my age group. I'm definitely happy with that!
The photos below of the course are from my warm-up running. Except the one of me at the finish!
If this first photo looks like a steep uphill - it is! Notice the tree to go over on the way up.
I was not optimistic at all about this race. I've had so many knee/leg issues lately. Even this morning before the race, I was feeling a lot of niggles and problems. But once I got going, I felt great! I stepped in one hole (when someone was passing) early in the race and that could have been very Bad News, but fortunately I kept going and the ankle worked itself out. I had a few trip-and-catches (not trip-and-falls) in the back half of the race with all the uphill and tired legs. But I came out unscathed!
Of course, now that I'm done, I am sore all over. Besides the obvious legs and knees, my neck and upper back are complaining loudly. Well, I'm planning to take two weeks off from running!