I arrived in New Hampshire four days before race day and had
plenty of time to relax on the beach with my nieces and nephews.
There were many walks on the beach with my mom.
It was great to swim in the Atlantic Ocean and hang out
before the race.
On Saturday me and my race support (Savvy and Cole) drove up
to Gilford to check in at Gunstock Mountain and drop off my bike in the transition
area at Ellacoya State Park on Lake Winnipesaukee.
(They love Muscle Milk)
As we waited for transition to open I donned the wetsuit and
got in the 72 degree water – it was so clear, and I could see the bottom.
We drove home and arrived to a steak dinner courtesy of my
sister and brother-in-law. Mom and Dad came and the entire family (sans Jay)
had a great pre race dinner.
I woke up at 3:45 am on race day and got to the transition
area around 5 am. I loved that I could park 100 feet from the transition area
and finish. It was a great set up.
I forgot the swim started in waves so the start wasn’t at
7am, rather it was 7:35 am.
I ran back to transition to eat a bar since I was starting
to get hungry; never good before a 1.2 mile swim. The swim went well except that I felt like I got stuck in a
few packs of swimmer and lost momentum swimming from looking up too much. But I
exited the water and started the bike without a hitch.
The bike was Hard, Hard, Hard, but pushed my pace. There
were steep hills that slowed me WAY down and tried to make up for it by pushing
faster on the downhills. We biked past the Laconia Speedway and at one point
the course was 11 miles from Concord. The pavement changed pretty frequently from nice smooth pavement to rough bumps, from wide shoulders to no shoulders. It was a typical New England road, that which I forgot about when I biked there a hundred years ago.
I knew my mom and dad were somewhere but didn’t see them
going into transition and to the run.
The Run was the BEST Run course not due to it’s difficult
but due to the awesome aid stations. They were loud and happy and found myself
laughing quite a bit. One collegiate looking man offered me snow. I took it and
held in my hands for five minutes.
I felt like I ran a good pace and refused to stop except at
aid stations. My quads were killing but it was harder to start up again if I
stopped. There were a few aid stations that I didn’t stop at, which was a
motivator.
I saw my mom and dad at the end of the first loop that
winded into the transition. I loved the set up of the race course. I told them
I had one more loop and I’d see them shortly. It was hot, but not as hot as running in Tucson (even at
7am).
I finished just after 6 hours to my mom at the finish and a
big hug! I’m glad they came to cheer me on. It was a good day. Not my fastest 70.3 but not my worst. It was good to race my
first triathlon in New Hampshire.
Swim: 42:33, Bike: 2:59, Run: 2:14 = 6:04
Thanks for the write-up. I'm doing Timberman this year as my first 70.3. Hungry for all the info I can get!!!!
ReplyDeleteEffie - train on your hills for the bike!! Hill repeats.
ReplyDelete