Fifth time is the charm for me, but finally got a buckle at Devil Dog this weekend. Feeling pretty sore and limping around today, but overall very pleased that I managed to avoid another DNF!

  • jopepa@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Awesome, unbelievable, congratulations! I have so many questions that I could probably Google, but I’d love to hear about your experience if that’s okay. When would you eat and sleep and how do you plan that across a hundred mile course? How do you graduate from marathons to even consider a challenge like this? What goes on in your mind when you hit a wall or do you even get those at your level?

    • ranok@sopuli.xyzOP
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      11 months ago

      Thank you! I had a timer to eat something every 45 min, no sleep which was tough towards the end. It’s very different from a marathon, you’re going slower and it’s a lot more about keeping consistent with eating and caring for small things early. This was late in the season so cold and wet!

      • jopepa@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        What were you eating?

        How long did it take you?

        “Small things earlier”, like what and how?

        How long did you sleep when you stopped? And what kind of fucked dreams did you have?

        Answer as many as you’d like, thanks for answering already, and congratulations again. Just astounding.

        • ranok@sopuli.xyzOP
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          11 months ago

          I was eating wheat thins and Oreos on the trail, broth and ramen noodles in aid stations. I was not a fast finisher, came in 31st in 30.5hr.

          The biggest small thing is skin care. On a short race you can manage a little chaffing or a hot spot, for longer races taking the 3min to Vaseline or clean whatever is rubbing before it turns bloody is worth it

          I actually didn’t sleep too well because my legs aches and I had an early flight home, maybe 7hr, don’t remember any dreams.

    • danciestlobster@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I mean me too but for someone who is actually trained for this I am guessing like… 12 hours would be a great time, maybe 13-14 more conservatively. Curious the actual answer now though

      • TheOccasionalTachyon@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        It’s typically a lot closer to 20 - that’s what the winning time at this race was last year.

        That said, the WR for 100mi is 10:51:39 - a 6:31 pace - though that wasn’t a trail run.

        • danciestlobster@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I want to say that seems much more doable than I would have guessed but doable feels like an odd term to attach to 100 mile runs regardless

    • ranok@sopuli.xyzOP
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      11 months ago

      The winner finished in 19 ish hrs, I was at 30.5. The first 40 mi were easy to keep a pace for around 24hr, but then as the legs got tighter, the weather cooler and wetter I couldn’t keep the pace up and had to walk the up hills.