disneygpa
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2018
- Messages
- 797
Sunday's trail run. 14 miles.... Longest run since Dopey 2020. And it feels like it was the longest run!
Pretty happy with this effort. It was cold, wet, slick and wonderful!! I was able to run "most" of the first 3 miles which is almost constant uphill. Albeit pretty slowly. From mile 3 to 4 is a steep descent (chinscraper downhill) which was a relief after the uphill effort. Then at mile 5 ish I made a wrong turn on the trail and ended up on an old logging road. Since I hadn't hiked this portion of the trail I wasn't familiar with it and in my brain it seemed like the right way to go. After not seeing Lost Lake at mile 6 I decided I'd definitely made a mistake. But by that point it seemed too late to turn back. I did end up turning back at 6.5 miles because the logging road side of the mountain was becoming dense with fog. Not that I run fast enough to run off the edge, but I wasn't comfortable with possibly missing my trail on the return trip.
Anyway, turned around and headed back from mile 9 to 10 is the infamous "chinscraper". It's flat out STEEP!! You almost have to be on your hands and feet going up. I walked the entire mile up. After reaching the top again, I started the 3 mile descent. Running down was another adventure. The rain had started back up and it was a steady stream of water in the uncovered portion of the trail. Almost went down a few times but was able to stay upright. Garmin got lost on the way down again. I'm not so sure the times for those miles are accurate. Especially the last mile. It certainly didn't feel like a 16 min mile and it was all on the mostly flat interurban part of the trail.
Legs were definitely tired after this trip. 4200ft of elevation gain is no joke. I need to figure out a way to stretch at the trailhead. Maybe putting down the backseat of the car and giving that a shot. It was raining too dang hard to try and do it next to the car. PNW winters. Everything in your life is constantly wet.
Feeling pretty good today. A little stiff and sore but not anything crazy.
Question: does anyone that reads this run with compression sleeves on their legs? I was doing some reading and some people say they help with fatigue. Though I couldn't find any science to back that up. Thinking I might try them for the next trail run.


Pretty happy with this effort. It was cold, wet, slick and wonderful!! I was able to run "most" of the first 3 miles which is almost constant uphill. Albeit pretty slowly. From mile 3 to 4 is a steep descent (chinscraper downhill) which was a relief after the uphill effort. Then at mile 5 ish I made a wrong turn on the trail and ended up on an old logging road. Since I hadn't hiked this portion of the trail I wasn't familiar with it and in my brain it seemed like the right way to go. After not seeing Lost Lake at mile 6 I decided I'd definitely made a mistake. But by that point it seemed too late to turn back. I did end up turning back at 6.5 miles because the logging road side of the mountain was becoming dense with fog. Not that I run fast enough to run off the edge, but I wasn't comfortable with possibly missing my trail on the return trip.
Anyway, turned around and headed back from mile 9 to 10 is the infamous "chinscraper". It's flat out STEEP!! You almost have to be on your hands and feet going up. I walked the entire mile up. After reaching the top again, I started the 3 mile descent. Running down was another adventure. The rain had started back up and it was a steady stream of water in the uncovered portion of the trail. Almost went down a few times but was able to stay upright. Garmin got lost on the way down again. I'm not so sure the times for those miles are accurate. Especially the last mile. It certainly didn't feel like a 16 min mile and it was all on the mostly flat interurban part of the trail.
Legs were definitely tired after this trip. 4200ft of elevation gain is no joke. I need to figure out a way to stretch at the trailhead. Maybe putting down the backseat of the car and giving that a shot. It was raining too dang hard to try and do it next to the car. PNW winters. Everything in your life is constantly wet.
Feeling pretty good today. A little stiff and sore but not anything crazy.
Question: does anyone that reads this run with compression sleeves on their legs? I was doing some reading and some people say they help with fatigue. Though I couldn't find any science to back that up. Thinking I might try them for the next trail run.

