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activelife<br />
TM<br />
FREE<br />
SPORTS • FITNESS • TRAVEL • ADVENTURE • WELLNESS • MAY - JUNE 2017<br />
5 fun<br />
ways<br />
to shift<br />
gears<br />
Nick<br />
Marcantonio<br />
chases the<br />
Ironman<br />
hiking<br />
the<br />
Devil’s<br />
Path<br />
still racing<br />
after all<br />
these years<br />
Bill Parks skis<br />
the Birkebeiner<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 1
WHERE DID IT START?<br />
Was it a idea in the back of your mind, a seed that got planted,<br />
something someone said, or a challenge?<br />
OR WAS IT ALWAYS THERE?<br />
Did you want to beat everyone in the 50 yard dash?<br />
Or were you the kid fidgeting at your desk, waiting <strong>for</strong> the bell<br />
to ring just so you could get outside?<br />
Even now, you can’t stand sitting still 9-5, or lying in a<br />
hammock on a beach <strong>for</strong> 5 days straight.<br />
WHAT INSPIRED YOU?<br />
Did you see a mountain you wanted to scale?<br />
Did something grab your imagination?<br />
Or did you simply see someone cross a finish line<br />
and say to yourself- hey, I can do that.<br />
WHAT’S YOUR MOTIVATION?<br />
Now that you’ve started, what keeps you going?<br />
Do you just like being outside? Do you like to keep moving?<br />
Do you want to stay healthy? Do you want to be strong?<br />
Do you like to challenge yourself? Do you just want to be faster?<br />
HOW DO YOU STAY FOCUSED?<br />
Do you set your own goals, or do you work with someone?<br />
How do you hang in there?<br />
WHAT’S YOUR PASSION?<br />
WELCOME TO<br />
activelife<br />
TM<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 3
contents<br />
FEATURES<br />
10 Cover Story:<br />
5 Ways to Spin It<br />
17 6 Essentials to<br />
Fitness<br />
20 <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong><br />
Profile:<br />
Bill Parks Skis<br />
the Birkebeiner<br />
Be<strong>for</strong>e and After<br />
10<br />
24 Road Trip:<br />
15 Hours on the<br />
Devil’s Path<br />
The Toughest Hike in<br />
the Northeast<br />
28 On a Roll<br />
How One Mom Learned<br />
to Love Racing<br />
IN EVERY ISSUE<br />
5 Editor’s Letter<br />
7 <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong><br />
Short List<br />
8 Tech:<br />
The TomTom<br />
Adventurer GPS<br />
Watch<br />
18 Health &<br />
Wellness<br />
30 Calendar<br />
8<br />
24<br />
ON OUR COVER:<br />
Accomplished cross-country running and track athlete<br />
Nick Marcantonio (a three-time Division III All-American at<br />
SUNY Cortland) trains <strong>for</strong> his next goal: the 2017 Ironman<br />
World Championship in Kona, Hawaii. Photo by Niles Gagnon.<br />
20<br />
4 | DACKS & TOGA activelife
editors’ letter<br />
hello...<br />
Thanks <strong>for</strong> picking up and reading the premier issue of Dacks and Toga <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong> magazine. We<br />
have learned a lot in the several months that our journey began, and our concept <strong>for</strong> the magazine<br />
became the publication you have in your hand. Foremost, we learned that publishing a magazine <strong>for</strong><br />
the active lifestyle community is not that different from training <strong>for</strong> an event or just trying to stay fit.<br />
You have to have a plan, and a goal. You have to start with small steps and push yourself to build<br />
up endurance and momentum.<br />
We are lucky. We live in one of the most beautiful parts of the country with mountain views that<br />
make you smile and boundless numbers of parks, trails, lakes and sporting venues to help you stay<br />
active. It’s not hard being creative when we have such wonders right in our backyards to keep us<br />
centered and focused.<br />
That being said, we hope you like what you see. We have put our best ef<strong>for</strong>t into bringing you<br />
a dynamic magazine that we hope is not only visually engaging, but also has articles that are<br />
motivating and inspiring. We want to thank everyone who has helped us from day one of our journey,<br />
especially our writers, photographers, and our advertisers, since all are important to our active<br />
lifestyle community.<br />
See you in July,<br />
The <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong> Team<br />
Get Ready <strong>for</strong> the 4th Annual<br />
CHURNEY GURNEY<br />
TRAIL AND MOUNTAIN BIKE RACE<br />
Benefiting the Under the Woods Foundation<br />
and Camp Under the Woods<br />
A Camp <strong>for</strong> Children on the Autism Spectrum<br />
Saturday & Sunday, August 5th & 6th<br />
at Gurney Lane Recreation Park, Queensbury<br />
Saturday, 9am: 5k TRAIL RUNNING RACE<br />
followed by Demos and Group Rides at noon<br />
Sunday, 9am: CHURNEY GURNEY MOUNTAIN BIKE RACE<br />
Cat 1, Cat 2, Cat 3, and Open/Pro Categories, Vendors & Demos<br />
Cash Prizes <strong>for</strong> Open/Pro, Prizes <strong>for</strong> other Categories<br />
Facebook/Churney-Gurney <strong>for</strong><br />
Updates on In<strong>for</strong>mation,<br />
Activities and Registration<br />
Ad Sponsored<br />
by North Country<br />
Subaru<br />
NOW A<br />
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Plus Group Rides, Activities & Contests<br />
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n Join <strong>for</strong>ces<br />
with our team<br />
of specialized<br />
trainers and<br />
coaches and gain<br />
a higher level of<br />
fitness, strength and<br />
education that is<br />
personally aligned<br />
with your goals.<br />
n Push yourself<br />
harder with eight<br />
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sessions and intense<br />
group workouts<br />
designed exclusively <strong>for</strong> our LEVEL UP participants.<br />
Find it at the Glens Falls YMCA<br />
Intermediate 600 Glen St, Glens Falls<br />
to Advanced (518) 793-3878<br />
Levels,<br />
Ages 14+.<br />
Fee: $150<br />
(Members only)<br />
For info: www.glensfallsymca.org<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 5<br />
Job # 000 - GF YMCA - Sales Rep/Artist
Our Contributors<br />
Drew Cappabianca owns and operates The Hub: a cafe,<br />
bar, and bike shop in Brant Lake, NY. He is involved in<br />
building better and safer mountain biking trails in the region<br />
and is an advisor <strong>for</strong> the Warren County Safe and Quality<br />
Biking Organization. He has hired Steve Ovitt to design Brant<br />
Lake Bike Park on Bartonville Mountain, located directly<br />
behind The Hub, with development beginning in 2017.<br />
(visit www.brantlakebikepark.com). When the Hub is closed<br />
<strong>for</strong> the winter months Drew can be found helping customers<br />
at The Sports Page in Queensbury, NY.<br />
Alex Kochon lives in Gansevoort with her husband and son.<br />
She is a <strong>for</strong>mer sportswriter at The Post-Star and is currently<br />
the managing editor of FasterSkier.com where she reports<br />
on World Cup skiing. She was born into a Nordic skiing<br />
family and skied <strong>for</strong> the Lake George HS Nordic Team. She<br />
captained the women’s soccer team at Emerson College and<br />
also interned at the Beijing Olympics. Additionally, she was<br />
a Nordic Skiing Instructor in the Colorado Rockies and is a<br />
Certified Personal Trainer. When she’s not writing or editing,<br />
Alex can be found chasing her 1-1/2 year old, and skiing,<br />
biking, running and hiking in the Adirondacks<br />
Eric J. Hamilton is a retired Environmental Engineer who<br />
keeps busy by being on the board of directors <strong>for</strong> several<br />
organizations including the Mohawk Towpath Byway, the<br />
Shenendehowa Nordic Club, and NYSSRA Nordic. He<br />
competes in Biathlon races <strong>for</strong> Saratoga Biathlon Club and<br />
Nordic Ski races <strong>for</strong> HURT Nordic. He also participates in<br />
Ski-Orienteering events. His passion is to get residents and<br />
visitors on bicycles to discover the historical, natural, and<br />
recreational assets along the Erie Canal.<br />
Jared Newell developed his love of athletics while running at<br />
Queensbury High School and SUNY Cortland where he was<br />
on Queensbury’s first Boy’s State Championship Team and<br />
SUNY Cortland’s first National Championship Team.<br />
He currently runs and cycles recreationally, but has found<br />
that his passion is fly fishing in the abundant waters of the<br />
Adirondacks. He still loves working and training endurance<br />
athletes and is currently aiming to continue pursuing cycling<br />
and triathlon racing. Weekly he works timing races<br />
throughout New York with Underdog Race Timing.<br />
Ethan Katz has been a Nordic skier since age 10.<br />
He currently is a Mechanical Engineering major in his junior<br />
year at Clarkson University in Potsdam, NY where he is on<br />
their successful Nordic ski team that has won Divisionals and<br />
Regionals the last three years, and which has per<strong>for</strong>med very<br />
well at Nationals in the NSCSA Division. Besides<br />
Nordic skiing he is an avid hiker. He also prepares <strong>for</strong> the<br />
Nordic season by bicycling, running, distance trail running,<br />
and crossfit training.<br />
Duncan Callahan is a <strong>for</strong>mer Glens Falls High School<br />
cross country and Nordic skiing star, who lives in Gunnison,<br />
Colorado with his family. He is a champion ultra-distance<br />
runner with 4-dozen races over the last decade including<br />
fifteen 100-mile races, and well over a dozen 50-mile races.<br />
Besides competing in ultra-distance races, Duncan is a<br />
long-time coach. He is currently the Director of<br />
Campus Recreation at Western State Colorado University<br />
as well as the school’s head Nordic Ski Coach, where he<br />
motivates a fairly new team that has done very well at<br />
Nationals the past two years.<br />
TM<br />
activelife<br />
Publisher<br />
87 North Publishing, Ltd.<br />
www.87npub.com<br />
Managing Editor<br />
Jody Katz<br />
Creative Director<br />
Gabrielle Katz<br />
Contributors<br />
Drew Cappabianca<br />
Alex Kochon<br />
Eric J. Hamilton<br />
Jared Newell<br />
Ethan Katz<br />
Duncan Callahan<br />
Advertising<br />
To advertise, call: 518-636-5960<br />
or email: ads@87npub.com<br />
Contact Us At:<br />
518-636-5960<br />
or email: info@87npub.com<br />
Manuscripts, artwork, photographs, inquiries and<br />
submitted materials are welcome.<br />
Email submissions to: info@87npub.com<br />
87NORTH<br />
PUBLISHING, LTD.<br />
Dacks & Toga <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong> magazine is owned and operated by<br />
87 North Publishing, Ltd.<br />
P.O. Box 495, Glens Falls, NY 12801<br />
© 2017 by 87 North Publishing, Ltd. All Rights Reserved.<br />
Reproduction in any <strong>for</strong>m, by any means in any <strong>for</strong>m, mechanical or<br />
electronic without permission from the publisher is prohibited.<br />
Ads created by 87 North Publishing, Ltd. <strong>for</strong> this magazine<br />
cannot be reproduced in print or online without written permission<br />
from the publisher.<br />
87 North Publishing, Ltd. and Dacks & Toga <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong> Magazine<br />
reserve the rights to refuse any advertisements <strong>for</strong> any reason.<br />
Acceptance of advertising does not mean or imply the service or<br />
product is recommended by 87 North Publishing, Ltd. or<br />
Dacks & Toga <strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong>.<br />
6 | DACKS & TOGA activelife
short list<br />
Destination: Meteora, Greece<br />
THE GREEK ISLANDS may be prominent on many travelers’<br />
bucket lists, but Meteora is fast rising to the top as a hub <strong>for</strong> the<br />
active adventurer. Meteora, which means “middle of the sky”, is<br />
famous <strong>for</strong> its precarious, hill-top monasteries and stunning scenery.<br />
While visiting the monasteries is still one of the main tourist draws,<br />
hiking, mountain biking, rock climbing and rafting are drawing more<br />
and more visitors. Meteora is in central Greece, about 4 hours from<br />
Athens. Summertime can be crowded, but some towns are a little<br />
quieter than others. Do some research be<strong>for</strong>e you go. In the<br />
meantime, this picture is definitely going on our bulletin board!<br />
[<br />
Some of<br />
]<br />
the things...<br />
we’re talking<br />
about!<br />
Travel, inspiration, gadgets and<br />
jobs well done — there’s always<br />
something on our mind. Here are some<br />
of the items on our current short list<br />
that we want to share with you.<br />
Stay Hydrated<br />
this Summer<br />
TOO BUSY TO<br />
REMEMBER TO<br />
DRINK A GLASS OF<br />
WATER? Not sure you’ve<br />
taken on enough fluids<br />
after a workout? Then<br />
the HydraCoach water<br />
botttle may be <strong>for</strong> you.<br />
The HydraCoach is an<br />
interactive water bottle<br />
that calculates how much<br />
water you should be<br />
drinking, tracks daily<br />
water consumption and<br />
motivates you to achieve<br />
proper hydration. It has<br />
a 600 ml. capacity, a<br />
water resistant computer,<br />
and comes with a 3 volt<br />
lithium battery.<br />
Get Inspired<br />
WHAT’S MORE IMPORTANT? RAW<br />
TALENT OR CONFRONTING YOUR<br />
FEARS? This very question, as well<br />
as the concept of perceived ef<strong>for</strong>t,<br />
is addressed in the book, “How<br />
Bad Do You Want it?” by Matt<br />
Fitzgerald. Although this book<br />
was published back in 2015,<br />
it still sits prominently on our<br />
coffee table and gets a lot<br />
of thumb-through action.<br />
From the first quote,<br />
“The Mind is the Athlete”<br />
(attributed to Bryce Courtenay) through<br />
the recounting of several exciting races<br />
from various sports, we find inspiration<br />
<strong>for</strong> both our training and our life.<br />
PHOTO: Shutterstock, HydraCoach, Jody Katz<br />
Kudos <strong>for</strong> Great Sportsmanship!<br />
JAKE JACOBS of Glens Falls, New York qualified as the<br />
number 18 seed out of 32 <strong>for</strong> the Saturday, March 11, 2017<br />
finals of the inaugural World Pro Ski Tour race at Sunday<br />
River, Maine. In the first round, Jake dispatched number<br />
15 seed Alec Tarberry to advance to the round of 16, where<br />
he was paired with the number 2 seed Gabriel Rivas of<br />
France. In the first run, Jacobs was leading the French ace,<br />
and as they were approaching the finish line Jacobs and<br />
Rivas each had to make recoveries and both skied out of<br />
the course without finishing. The judges ruled that Jacobs<br />
had preceded further down the course than the French rival,<br />
which would have given Jacobs a 1.35 second advantage<br />
over the French star <strong>for</strong> the 2nd run. However Jake, in a<br />
gesture of incredible sportsmanship, told his opponent<br />
that he may possibly have interfered with Rivas towards<br />
the bottom of the run. The two athletes discussed the matter<br />
and agreed on a 0 time advantage going into the 2nd run<br />
on a handshake. The race Jury accepted the racers’<br />
decision, a development that is unprecedented in the<br />
history of Pro ski racing. In the 2nd run of the Heat the<br />
French skier nipped Jake by a mere thirty five hundredths<br />
of a second and advanced on to the quarter finals. Jacobs<br />
per<strong>for</strong>mance against some of the world’s best ski racers<br />
earned him $500 <strong>for</strong> the race. The World Pro Ski Tour will<br />
feature up to 6 events next season. Complete results and<br />
in<strong>for</strong>mation can be found at www.worldproskitour.com.<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 7
tech<br />
Off-Road,<br />
On-Road,<br />
Any Terrain:<br />
The TomTom<br />
Adventurer<br />
GPS Watch<br />
is the Perfect<br />
Companion<br />
Everyone seems to be<br />
wearing a sports watch<br />
nowadays. I’ve seen cashiers<br />
at department stores wearing<br />
Fit Bits. I’ve seen senior<br />
managers at offices wearing<br />
Polar HRM watches. I’ve been to street<br />
running races, triathlons, Nordic ski races,<br />
and trail running races and virtually every<br />
competitor has a sports watch on. If you<br />
don’t believe me just watch the action<br />
several seconds be<strong>for</strong>e a race and you’ll<br />
see racers setting their watches to time<br />
their progress and help them meet their<br />
race goals.<br />
There are so many brands and so many<br />
types of sports watches. Some are simple<br />
with bare bones features while others are<br />
packed with absolutely amazing features.<br />
They all fit into two groups: some must<br />
work with cell phones while others are<br />
standalone units.<br />
My current sports watch of choice is<br />
a TomTom Adventurer GPS watch. It’s<br />
of the standalone variety, which I prefer.<br />
I’ve owned other brands like Polar and<br />
Garmin and enjoyed them, but lately the<br />
TomTom line best suits my needs. I am<br />
not recommending you buy one and I am<br />
not suggesting that your GPS watch is<br />
not as good. I just feel com<strong>for</strong>table owning<br />
TomTom watches and have owned at<br />
least six different models. In fact, everyone<br />
in my family uses one to monitor their<br />
races and practices.<br />
I recently upgraded to this TomTom<br />
model, which became available to the<br />
public just a few months ago. For me, it<br />
has all the features I need plus extras, and<br />
it can easily compete with much higher<br />
priced watches from competitors. Even<br />
so, it’s not cheap. Expect to pay over<br />
$300 <strong>for</strong> one with headphones. Compare<br />
that to Garmins and Suuntos at this level<br />
and $300 plus is a bargain.<br />
8 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
n With<br />
great looks<br />
and multi-sport<br />
functions, the<br />
TomTom Adventurer<br />
has a lot to offer.<br />
Be<strong>for</strong>e putting an Adventurer<br />
through its paces (which I’ll touch<br />
on later), I can say it’s an impressive looking<br />
watch. I chose the visually impacting<br />
orange and black model (the only<br />
other choice from TomTom is an all black<br />
Adventurer with an orange strap loop).<br />
It’s an attention magnet and can be an<br />
icebreaker during those awkward conversations<br />
that are slowly going downhill due<br />
to the lack of things to say. I can’t tell you<br />
how many times I will be in a conversation<br />
with someone and I see his or her<br />
eyes gravitating towards my Adventurer,<br />
like a moth to a flame. I want to say to<br />
them “eyes up here” but don’t since it is<br />
a bit flattering to have people stare at or<br />
ask about your watch. So, I can say that<br />
<strong>for</strong> me, TomTom hit it out of the park with<br />
the looks of the Adventurer.<br />
The watch face is easy to read with<br />
large numbers <strong>for</strong> the time of day, on two<br />
lines. To distinguish the hour from the<br />
minutes, the hour numbers are always<br />
a little darker. The Adventurer continues<br />
TomTom’s use of an innovative fourposition<br />
navigation button, which makes<br />
navigating through windows simple. Just<br />
press the North, South, East or West side<br />
of the button to get to the window you<br />
want. It’s far easier to use than tiny buttons<br />
on many other watches or having to<br />
rotate your finger around a dial (try that<br />
with gloves on or on a rainy day), that is<br />
necessary with some other watches.<br />
The band has a bazillion small per<strong>for</strong>ation-like<br />
holes (no they don’t go through<br />
the band) on both sides that make the<br />
band look very unique and very stylish.<br />
TomTom claims the underside holes make<br />
the watch more com<strong>for</strong>table when you are<br />
active and perspiring. I’m not sure that’s<br />
the case but the band does look cool.<br />
In addition to the holes, the band is<br />
TomTom’s only one with a pivot—albeit<br />
on one side—which makes it fit better.<br />
It also has a hard plastic frame that<br />
surrounds the watch body and not only<br />
makes the watch bigger than other Spark<br />
series watches (the Adventurer is a Spark<br />
with all the options), it also is designed to<br />
protect it while hiking and to visually support<br />
its rugged genealogy. When removed<br />
from the band, the watch body itself looks<br />
no different than a Spark or Spark 3, but<br />
looks can be deceiving.<br />
The Adventurer is the most<br />
feature-rich TomTom GPS<br />
Sports watch they have made.<br />
Built-in heart rate monitor…check.<br />
Built-in music….check. Multi-sports….<br />
check. Plus, it supports activities like<br />
hiking, trail running, snowboarding and<br />
downhill skiing, which make it a true “allseason”<br />
watch. For the Alpine skiing and
snowboarding communities it will sync (via GPS) your location<br />
while you are on a ski resort chair lift. It will show you your last<br />
downhill run at that course, and show you 3-D Distance and<br />
3-D Speed. I’m not a downhill skier, nor am I a snowboarder so<br />
I will most likely never use those features. I will use the newly<br />
added hiking and trail running modes in addition to the running,<br />
treadmill running, bicycling, indoor bicycling, gym and stopwatch<br />
modes. I may even use the swimming mode if I ever get<br />
reacquainted with that sport. This probably won’t happen.<br />
Also new in the Adventurer (and Spark 3) is the built-in<br />
compass, which I’ve found to be very easy to calibrate, and<br />
the barometric altimeter, which gives far more accurate in<strong>for</strong>mation<br />
than standard GPS. In addition, TomTom has added in the<br />
ability to route you back to your start point (called breadcrumbs<br />
navigation) to minimize your chance of getting lost. This to me<br />
is very important since it’s well known in my family that I have<br />
no navigation skills and am plagued with the world’s worst<br />
sense of direction.<br />
TomTom also listens to owner suggestions (so I’ve heard).<br />
They’ve redesigned their user application (called mysportsconnect)<br />
and made it more intuitive. However, despite being easy<br />
to use, and very “cheerful” looking, I find it to be a little on the<br />
juvenile side and the figures look like they are having too much<br />
fun. I can’t recall the last time I looked that happy working out<br />
or training so maybe that’s why I am having this disconnect with<br />
the interface.<br />
TomTom also thoughtfully resolved a complaint of owners of<br />
many battery-powered devices—expected battery life be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
needing a charge. All previous versions of TomTom GPS watches<br />
sampled GPS satellite readings every second and this was the<br />
main reason their batteries would be drained after 6 hours or so.<br />
The Adventurer samples satellites every two seconds and<br />
TomTom claims a 20-hour battery life between charges when<br />
using GPS in hiking mode. This is far more helpful <strong>for</strong> those on<br />
long hikes and those participating in ultra races.<br />
Then there’s the feature I have grown to like the most: the<br />
built-in music. TomTom Adventurers have a built-in hard drive<br />
that can handle up to 500 songs and they sync easily and<br />
quickly with my computer’s iTunes library. Then it’s just a matter<br />
of selecting the playlists I want added (or removed) and I have<br />
music on my watch (without the need of a cell phone or other<br />
device). Add in the terrific TomTom wireless Bluetooth headphones<br />
that work great, sound really good and stay in place<br />
well, and you have a very nice music package to help you drown<br />
out extraneous noise you don’t want to hear while working or<br />
training. TomTom designers managed to fix two common wireless<br />
headphone issues that were problems with their original<br />
headphones. They removed the on-cable panel with control<br />
buttons that makes headphones unbalanced when you move or<br />
turn your head and put the three buttons on the right ear bud.<br />
They also revised the adjustment fit by removing the clip that<br />
was on the first version and putting a rubber strap on the new<br />
version. This adjustable rubber strap does a great job keeping<br />
the ear buds in place while you are on the move. Kudos to the<br />
TomTom design team <strong>for</strong> making a nice sounding and welldesigned<br />
set of headphones even better.<br />
Finally, how does it work? In short, great. The ability to<br />
race against previous races, against time, race with a selected<br />
pace, sync with external sensors (bike sensors, external HRMs)<br />
have always been TomTom features. Add to the list its built-in<br />
optical Heart Rate Monitor, fast GPS satellite lock, the ability to<br />
save trails in your TomTom account to sync with at a later date<br />
and you have a nice package. On a more personal note, the<br />
breadcrumb trail navigation feature was a game changer since<br />
I’m so directionally challenged. It was put to a test in Coles’<br />
Woods (Glens Falls, NY) and it worked as promised—saving me<br />
from wandering the trails endlessly and <strong>for</strong>ever, like The Flying<br />
Dutchman. Thank you, TomTom.<br />
-Jody Katz<br />
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FIVE WAYS TO<br />
It’s Spring and the are bikes coming out in droves!<br />
Whether you’re out on the roads or out on the trails, here<br />
are 5 ways to get the most from your ride.<br />
1<br />
From Running to Ironman Triathlons:<br />
Nick Marcantonio’s Rise<br />
By Alex Kochon • Photo by Niles Gagnon<br />
There’s something about Canadian<br />
pro triathlete Lionel Sanders<br />
that speaks to Glens Falls<br />
graduate Nick Marcantonio. He did it<br />
backwards, Marcantonio explained,<br />
jumping into triathlons at age 22 and<br />
starting off with the ultimate beast<br />
of the swim-bike-run races: the Ironman<br />
(2.4-mile swim, 112-mile bike<br />
and 26.2-mile run, in that order, no<br />
breaks).<br />
“He just jumped into it, randomly<br />
borrowed his mom’s credit card, same<br />
thing I did to be honest,” Marcantonio,<br />
23, said with a laugh. “He kind of went<br />
against the grain … backwards<br />
from what normal people do, so I<br />
connected with him.”<br />
Marcantonio is locally known<br />
10 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
<strong>for</strong> his cross-country running<br />
and track achievements. He won<br />
Class B sectionals as a Glens<br />
Falls senior and was a three-time<br />
Division III All-American at SUNY<br />
Cortland. Two years ago, he decided<br />
to take on triathlons the “backwards”<br />
way, starting with the longest-distance<br />
race first. While watching Ironman<br />
Lake Placid <strong>for</strong> the first time, he<br />
signed up that day <strong>for</strong> next year’s race.<br />
Despite its roughly $700 registration<br />
cost, the race typically sells out immediately.<br />
Committed to running through his<br />
senior season at Cortland, Marcantonio<br />
spent the next year dabbling more<br />
seriously in swimming and biking.<br />
“I would bike probably three times a<br />
week and then swim whenever I could.<br />
My swimming was really bad,” he said.<br />
Then last May, two months be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
the race, he was hit by a car while riding<br />
his bike in Hudson Falls. He suffered<br />
road rash and a minor back injury,<br />
and took a month to recuperate<br />
and get back on his bike again.<br />
Out <strong>for</strong> Ironman Lake Placid, he deferred<br />
his entry to race Ironman Maryland<br />
on Oct. 1, 2016, instead, and<br />
began working with Kevin Crossman,<br />
a local triathlon coach, Glens Falls<br />
physical education teacher and varsity<br />
swim coach.<br />
“Kevin coached me in grade school<br />
in P.E., so I’ve known Kevin <strong>for</strong> a while<br />
and I knew he had done Ironmans,”<br />
Marcantonio explained. “He had a finishing<br />
plaque of him doing Lake Placid<br />
in his office and I would look at it every<br />
Two years ago, he decided<br />
to take on triathlons the<br />
“backwards” way, starting with<br />
the longest-distance race first.<br />
once in a while and it caught my eye.<br />
… He definitely was the first person to<br />
implant it in my mind and it kind of<br />
stuck with me.”<br />
As part of his 12-week plan leading<br />
up to Maryland, Marcantonio raced his<br />
first triathlon last August, the Fronhofer<br />
Tool Triathlon in Cambridge. He<br />
finished second overall in the Olympicdistance<br />
race (0.93-mile swim, 25-mile<br />
bike, 6.2-mile run).<br />
Then in September, Marcantonio<br />
made the jump to the Big George Half<br />
Iron distance in Lake George, which he<br />
won with a course record of 4 hours,<br />
8 minutes and 3 seconds. One month<br />
later at his Ironman debut in Baltimore,<br />
he won his 18-24 age group<br />
and placed ninth overall. While the<br />
swim had been canceled, he finished<br />
the 112-mile bike in 4:11:38 hours,<br />
and the run — his first marathon — in<br />
nearly 3 hours flat. By winning his age<br />
group in Maryland, he qualified <strong>for</strong> the<br />
2017 Ironman World Championship in<br />
Kona, Hawaii, this coming October.<br />
On April 22, Marcantonio planned<br />
to race his second Ironman, the North<br />
American Championship in Texas, to<br />
prepare <strong>for</strong> Kona. And after Kona on<br />
Oct. 14, he plans to scale back the<br />
distances.<br />
“Once I finish Kona, I’m not doing<br />
another Ironman until I’m late 20’s,<br />
30’s,” he said. “I want to focus on the<br />
half and Olympic distances. More<br />
from a developmental aspect, I<br />
won’t probably hit my peak racing<br />
ability in Ironman until I’m early<br />
30’s, mid 30’s. The guys winning<br />
the World Championships are seasoned<br />
veterans. They’ve been out<br />
there <strong>for</strong> 10, 15 years. If I want to<br />
compete the way I want to, I’m going<br />
to save that <strong>for</strong> another 10 years<br />
down the road.”<br />
In addition to the training advice he<br />
receives from Crossman, Marcantonio<br />
knows his stuff. He studied fitness<br />
development at Cortland, was an assistant<br />
cross-country coach at Rensselaer<br />
Polytechnic Institute (RPI) in Troy,<br />
and is a personal trainer at the Glens<br />
Falls YMCA.<br />
“If I can race professionally, that’s<br />
the end goal,” Marcantonio said of his<br />
triathlon aspirations. “However long<br />
that happens, it could be next year,<br />
it could be the year after that. … If it<br />
lasts two years, four years, five years,<br />
I just want to do it. It could last a season,<br />
but I want to say I raced professionally.”<br />
– Continued
SPIN IT!<br />
Some Tips to Start<br />
Training <strong>for</strong> Triathlons:<br />
GET A BIKE: While you can spend thousands of<br />
dollars on a triathlon “tri” bike, Marcantonio, who said<br />
he’s not a bike expert, recommends getting a bike that<br />
suits your needs. “If you’re competing <strong>for</strong> marginal<br />
gains and you want to gain two minutes on the bike<br />
and you’re racing <strong>for</strong> podium finishes, then yeah, you<br />
want a tri bike. But if you’re just out there having<br />
fun, which is awesome, and you just want to finish it,<br />
doesn’t matter. Tri bike, road bike, whatever.”<br />
PICK A RACE DISTANCE: Marcantonio says<br />
the distance — sprint (half-mile swim, 12-mile bike,<br />
3.1-mile run) vs. Olympic vs. half Iron vs. Ironman —<br />
doesn’t matter, but goal-setting does. “I’m really big<br />
on goals,” he said. Write down what you want to do,<br />
what you want to improve on and how you’re going to<br />
achieve those things. “If you constantly have that in<br />
the back of your mind, ‘Six months from now, I want<br />
to do this race and I want to hit this time,’ it’s easier<br />
to train year-round and stay motivated.”<br />
TRAIN TO RACE: Marcantonio tries to do<br />
his workouts in the order in which he’ll race them:<br />
swimming first, then biking later that same day, <strong>for</strong><br />
instance. In terms of workout duration, that will vary<br />
<strong>for</strong> each individual, the length of the race they’re<br />
training <strong>for</strong>, and their personal goals. Generally, keep<br />
your swimming, biking and running workouts within<br />
the time you expect to finish. So if you estimate the<br />
swim will take less than an hour to race, keep your<br />
swim workouts within that time frame.<br />
Nick heads<br />
out <strong>for</strong> a<br />
training ride.<br />
He is<br />
sponsored by<br />
Grey Ghost<br />
Bicycles<br />
and Nuun.<br />
AND RACE TO TRAIN: “Have fun with it.<br />
As soon as you stop having fun, you need to take a<br />
step back … You’ve got to love it.”<br />
LOCAL RESOURCES:<br />
• Adirondack Triathlon Club:<br />
facebook.com/adirondacktriclub,<br />
• Saratoga Triathlon Club:<br />
saratogatriclub.com,<br />
• High Peaks Cyclery Mini Tri Races:<br />
highpeakscyclery.com
2<br />
Join a Group Ride:<br />
The First Ride of the Season<br />
Now that the weather is beginning<br />
to clear up and the snow<br />
banks have melted, many of us<br />
who have had our bikes sitting on the<br />
trainer all winter are beginning to get<br />
back out on the roads. The weather is<br />
occasionally a little finicky in Spring,<br />
but getting back into the saddle is always<br />
better done earlier in the season<br />
rather than later. The great part about<br />
our area is that group rides can be<br />
found everyday throughout the week,<br />
and most have already started up with<br />
regular meeting times. So if you’re<br />
lacking in the motivation department,<br />
hooking up with one (or all) of these<br />
groups can give you a little help getting<br />
out the door and back on the bike.<br />
The first official group ride that<br />
I was able to get to this year was on<br />
Thursday, March 30th over at Grey<br />
Ghost Bicycles, located in The Colvin<br />
Building down on Glen Street in Glens<br />
Falls. They will be hosting group rides<br />
from now until when the snow starts<br />
to fly again next Fall. If you’re looking<br />
to come on the next ride, the meeting<br />
place is the public parking lot behind<br />
Grey Ghost Bicycles at 6pm SHARP.<br />
The ride is usually comprised of an ‘A’<br />
Group that goes a little further and a<br />
little faster than the ‘B’ Group. Both<br />
groups are led by either Steve Fairchild<br />
or Niles Gagnon who are experienced<br />
riders, bike mechanics, and<br />
permanent fixtures at Grey Ghost. All<br />
rides are no-drop rides, meaning that<br />
if you’re newer to the sport, you don’t<br />
need to worry about getting left out in<br />
the middle of nowhere. Niles and Steve<br />
are on hand to help anyone with mechanical<br />
issues or flats that happen<br />
from time-to-time out on rides.<br />
Our ride that Thursday was a bit<br />
colder than normal spring and summer<br />
conditions as it was 42 degrees, but<br />
there were still about 12<br />
hardy riders that showed<br />
up. We set out across the<br />
bridge into South Glens<br />
Falls and down Saratoga<br />
Road be<strong>for</strong>e picking up<br />
Butler Road. We used<br />
Redmond Road to cross<br />
over The Northway and<br />
get out to the nice country<br />
roads of Selfridge and<br />
Clark Road. Once we got<br />
over I-87 the ride was a<br />
pretty gradual downhill<br />
except <strong>for</strong> one short, steep<br />
hill towards the end of<br />
Clark Road followed by a pretty steep,<br />
fun descent out to West River Road. The<br />
ride followed the Hudson River north<br />
<strong>for</strong> about three miles until we made our<br />
way back up into South Glens Falls via<br />
Fort Edward Road and Sisson Road.<br />
The ride finished up back over the<br />
bridge into Glens Falls and with a short<br />
sprint up the Civic Center Hill, we were<br />
back at GGB.<br />
The ride was fairly easy and casual<br />
given that it was most peoples’ first<br />
The group<br />
stayed very<br />
close together,<br />
talked about<br />
how sick and<br />
tired they<br />
were of riding<br />
on their bike<br />
trainers...<br />
By Jared Newell<br />
Photo by Niles Gagnon<br />
time out on the roads <strong>for</strong> the year. The<br />
group stayed very close together, talked<br />
about how sick they were of riding the<br />
bike trainers, and how the rest of their<br />
winter was since everyone last saw one<br />
another. Overall we rode 22 miles and<br />
averaged a very relaxed 16 mph. While<br />
it was definitely a very social ride, as<br />
the weather becomes warmer and the<br />
ride gathers its normal<br />
group of riders, the ‘A’ and<br />
‘B’ rides will break off into<br />
groups of 15-20 riders.<br />
As the summer ramps up<br />
the rides progress to some<br />
more difficult routes and<br />
get a little faster.<br />
While there is plenty<br />
of help out on the rides,<br />
its always a good idea to<br />
bring a couple of water<br />
bottles, some gels or nutrition<br />
bars, and your own<br />
flat kit (spare tube, co2<br />
and inflator, patch kit) to<br />
be on the safe side. Helmets are always<br />
mandatory, and LED lights are recommended,<br />
especially <strong>for</strong> the longer rides<br />
when it might start getting dark be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
the end of the ride. If you haven’t been<br />
out on the roads in a while it wouldn’t<br />
hurt to get your bike checked out at<br />
your local bike shop or get a tune up<br />
be<strong>for</strong>e getting out there and riding.<br />
I am looking <strong>for</strong>ward to more Thursday<br />
Night Rides and hope to see some<br />
of our readers out there!<br />
The Grey<br />
Ghost group<br />
out on one of<br />
their favorite<br />
routes.<br />
Check with<br />
your local<br />
bike shop to<br />
locate a<br />
group ride<br />
you can join.<br />
12 | DACKS & TOGA activelife
PHOTO: Shutterstock<br />
Get on a Mountain Bike:<br />
3<br />
Great Local Trail<br />
Options For Everyone<br />
By Drew Cappabianca<br />
Professionally built<br />
trails are designed <strong>for</strong><br />
a wide range of riders.<br />
Mountain Biking in the Capital<br />
Region and Adirondacks used<br />
to be reserved <strong>for</strong> a relatively<br />
small group of seasoned, often dedicated<br />
riders capable of navigating very<br />
technical terrain. They constructed<br />
the trails they rode on and those trails<br />
not only had limited access but more<br />
importantly they had limited appeal,<br />
especially with the less experienced<br />
mountain bike community. However,<br />
recent assistance from a couple of<br />
municipalities, a business group, and<br />
one local professional trail builder, has<br />
changed all of this.<br />
Up until 2013, not a single mile of<br />
professionally built mountain bike<br />
trails could be found in the Capital<br />
Region or the Adirondacks. This all<br />
changed when the Town of North Creek<br />
and the North Creek Business Alliance<br />
hired professional trail builder Steve<br />
Ovitt of Wilderness Property Management<br />
to develop single track mountain<br />
bike trails on the Town’s property at<br />
Ski Bowl Park. While initially limited,<br />
this became the genesis of local professional<br />
trail development.<br />
The following year the Town of<br />
Queensbury hired Steve to design<br />
and direct the construction of a bike<br />
park at the Town’s Gurney Lane Recreation<br />
Area. Since then trails have<br />
been added every season with more<br />
on the way in 2017. It has quickly become<br />
a top destination <strong>for</strong> local and<br />
visiting riders.<br />
So what is the importance of professionally<br />
built trails versus their<br />
volunteer built counterparts? Professionally<br />
built trails<br />
are designed <strong>for</strong> a wide<br />
range of riders and<br />
take into consideration<br />
rider ability and safety,<br />
whereas volunteer/nonprofessional<br />
builds tend<br />
to be used by those that<br />
built them, and they<br />
tend to be more experienced<br />
and capable riders.<br />
Additionally, professionals<br />
know how<br />
to create well-designed<br />
trails that are more durable.<br />
Beyond the environmental<br />
impact it<br />
should be noted that even beginner<br />
or intermediate level trails can wear<br />
down and become more difficult to<br />
navigate over time because soil erosion<br />
reveals rocks and roots. So having<br />
a trail designed to last is crucial.<br />
This doesn’t mean that professionally<br />
If you<br />
haven’t tried<br />
mountain<br />
biking in a<br />
while (or ever),<br />
I can’t be more<br />
emphatic by<br />
recommending<br />
you try it<br />
again.<br />
built trails are not enjoyable to better<br />
riders. It just means that a larger portion<br />
of the community, from beginner<br />
to expert, can enjoy them. The greatest<br />
importance of professionally built<br />
trails is the growth they help fuel the<br />
sport with.<br />
With the increase of professionally<br />
built trails fueling mountain biking<br />
growth, I must say that bike technology<br />
has also helped in this growth.<br />
Bigger wheel sizes, plus size tires, and<br />
full-suspension options allow almost<br />
anyone who can ride a bike to enjoy<br />
mountain biking. If you haven’t tried<br />
mountain biking in a while (or ever),<br />
I can’t be more emphatic by recommending<br />
you try it again. Rent, borrow,<br />
or buy one and hit the trails.<br />
You’ll have a great time! Here are just<br />
a couple of my local favorite trails:<br />
The Ski Bowl Trails have become<br />
popular to bicyclists from the North<br />
and South and they are located at<br />
Ski Bowl Park off State Route 28 in<br />
North Creek, NY (just past the turn<br />
<strong>for</strong> Gore). If you’re in the area, come<br />
try them but note this trail system is<br />
designed more <strong>for</strong> intermediate and<br />
advanced riders and less <strong>for</strong> beginner<br />
riders. When you’re done riding<br />
the main single track trail system, be<br />
sure to check out the often overlooked<br />
Raymond Brook Ski Trail via the ski<br />
bowl connector trail. The mostly double<br />
track climb leads to a fantastic decent<br />
of the Ski Trail, which features<br />
bike-specific improvements. It ends<br />
at Route 28 where you can casually<br />
pedal back on the generous shoulder<br />
and recap the day’s highlights.<br />
When you’re back at the parking lot,<br />
don’t stop there. Pedal into downtown<br />
North Creek <strong>for</strong> post-ride food and<br />
drink (or just coffee <strong>for</strong> the way home)<br />
from great places like Cafe Sarah,<br />
Izzy’s, and BarVino.<br />
Conveniently located<br />
right off exit 20 of I87<br />
in Queensbury, Gurney<br />
Lane Recreation Area in<br />
my opinion is the best<br />
place <strong>for</strong> someone interested<br />
in getting into<br />
mountain biking. It features<br />
plenty <strong>for</strong> beginner<br />
riders, has a lot to offer<br />
<strong>for</strong> intermediate riders,<br />
and enough to keep experts<br />
attentive because<br />
of challenging rock features<br />
and tight & twisty<br />
session-type trail options.<br />
You can either park behind<br />
the county home (follow the “Detention<br />
Center” sign), or continue up<br />
Gurney Lane and park at the park’s<br />
entrance. The park is so well designed<br />
that I don’t have any tips… just follow<br />
the trail maps and have a blast!<br />
– Continued<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 13
4<br />
Take the Scenic Route:<br />
By Eric J. Hamilton<br />
Photo provided<br />
Biking Along the Erie Canal<br />
The Mohawk Towpath Scenic Byway<br />
in the Capital District region<br />
of New York is a nationally recognized,<br />
historic driving route between<br />
Water<strong>for</strong>d and Cohoes to Schenectady<br />
that follows the historic Erie Canal<br />
and the waterway west. I’ve biked this<br />
byway many times and can say from<br />
experience, when you travel this route<br />
you gain an appreciation of the role<br />
our local communities played in the<br />
western expansion of the country and<br />
in the Industrial Revolution.<br />
I believe that the best way to experience<br />
the Mohawk Towpath Byway is<br />
on a bicycle. You’re moving at a casual<br />
pace and you will see much more than<br />
you would in a car that is going 30 to<br />
40 mph. On a bike you’re free to stop<br />
by a historic site, watch a blue heron<br />
or large raptor fishing <strong>for</strong> dinner, or<br />
keep pace with a cabin cruiser plying<br />
the canal. You can also photograph<br />
endangered plant species in full bloom<br />
in ancient geology, enjoy your favorite<br />
ice cream from the local convenience<br />
shop, have a fresh apple from a neighboring<br />
orchard, or just enjoy any of<br />
several appealing attractions that can<br />
be seen along the way.<br />
Canal Road in Halfmoon and Riverview<br />
Road in Clifton Park join as<br />
one of the most heavily used on-road<br />
bike routes in Saratoga County. Even<br />
though the travel lanes are narrow<br />
and without shoulders, they are rural<br />
roads along the Mohawk River and<br />
traffic is light. Further west (past the<br />
intersection with Grooms Road), Riverview<br />
Road becomes a county highway<br />
and traffic picks up noticeably. There<br />
are shoulders from Grooms Road to<br />
Route 146 in Rex<strong>for</strong>d <strong>for</strong> bicyclists to<br />
ride on.<br />
The Mohawk Hudson Bikeway on<br />
the south side of the Mohawk River<br />
is an alternate route between Route<br />
9 west of Cohoes to Aqueduct. This<br />
makes <strong>for</strong> an inviting segment of a loop<br />
with river crossings that are about 12<br />
miles apart. It’s a ride that is especially<br />
popular on hot summer days since<br />
the bikeway passes through shaded<br />
woodlands along the south shore of<br />
the river.<br />
This spring the newly reconstructed<br />
Towpath Trail will connect from Canal<br />
Road through the Vischer Ferry Nature<br />
and Historic Preserve to the Lock<br />
7 Dam Overlook (just west of the hamlet<br />
of Vischer Ferry). This towpath of<br />
14 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
the 1842 Enlarged Erie Canal has a<br />
hard trail surface that is fine <strong>for</strong> any<br />
road bicycle.<br />
On June 4, my hometown of Clifton<br />
Park will host a casual afternoon<br />
group ride that will visit historic sites<br />
along the Byway and the Towpath<br />
Trail in celebration of National Trails<br />
Day. Our town’s local historian will<br />
attend the ride and share some humorous<br />
stories, and other stories that<br />
should provide great insight into life<br />
on the canal over the<br />
last two centuries. Light,<br />
homemade refreshments<br />
are planned <strong>for</strong> those<br />
who may get hungry. For<br />
more in<strong>for</strong>mation contact<br />
the Town of Clifton Park’s<br />
Parks and Recreation Office<br />
at (518) 371-6667.<br />
Volunteers along the<br />
Byway corridor have<br />
hosted “Bike the Byway”<br />
events that are casual<br />
rides from Rex<strong>for</strong>d east<br />
through Clifton Park, Halfmoon, and<br />
Water<strong>for</strong>d and down to Water<strong>for</strong>d Harbor.<br />
There is also a self-guided tour of<br />
historic features that cyclists can access<br />
by stopping along the Byway and<br />
keying in (518) 649-9990 on their cell<br />
phone or scanning a QR code.<br />
In addition to the fun rides I’ve mentioned<br />
above, I strongly recommend you<br />
take a bike ride or a hike up the flight<br />
of locks in Water<strong>for</strong>d. Five locks lift watercraft<br />
from the Hudson River to the<br />
Mohawk River in less than two miles.<br />
This is the highest lift in the shortest<br />
On a bike<br />
you’re free<br />
to stop by a<br />
historic site,<br />
watch a blue<br />
heron or large<br />
raptor fishing<br />
<strong>for</strong> dinner...<br />
distance any where in the world! I also<br />
recommend you visit the Cohoes Falls<br />
which is the navigational barrier the<br />
Erie Canal was constructed around<br />
and, don’t miss the historic Stockade<br />
area in Schenectady. Biking its treelined<br />
narrow streets through architecturally<br />
significant historic homes (several<br />
of which date back to early Dutch<br />
settlers) is always a pleasure.<br />
The only downside to cycling on the<br />
Mohawk Towpath Byway is that none<br />
of the local bike shops<br />
want to rent bicycles<br />
due to the high cost of<br />
liability insurance and<br />
the cost of maintaining<br />
the rental bicycle fleet.<br />
There is a growing movement,<br />
however, to change<br />
this as more and more<br />
communities are making<br />
use of bike-share operations<br />
and more out-oftown<br />
visitors discover<br />
our area and discover our<br />
recreational assets. Here’s a tip: even<br />
though a growing number of cyclists<br />
commute to work on these routes, <strong>for</strong><br />
a more pleasant experience, visiting<br />
bicyclists should try to avoid traveling<br />
the crossings of the Mohawk River during<br />
weekday commuter rush hours.<br />
So, bike the Mohawk Towpath Byway<br />
and discover the eastern gateway<br />
to the only water level route through<br />
the Appalachian Mountains. Bike it<br />
at a leisurely pace, in manageable segments,<br />
and discover something new<br />
right here in our own backyard.<br />
Even though this section of Riverview Road in<br />
Rex<strong>for</strong>d is a heavily traveled segment of the Byway,<br />
there are better shoulders to accommodate cyclists and<br />
pedestrians. The iconic views make this a great stop.
Glens Falls YMCA<br />
personal trainer<br />
Bob Olden gives me<br />
a run-through on<br />
the basics.<br />
Right: A better view<br />
of my spin cycle.<br />
5<br />
Expand Your Routine:<br />
Push Your Fitness<br />
Limits with Spinning<br />
By Gabrielle Katz<br />
If you’re looking to change up your<br />
current workout routine, or supplement<br />
your bike training when<br />
the weather doesn’t cooperate, then a<br />
spin class may be <strong>for</strong> you.<br />
I jog somewhat regularly, but sometimes<br />
find it a little tedious. When<br />
Spring arrives, I like to hop on my<br />
bike to break up my routine. However,<br />
I’m never sure that I’m giving myself<br />
a great workout. The memory of two<br />
bike accidents many years ago has<br />
made me over-cautious<br />
and keeps me from pushing<br />
my limits when I’m<br />
out on the road.<br />
I was interested in<br />
learning what a proper<br />
bike workout might feel<br />
like. I had heard through<br />
the grapevine that the<br />
12:15 class at the Glens<br />
Falls YMCA was popular<br />
and motivational, so I<br />
chose it as my first <strong>for</strong>ay<br />
into spinning.<br />
The Glens Falls YMCA<br />
spin studio has 34 indoor<br />
cycles, all maintained in excellent condition.<br />
I was warned to arrive early as<br />
the class is often close to full, even at<br />
lunchtime. The class is appropriate <strong>for</strong><br />
people at all levels. I did have some<br />
concerns heading in: would I be able to<br />
keep up, and would it seem as boring<br />
to me as running on a treadmill does?<br />
Luckily, I learned that the Friday class<br />
I chose would be a virtual class, and<br />
we would be working out to a video as<br />
well as music.<br />
We passed a<br />
roadside food<br />
stand and an<br />
ice cream<br />
truck, but our<br />
pursuit of the<br />
rider ahead<br />
of us never<br />
wavered.<br />
When I arrived at class I met the<br />
trainer, Bob Olden, who was super<br />
friendly and helpful. Bob introduced<br />
me to my cycle, a beautiful Keiser M3,<br />
and helped me adjust the seat and<br />
handlebars to my height. Next came<br />
the pedals which have two options:<br />
You can lock in with your bike shoe, or<br />
you can wear sneakers and strap into<br />
the basket. He showed me the computerized<br />
console and the separate<br />
indicators <strong>for</strong> RPMs, watts, heart rate,<br />
elapsed time, gear and<br />
mileage. The stem of the<br />
cycle has a red lever at<br />
a convenient spot where<br />
you can easily adjust<br />
gears with your thumb.<br />
Of course, we are not<br />
actually shifting gears,<br />
but increasing tension<br />
up and down to replicate<br />
gear shifts. I learned<br />
that I would need to find<br />
a “base” gear that I was<br />
com<strong>for</strong>table with, and<br />
that I would be shifting<br />
up and down at his direction<br />
throughout the workout. Once<br />
we were “in the zone”, we would burn<br />
10-12 calories a minute, and 400-500<br />
calories per session.<br />
In an actual bike ride, the movements<br />
your body makes as you pedal<br />
up and down hills naturally work all<br />
the parts of your body. On a stationary<br />
bike, you are coached to shift positions<br />
<strong>for</strong>ward and back, up and down,<br />
to give everything, glutes, hamstrings,<br />
calves, etc., a good workout. Bob does<br />
the workout along with the class, guiding<br />
and motivating us.<br />
Bob in<strong>for</strong>med me that we would be<br />
travelling to the Canary Islands <strong>for</strong><br />
our ride. He finds destination videos<br />
of virtual bike rides on YouTube and<br />
plays them <strong>for</strong> the class. The video<br />
also shows a graphic of the ascents<br />
and descents of the ride, as well as<br />
the route and our progress. Our trip<br />
that day would entail a short incline,<br />
a short downhill, and then a long<br />
steady incline. The lights dimmed, the<br />
music played, the video started and<br />
off we went.<br />
Following the bike rider on the<br />
screen felt very real. At various times,<br />
Bob urged us to get out of the saddle<br />
and try to pass him. We pedaled past<br />
an overlook, but didn’t stop to catch<br />
the view. We passed a roadside food<br />
stand and an ice cream truck, but our<br />
pursuit of the rider ahead of us never<br />
wavered. This was a tough workout<br />
and I pushed myself hard. There were<br />
a few times when I felt I was struggling,<br />
but Bob’s motivation got me through.<br />
“Put more water in the back of the<br />
bucket”, or, “Put more water in the<br />
front of the bucket”, he would shout,<br />
to get us to shift our hip positions and<br />
work a different part of our legs. On<br />
steep inclines he would urge, “Dig! Dig!<br />
Dig!” and dig is what I did. Best of all, I<br />
found myself leaning over the handlebars<br />
and pedaling really hard down the<br />
hill, something I would be too afraid to<br />
do out on the road. I learned not only<br />
what a phenomenal workout spinning<br />
is, but, as an exercise loner, I learned<br />
how great it is to work with a trainer in<br />
a class setting.<br />
Soon, the ride was over. I got off the<br />
spin cycle feeling like my entire body<br />
had been well-worked. Better yet, I had<br />
one of those after-workout highs and<br />
felt great all day. My first spin class<br />
was a terrific experience, truly one of<br />
the best workouts I have ever done. I<br />
highly recommend adding spinning to<br />
your routine!<br />
n<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 15
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16 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
Job # 000 - Tom Stock - Sales Rep/Artist
6 Essentials<br />
to Fitness<br />
In our struggle to improve and advance, we tend to<br />
over-complicate all facets of health, nutrition, fitness, and<br />
sport-specific training. The motivation is admirable, and the ef<strong>for</strong>t is<br />
celebrated, but are we really improving, or are we merely spinning<br />
our wheels? More importantly, what should we actually be focusing<br />
on with regard to improving our health and fitness?<br />
by Duncan Callahan<br />
As I’ve tried to answer these questions<br />
over the past few years, I’ve taken<br />
a close look at peers of mine who maintain<br />
or improve their fitness consistently.<br />
What are they doing in order to continually<br />
improve? Why does it seem like their<br />
set-backs don’t actually set them back?<br />
Is it mental? Is it genetic? What is the difference<br />
between those who remain fit and<br />
healthy, and those who gain weight, struggle<br />
with their health, and end up tired or<br />
injured? My observations have led me to<br />
the following conclusions.<br />
Those successful in maintaining<br />
1 or improving their health and fitness are<br />
in it <strong>for</strong> the long haul. They acknowledge<br />
that their immediate goals are of secondary<br />
importance to their long term plans.<br />
Pushing through injury, causing pain, and<br />
exalting deprivation will lead to nothing<br />
but injury, burn-out, and bitterness. Instead,<br />
successful individuals build consistent<br />
daily actions which add up over time<br />
to lead them to their desired outcome.<br />
n THE TAKEAWAY: Focus on the<br />
long term and don’t beat yourself up if<br />
you miss a day.<br />
Successful individuals work with<br />
2 their physiology, instead of warring<br />
against it. They understand what their<br />
weaknesses are, and attempt to improve<br />
in those areas. However, they do not dwell<br />
on those weaknesses. Instead, these individuals<br />
focus on incremental improvement<br />
in their weak areas, while not short-changing<br />
working on their strengths. It is a balanced<br />
approach.<br />
n THE TAKEAWAY: Work with your<br />
body and stop warring against it.<br />
The most successful athletes view<br />
3 food as fuel, instead of using exercise<br />
as an excuse to eat more. The better the<br />
fuel, the better they feel. Eat clean and<br />
the body will respond to the demands you<br />
place upon it. So, what does it mean to<br />
eat clean? That’s a tough question, but in<br />
general I’ve observed the most successful<br />
individuals tend to focus on simply eating<br />
real food - large quantities of non-starchy<br />
vegetables, high quality fruit, healthy fats,<br />
and quality meat.<br />
n THE TAKEAWAY: Avoid processed<br />
food and embrace a low sugar diet.<br />
Whether we look at the weekend<br />
4 warrior or the elite athlete, those who<br />
are truly successful over the long haul<br />
respect the need to take time off – daily,<br />
weekly, monthly, and yearly. They view<br />
daily sleep as vital to health and important<br />
<strong>for</strong> recovery from training. Taking one day<br />
off per week is crucial <strong>for</strong> physical adaptations,<br />
and these individuals make sure<br />
to adhere to this. The most successful<br />
also make sure to have one week of lower<br />
workload per month, which is important <strong>for</strong><br />
long-term improvement. What about yearly?<br />
I’ve observed that the most successful<br />
take up to 2 months off from structured<br />
training per year. They’re still active, but<br />
not in a regimented training plan.<br />
n THE TAKEAWAY: Respect the<br />
need to recover and rest – your body<br />
will thank you.<br />
I’ve witnessed so many people<br />
5 make the mistake of falling behind on<br />
their fitness goals during the work week,<br />
only to try and make up <strong>for</strong> it on the weekend<br />
with a century ride, a long run, or a<br />
very hard ef<strong>for</strong>t in the gym. Although this<br />
may be better than nothing, it’s also a<br />
recipe <strong>for</strong> injury and frustration. The successful<br />
athletes and individuals I know<br />
make sure to set a minimum amount to do<br />
each day, and then they prioritize getting<br />
it done. These successful individuals get<br />
their training and fitness activities done<br />
when they can, but nearly all of them get it<br />
done first thing in the morning.<br />
n THE TAKEAWAY: Establish a<br />
minimum that you can get done each<br />
day and prioritize getting it done early.<br />
Perhaps the most important characteristic<br />
of individuals successful in<br />
6<br />
maintaining and improving fitness is their<br />
ability to limit stress and eliminate the nonessential<br />
aspects of their life. These people<br />
have the ability to finish work, turn their<br />
over-thinking brain off, and focus on what<br />
else they need to do that day. They don’t<br />
dwell on what didn’t get accomplished.<br />
They don’t dwell on their email inbox. Instead,<br />
they simply acknowledge that they<br />
have more work to do, and it can wait until<br />
they get back to work. This characteristic<br />
is indeed a powerful one. In addition,<br />
these people don’t waste time on social<br />
media, fantasy sports, or unnecessary<br />
technology. They focus.<br />
n THE TAKEAWAY: Reduce stress<br />
by acknowledging that you have limits<br />
to how much you can accomplish in<br />
a day, and don’t waste time on things<br />
that add little value to your life.<br />
Want to be successful in maintaining<br />
or improving your health and<br />
fitness? Pick one or more of the above<br />
bullet-points and implement it into your<br />
life. Focus on the things you can control<br />
and don’t worry about what others think.<br />
Shift your mind-set to the long term and<br />
your body (and your mind) will thank<br />
you. Here’s to successfully maintaining<br />
and improving our health and fitness.<br />
Thanks <strong>for</strong> reading. –DC<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 17
health & wellness<br />
Surviving a<br />
Minor Injury<br />
It can take quite some time and<br />
ingenuity to recover from a sprained<br />
foot or other mishap. Here are some<br />
tips to help speed up the process.<br />
IN CASE OF INJURY...<br />
When I was seven, I broke my wrist on one of the very<br />
last days of second grade be<strong>for</strong>e school let out <strong>for</strong><br />
the summer. Back then I had no adult responsibilities.<br />
My only concern was keeping my plaster cast dry <strong>for</strong><br />
six weeks while I, unable to swim at our town park with my friends,<br />
stood waist deep in the water with a plastic bread bag secured<br />
around my arm.<br />
I’ve been more than lucky not to have suffered any serious injuries<br />
since then, but a recent sprained foot poked a serious hole in the<br />
memory of my seven-year-old-self calmly lazing through a restful<br />
summer recuperation as I waited to get back in the water. In fact,<br />
nothing surprised me more than how completely sidelined I felt by<br />
what I considered to be a minor injury.<br />
The pitfalls are out there: tree roots, loose gravel, steep inclines<br />
and rocky slopes. And so it was <strong>for</strong> me, hiking up a hill in deep<br />
snow, when my foot rolled sideways. I knew I had<br />
hurt myself somewhat, but it wasn’t until I woke up at<br />
midnight in excruciating pain that I knew that I needed<br />
to get to the emergency room. After a struggle to get<br />
dressed and get a sock over my painfully swollen foot,<br />
I crawled across the floor to the top of the stairs. I then<br />
had to push myself down the stairs, inching downward<br />
in a sitting position. At the bottom my husband handed<br />
me an old, hand-carved wooden cane that we found at<br />
an antique shop and kept in an umbrella stand as decoration. It was<br />
utterly useless. Our front steps were icy. The struggle to get to the<br />
car while hopping on my right foot, and actually getting through the<br />
lobby of the ER, was exhausting.<br />
A couple of hours, some good pain medication and an X-ray<br />
later, I learned I had a sprain. Not a break thankfully, but a painful<br />
inconvenience that would certainly need time to heal. My foot was<br />
wrapped in an ace bandage and I was issued a pair of crutches and<br />
sent home. Here are some of the obvious and not-so-obvious things<br />
I learned the hard way:<br />
n Read the doctor’s orders thoroughly. Don’t<br />
just listen to your doctor’s recommendations. Read everything the<br />
nurse gives you, and not just the first few paragraphs. If I had done<br />
so, I would have remembered that I needed to continue icing and<br />
elevating my foot into the 2nd and 3rd day. Instead, I slacked<br />
off after the first day. A week later I had to repeat the entire<br />
icing/elevation process to reset my recuperation.<br />
n Stay home from work <strong>for</strong> at least two days,<br />
if not three. I only stayed home one day. Feeling invincible, I headed<br />
<strong>for</strong> the office. It was a mistake. While I pretty much stayed in my<br />
chair and everyone kindly helped me, I couldn’t elevate or ice my<br />
foot. The healing process stagnated and I exhausted myself<br />
hobbling around.<br />
n Don’t do any long-distance driving. On the third<br />
day after my injury, I took a three hour trip to a prior commitment.<br />
Another mistake. I figured that my sprained left foot wouldn’t have<br />
to do anything but rest while I drove, but it was one of the worst<br />
things I could have done. By the end of the trip, my foot, resting<br />
in one position on the floor of the car each way <strong>for</strong> three hours,<br />
turned into a swollen, numb, painful stiff stump. Next time I’ll<br />
cancel and stay home.<br />
18 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
n Take it easy. Yes, even though you are getting help from<br />
loved ones, you will see the chores are piling up around the house.<br />
Or maybe you don’t like being dependent. You begin to feel a little<br />
better and start taking on all of your usual tasks. You start moving<br />
around frequently on your crutches, and hopping and standing on<br />
one foot. Don’t. If you do, you will start to overcompensate with the<br />
rest of your body. Pretty soon, your neck aches, your hands ache<br />
from the crutches and from scooting up and down the stairs, then<br />
your good foot starts hurting and you’ve pinched a nerve in your<br />
armpit from slamming around on the crutches. You may not have<br />
re-injured your foot, but you’ve risked sustaining another injury to<br />
another part of your body.
n A pair of crutches belongs in every athlete’s<br />
emergency kit. As soon as the nurse in the ER fitted me with my<br />
crutches, I realized how valuable they would be to have on hand.<br />
If this ever happens to me again, I have a great tool to use until<br />
I can see a doctor. The crutches are adjustable so that they fit<br />
people within an eight-inch range of height. That means family<br />
members and friends can use them in a pinch. If you don’t want to<br />
invest in crutches, at least get yourself a good cane.<br />
n Check out some videos. It turns out that crutches<br />
are not that easy to use. They take some getting used to. In addition<br />
to the aches and pains mentioned above, navigating on them<br />
too quickly can cause you to lose your balance. After about 5 days<br />
of frustration and discom<strong>for</strong>t, I finally checked Youtube and found<br />
several instructional videos on how to properly use crutches. The<br />
videos reminded me that I needed to slow down and be more<br />
intentional in my movements. I also realized that the hand braces<br />
were not exactly at the correct height, so I repositioned them.<br />
My only caveat: if you live or work in an old building, check out the<br />
stability of the banisters be<strong>for</strong>e you follow their recommendations<br />
<strong>for</strong> scaling any staircases.<br />
n Backpack it. Crutches tie up both hands. You cannot<br />
carry anything, or even bring a cup of coffee to the table. You will<br />
have to ask loved ones <strong>for</strong> a lot of help! Not only did I ditch my<br />
purse <strong>for</strong> a backpack, I kept the backpack with me even in the<br />
house. I found that traveling around my home with a backpack<br />
helped me keep things tidied up and saved extra trips going up<br />
and down stairs.<br />
n A transport wheelchair is an added plus. A week<br />
into my recuperation, my sister gave me our late father’s transport<br />
wheelchair to use. It was a lightweight, foldable dream come true.<br />
If anyone in your extended family has one of these, tell them to hold<br />
on to it. The wheelchair gave me the freedom to tool around the<br />
kitchen and prepare meals. I could get heavy items from the fridge,<br />
carry liquids to the table and unload the dishwasher. If I had gotten<br />
the wheelchair earlier, my entire first week would have been<br />
immeasurably easier.<br />
n Don’t wait until your old age to age-proof your<br />
house. If you are an active person, or you have a child participating<br />
in sports, sooner or later someone in your home will get injured. The<br />
same modifications that help an elderly person age in place are just<br />
as useful <strong>for</strong> an active athlete. While I was grateful that we already<br />
had a walk-in shower, I still felt the need <strong>for</strong> a grab bar. A grab bar<br />
in the shower will also allow an injured teenager to shower privately<br />
and safely. I also needed a shower seat because I did not feel stable<br />
standing on one foot on a slick shower floor. Truth be told, we do<br />
have a leftover portable shower seat from taking care of an elderly<br />
parent. However, it was in the garage, legs caked in dirt, as I’d been<br />
using it as a seat while I weeded the garden. I will definitely clean it<br />
up and reclaim it <strong>for</strong> its proper use. I also found that the two built-in,<br />
counter-height, pull-out cutting boards on either side of my kitchen<br />
stove were incredibly helpful while cooking dinner in a wheelchair.<br />
n Sneakers, Sneakers, Sneakers! I did not try to<br />
wear high heels, but I did try to wear shoes that turned out to be<br />
completely inappropriate. These shoes looked harmless because<br />
they were relatively flat, but they caused a lot of stress. Wearing<br />
shoes and boots with stiff leather or even a one-inch heel will<br />
put a lot of strain on your foot. They set my progress so far<br />
backward that I needed to go back to sneakers again exclusively<br />
during the fourth week.<br />
n Don’t be overconfident. Once you start feeling<br />
better, your confidence will snowball and you will start moving<br />
around as usual. Don’t. Keep your movements methodical and<br />
intentional <strong>for</strong> several weeks and don’t overdo it, or you will surely<br />
find yourself back at square one.<br />
-Gabrielle Katz<br />
PHOTOS: Shutterstock<br />
Perfect, Picnic-Worthy,<br />
Pack-and-Go Protein<br />
Snacks <strong>for</strong> <strong>Active</strong><br />
People<br />
Just because you’re<br />
out hiking, biking,<br />
training or getting fit,<br />
it doesn’t mean you<br />
have to sacrifice great<br />
taste or solid food <strong>for</strong><br />
your protein boost.<br />
With the warm weather<br />
approaching, it’s also<br />
good to know these<br />
snacks can go several<br />
hours without<br />
refrigeration.<br />
EGGS<br />
6g Protein<br />
per serving<br />
Scrambled Egg Muffins: Spray a muffin tin with non-stick<br />
spray. Scramble up some eggs and fill muffin cups, one egg<br />
per cup. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Bake <strong>for</strong> 20 minutes<br />
at 350°. Add any ingredients you like to suit your taste:<br />
spices, sauteed onions, peppers or sausage, sundried<br />
tomatoes, shredded cheese...use your imagination.<br />
Let cool, put in a zip-loc bag, pack them up and go.<br />
BEEF<br />
JERKY<br />
7g Protein<br />
per serving<br />
Beef Jerky and Fruit: Yes, we know, beef jerky<br />
does come out of a package. But, when you pair it with fruit,<br />
it’s a completely different flavor experience as well as a more<br />
complete meal. Our favorite is jerky paired with orange slices,<br />
but apples and grapes also pair well.<br />
PEANUT<br />
BUTTER<br />
8g Protein<br />
per serving<br />
Peanut Butter Banana Rollups: Spread a whole wheat<br />
wrap with peanut butter, layer with sliced bananas and roll it<br />
all up. Yes, it’s simple, but also delicious and filling. You may<br />
want to carry these in a tupperware container in your pack.<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 19
active life Profile<br />
Bill Parks<br />
Bill training on roller<br />
skis last Fall on the<br />
Warren County Bikeway.<br />
Opposite: Bill changing<br />
into his boots in the back<br />
of his famous van, top, and<br />
more training on the snow<br />
last Winter at Mt. Van<br />
Hoevenberg, bottom.<br />
Photos: Jody Katz
Skis the Birkebeiner:<br />
Be<strong>for</strong>e and After<br />
B ill Parks waited <strong>for</strong>ty years between<br />
his first ski marathon and his quest <strong>for</strong><br />
the Birkebeiner. Here he shows us that<br />
it’s never too late to take on a challenge.<br />
The 2007 gray Chevy Express van<br />
shows the scars of many North Country<br />
winters and is a lot quieter on the inside<br />
and far emptier. What once was recognizable<br />
all throughout the Adirondacks <strong>for</strong><br />
ferrying a dozen or so exuberant Glens<br />
Falls High School Nordic skiers and their<br />
gear to practices and meets now usually<br />
carries just one occupant and his equipment.<br />
The laughter that once resonated<br />
through the van’s interior panels has since<br />
subsided but is not <strong>for</strong>gotten. The odometer<br />
proudly shows 97,000 miles and the<br />
intrepid van still ably climbs the winding,<br />
sometimes icy, often pot-holed hills of the<br />
North Country that can humble many newer<br />
vehicles. Like Bill Parks, the van has<br />
led a focused and sometimes glorious life.<br />
Like Bill Parks, the van is always ready <strong>for</strong><br />
the next challenge.<br />
For Bill, his latest challenge was the<br />
European Birkebeiner that he raced on<br />
March 18. It was a 54 km (33.5 mile)<br />
cross country classic ski race-from Rena<br />
to Lillehammer, Norway-that is steeped in<br />
history, and one Bill has wanted to do <strong>for</strong><br />
several years. At age 73, and having retired<br />
from over three decades of teaching<br />
and coaching in the Glens Falls’ school<br />
system, he decided to join racers from all<br />
over the world to take on this historic event<br />
that was first re-enacted in 1932.<br />
The Birkebeiner’s nearly 17,000 racers<br />
typically face a variable terrain that goes<br />
through <strong>for</strong>ests, over mountains and even<br />
over bare rock. All skiers are required to<br />
wear a backpack weighing at least 7.7<br />
pounds. The weighted backpack and the<br />
race itself re-enact the carrying of Prince<br />
Haakon, the 18-month old heir to the Norwegian<br />
throne by two of the Birkebeiner<br />
group’s best Nordic skiers in 1206 as they<br />
safely smuggled him out of Norway to protect<br />
him from death by the hands of their<br />
warring rivals, the Baglers.<br />
The escape included spending a stormy<br />
Christmas Day in a mountain with nothing<br />
but snow to feed the hungry baby Haakon.<br />
They survived that great escape and Haakon<br />
grew to be the sole King of Norway,<br />
uniting the two rival factions. This is why<br />
Lillehammer is the only town in the world<br />
with a skier on its coat of arms.<br />
We caught up with Bill training <strong>for</strong> the<br />
Birkie on two occasions: the first time was<br />
last Fall when he was rollerskiing on the<br />
Warren County Bikeway, and the second<br />
time was several weeks be<strong>for</strong>e he left <strong>for</strong><br />
Norway, where we met him on snow at the<br />
Nordic Ski Center at Mt. Van Hoevenberg.<br />
<strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong> Magazine asked Bill a round of<br />
questions regarding the Birkie be<strong>for</strong>e he<br />
left <strong>for</strong> the race. This is what he told us:<br />
<strong>Active</strong> <strong>Life</strong>: How does your<br />
family feel about you participating in<br />
the Birkie? Any concerns? Anyone<br />
against it?<br />
Bill Parks: Everyone positive and<br />
supportive. My wife was hoping I would<br />
find someone to join me. Once I did, she<br />
gave the seal of approval.<br />
AL: So who will be racing with you<br />
in this year’s race?<br />
BP: Darwin Roosa, who joined me on<br />
my first trip to Norway, will travel with me<br />
and will also be racing. He has done it in<br />
the past.<br />
AL: Have you fully recovered from<br />
your recent hip replacement?<br />
BP: No problems. My orthopedic surgeon<br />
is enthusiastic about my adventure.<br />
I plan to have a Brigham and Women’s<br />
Hospital logo on my pack! I wouldn’t be<br />
there without their repair work!<br />
AL: When was the last time you<br />
participated in a race of this length?<br />
BP: In the late 1970s I did the Vermont<br />
Ski Marathon...60 kms. from South<br />
Lincoln to Brandon. After that, the longest<br />
races were 25 kilometers at the Masters<br />
race of the Empire State Games in the<br />
early to mid 1980s.<br />
AL: Since practicing on snow has<br />
been hard lately, will you be ready <strong>for</strong><br />
the race be<strong>for</strong>e you leave?<br />
BP: There was a bad spell from Thanksgiving<br />
through early January. I was sick<br />
twice and missed about a week each time.<br />
Lack of snow and a cautious return after<br />
sickness reduced my training big time.<br />
Things have improved rapidly over the last<br />
week and a half. Finishing the distance<br />
shouldn’t be a problem. How speedy I am<br />
will depend on a lot of things, one of which<br />
is how effectively I am able to train.<br />
AL: Have you consulted others who<br />
have raced the Birkie on how to race<br />
t<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 21
Bill working<br />
hard on a climb<br />
at a mid-point in<br />
the Birkebeiner.<br />
Photo Courtesy of<br />
Bill Parks<br />
it, what to expect, etc.?<br />
BP: I have talked to 5 people who have<br />
raced it or skied parts of the course and<br />
quizzed them about what to expect.<br />
Oddly, none of them mentioned the<br />
eight miles of up hill that one immediately<br />
faces, but rather, they remembered<br />
the high speeds of the six mile down hill<br />
towards the end. I have also viewed the<br />
2015 elite race to appraise the terrain and<br />
conditions I will encounter.<br />
AL: What are your expectations?<br />
BP: In perfect conditions I hope to<br />
average about 8 minutes per mile. Perfect<br />
conditions means no head winds, cool<br />
snow conditions, a good wax job and<br />
nothing falling out of the sky. All of that on<br />
the same day would be like winning Lotto!<br />
22 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
AL: What is your race plan?<br />
BP: Cautious but steady up the long first<br />
climb, cruise as fast is sensible over the<br />
mountain tops, stay on my feet on the<br />
long descent and see what’s left on the<br />
level-ish last 5 kms.<br />
AL: Do you have any tricks up your<br />
sleeve to help you in the race?<br />
BP: I plan to wear a heart rate monitor.<br />
From training: I know how high I can let<br />
things get (briefly) and recover quickly,<br />
how high I can sustain a high rate <strong>for</strong><br />
longer periods and recover given a longer<br />
easy stretch, and I know heart rates that<br />
I can maintain <strong>for</strong> long periods where<br />
conditions are fast. Armed with that<br />
in<strong>for</strong>mation, I feel I can execute my<br />
race plan.<br />
Bill’s Birkie Fundraiser <strong>for</strong> Friends of Cole’s Woods<br />
In addition to everything else he does, Bill Parks is a long-time board<br />
member and trail groomer <strong>for</strong> the Friends of Cole’s Woods, the non-profit,<br />
volunteer organization that maintains the ski trails in Cole’s Woods in<br />
Glens Falls and Queensbury. With his thoughtfulness and ingenuity,<br />
Bill trans<strong>for</strong>med his Birkie quest into a fundraiser <strong>for</strong> the Friends of Cole’s<br />
Woods, offering donors the opportunity to sponsor him by the kilometer or<br />
by the mile. The response exceeded expectations, and the<br />
Friends of Cole’s Woods were thankful. Good job, Bill!<br />
AL: What gear will you be using (our<br />
readers will like to know)?<br />
BP: Fischer Carbonlite skis, Madshus<br />
Hyper RPC boots and Swix Star CT1<br />
composite poles.<br />
AL: Are there any break/rest stops<br />
within the race?<br />
BP: Well, if I get tired I can lie down in<br />
the snow. There are food and drink<br />
stations at 9, 15, 28, 34 and 40 kms. They<br />
tend to put them on gradual down grades<br />
so one can grab something and ingest it<br />
as they coast along.<br />
AL: What parts/areas of the race do<br />
you expect to be faster at and what<br />
areas will be harder?<br />
BP: The long, gradual climb will be a<br />
challenge and it is hard to predict how that<br />
will go. I am confident that I can cruise at<br />
the required rate on flat and rolling terrain.<br />
Hopefully the down hills will offset the<br />
slow chug up the long hills!<br />
AL: Will you race this race again?<br />
BP: Currently I am resting about <strong>for</strong>ty<br />
years between these long races....<br />
AL: What’s the next athletic challenge<br />
you will be undertaking?<br />
BP: I have a couple of grandchildren<br />
who need brain washing so we can ski together<br />
<strong>for</strong> as long as I can wobble around.
SO, HOW’D HE DO?<br />
We touched based with Bill as he<br />
was relaxing in Florida, and still<br />
recovering from a cold that affected his<br />
Birkie race. Here is his follow-up:<br />
It is good to be back in the U.S. and settled.<br />
I was still sick traveling home. Moving<br />
luggage around and trying to guess<br />
which medicine to take to avoid coughing<br />
attacks on a long plane ride were stressful.<br />
I wanted to avoid being asked to leave<br />
the plane at 35,000 feet.<br />
On race day I started cautiously, which<br />
had been my plan. Within a kilometer,<br />
however, I knew I had to almost hike the<br />
initial 14 kms. I had good grip but very little<br />
glide. I hoped to gain time on the mountaintops<br />
where it would be flatter. But my<br />
biggest concern was to finish and that<br />
concern was real because I could feel the<br />
negative effects of the cold and the lack of<br />
sleep I had experienced as a result.<br />
We waxed the night be<strong>for</strong>e the race,<br />
(the bus to the start left at 4:15 AM). We<br />
had skied the last 16 kms of the course<br />
the day be<strong>for</strong>e the race and had a wax<br />
job that worked well. The <strong>for</strong>ecast <strong>for</strong> the<br />
start, finish and high point of the course<br />
was <strong>for</strong> no snow and temps like the day<br />
be<strong>for</strong>e. My companion, Darwin Roosa,<br />
and I felt (and our experienced group<br />
leader agreed) that the wax job we had<br />
been using should be good and we reapplied<br />
it. We ironed in a very thin coat<br />
of KR20, added a very thin coat of KR35<br />
and then a coat of K21 silver universal.<br />
After freezing that wax we added several<br />
thin coats of extra blue hard wax in case<br />
we encountered a dusting of powder.<br />
The day was beautiful, sunny, no<br />
serious wind and temps in the high 20s to<br />
mid -30s along the course. Un<strong>for</strong>tunately,<br />
counter to all the weather data we had,<br />
there had been 1/4 to 1/2 an inch of powder<br />
over about 80% of the course. So, I am<br />
afraid we did not wax correctly as was the<br />
case with a lot of others. At the high point<br />
of the course, I pulled into a complementary<br />
Swix Wax Station. As I explained my<br />
problem (which was unnecessary, since<br />
everyone was having the same problem),<br />
the Swix guys released my bindings and<br />
in about a minute and a half scraped most<br />
of my klister off and applied VR 55. In two<br />
minutes I was on my way! I had good wax<br />
<strong>for</strong> about the last 18 kms including the big<br />
down hills.<br />
I got sweaty by the top of the initial 1700<br />
ft. over 14 kms. At that point we hit a little<br />
breeze and I was getting chilled. I stopped<br />
<strong>for</strong> dry gloves but resisted the idea of a<br />
warmer top. That was good because the<br />
warmer hands and the sun above tree line<br />
warmed me up.<br />
There is a lot of time to think during a<br />
race this long. It was discouraging when I<br />
got up the first huge climb and discovered<br />
that my wax was slow on the parts of the<br />
course where I had been expecting to do<br />
best. On down hills I’d be in a tuck and<br />
skiers would be roaring past. I would be<br />
double poling and they would be off in the<br />
distance still in a tuck. In terrain where I<br />
had been double poling with a kick while<br />
training all winter I was single poling.<br />
There were kilometer markers. At 25 kms<br />
would be a sign announcing I was 29 kms<br />
from the finish. It would cross my mind that<br />
two weeks be<strong>for</strong>e I had skied about 25<br />
kms, which was my longer training days of<br />
the winter. Eventually I would subtract 14<br />
kms from what I had left since I knew that<br />
There is a lot of time to<br />
think during a race this long.<br />
It was discouraging when<br />
I got up the first huge climb<br />
and discovered that my wax<br />
was slow...<br />
part was mostly downhill followed by a few<br />
level kms. That made things seem more<br />
manageable!<br />
Food and fluids were easy. There were<br />
regular feed stations with warm sports<br />
drinks, some bars and banana chunks<br />
plus I had some favorite granola bars.<br />
The course was every bit as challenging<br />
as I had imagined. I was plenty tired at the<br />
end but I have been more tired on many<br />
occasions. Once I realized that my health<br />
and wax job would make my time goal unrealistic,<br />
I was not pushing the way I would<br />
in race mode.<br />
Approaching the finish line, I had no<br />
idea of a big sprint finish. I was, however<br />
eager to be done and at the last twenty<br />
yards I changed tracks and passed two<br />
guys rather than lose momentum.<br />
Darwin, a youthful 66 and who has been<br />
racing regularly all season, did well but<br />
also suffered with a slow wax job. He finished<br />
in 5 hours and 11 minutes. He was<br />
160th out of 238 65-69 yr. olds. I was 5<br />
hour and 59 minutes and 151st out of 177<br />
70-74 yr. olds.<br />
The best of it was the scenery, being<br />
part of this huge cross country ski happening,<br />
meeting interesting people from<br />
all parts of the ski world and the thrills and<br />
chills of the plummet down the final 13<br />
kms towards Lillehammer. To appreciate<br />
the hills go to https://www.youtube.com/<br />
watch?v=gxdz6_8gA-Q<br />
Assuming you don’t want to watch all<br />
2 1/2 hours, move your cursor to 2:03 and<br />
watch Martin Sundby, (who double poles<br />
the entire race), start down the hills. After<br />
a brief look at the standings, a snowmobile<br />
follows the second and third skiers down<br />
the hill at 45 to 50 miles per hour. The<br />
video will show what the conditions and<br />
weather were like.<br />
I did my first ski marathon in 1977. I<br />
waited 40 years be<strong>for</strong>e doing this one and I<br />
plan to continue doing them at that interval.<br />
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Run, Walk, Bike, Ski...Enjoy!<br />
The Trails of Cole’s Woods, Glens Falls<br />
The First Lighted Ski Trails in North America<br />
Maintained by the Friends of Cole’s Woods<br />
For in<strong>for</strong>mation: coleswoods.weebly.com<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 23<br />
Job # 000 - Friends of Cole’s Woods - Sales Rep/Artist
oad trip<br />
15<br />
HOURS<br />
ON THE<br />
DEVIL’S<br />
PATH...<br />
THE TOUGHEST<br />
HIKE IN THE<br />
NORTHEAST<br />
Constant grade changes,<br />
boulders and steep rock<br />
slopes make this Ulster<br />
County trail a challenging<br />
weekend hike. But <strong>for</strong> some,<br />
nothing compares to<br />
compressing this 2-3 day<br />
trek into a one-day event.<br />
Story and Photos by Ethan Katz<br />
T<br />
he night was young and com<strong>for</strong>tably<br />
cool, but pervaded with a taste<br />
of the mugginess tomorrow would<br />
bring. We stood in silence; the sleepy<br />
sounds of the <strong>for</strong>est and the glow of<br />
fireflies lazily bobbing amongst the<br />
canopy the backdrop of this summer<br />
night. It was 9:00pm, and we had just<br />
arrived at the western terminus of the<br />
hike we would begin in seven hours. We<br />
discussed sleeping arrangements <strong>for</strong><br />
the short night ahead of us as we unpacked<br />
gear and supplies from Jack’s<br />
car and stuffed it into mine <strong>for</strong> the drive<br />
to the eastern trailhead. Jack, a longtime<br />
hiking companion I’d known since<br />
high school, was one of the few people<br />
I could count on to be excited about<br />
the woods, and walking through them<br />
<strong>for</strong> untold hours. But this hike would<br />
prove to be different.<br />
The Devil’s Path is a rugged, 25-<br />
mile, point-to-point trail over six of<br />
24 | DACKS & TOGA activelife<br />
the Catskill High Peaks and is notorious<br />
<strong>for</strong> its difficulty. Although not<br />
as tall as the Adirondack High Peaks,<br />
these summits still sit at a confident<br />
3500 ft. or more, with the trail<br />
fiendishly following what appears to<br />
be the most difficult line over them.<br />
Still, this trail has quite the reputation<br />
preceding it. Legends tell that<br />
the first settlers to the area took one<br />
glance at this imposing ridgeline with<br />
its deep ravines and thought: only<br />
the cloven hooves of the Devil himself<br />
could traverse this landscape. Indeed,<br />
there are three 1000 ft. descents immediately<br />
followed by 1000 ft. climbs,<br />
with numerous rock scrambles that<br />
require hands <strong>for</strong> assistance.<br />
With a whopping 18,000 ft. of total<br />
elevation change, it’s the neverending<br />
ups and downs that beat your<br />
legs, and your mind, into submission,<br />
lending credence to the legend.<br />
Consequently, most hikers choose to<br />
backpack this route over two or three<br />
days, a challenging feat itself <strong>for</strong> most<br />
people. Only the crazed and sadistic<br />
attempt it in a single day. That is<br />
why, <strong>for</strong> this hike, we chose to put in<br />
a little <strong>for</strong>ethought—a rare occurrence<br />
<strong>for</strong> the two of us, who pride ourselves<br />
with our good sense of spontaneity.<br />
This amounted to dropping a gallon of<br />
water in a reused milk jug at the halfway<br />
point, Devil’s Tombstone Campground<br />
in Stony Clove Notch. Despite<br />
the bonus points <strong>for</strong> thinking ahead,<br />
we would still be dreadfully thirsty approximately<br />
19 hours later.<br />
Construction of the Path began in<br />
1929, when the east section up to Mink<br />
Hollow was cut. The route up Plateau<br />
was established in 1934, and Hunter<br />
from Stony Clove Notch the following<br />
year. But it wasn’t until ’73 that the<br />
trail down to the falls and up over West<br />
Kill, the final summit of the range, was<br />
added. Over its 25-mile stretch, the<br />
Path has only one road crossing: NY<br />
214 at Stony Clove Notch. This splits<br />
the trail into the classic eastern section,<br />
and the more recent western section,<br />
with the eastern half being considered<br />
more difficult. That was the<br />
half we chose to start with.<br />
At 10:30, we pulled into the eastern<br />
trailhead at the end of Prediger Road<br />
next to a weary wooden shack with<br />
unmistakable signage reading “NO<br />
SLEEPING IN CARS.” Un<strong>for</strong>tunately,<br />
we had a one-person tent between the<br />
two of us and absolutely no desire to<br />
find a suitable campsite this late, and<br />
by 11:45, we were ready to pass out.<br />
One of us ended up breaking that rule.<br />
I<br />
A beautiful spot to unload<br />
our gear and take a break<br />
<strong>for</strong> lunch. Left: An unknown<br />
hiker carved some words<br />
of encouragement onto a<br />
mushroom.<br />
slept erratically, finding it hard to<br />
contort my 6’2 frame in my Camry.<br />
Jack was in his tent immediately<br />
outside the car door. It was so still I<br />
could hear him moving around. And<br />
yet, somehow, unbeknownst to me,<br />
we had midnight visitors. The way<br />
we were positioned, every time a car<br />
drove through, its headlights would<br />
shine right at Jack’s tent. They would<br />
then immediately stop and ponder<br />
the situation <strong>for</strong> a couple excruciating<br />
moments be<strong>for</strong>e driving further.<br />
This apparently happened several<br />
times between 12:30 and 1:30am. The<br />
strangest thing: no one spoke. Not a<br />
peep. Jack could hear one person<br />
snapping photos of the trailhead but<br />
no one opened their mouths. It was a<br />
ghostly procession.<br />
What worried us more about the<br />
midnight visitors than the possibility<br />
of being busted <strong>for</strong> sleeping in the
parking lot was that all of those people<br />
started out on the trail hours be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
us. Did they know something we<br />
didn’t? After meager breakfasts we<br />
were raring to go, and set out into the<br />
night towards Indian Head, our first<br />
ascent. It was 4:00am, and accompanying<br />
us were barred owls hidden<br />
somewhere in the darkness. Enjoyable<br />
at first, they soon became off-putting<br />
as their hoots morphed into uncannily<br />
human-sounding laughs reverberating<br />
through the otherwise silent trees. I<br />
set the pace, as I would <strong>for</strong> much<br />
of the adventure, and it wasn’t<br />
long be<strong>for</strong>e we were climbing a<br />
steep grade, still at a brisk 3mph.<br />
As the first wisps of morning entered<br />
the horizon, I turned off my<br />
headlamp and looked at the sight<br />
be<strong>for</strong>e me. There, 30 feet ahead<br />
was a large boulder in the way.<br />
Surely this wasn’t right, right? Nothing<br />
but a taunting red blaze proved that it<br />
was indeed.<br />
Indian Head brought with it beautiful<br />
views. The fog from the previous<br />
night had gathered into a low, thick<br />
carpet stretched to the horizon, with<br />
the surrounding hills peeking through.<br />
It gave the impression of looking out<br />
an airplane window high above the<br />
clouds. We continued over and down<br />
into our first descent, already humidarmpitted<br />
and shirtless. Next on the<br />
docket was Twin, which af<strong>for</strong>ded us a<br />
view westward over the rolling ridgeline,<br />
with Plateau demanding the most<br />
attention. A quick snack later and we<br />
were on the road again, descending<br />
the col toward Sugarloaf.<br />
On the summit of Sugarloaf, we<br />
snacked again, feeling optimistic. We<br />
had reached the top of the third of six<br />
Despite the bonus points<br />
<strong>for</strong> thinking ahead, we would<br />
still be dreadfully thirsty<br />
approximately 19 hours later.<br />
peaks in about three hours of hiking.<br />
Overall feeling good, I set a goal to be<br />
out in the next nine hours. However,<br />
in the extremely technical descent toward<br />
Plateau, we quickly realized that<br />
we wouldn’t be making good time <strong>for</strong><br />
a while. With loose rocks and some<br />
stretches that were confusing to follow,<br />
we became worried that this<br />
would reflect the rest of the traverse.<br />
So, in Mink Hollow, we took a mental<br />
break be<strong>for</strong>e Plateau, opting to follow<br />
the extremely dubious, almost Loony<br />
Tunes-style sign that read, “SPRING,”<br />
with an arrow pointing down a hill.<br />
We were thirsty after all, Wile E. Coyote<br />
or no.<br />
The “spring” turned out to be more<br />
of a muddy, leafy, pool and shot down<br />
our hopes of filtering a little supplementary<br />
water. I knew my 2L bladder<br />
was running low, and would likely run<br />
out be<strong>for</strong>e our water drop at Devil’s<br />
Tombstone. Nearby, a kitchen knife<br />
had been jammed two inches deep<br />
into a tree trunk in an apparent fit of<br />
rage—such was the frustration of the<br />
Devil’s Path. Turning back up the hill<br />
towards Plateau, our pace had slowed,<br />
and a trail runner passed us easily.<br />
Plateau was the first time we felt the<br />
pressure. After climbing a fourth of<br />
the way, we were in a bad place.<br />
Halfway up, glistening with sweat and<br />
breathing shortly, we stopped <strong>for</strong> what<br />
seemed like our fifth break in 20 minutes.<br />
Jack realized we needed a little<br />
something, so we slurped down our<br />
first GU packets of the day. Immediately,<br />
Mandarin Orange hit my tongue<br />
like an explosion, and in eight minutes,<br />
I was feeling the benefits of the<br />
sugar boost and caffeine focus. With<br />
heightened determination, I watched<br />
as the pace on my TomTom Multisport<br />
Cardio shot downward, and we<br />
trudged up and up, a cloud of flies<br />
surrounding us, as if old Beelzebub<br />
himself was keeping tabs. Passing<br />
a large mushroom with the words,<br />
“ALMOST THERE” prophetically<br />
scrawled into the surface, we soon<br />
rounded the crest, and felt grateful <strong>for</strong><br />
the two miles of flat land on the aptly<br />
named Plateau. By 10:05, I retrieved<br />
the water jug and we broke <strong>for</strong> lunch<br />
be<strong>for</strong>e the beautifully glassy Notch Lake<br />
at Devil’s Tombstone Campground.<br />
It’s about now that I should mention<br />
that our total time, though respectable<br />
<strong>for</strong> a hike of this caliber, and taking<br />
into account our complications, was<br />
nothing spectacular. All told, it took us<br />
15 hours to hike the Devil’s Path, and,<br />
if given a second shot, I firmly believe<br />
we could knock off three. Still, this is<br />
pitiful compared to the blistering FKT<br />
(fastest known time) of 4:53:45, set by<br />
the insanely accomplished ultrarunner<br />
Ben Nephew, in November 2015.<br />
For comparison, it took us three hours<br />
to reach the summit of Sugarloaf;<br />
Nephew was already pulling into Devil’s<br />
Tombstone Campground, an entire<br />
mountain and a descent ahead of us.<br />
And where he took a 2-3 minute break<br />
to refill water, we stopped <strong>for</strong> 44 minutes<br />
of carbohydrate gluttony and allowed<br />
the cement in our legs to firmly<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 25
set be<strong>for</strong>e starting again toward Hunter<br />
Mountain.<br />
However, do not assume that we<br />
were not competitive. Far from it.<br />
Nearing the shoulder of Hunter, we<br />
passed a group that was also hiking<br />
the whole way from Prediger Road that<br />
we began referring to as “that family.”<br />
Perhaps some of our midnight visitors<br />
that started four hours be<strong>for</strong>e us?<br />
We did not know <strong>for</strong> sure, but this is<br />
what we assumed, and as we passed<br />
we were filled with the excitement and<br />
arrogance that comes with making up<br />
four hours on another party in only 12<br />
miles. Maybe it was this sense of adequacy<br />
that led to our decision to add<br />
the extra 3.2 miles to bag the<br />
true summit of Hunter.<br />
Dude, what if we add this<br />
extra peak, and we pass<br />
that family again?! So that<br />
was our plan. Coming off<br />
Hunter, the extra miles felt<br />
like nothing, but when we<br />
stopped at the intersection<br />
to sit down a minute, I realized<br />
the soles of my feet<br />
were burning. This sensation did not<br />
improve on the featureless descent toward<br />
West Kill, which seemed to take<br />
an eternity. Jack was now leading, and<br />
I was getting flashbacks to the Plateau<br />
descent because, once again, I was<br />
running out of water.<br />
We passed two refill locations, but<br />
Jack hadn’t packed his battery charger<br />
and the UV filter we had been using<br />
was dead. Coming into the falls,<br />
we ran into “that family” once again,<br />
this time lounging on the other side<br />
of the bridge by the water. “Did you<br />
guys make a wrong turn?” they asked<br />
self-assuredly. Then, I turned toward<br />
them, and I said deliberately “Nah, we<br />
felt like nabbing Hunter too. See yah.”<br />
I savored the words. They felt good.<br />
Despite my proud moment, it was<br />
here, at this very intersection,<br />
that we began on a wrong path<br />
that would take us an hour and two<br />
miles out of our way, as well as nearly<br />
defeat our spirits. The worst part was,<br />
After ages we were at the lookout<br />
just below the summit. The views<br />
east were spectacular and we got<br />
a good look at the ravine leading<br />
us the wrong way...<br />
“that family” might have corrected us,<br />
but I was cocky. After realizing our<br />
mistake (thanks to a kind couple that<br />
lent us a map) I took a sip of water<br />
from my hydration pack and felt the<br />
ominous puff of emptiness. We would<br />
not make our 12-hour goal, but hey,<br />
maybe we’d pass that family again! It<br />
was like this that we began our ascent<br />
of West Kill—the longest climb and<br />
our last <strong>for</strong> the day.<br />
Somewhere about halfway up we<br />
split the last two GUs as well as drank<br />
the last of Jack’s water. I slowed our<br />
pace to a crawl to conserve precious<br />
H2O—we definitely were not going to<br />
see that family ever again. Luckily,<br />
this part of the trail had some of the<br />
most walkable miles, but time was<br />
dragging. After ages we were at the<br />
lookout just below the summit. The<br />
views east were spectacular and we<br />
got a good look at the ravine leading<br />
us the wrong way: it just kept losing<br />
altitude and going south.<br />
Passing a cairn marking the true<br />
wooded summit, we began our final<br />
descent toward Spruceton Road, the<br />
end of our journey. I was hungry,<br />
but would eat nothing other than the<br />
M&M’s picked from Jack’s trail mix to<br />
avoid salt, lest my thirst be further realized.<br />
I went pretty internal here, and<br />
zoned out <strong>for</strong> a long time. Our conversation<br />
had also been dead <strong>for</strong> some<br />
time, so I had to check to make sure I<br />
wasn’t losing it when I began hearing<br />
a metallic clanking. Jack heard it too.<br />
We saw some shady figures through<br />
the trees. Maybe the DEC was nailing<br />
up signs? Rounding a bend, we came<br />
upon a couple banging their trekking<br />
poles together as they walked. They<br />
told us they had startled a bear, and it<br />
had run up the trail. Great. I pulled my<br />
ancient Polish utility knife out and we<br />
Mosy of the views are off<br />
the main trail but they’re<br />
definitely worth it. Of course,<br />
there’s not much time to<br />
take them in when you are<br />
pursuing your personal FKT.<br />
26 | DACKS & TOGA activelife
continued on, sounding out our presence<br />
every few minutes.<br />
Bears do frequent the Catskills, and<br />
we had passed a few piles of scat, so I<br />
was pumping adrenaline when I saw<br />
a dark animal move under a tree and<br />
out of sight up the trail. “Jack, I saw it.<br />
There.” We walked a few steps further<br />
to get a better view and I was dumbfounded.<br />
There it was: a wide, black<br />
porcupine, waddling at full tilt away<br />
from us. I could tell it was moving at<br />
full speed, but it was only going about<br />
1 mph, and it was dead set in following<br />
the trail. We continued, now matching<br />
its pace, and providing a berth of<br />
15ft. This allowed the couple to catch<br />
up. “It’s just a porcupine,” I turned<br />
and said, hoping they would cease<br />
the racket that had continued without<br />
a hitch. “OK,” one responded as they<br />
continued slamming their trekking<br />
poles together with irritating intensity.<br />
Wonderful. Just when I thought we<br />
would be stuck following this quilled<br />
tortoise all the way back to the car,<br />
followed by that beautifully composed<br />
metallic cacophony, the porcupine<br />
turned off into the trees. With out a<br />
second’s hesitation, we dusted the two<br />
behind us. The absurdity had me <strong>for</strong> a<br />
while, and I was beaming.<br />
Soon, though, I was reminded of<br />
my thirst and hunger and just<br />
wanted to be done. I was fantasizing<br />
sugary drinks when I caught<br />
up to Jack who was waiting <strong>for</strong> me.<br />
There was a large, comical sign that<br />
read “SPRUCETON 1.5” pointing in<br />
the general opposite direction we had<br />
just come <strong>for</strong> the past hour and mildly<br />
uphill. That was the last straw. All<br />
of my frustration and fatigue boiled<br />
over and I started running angryily,<br />
increasing my pace as I went. Jack<br />
fell off the back but I could just hear<br />
his trekking poles behind me, steadily<br />
clicking away the distance. The final<br />
half mile I sprinted, swearing and<br />
grunting, all the way to Jack’s car. I<br />
reached the lot, but now had to wait<br />
<strong>for</strong> him to unlock the car. I paced<br />
around, still fuming, but allowed my<br />
anger to slowly steam out.<br />
After a small eternity, Jack unlocked<br />
the car and we split a water<br />
bottle. I walked across the street to<br />
a shallow stream to baptize myself in<br />
its freezing waters. First, with extreme<br />
care, I took off my boots and gingerly<br />
sunk my feet into the water. Heaven. I<br />
then crawled in, sat down, and slowly<br />
laid my body down and stretched out<br />
my legs, allowing the cold to wash over<br />
me, rinsing away the sweat and the<br />
grime, the dead flies, the aches and<br />
pains, and all the frustration. We did<br />
it. After a few more minutes of this,<br />
I sat up, looking at the evening sky,<br />
thankful <strong>for</strong> the day.<br />
Though most trails are<br />
marked we managed to<br />
lose our way. Luckily, a<br />
nice couple lent us their<br />
map and we headed off<br />
in the right direction.<br />
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DACKS & TOGA activelife | 27
Our writer<br />
finishing up a<br />
late winter run<br />
with her son<br />
and, opposite,<br />
crossing the<br />
finish line<br />
at the<br />
Memorial<br />
Mile.<br />
On<br />
a Roll<br />
One Stroller-Pushing<br />
Mom’s Running Tale<br />
by Alex Kochon<br />
PHOTOS: Jody Katz,<br />
Opposite photo<br />
Courtesy of Alex Kochon<br />
Monday, May 30 of last year started off as ordinary as<br />
any other day. It was one day shy of my son’s first<br />
birthday, and I had planned to spend the Memorial<br />
Day morning at home while he took his morning nap.<br />
There was a parade in town and perhaps, if he woke up in<br />
time, we’d go to it. I had gone the year be<strong>for</strong>e, so pregnant<br />
that I couldn’t zip up my rain jacket, and the year be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
that, walked my dog along Glen Street in Glens Falls as<br />
we checked out the spectator-lined parade route — which<br />
doubled as a race course.<br />
Nap time came and went, and my little one was still<br />
awake. I considered that Memorial Mile running race. It’s<br />
just a mile, I thought. We could totally handle that.<br />
It was a beautiful spring morning, T-shirt weather — a<br />
no-brainer <strong>for</strong> getting outside. I reached out to my parents<br />
and brother who was in town with his girlfriend. “Anyone<br />
want to do this race with me?” His girlfriend immediately<br />
replied yes.<br />
She took care of registering the two of us and we planned<br />
to meet be<strong>for</strong>e the start. As an aside, not an excuse, I’m<br />
slightly infamous <strong>for</strong> cutting times close. You could call me<br />
late, but I don’t like that word since I’m usually right on<br />
time. Usually.<br />
With a kid, multiply my tendency toward tardiness times<br />
1000. It’s not easy getting out the door, now add in the lastminute<br />
decision to run a 9:45 a.m. road race.<br />
Always mindful of the speed limit (scout’s honor), I arrived<br />
in downtown Glens Falls with minutes to spare. But<br />
karma, or the running gods, or the real God, was on my<br />
side. I found a parking spot within view of the start and<br />
launched into what would become my pre-race routine:<br />
Park. Gather necessary clothes, water, money, etc. Grab<br />
the Thule Chariot (a.k.a. the Ferrari of baby joggers, thanks<br />
to a collective baby shower gift) and assemble in less than<br />
45 seconds (not exaggerating, I’ve timed myself). Pull the<br />
stroller to a safe place alongside the car, load the baby<br />
(who’s already dressed in appropriate clothes and layers),<br />
toss in some sunscreen, a snack and water <strong>for</strong> him, and<br />
definitely his bottle, and off we go.<br />
By the time I got to the start, I think I had three minutes<br />
to spare. My family was getting a little anxious about my<br />
whereabouts, but we met up in time <strong>for</strong> me to get my racing<br />
number and pin it to the stroller. I hadn’t had a conventional<br />
warmup, but I was definitely warm. I took a sip of water,<br />
offered Matti his bottle and lathered him with sunscreen.<br />
28 | DACKS & TOGA activelife
We lined up near the back and focused<br />
on the one-mile, point-to-point race<br />
ahead. My only goal: don’t clip anyone’s<br />
heels with the stroller.<br />
I soon found that was far easier<br />
said than done as I gradually picked<br />
up speed along the fast-and-flat Glen<br />
Street. I had started out faster than I<br />
had expected, but this was only a mile,<br />
so I decided to keep pace with several<br />
young kids running with (or sprinting<br />
away from) their parents. Be<strong>for</strong>e<br />
the race’s halfway point, there was a<br />
noticeable trend of among the littlest<br />
ones as they faded hard, some even<br />
stopping in their tracks. I<br />
darted around them, with<br />
Matti chatting the whole<br />
way. Six minutes and 59<br />
seconds after starting, we<br />
were done.<br />
How’s that <strong>for</strong> a workout?<br />
It was my first race in<br />
a long time, and I’ve never<br />
been much of a runner, so I<br />
was pleased with the ef<strong>for</strong>t.<br />
Upon careful inspection at<br />
the finish, Matti was happy,<br />
too. We met up with our<br />
family at the finish, walked<br />
back to the start, and continued<br />
on with our day.<br />
Something about how impromptu<br />
that day was and<br />
how positive the experience<br />
was, racing with my son<br />
and listening to him giggle<br />
as he watched other runners,<br />
stuck with me. After<br />
that, I jumped into (meaning,<br />
I signed up on race<br />
day) about a dozen other<br />
road races last summer, all<br />
around 5 kilometers (or 3.1<br />
miles) long, with the exception<br />
of the Firecracker 4 Mile on July<br />
4, which I pre-registered <strong>for</strong>. I pushed<br />
Matti <strong>for</strong> all but three of them, and had<br />
a surprising realization as we raced<br />
into late fall: I got faster. In fact, I ran<br />
almost as fast as I ever had at that distance,<br />
which was during college, as a<br />
mom one year out from having a baby.<br />
The other unanticipated trans<strong>for</strong>mation<br />
I had from running with my kid<br />
was that, <strong>for</strong> the first time ever, I truly<br />
began to love running, and moreover,<br />
racing. I would wake up on a given<br />
Saturday or Sunday morning, and if<br />
the weather looked promising, I would<br />
scan the local road-race registry. If one<br />
looked doable, I’d gather all of our necessities<br />
<strong>for</strong> the outing and load up the<br />
car, almost always cutting it incredibly<br />
close. Never fail, we’d make it to the<br />
start — sans warmup — which was<br />
fine because Matti doesn’t like to sit<br />
<strong>for</strong> more than 30 minutes anyway.<br />
I’d line up among the other racers<br />
with a clear mind. I wasn’t nervous,<br />
there were no expectations, I didn’t<br />
have to impress anyone (besides Matti,<br />
who mostly just didn’t want me to<br />
stop). At any given time, we could be<br />
done if he wasn’t happy. It started<br />
raining during one of our 5 k races, so<br />
I pulled over to put the stroller’s rain<br />
fly down and make sure the blanket<br />
was tucked around him. I considered<br />
walking after that (I was having a<br />
tough race on a hilly course; not exactly<br />
an advantage when you’re pushing<br />
a 40-pound stroller and 20-pound<br />
baby), but the worsening weather<br />
pushed me to finish quickly. It was<br />
one of my slowest races, but it was all<br />
“...<strong>for</strong> the first time<br />
ever, I truly began<br />
to love running, and<br />
{moreover, racing.”<br />
good. Matti stayed dry, he took a long<br />
nap later in the day, and together we<br />
had accomplished something.<br />
I know he won’t remember last summer<br />
and all the races I brought him<br />
to, but those are memories I’ll always<br />
have with him. While I used to leave<br />
races soon after finishing, all too eager<br />
to get on to the next thing, I’ve mellowed<br />
and become more relaxed, more<br />
supportive of the other finishers, the<br />
other stroller pushers, the other parents<br />
running with their kids. Sometimes,<br />
we earned medals, which Matti<br />
proudly wore around his neck. Thinking<br />
less about myself and more about<br />
the experience heightened my enjoyment<br />
and appreciation <strong>for</strong> these kinds<br />
{<br />
of events, with almost all of them benefiting<br />
different charities.<br />
So, to other moms and dads out<br />
there with children young enough to<br />
push in a stroller, or children who<br />
might be interested in doing a threemile<br />
race with you (most of these races<br />
also have shorter fun runs <strong>for</strong> kids), I<br />
encourage you to go <strong>for</strong> it. It’s a lot of<br />
work getting there, but you’ll be better<br />
— physically and mentally — <strong>for</strong> it.<br />
In terms of tips <strong>for</strong> running with a<br />
child, I have a few:<br />
n DO pre-register if you know you<br />
can make it. It will save you time and<br />
money (usually at least $5<br />
cheaper than day-of registration)<br />
and you won’t have<br />
to deal with paperwork or<br />
payment on race day.<br />
n DO check the weather,<br />
especially if you have a little<br />
one riding along in the<br />
stroller. Keep in mind that<br />
they’re not running, so they<br />
won’t be sweating while you<br />
might be. Make sure they’re<br />
dressed appropriately, complete<br />
with a hat, sunglasses<br />
(or sun shade, if your stroller<br />
has one) and sunscreen,<br />
if necessary. And if it’s going<br />
to rain, consider skipping.<br />
Puddles are tough to dodge,<br />
and you’re going to get really<br />
wet behind that stroller.<br />
n DO check the race organizers’<br />
<strong>web</strong>site or posted<br />
rules be<strong>for</strong>e the event.<br />
If it says no strollers, don’t<br />
be that person running with<br />
a stroller. There’s a reason<br />
they asked you not to, so<br />
pick another race (or have<br />
someone watch your child<br />
and see how fast you can do it solo!)<br />
n DON’T plan to run with a stroller<br />
in a race with 3,000 people. Take it<br />
from me. Bad idea.<br />
n DO go with the flow. If you’re not<br />
having a great race, or something<br />
comes up and you have to stop or<br />
make adjustments, roll with it. Finish<br />
as strong as you can, or turn it into<br />
a different kind of workout (<strong>for</strong> one<br />
race, I alternated between jogging and<br />
short sprints. The baby loved it. You<br />
can turn it into a game, telling them to<br />
prompt you, “Ready, set, go!”)<br />
n DO check in on them immediately<br />
after. I know too well what “I’m<br />
going to puke” feels like at the finish,<br />
but you probably shouldn’t be pushing<br />
yourself to that point when you’re running<br />
with a stroller, and if you are, the<br />
feeling should pass quickly. As soon<br />
as you can after finishing, pull off to<br />
the side and face your child as you give<br />
them a big smile. They’ll associate that<br />
with happiness and be excited the next<br />
time they get in the stroller.<br />
DACKS & TOGA activelife | 29
calendar<br />
“If you really<br />
want to do something,<br />
you will find a way. If you don’t,<br />
you’ll find an excuse.”<br />
Jim Rohn<br />
Check out some<br />
of these upcoming<br />
events either to<br />
participate or<br />
spectate.<br />
Sat., May 20, 5:00pm*<br />
Glens Falls<br />
Urban Assault<br />
Glens Falls<br />
For info: adkracemgmt.com<br />
Sat.-Sun., May 20-21<br />
13th Annual<br />
Tour of the Battenkill<br />
Washington County<br />
Fairgrounds, Greenwich<br />
For info: tourofthebattenkill.com<br />
Mon., May 29, 9:55am*<br />
Memorial Mile<br />
Glens Falls<br />
For info: adkracemgmt.com<br />
Sat., June 3<br />
Wilmington/<br />
Whiteface 100k<br />
For info: whitefaceregion.com/do/events<br />
*Start times. Arrive early to check-in, warm-up, etc.<br />
Sun., June 4, 8:00am*<br />
Whiteface Mountain<br />
Uphill Bike Race<br />
For info: whitefaceregion.com/do/events<br />
Sun., June 4, 7:00am*<br />
Saratoga Springs ADA<br />
Tour de Cure<br />
Saratoga Spa State Park<br />
For info: diabetes.org/saratoga<br />
Sun., June 4, 1:00pm*<br />
Clifton Park’s<br />
23rd Annual Park Trails<br />
Day Guided Bike Ride<br />
10-12 miles highlighting<br />
the Bicentennial of the<br />
Erie Canal Towpath<br />
For info: cliftonparkopenspaces.org/events<br />
Sat., June 10, 10:15*<br />
22nd Annual<br />
Black Fly Challenge<br />
Indian Lake and Inlet<br />
For info: blackflychallenge.com<br />
Sun., June 11, 8:00am*<br />
Lake Placid Marathon<br />
and Half Marathon<br />
Lake Placid<br />
For info: lakeplacidmarathon.com<br />
Sun., June 11, 8:00am*<br />
8th Hudson Crossing<br />
Triathlon<br />
Schuylerville<br />
For info: hudsoncrossingtri.com<br />
Fri.-Sun., June 16-18<br />
Adirondack SUP<br />
Festival<br />
Saranac Lake<br />
For info: adirondacksupfestival.com<br />
Sat., June 24, 8:00am*<br />
Tupper Lake Tinman<br />
Triathlon<br />
Tupper Lake Municipal Park<br />
For info: tupperlaketinman.com<br />
Tues., July 4, 9:00am*<br />
Firecracker 4<br />
Saratoga Springs<br />
For info: firecracker4.com<br />
Sat.-Sun., Aug. 5-6<br />
Churney Gurney<br />
Gurney Lane<br />
Recreation Park,<br />
Queensbury<br />
For info: Facebook Churney Gurney<br />
PHOTO: Shutterstock<br />
30 | DACKS & TOGA activelife
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