Bay to Breakers 2011

The infamous foot race / human spectacle, Bay to Breakers, held their 100th running last weekend and D and I made the trip out to San Francisco to participate in the silly first-hand. My college bud Al has posted photos from the event over the past few years, and between the centennial mark and our renewed interest in running, we knew this was this year to finally check it out. On the one hand, flying across the country for a 12k race (which, due to injuries, we didn’t even plan to run seriously) is pretty extravagant, but then again we were due for a jolt out of Ohio, and I can’t think of anything less like Ohio than B2B.

Bay to Breakers is unique from other races in so many ways. Its course covers 7.46 miles all mostly in a straight line as spans from the bay side of the city, all the way across town to the beach at the edge of the pacific. It takes you through a diverse slice of neighborhoods as well as a long trek through one of the nation’s most impressive city parks. About a third of the way into it there’s even a signature San Francisco hill that raises steeply over multiple blocks.

But the real magic, and mayhem, of B2B are the participants. While the race does draw some of the world’s best distance runners, the vast majority of the crowd are there to party across the city. This year the race registration was capped at 55,000 people – which they sold out – and most sources are estimating there was another 10-30k participating roguely. There are costumed runners and walkers of all sorts. Superheroes, cartoon and video game characters, people dressed as cops, people not dressed all (argh, my eyes!), and even inanimate objects (like a box of crayons or a barrel of monkeys).

Absent this year were floats, such as kegs in shopping carts and tequila bars pulled by go-karts, but there was still plenty of drinking along the route. Everyone is saying what a nice tame B2B it was, but it’s still a lightyear of crazy beyond anything you’d see in Cincinnati. Heck, the news from this year’s marathon in Cinci was a sole naked runner that got arrested. After he was tased. In the rain. At mostly walking pace we finished the trek in 2 hours and 32 minutes. It may be fun to go back and run the whole thing, but I wonder if I’d even want to blast through it that quickly. There’s far too much to experience in a quick hour run.

Filed under Sports, Vacations

A New Chapter

Today Amazon announced that their ebooks have begun to outsell their paper equivalents. While Amazon is only a chunk of all publication retail, it’s a significant milestone.

I’m not surprised at all. I think every book lover I know (from aspiring writers to avid readers who just like the smell and feel of books) have now all embraced the new format. They may still buy the occasional book as something of a keepsake. They even still like to visit bookstores – something about walking among all the tomes – but they usually just take note and then purchase the ebook.

I’m finally reading my first Kindle book now, and I prefer it, too. I started it right after finishing a 400-500 page bound book that I’ve been toting around for far too long. No contest. And if I’m somewhere where there’s a wait, I can pull out my phone with the Kindle app and read a few pages from the very spot I left off on. I’ve got three books from last Christmas I have yet to read, and I’m half tempted to rebuy them in kindle form. But as much as I’m a techie, I am even more a cheapskate 🙂

What’s cool is that the older demographic isn’t lagging behind in its adoption like you see with other technology. Monday, on the plane next to me, there was a guy in his 60s (probably mid to late). He spent probably an hour scrawling lengthy hand written notes on a yellow legal pad. Then he pulled out his kindle and read for an hour or two. This was no hipster umbilically connected to his laptop, yet using the Kindle came naturally.

Clearly there will be different devices for different purposes and the true shift will happen as more options gain popularity. The iPod did a lot to bring music to the mp3 age, but it’s the ubiquity of player options (from devices like iPods and phones to services like last.fm and Pandora) that really makes the CD industry fade away. The Kindle is the perfect modern day paperback – compact and versatile for any environment, but lacking for graphics and technical docs. Tablets may prove to be the device of choice for textbooks and graphic novels.

Photos, movies, and music have all made the shift away from their physical form. Books have held out the longest, but the writing is on the wall. It makes you wonder how libraries (personal and institutional) are on their way of becoming tomorrow’s obscure record collections.

Filed under General News

The Flailing Pig

The Flying Pig Marathon (and other races) is the biggest running weekend in Cinci. Last year I made my return to racing with the Pig’s 5k. It was slow and rough, but a success. This year I had planned to move up to the 10k, which would be a first, plus prepare me for a 12k a couple weeks following. But sometimes bodies like to challenge your plans.

As I increased my training distances past about 5 miles mid-March, I started feeling something distantly familiar. After another run, I was sure the Runner’s Knee I had back in college decided to return. Runner’s Knee is the common name for various types of trouble caused by the muscles around the knee cap. On the bright side, the condition itself isn’t a sign of damage, but just overuse. When it’s acute, it’s hard to walk, let alone run, but a day or two of rest brings things back to normal. With the onset of that, I had to cut my training back to nearly nothing the few weeks leading up to the pig. I got in some elliptical time and a couple 1 mile runs, but it wasn’t much.

The morning of the race was perfect – sunny and just a bit cool. It’s always a blast to run through the street of downtown Cinci, and with awesome weather it’s even better. I started at a good pace and felt great for about the first mile. Then the ache started to set in. As the ache turned more painful I stopped about every half mile to stretch and walk a little. That’d provide some brief relief then I’d get back to a decent jog. I’m not accustomed to stopping like that through a race. Even though I might slow, I usually refuse to drop to a walk, but that just wasn’t an option this time out.

In the last half mile the course is always lined with tons of people watching and cheering and it’s really exhilarating. Even for the 5k, the crowd gives you that nice sense of accomplishment. Feeding off the energy I finished strong, almost at top speed. Amazingly, even with the pauses during the last 2 miles, I still managed to beat last year’s time by nearly a minute! I think that speaks a lot for my improvement over the year, and I’m excited to see my times once I’m past my injury.

Time Pace (per Mile) overall place men’s place division place (M 35-39)
32:56 10:38 1006 / 2,992 577 / 1,110 60 / 128

Filed under Sports