JAN RYERSE: BADWATER 2002 STORY
Yes,
this is a long report ... but then so was the race!!
When I first read about Badwater several years ago I was intrigued - 135 miles
across blazing hot Death Valley in the middle of summer - starting at the lowest
point in the country and ending more than half way up the highest. As I ran more
and more ultras I discovered that I like and do well in road and track races and
that I don't mind hot weather. I knew that at some point I had to try BW - it
was my kind of ultra. Seeing the video "Running on the Sun" and reading Kirk
Johnson's book "To the Edge" clinched it. I applied and was accepted into the
2002 Badwater 135. This is an account of my race. I obtained advice from a
number of folks with BW experience including Steve Silver, Paul Stone and Jay
Hodde and I read as much as I could get my hands on about the event and how to
train for it. I actually started training for BW in January with gradually
increasing long runs on consecutive Saturdays, which continued through February
and March, building up to a 38 miler. I would then do half the distance that I
ran on Saturday the next day on the Sunday morning. I had weekly totals of 70 -
80 miles towards the end of this period. In April I ran the Double Chubb 50K in
5:26 and in May I ran 104.56 miles at the Cornbelt 24 hour and then the Berryman
50 miler on Memorial weekend in 10:24. I backed off a bit on the mileage for a
couple of weeks and then ran a couple of 70+ mile weeks a good deal of which was
in the midday or afternoon sun. This brought me to the end of the first week of
July and then I tapered down to 30 miles a week running almost every day but
keeping the runs short. My last run was an easy 3 miler on the Saturday before
the race, which was to start on Tuesday July 23rd. I began my heat training in
late April. This consisted of the following:
1. Sitting in the dry sauna at the gym (no thermostat, they always kept the temp
about 165 F - I could only stay in for 15-20 minutes),
2. Walking up and down 12 flights of stairs at work, the stairwell was not air
conditioned and faced the southeast so the temp would get well over 100 F by
midday
3. Driving home from work with the windows up in the van and with the heater and
fan all the way up blasting hot air in my face for 30 minutes,
4.
Getting into heavy sweatpants, two long sleeve shirts, a nylon jacket zipped up
to the chin, a winter wool cap and gloves for a an hour workout on the Nordic
Trac ski machine in the 90 - 100 F sun or for cutting the grass or for
running/walking miles and miles at the track.
I went to Badwater knowing I had prepared well but I was still very
nervous because I'd never been to Death Valley and I had no idea how my body
would hold up under those brutal conditions. Suffice it to say my training
must have worked as I finished in 40:45, well under the 48 hour time required
to buckle and good for 11th place overall and 7th place among the men (out of
80 + starters). Not bad for a 56 year-old Badwater novice, if I do say
so myself. Here's how it went.
I had a good crew, consisting of Tom Reich, an ultrarunning buddy from home in
St. Louis and Naeem Ravat, a Badwater wanna-be from Houston. I thought long and
hard about what supplies I would need which we picked up in Las Vegas on Sunday
on the way to the race. I had arranged for two more crew and a second car but
unforeseen circumstances prevented them from making the trip. We had a rental
minivan with the two rear bench seats removed to make room for all of our
supplies. One large cooler was packed with three ice blocks, ice cubes and
filled with water. This would be our ice cold water supply, and it worked really
well - we never ran short of cold water. We had 3 additional small Styrofoam
coolers with ice for food, other drinks and cold towels and sponges.
I set out from BW (I was in the 6 am start group) at a 13 min/mile pace and felt
very good through the first checkpoint at Furnace Creek (17 miles). In fact I
was sweating enough under my white long sleeved Sun Precautions top that the
evaporating sweat made me feel quite comfortable. I started out by running 3
minutes and walking 4 minutes when I could, although sometimes the course
dictated when I would run or walk. I didn't want to run up the hills and I
didn't want to walk on down hills. Right from the start I took an electrolyte
cap and a GU every hour - and continued this for the duration of the race. I
would also drink two 20-ounce bottles of fluid, one water bottle and one Succeed
Ultra bottle approximately every 25 minutes. It was 9:30 when I checked in at
Furnace Creek, the sun was well up and the temp was around 110 F. One aspect of
this race, which attracted me was the scenery. At the start you have mountains
on both sides as you make your way north through Death Valley. The light cast by
the rising sun on the mountains to the west was spectacular. The next 25 miles
to Stovepipe Wells (42 miles) is gently undulating road through the hottest part
of the course. By this time I was drinking close to a gallon of fluid (water,
Succeed Ultra and Gatorade) per hour. Interestingly, I remained very well
hydrated throughout the entire race, as my urine never got yellow - first time
ever that my pee remained clear for the duration of an ultra. The temp in the
support van read 130 F as I was coming into Stovepipe Wells at 4 pm. A woman
runner who had passed me around 30 miles said try putting a cold wet towel over
your head (under your hat) and shoulders while running to help keep you from
overheating which I found to be good advice, it helped keep me cooler and more
comfortable than I otherwise would have been. I was also tying a fresh ice-cold
neck cooler around my neck every two miles, which helped keep you cooler.
Somewhere in here I sensed a hot spot on my left heel - a developing blister.
Not wanting to let it get too bad I stopped and had my crew bandage it up. Naeem
had stayed for Denise Jones' foot clinic after the pre-race meeting and he knew
exactly what to do - pop the little sucker, add bandage, cover with elastakon
tape, add tincture of whatever its called to the edges of the elastakon and
cover edges with micropore tape to prevent rolling. I could feel the blister for
a few miles and then never heard from it again until the race was almost over. I
had run the first 40 miles or so in my Nike Pegasus and now I changed into a
lighter pair of shoes, my Addidas Tapers. They felt good on my feet if a little
tight in the toes as my feet were swelling.
By Stovepipe Wells I was really feeling the heat and needed to lie down in the
shade on the concrete porch in front of the store with ice cold wet towels over
me for 15 minutes. Tom and Naeem went in and bought me a Popsicle - ahhhhh -
very good, so I had two more. After stretching my back, it was up and going
again, up the long 17-mile ascent to Towne’s Pass at 59 miles. Tom was with me
now, keeping me company as we talked on the long ascent. For the first few miles of this climb I stopped every two miles to sit and cool down my
core body temp with cold wet towels. Naeem was handing off fresh bottles of
water and Succeed Ultra, and various food items. I was eating grapes, cherries,
pretzels, dates, p and j sandwiches, turkey and cheese sandwiches, cold canned
fruit, yogurt and chocolate pudding. A gusty wind was blowing
the 120 + F air straight down the road into our faces - something like standing
in front of a very large and very hot hair drier. Dusk arrived and we turned to
look back down into Death Valley, which was receding in the distance. Soon the
full moon peeked over the mountains to the east, it was so bright flashlights
were not necessary - the moonlight cast our shadows across the road to our
right. Up, up and up, mostly walking. Near the top of the pass there were some
flat stretches and little dips in the road which I ran.
At the top of the pass at 59 miles, I lay down on a towel on the road and
stretched my back and then was off running down the long descent into Panamint
Valley, not too fast or too hard, because I didn't want to trash my quads, short
steps with frequent short walking breaks was the ticket for me. There were still
another 7 miles to get to the halfway point. Running shirtless and hatless in
the dark felt really good. It had cooled a bit at the top of the pass at 5000
feet (down to around 90 F) but now was warming up again as Tom and I approached
the valley floor. I began to smell smoke from the forest fires burning off to
the west.
As you descend into the valley you can see the lights of Panamint Springs (72
miles) off in the distance across the valley but it will take several hours to
get there. We made decent time across the valley and then started climbing again
arriving at the Panamint Springs checkpoint about 3 am. Many crew (and some
runners) stop at Panamint Springs for some sleep as the resort
provides a large room to sack out in, however after a short rest and stretch
break I was up and moving out onto the 8-mile ascent to Father Crowley Point at
80 miles. This was a very twisty road with sharp blind turns. Good thing it was
very early morning and there was very little traffic on the road. During this
time my pacer and I heard a snarly growl come from the rocks off to our
left. A minute later it was repeated, it sounded like a large animal and was
cat-like, a bobcat or mountain lion perhaps.
Tom left me shortly later and I was on my own for the remainder of the ascent to
Father Crowley Point. The sun had come up a couple of hours prior to this and I
marveled once again at the beauty of the mountains and shadows in the deep
valleys. You go higher and higher here and have a great view back down along the
twisty road. I see some runners way down there, tiny
figures with toy-sized cars beside them. Once up to Father Crowley's point, the
course levels off in an undulating sort of way. A car comes alongside of me and
Tom, who is back running with me again, and a man jumps out with a camera. He
runs ahead snapping photos. We run up the little hill in front of us trying to
look good for the camera. He gets back in the car and as soon as it disappears
around the next bend we walk again.
However, with the morning sun I seem to get renewed energy and we began to put
in some good miles running and walking along this stretch terrain into Darwin
check point at 90 miles which I go through a little past 9 am. Between 85 and 95
miles I felt really strong and Tom and I passed 4 or 5 other runners and their
crews. We hear a deep noise building quickly ahead and then a fighter jet zooms
overhead with a deafening roar. He's flying low and fast - open airspace out
here I guess - no constraints - I feel as free and alive and unrestrained as
that pilot must feel here in the high desert in the early morning sun. It was an
exhilarating feeling. At Darwin I think to myself, wow you've gone 90 miles!!
Then I realize I still had 45 miles to go, I'm only 2/3 done this thing. But I'm
feeling good and strong and ready to run. After leaving Darwin you work your way
though a cut in the mountains and gradually descend from 5000 feet to about 3000
feet to the floor of
Owens
Valley. There is a big dry salt lakebed off to the left and mountains off to the
right. The
jet roars past again. Dead ahead is the longest straightest black asphalt road
I've ever seen. It just goes on and on and, yup, that's where we have to go.
This is a difficult part of the race because you don't seem to get very far very
fast, and you have to work hard mentally to keep focused and to keep up that
relentless forward progress. Tom and I make a big sweeping turn and there
stretched out in front of us was another seemingly endless stretch of asphalt
road. The smoke from the nearby forest fires prevents us from seeing the
mountains and Mount Whitney off in the distance. We run between two reflector
posts alongside the road, then walk to the next one, then run, then walk, over
and over again. We stop briefly every two miles for more drink and food and then
go again. Every hour I still take a GU and an E-Cap and as I have been doing
from the start I take some food with me back out on the course - maybe some
pretzels, grapes, cherries, sandwiches, or canned fruit, yogurt or chocolate
pudding. I hand off the empty containers to Naeem as he drives past.
During this time I go through 100 miles in 29:27, still a little over 50K to go.
Again it is run a couple hundred yards, walk a couple hundred yards, from one
road marker post to the next, over and over again. I changed shoes again back at
about 80 miles - into my lightest shoes, my Adidas racing flats which I bought
one size larger than normal. They felt good but my toes are
now starting to hurt. I'm afraid to look. I change into a pair of Nike Pegasus
with the toes cut out but they don't help and I go back into the Adidas racing
flats. 110 miles and 120 miles pass and then finally we come to the right turn
for the 2-mile trek into Lone Pine check at 122 miles. I check in at 6:30 pm and
continue directly to Whitney Portal Road for the last grunt of a climb up Mount
Whitney. Lone Pine is at 3600 feet and I have to climb 4700 feet in the next 12
miles. I'm alone now, focusing on the final stages of this race. I still have
plenty of energy and determination and
at first I alternate running with a very fast power walk, thinking with 2 hours
and 40 minutes and 7 miles to go that maybe I can break 40 hours. It gets dark
and the bats swoop low over my head investigating. A pleasantly sweet pungent
odor drifts up from a valley off to my left. I'm still pushing hard with 5 miles
to go at 38:45. But the climbing starts to get tougher and tougher, up the steep
switchbacks and I'm reduced to 30-minute miles. I'm running out of energy. It
seems to take sooooo long to go a mile at this point but finally I see the last
turn in the road and the lights of the finish line.
Forty hours and 45 minutes. I tell them I couldn't get under 40 because I'm a
poor climber but they quickly calculate that my time was four hours and 16
minutes from LP to the finish and tell me that is very good, that most people
take 5 to 6 hours for the climb. That makes me feel better. I sit and rest. It
is finished.
It is now one week later. I'm back at home in St. Louis. My feet were so swollen
so badly it took 5 days before I could get my feet in my street shoes. The two
worst blisters (the one on the heel and one around a big toe) are gradually
healing and I'm starting to walk normally again. Everything else was fine –
there was no pain in my legs, knees or hips. Looking back on this experience all
I can say is that it was a totally awesome adventure - it's a tough but
beautiful course. There were two sunrises, two sunsets, three valleys to cross
and three mountain ranges to climb. I looked out at the high desert and the
mountain passes in the daylight and in the moonlight and I liked what I saw. I'm
glad I'm an ultrarunner. And I'm glad I took the Badwater challenge. I can't
wait to do it again.
A final note: I had heard that when you go to Badwater you are treated like
family. That's exactly the way RD Chris Kostman, Dr. Ben and Denise Jones and
all their support staff made me feel. Thanks to all of them for the hard work
they put into organizing this event and keeping it alive and well. It was also a
treat to meet Al Arnold, the man who started it all by being the first person to
run from Badwater to Whitney Portal 25 years ago in 1977.
Jan Ryerse,
Alias "Trail Turtle"; now "Desert Turtle"
St. Louis, MO
Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2002
RETURN TO TOP