It was mid
January, and I was on the Welch/Dickie Loop, a popular 4 mile hike over the
twin summits of Welch and Dickie Mountains. I had just crested Welch, and as I
began my climb up to Dickie, I came upon two hikers.
“How’s it
going?” I asked. I noticed they were decked out in full-on winter
mountaineering regalia. Big packs, plastic boots, gaiters—the whole deal. They
were understandably laboring under the weight of those big packs as they tried
to surmount a short ledge in the trail.
One of the
hikers looked at me. “Are you running?”
As he said it, the last word dripped with incredulity. “Yeah,” I shot back.
Clearly envisioning my inevitable demise, he asked, “Have you filed a flight
plan with someone?”
“My wife knows
where I am.” I jumped over their troublesome ledge, and picked up my pace up
Dickie’s summit slab, trying to put some quick distance between them and me. I
think I heard one turn to the other and say, “He’s crazy.”
Following the mountaineers on Welch and Dickie
The run went
quite well. Other than the strange encounter, I had the beautiful trail to
myself. I did take a sketchy slip while descending a short ice slab. I planted
my left foot and found myself on my butt, sliding the 10 feet down the slab.
After that, I made it back to the car without incident. I stopped my watch at
1:05.
As I sat down
to take my micro-spikes off my Gore-Tex running shoes, I noticed that I had put
the left microspike on upside down, with the spikes pointing up into my shoe,
instead of down on the trail. That explained my slip on the ice. Shit, maybe I
AM crazy.
My time on
Welch/Dickie was far off the fastest known time for the loop (somewhere around
40 minutes by either Pat McElaney or Tim Deroehn, depending on whom you ask).
But winter running isn’t really about running for time. It can’t be.
It’s really
all about the conditions. One day, you might find a packed out sidewalk that
allows glorious 9 minute miles, while another day, that trail might be covered
in powder that only yields to a 17 minute/mile death march. Just the other day,
I ran a standard loop at Smarts Brook. There was a light dusting on the trail.
Nothing serious.
It snowed
that night, and the next day, I decided to run the loop again. Luckily, someone
with snowshoes had broken the trail. The woods sparkled with new powder. Tiny
snow particles caught the morning light and looked to dance in the cold air. I
quickly ran up the trail, my breathing only slightly disrupting the stillness
of the winter morning. This is why I run trails in the winter, I thought, this
is… just…perfect…
And then the
snowshoer turned around. The nicely broken trail turned into 4 inches of powder
covered by an ice crust. A horrendous, terrible, evil ice crust. A painful ice
crust. With every stride, by foot crashed through the crust, descend through
the powder, and the natural pronation of my ankle rolled my anklebone right
into the razor edge of the crust. Over and over and over. During the last two
miles back to the car, the crust bruised and cut into my anklebones, so much
so, that I limped most of the next day.
Breaking trail
I returned a
week later, this time armed with cardboard I had taped over my now-healed
anklebones. I found a packed out trail, and had no need for the cardboard. In
fact, the cardboard wore a hole into the top of my foot where it rubbed. I
might be the only runner I know who has gotten a blister from poorly fitting
cardboard.
Winter
running is absurd, and this absurdity can be refreshing. After having run for
25 years, when I go out on the road, I know what to expect. I can plan on 8ish
minute miles. I can compare my run to runs from last year, and to runs from
when I was much younger and much faster. I’m always comparing to some previous,
fitter, version of myself.
When I go out
on a winter trail run, I have no idea what to expect. Slogging up unstable snow
to the summit? Cool! Bounding down stable Styrofoam snow on the way down? Even
better! Straining not to walk in places where in the summer, I’d be casually
running? Awesome! Running the trails in the winter is the only time when I’ve
been proud of 15 minute miles.
I think my
body likes that. There’s really no such thing as repetitive motion on the
trails, especially when they’re snow covered. Each stride is completely
unique—kind of like a snowflake. There’s slipping, skidding, tripping, and
sometimes falling. It’s all part of the experience. But after a few runs through
the snow, I notice my hips, knees, ankles, and feet getting stronger. And this
strength has to help in the summer when the trails dry out and the running gets
easier.
Is winter
trail and mountain running for everyone? Certainly not. But that’s one of the things
I like about it. The trails are relatively empty except for snowshoers (whom
you love for breaking trail) and the random mountaineer types whose minds are
blown by your supreme awesomeness. Or craziness.
Beautiful New Hampshire mountains