Al Smith III running up Cascade Creek. |
“Do you think I need to wear a
shirt?” I asked my running partner.
“No way
dude its 85 degrees and sunny,” Jonathan replied.
He was
right, we should have started this run hours ago, and I already felt woozy just
getting out of the car and putting on sunscreen. So I threw my t-shirt in the
Subaru, and we headed up Animas Mountain for our run.
Forty minutes later, on the top of our
beloved Animas, storm clouds rolled in over the La Plata Mountains. On the
descent thunder erupted and a vicious hailstorm ensued, pelting our exposed bodies
feeling like getting constantly poked by needles. All we could do was laugh,
insanely, continue on and endure the abuse.
“I’m really glad I didn’t bring
that t-shirt,” I snarkily remarked to Jonathan when we arrived back at the
trailhead.
I got into
running because I had to. I needed it. I have an addictive personality, and
only escaped living the life of a drug addict because I moved from Illinois to
Colorado, and found activities that released the endorphins and adrenaline into
my body. I’ll stand by this statement until the day I die: exercise is better
than any drug.
I remember
in high school when I was a hippie kid who smoked pot and cigarettes 24/7 I
despised running. When we were forced to do the mile in gym class I nearly died,
pushed to the point of dry heaves, side aches, and a general hatred for the
activity.
I finally got into trail running five years
ago when I moved back to Gunnison full time and was forced to endure the
brutally cold winters. It sounds counterintuitive, I know, go skiing most
people would say, but I don’t ski. I’m as much as a threat to myself on skis as
I would be putting a needle in my arm. Some people are made to go with gravity,
and some are made to fight it. And, the others, well I cannot speak for them.
To me inactivity of the body is a death sentence.
Anyways,
for a few years after graduating from college I managed a transient lifestyle,
I’d skip out on the epic, six-month Gunnison Valley winters, and return for the
perfect summers. Then I got a job, a serious, year round, nine to five desk job,
doing public relations writing. I flipped the switch from dirtbag to
professional. Ripped t-shirts and ragged jeans to collared shirts and slacks. Ah,
the roles we play in life. And, for a time I loved it.
It started
with lunch break runs; even though it was cold, it was sunny. I ran on snow and
the Vitamin D soaked into my soul. I returned to my desk happy and full of
endorphins.
I couldn’t
have picked a better time to get into trail running. It was around the time
when Born To Run by Christopher
McDougall was published. The pages in that book turned themselves, and the only
place my mind travelled while reading it were to my local trails. It was an
understatement to say that I was inspired. My stoke for running was on fire.
It didn’t
hurt that my backyard was Hartman Rocks, thirty square miles of rolling
sagebrush and granite boulders, with snowcapped mountains in the distance. When
it rained the diving smell of sage penetrated the soul, a spiritual, peaceful
refuge.
Every
runner has an ideal distance for a perfect workout. When you first getting into
trail running the excitement is high because you’re finding that distance. That
day when you run farther than you ever have before can be a great feeling. Or,
you can bonk and feel like shit. Trail running is always a balance between
loving running and hating it. I found my ideal maximum distance to be around 17
miles. To run a 100-mile race, like many mountain folk do, would probably make
me hate running forever.
Reading the
last pages of Born To Run, which
covers the Tarahumara Indians and the Leadville 100 running race, among other
topics, was sad, I wanted it to keep going, forever. Fortunately the type of
characters that were in the book lived in my town. I had two friends, Tim Parr
and Duncan Callahan that have won the Leadville 100. One of my co-workers, Elva
Dryer, was an Olympic runner. The best part was they didn’t have the egos that
they could have had because they were some of the best runners in the world. When
we talked running the passion was shared.
I think
that’s what I love the most about the running community in Colorado; it’s a
communal, shared experience. There’s no gear that makes you stand out as more
important than someone else. The person, who is trying to better him or herself
through running, can share the trail with the best runner in the world. The
many races that happen throughout the spring, summer and fall in our region are
a testament to everything that is good about the human race. Aid stations can
offer a drink and food, or they can offer a shot of stoke. A few kind words at
the right time can offer mountains of inspiration to continue on the journey.
Eventually
I got tired of a 9-5 desk job and those cold Gunnison winters, and moved down
here to Durango. The running here is just as good as it is up there in God’s
country. The shared passion is here, and I’m getting excited to train for the
Durango Double in October.
I continue
to experience mishaps, episodes of bonking, and general suffering on the
trails. Last fall my brother and I got lost in a haze of fog coming off
Engineer Mountain, and spent six hours struggling down a drainage, only to
emerge in Cascade Canyon. Then there are the days where you start in the
sunshine and end up getting nailed by hail, while thunder erupts behind you,
begging you to run faster.
Most days, when I’m hydrated, well rested, and warmed up,
running turns into bliss. That endorphin high, where with one foot in front of
the other, a flow is felt, and there’s something meditational and healthy about
the experience. And, perhaps, Bruce Springsteen said it best, “Tramps like us,
baby we were born to run.”
My two books are called: The Great American Dirtbags and Climbing Out of Bed. Click on the titles to view them on Amazon.
My two books are called: The Great American Dirtbags and Climbing Out of Bed. Click on the titles to view them on Amazon.