Sunday, July 8, 2012

Quebec City: Hill Training Made Unavoidable!

And I thought Vermont was hilly...

This post begin awhile back with a fantastic agreement among six of us to run 100 on 100, a day-long 100-mile relay race through Vermont from Stowe to Ludlow along Route 100. We pile into a van and trade off running designated legs of the course, each of us running three times between the start and finish. Add costumes, stir in crazy cheering and occasional stops at swimming holes, mix.

Our team met a few weeks ago to look at the course profiles for each leg of the race. Each runner has a good mix of really hard and only just-hard running to do, around 5-6 miles for each leg. I really wanted to run the leg through Waitsfield, my first Vermont home, and foolishly let that cloud my judgement in reading the course description:

Hills approaching the Round Barn Farm, Waitsfield. (Fall)
"This leg is one big hill from start to finish and the length is not short. Those of you willing to lay yourself down for the team will thrive on the challenge of this hill."

Challenge? Who doesn't love a challenge?!

This Fourth of July week, I took time off work and spent a day in Waitsfield catching up with friends and taking a gander at what 100 on 100 considers a challenge. I kind of think they know what they're talking about....

In the entire time I live in Waitsfield, I wasn't a runner. One time Emily goaded me into a running the 4-mile Mad Dash, but I didn't really train and I walked part of it. Otherwise, I stuck to the Mad River path, snowshoeing in the winter and swimming in the summer. I drove East Warren Road countless times in my years in the Valley, and never did it really occur to me how steep and relentlessly hilly it is. Never did I think to honk or cheer for the runners and bikers I saw chugging up that road. Never did I fully understand that valleys are created by steep, steep hills.

On Tuesday, I ran from Bridge Street (through the covered bridge, awww!) up to the Round Barn Farm and back. This is just a small section of the overall run but it was a wake-up call: I need to commit to some serious hill training!

You call that a hill?!
On Thursday, my last-minute vacation to Quebec City offered the perfect chance to get started. I checked into my hotel in the Old City in the evening and immediately headed out on a hilly run between the upper Old City and the lower Old City -- stairs, steep streets, stone ramparts, grass trails. I didn't have a route, just a desire to get oriented to the town and take every uphill or downhill that crossed my path. Cruising down the steep, steep street from the cathedral to the lower town, I had a grin on my face that prompted a passerby to say, "I'd like to see you smiling heading back UP the hill!" To which I thought, "Yes! That is the goal!" I smiled up the hills, down the hills, at the horses plaintively drawing carriages of tourists, at policemen and street artists. I may have seem slightly crazed, but the mantra 'fake it till you make it' works for me: decide to enjoy the run, and before you know it you ARE enjoying the run.

Looking up at the Frontenac from the lower Old City.
The next day day, I kept my Garmin going as I walked all over town, up hills, down hills, in museums, shops, along the Terrasse Dufferin. I clocked 9 miles by evening, at which point I headed out on a run across the Plains of Abraham. The fields swarmed with walkers, runners, and festival-goers heading to a massive outdoor concert that became my soundtrack for much of the run. I stopped here and there to take in the gorgeous views of the St. Lawrence, and duck into the wooded trails off the main paths. I circled the Quebec Parliament building and headed back into the Old City just as the sun set, satisfied with four more miles on the Garmin and great day behind me.