This Sunday we awoke to about 3 inches of snow on the ground and heavy snow falling with much more to follow. Even in a snowstorm 13 runners made there way to Brueggers for the Sunday Long Run. We reviewed the routes and the many options that could be taken along the way to tailor the distance to your willingness to endure the elements. Demi took the first option, and I’m sure there were many more that made the same decision in absentia, her run was across Main St to the Melrose YMCA for a jaunt on the treadmill. The rest of us headed out in the storm up Main St to West Wyoming.
In an attempt to keep track of people the best I could I started out at the front of the pack running with a new visitor to the Sunday Long Run, John. John is a strong runner with years of experience, a self-professed “thick Irishman” who would not give up his space along the side of the road while I kept moving from roadside to sidewalk trying to figure out where I felt safest. There was enough snow on the sidewalk to cover our shoetops, with unsure footing underneath from choppy ice from last week’s storm hidden underneath. The roadside was slushy snow, much more manageable for a runner but not so much for a car as the plows were just making there way out into the storm.
At Grimsby’s we picked up Lois who had braved the storm, driving all the way from New Hampshire, but arrived a little late. She hopped in to the pack and followed us to the Fellsway East hills. Here’s where things got interesting. John pulled ahead having the advantage of his superior speed and his Yak Trax. Brian Gilroy caught up to me as we ascended the second long hill of this stretch. Coming down the hill was an old man in a big car who thought it necessary to let out a succession of beeps to let us know that an icy road in the middle of the snow storm was no place for a runner, but apparently is the right place for an old man with an attitude. All of us were aware of him now as he passed the frint pack and stopped beeping. A second later he passed the middle pack and beeped beeped beeped a little more furiously. Then again as he passed the back of the back. The Mad Beeper had introduced himself to the Sunday Long Run group, I sure hope our new friend made his way to his very important destination.
We turned at the rotary at Highland Ave, greated the guy under his tent selling newspapers who seemed completely unphased by the weather, and headed up to water stop 1 where Rick would be waiting for us. The effects of trying to accompany John began to take its toll, and with snow accumulating on my glasses, John and Brian faded into the snowy distance even quicker. Ed pulled up next to me and as we dodged the parade of plows intent on clearing out the complete width of Highland Ave we hoped in out of snowbanks all the way to the water stop.
I stayed at the water stop to make sure all runners arrived safely and headed out to their next destination correctly. Brian and Ed left as another John and Ginny pulled in. And another John, BarryC, Christina, and Jose followed in behind them. A plow stopped in the middle of the street and asked “Can I ask you guys a question? How many of you are out here? What race is this?”, about a dozen, not a race. “Then what are you people doing out here!!!”. He laughed at us as he pulled away, which was much more pleasant than the plow driver coming the other way who made it obvious he resented us being in the streets, slowing down his progress, delaying his late morning of sitting under a bridge somewhere in his plow.
The rule of the day seemed to be that if your name was John you headed down Woodland Ave to run 7 miles for the day, otherwise you turned left on Elm to loop the backside of Spot Pond. As they headed out Suzanne, Lois and Pam pulled in. Liz pulled up to let us know she would not be running today, being on the saner side of the crazy runner line. With everyone accounted for we Suzanne, Lois, Pam and I headed down Elm St while Rick moved the water stop over to the Stone Zoo parking lot. Somewhere on Elm St a muscular guy in a cutoff t-shirt shoveled his driveway. I didn’t see him, but according to Ginny he was quite a sight. To keep warm I set off ahead of this pack up Slacker’s Hill towards the Sheepfold. I could see the footprints from the pack ahead of us and could tell I was getting closer to them as the prints became more defined. Heading over Rte 93 and through the South St parking lot of Spot Pond I could see Barry, Jose, and Christina, plus the argyle pattern of Ginny’s Yak Tracks were well defined in the snow so I knew she wasn’t much further ahead. I caught the three as we headed toward the zoo, where Ginny was already sipping Gatordade with Rick.
I let them head out ahead of me while I waited to see that the rest of the runners were coming, again with the intention of catching up to them at some point. The stretch from the zoo to the hockey rink, runners were forced out into the street. About 7 inches of snow had accumulated on the sidewalks, and although they were runnable, our wet sneakers were starting to make our feet too cold. Lois and Pam headed back down Pond St by Grimsbys for about an 8 mile run, the rest pushed forward to the hockey rink. A pack of plows cleared the opposite side of the road so I headed up there to run, where I could see the expressions on people’s faces when they spotted the crazy snow covered runner coming at them. Turning up North Border Rd Rick pulled over to offer more water. I was more concerned that he might be stuck in the snow bank than my own hydration, but all was ok. Back onto the hills of the Fellsway East where an elderly woman panicked at the sight of runners in the road and slammed on her brakes on the downhill, sending her skidding into the path ahead of the runners. Luckily she was well ahead of us and nobody was hurt. She drove about 1 MPH after that until all runners had passed her. Back past Grimsbys some chose to turn down Wyoming to bring the adventure to a slighty quicker end. Ginny, Jose, Christina, and I formed a pack of four making our way to the Melrose Middle School knoll for our last water stop. Rick was quite a trooper dealing with the snow storm to keep us hydrated. With Gatorade fueling our last mile we headed up to Main St.
Ginny and I pulled ahead on Main St, running on the side of the road. Suddenly we heard a big bang behind us. Peaking back I saw a plow heading down the street. A few seconds later I heard the big bang again, this time right over my shoulder. This is when I realized these were on purpose, a signal to us runners that we were about to get scooped up by a massive plow blade. Hopping over a large snow bank into the foot of fluffy snow on the side walk we found safety as the big plow scraped the side of the street.
Pulling into Brueggers, a snowy mess, our 12.5 miles were done. Brian came in having added extra miles on for about 16, wearing a bushy mustache seemingly made completely of ice. With frosen hair, sweaty icicles, soaked clothed and soggy sneakers, 13 of us made it through what hopefully was the messiest long run of this winter… but it is still early in the season. I told everyone they could add 10% to the distance they had run today, the degree of difficulty warranted it.
YOU ALL ROCK!! That is awesome that you braved the elements. You are hard core runners who will let nothing like a “little” snowstorm stand in your way:) I pulled the same trick as Demi and headed to the gym in Arlington. I was a bit worried about the roads so I wimped out. However, a long run on the treadmill is not my idea of fun, so I headed out today for my long run. It seems we have our own “band of beepers” in Arlington. I just always assume they are lazy people who have never exercised a day in their life and It makes me feel better. How would they understand the drive and motivation to get in a run, no matter what!! Kudos to you all!
Jim!
Thanks for the recap. I was wondering what had transpired on Sunday. Congrats to all who braved another Sunday morning snow storm. Sounds like real fun! (Not!) I took one look outside around 6:45 & thought there is no way I am going to drive 50 miles (to & from Melrose) in this stuff only to be run over by a snow plow.
So a quick change of plans was in order: running shorts, a tank top & off to the gym which is less than four miles from my house. I dusted the three inches of snow off the car & drove; slip, sliding all the way including a pretty good fish tail. The good news was the gym was relatively empty. The “new” plan was to run two hours on the treadmill.
Now I can do an hour with no problem & the first hour went by fairly easy. Much to my delight I found that the Cybex machine I was using had a negative incline (or decline) feature to simulate down hill running. Unfortunately, I discovered this feature with about 5 minutes left in the first hour since I planned to switch machines after one hour for a different feel & to stealth the 30 minute cardio limit!
The second machine, a Life Fitness, had a larger platform & several more bells & whistles than the Cybex including a random hill program which broke up the monotony. All was going according to plan until I reached for my towel around 45 minutes into the second hour & inadvertently hit the emergency pull cord bringing the machine to a grinding halt!
Pissed ( Jim can I say that in this Forum?) that I was so close yet so far I booted up the machine again & I was off for another 36 minutes of running & 4 minutes of cool down! The Good News: total running time 2 hours & 21 minutes & 1,767 calories. The bad news: roughly 12.1 miles (What’s up with that?).
Although the ride home was uneventful since plowing the main roads had begun the shoveling on the home front had not. Can anyone tell me: Is there a race where you can run for couple of hours & then shovel for two hours? There seems to be a lot of this lately!
Nice re-cap Jim. I am so glad to have survived this one, and living to tell about it. (Although, no one around here wants to hear about it since they cautioned me not to do it in the first place.) So, a few new white hairs , a sore hamstring from falling off the undefined shoulder of the road and a new awareness of a great fear of snow plows is the damage from this one. This is completely outweighed by the euphoria of completing 12.5 miles in extreme winter conditions. Yahoo! Can’t wait to see what the weather will be April 20th!
Wow- you guys are real diehards! Emphasis on the DIE! Seriously-Glad everyone made it safely to their destinations and that Jim did several headcounts. I really admire your mental toughness!
get designer bags sale name brand handbags with low price brand handbag expensive bags , just clicks away
check louis vuitton outlets lv online shop for less and check coupon code available