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Friday, October 4, 2024
Blog Page 167

Ask JP: Running When Race Day Weather Is Rough

Those of you who were fortunate enough to run the BMO Vancouver Marathon were treated to some beautiful weather. The same can not be said for the thousands of runners who lined up for the various races at the GoodLife Toronto Marathon and Mississauga Marathon.

As race weekend grew nearer, my inbox and social media feeds were filling up with messages from runners beginning to get stressed out about the impending nasty weather and how they should best prepare to tackle their respective races. So, instead of addressing a few these questions individually, I thought I would share I how approach racing under less than ‘ideal’ conditions.

  1. Be Grateful

I truly believe that my worst day running is always better than my best day “not running.” When it comes to training for a half-marathon or marathon, we are well aware that anything can happen during the training cycle—injury, illness, or life circumstances can easily sabotage or sidetrack your goal race. Therefore, if you wake up on race morning and the conditions aren’t ideal for a PB, just remind yourself that no matter how fast you run today, you are still graced by doing something that most people only dream of doing.

 

  1. Embrace Your Tribe

Remember when you were kid, and your “dream day” was waking up early on the weekend, hanging out with your friends, and playing in the rain—Well guess what?   Now you’re an adult and you get to do just that!  When I saw the nasty forecast for Toronto and the GTA, I started using the hashtag #EmbraceTheSuck because I wanted to remind myself that no matter what the weather is, I will make certain I enjoy hanging out with my running mates. And don’t forget to take lots of prerace photos and “soggy” after-race photos so that you can show just how #BadAss you and your running friends really are!

  1. Arrive Prepared

When it comes to racing in poor conditions, one of the worst things you can do is to unnecessarily suffer the elements before the race even begins. Make sure you arrive to the start of the race wearing lots of warm layers, and rainproof protection. You can lose a lot of energy trying to keep warm, and that will be valuable energy you will need to enlist once the race begins.

  1. Race In The Moment

Game plans and tactical visualization are critical elements of any successful training plan; however, when conditions during a race start to deteriorate, it may be wise to defer to a more appropriate strategy of “racing in the moment”. Be responsive to the conditions you are currently facing—if it starts to heat up quickly, you will need to adjust your pace accordingly. And as was the case at the Goodlife Toronto Marathon, runners encountered moderate rain throughout the race that contributed to an increased risk of blisters, chafing, and mild hypothermia at the end of the race. But what proved to be the biggest racing obstacle was the severe wind gusts during the last 9km of the race. As runners hit the final turn-around, it became increasingly apparent that PBs and target times were slipping away. My response to facing a strong headwind is the same strategy I use for ascending a steep hill—Instead of getting hung-up on the idea of maintaining my per-kilometer race pace, I focus on maintaining the same perceived effort. No doubt, this will lead to a drop in your actual pace, but you will avoid bonking and having to walk later in the race.

  1. Smile In That Finishing Photo

And last but not least… No matter how much you’ve suffered out on the course… No matter how cold, wet, or exhausted you are… When you get to the final 100 meters of the race, don’t forget to look up and smile for the photographers at the finish line. Show everyone, including yourself, what a running warrior you are! Nothing can stop you…. Nothing!

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Send your advice and questions to JP runjprun@gmail.com. Want more tips, tricks and practical advice from JP Bedard? Check out his previous posts with questions from elite and everyday athletes.

Krista DuChene: Mother, Marathon Runner & Olympic Hopeful

You’ve known Krista DuChene as iRun’s Marathon Mom.  After breaking her femur in the spring of 2014, the Saucony Canada Elite Athlete candidly shared her story with iRun as she battled back on a lengthy road to recovery. One year later, DuChene not only recovered from her injury, she met the Canadian qualification standard for the 2016 Rio Olympics. Having proved her fitness level at the Banque du Scotia Montreal Half Marathon, the mom of three is expected to be named to the Canadian Olympic team, which would make her the first Canadian women to run the Olympic Marathonin 20 years.

In celebration of Mother’s Day we’re sharing Saucony Canada’s short film, about this inspiring Marathon Mom and her biggest (and most important) fan base, her family.

Moms who Run are Better Parents

The writer sight seeing in the City of Light with Paris Running Tours.

I’m a runner, a mom, and sometimes I leave my kids to run. Truth is, I think I’m a better parent for it. Here’s where running has taken me.

By: Anna Lee Boschetto

“Do the girls miss you?”

“Yes, but they are with their dad,” I respond. What I really want to say is, “No, not at all because really I’m a cold and heartless soul, so they’re probably thrilled I’m not around.”

I’m in a random text conversation with my sister in law, while I’m traveling for work. She is asking how my two daughters, ages seven and five, can bear to be with out me. It’s a fair question, I’m their mom and at the time I was on the first of what will be four work-related trips within a six-week period. The last one included running the BMO Vancouver Half Marathon last weekend, and writing about it. Where do I find the time to train for a half-marathon you ask? We’ll get to that, plus

I’ll fill you in on how running has made me a better parent too.

But first, let’s get a few things straight.

My sister-in-law and me get along very well. We’ve learned to appreciate each other’s differences and love one other for (or despite) them. Regardless, she frequently asks (what I consider to be) some pretty ridiculous questions and this is one of those occasions. But while I’d like to say that she is the only person who has ever asked questions like this, that’s not the case. More often than not, I find myself defending my choices—as a parent who travels for work, a runner who happens to also be a mom, and don’t even ask what’s said to me when travel and running intersect.

As moms, it can feel like we’re all on an up hill battle. I get it, I hate hill training too, but let me be the first to tell you the view from the top is pretty sweet if you grind it out on the climb. Nevertheless, according to most moms I’ve talked to, getting in some “me time” is downright near impossible. So how can I, a mom of two, possibly make time for the long training runs, and sweat out speed sessions when the rest of my contingent is struggling to stay on course?

I’m not going to lie, it isn’t easy, but nothing worthwhile in life really is. And just to be clear, binge watching anything on Netflicks isn’t worthwhile. So, nearly eight years into motherhood, I’ve realized one thing to be true, if you don’t make the time, time isn’t going to wait for you, it will march on. That means, if you want to run a 5K, 10K, half-marathon or get back into some semblance of a fitness routine, you’ve got to make it happen, yourself. But you’re a mom, your children need their mom, what will they do if you’re gone for an hour? It’s an unsolved mystery for many.

Consider this: Do you have to tell your partner to break out his golf clubs? Exactly. What happens to the kiddos when he does tee off? Judging from the mom rants I’ve read and heard, moms are taking care of them. Mystery solved.

So, what are you waiting for?

At the same time, maybe its not so easy for moms. We feel guilty at the very thought of leaving the little one. What about when they are snoozing in their crib? Yes, I’m talking about getting up in those early morning hours and seizing the day. Carpe diem. Oh, you’ve opted for co-sleeping? How can you possibly break the bond in the early pre-dawn hours? I get it, but let’s get real.

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Running along the Seawall in Vancouver during the BMO Vancouver Marathon Race Weekend.

Looking back, there were plenty of mornings I just didn’t feel like pounding the pavement. If I’m honest, there are still those days even now. But I know that when I do step outside and breath the early morning air, I’m awake and alive in a way that I’ll never quite be with an extra hour of sleep.

I’m really not cold and heartless. What I knew then—and what I’m grateful for now— in the long run, I needed some time to clear my head. On mornings when I hadn’t slept as restfully as I’d like, having that time on my run gave me a chance recharge. When I went back to work, these runs were a pre-planning session for each day, as much as they were part of training for an upcoming race. Now, with children old enough to understand their mom is a runner, I’m glad to be setting an example, one that I hope they may look back on when they’re moms, and remember they can be runners too.

 

 

 

 

End Sexual Harassment: Tips on What Runners Can Do

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May is sexual assault awareness month. Along with sharing shoe reviews and gear updates, it’s important to us to also share running safety tips with our readers. Please take a moment to consider your personal safety before you head out for your next run.

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Detective Constable Lindsay White of Barrie Police Services, formerly of the Crimes against Persons Unit, who is also a runner, offers the following safety reminders.

Running Safety

First of all, the following are suggestions to reduce your personal risk while running. A person that does not do so is no means responsible for the actions of a person intent to commit a crime against them. However, as with passwords on your accounts and locks on your doors there are steps you can take to lessen your risk while enjoying your activity.

  1. Run with a buddy. This is ALWAYS a good suggestion. They can be company, motivation and if you injure yourself or experience some other medical emergency — someone is right there. And there really is safety in numbers.
  1. Sometimes you just can’t run with a partner but numbers still help. Stay in a populated, well lit area. Know your route and let somebody know when you leave, the route you are taking and when you expect to be back.
  1. Run with your phone. This almost goes without say as most of us refuse to leave the house without it. But if you have it and you encounter a medical emergency, get lost or find yourself in a situation that makes you otherwise feel uncomfortable or uneasy — help is at your finger tips.
  1. Keep your ears open. A lot of us need music to run, but if you can’t hear traffic, bikes approaching or footfalls behind you then you are at a safety disadvantage. Keep the volume down low enough that you can still hear ambient noise or keep one ear bud out.
  1. Bring a whistle. Whistles create attention and criminals do not want attention. Furthermore, if you fall or get lost you can use the whistle to draw help to you.
  1. Stay alert and trust your gut. We have been given instincts for a reason: survival. If you don’t like the looks of that path or that bridge or that group or person you are approaching — avoid it. Go around. Turn around. If the “friendly” stranger that has caught up and is chatting beside you makes you uncomfortable — ditch them. You do not owe it to them to be polite if it is compromising your sense of safety.

Happiness is Running to the Music

I love to run because I believe the secret to happiness is progress. Setting a standard and then having the rituals to achieve them. As a result good health is a standard in my life that I try to uphold.

Exercise is the ultimate way to free your soul and spirit. It clears the pathways and channels we use as human beings to be back in the flow of life. To feel it’s pulse and rhythms. When an artist does that, there is an endless supply of creativity. It clears the mind, frees the soul and creates a fit form. What else do you need? I never miss a chance to run on tour. Not to mention there is no better way to truly see the world then with a pair of running shoes on. I also find running on tour is a chance for me to be alone. I love people, but I need my aloneness to be truly happy and ultimately balanced in life. Being alone resets my soul and running is a huge part of that.

My interest in running began when I was on the long distance team in school – so it started really early. However, it was in my 30s that I really fell in love with not only running, but life and steering the course of my destiny. Running got me through some of the most intense and painful moments of my life. Therefore it’s a deep part of my spiritual health as well as my physical one.

I almost always listen to something when I run. Most of the time I listen to either music, audio books or lectures. I find running is the perfect time to not only work on my body, but to work on my mind as well.

Given my schedule this year with the release of my new album GHOST LIGHT and tour plans all over the world, I have decided to do an easy 5km run in Toronto at the ScotiaBank Waterfront Marathon on Oct 16th to raise money for the Alzheimer Society of Toronto. ”

10-song Playlist (and to listen to his playlist, which we highly, highly recommend, click here)
Lake Street Dive – Bad Self Portraits
Bahamas – Waves
Anderson .Paak – The Bird
Here We Go Magic – Hard To Be Close
Sufjan Stevens – Death with Dignity
Leon Bridges – Better Man
Ray Lamontagne – Repo Man
Radiohead – Lotus Flower
The Head and The Heart – Homecoming Heroes
The War on Drugs – Red Eyes

Royal Wood is a multiple Juno-nominated singer, songwriter, arranger, producer and budding sommelier in training. His new album, GHOST LIGHT, is out now with Cadence Music, and features the new single, Good To Be Young. Check out Royal’s tour dates at: www.royalwood.ca.

Under Armour Helps You Run the Numbers

As far as runner’s go, I am an anomoly and it really isn’t a running thing, it’s a personality thing. Give me things to add, subtract or multiply and my eyes become as glazed as on of the Kardashian’s lipgloss.

By: Christa Davidson

Many of you post monthly mileage updates on social media and my first thought is, “I don’t add up the week, let alone the month,” then my second thought is, “I’m a running weirdo.” Not only don’t I know my mileage at any given time, I don’t really care either because caring would mean tracking and adding. I just run.

It’s as though the folks at Under Armour saw me coming and knew what a numerical numbskull I am when they thought up the newly launched Under Armour HealthBox. They said, “Hey she can’t be the only one who is mathematically challenged. Let’s help these Einstein’s get a grip.” What they have come up with makes tracking all your health related numbers easy-peasy. You don’t have to be a wizard.

Under Armour owns the fitness apps, MapMyRun and MyFitnessPal. These apps combined with UA’s app, Under Armour Record all work together synching your activity and calorie intake. Now with the addition of the UA HealthBox you can also keep track of your sleep and weight without any extra effort.

According to UA, the HealthBox is the world’s first Connected Fitness system designed by athletes. It is a collection of wireless gadgets that collect your data and simultaneously synch it all to the UA Record. The devices in the HealthBox, which is essentially a beautiful box with gadgets in it that are powered by UA’s partner HTC, include a scale, a heart rate monitor and a wrist band.

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UA Scale: Wifi and Bluetooth enabled, this scale synchs your weight and body fat percentage to UA Record. The scale recognizes and differentiates up to eight different users.

UA Band:This is a fitness band worn on the wrist and tracks steps, distance sleep, and resting heart rate and automatically synchs to UA Record. You can also use the band to control your playlist when connected to MapMyRun.

UA Heart Rate:  This comfortable band with a compact HR sensor that tracks your HR and is connected wirelessly to the UA Band, allows you to monitor during activity. Without even checking your HR numbers, the band displays a green, yellow, orange or red light so you can see at a glance your HR zone.

UA Record: While not contained in the box, UA considers this the fourth product of the HealthBox. This app is available for download to your smart phone and pulls together all the information gathered by the connected devices in one spot for dissemination. It allows you to set daily nutrition, fitness, sleep and activity goals and lets you see your progress.

Using the UA HealthBox for about a month, I am now a numbers genius. I know all of my health stats and because of this I find myself going the extra bit to meet or exceed my goals each day. And essentially, I don’t lift a finger to track it all. I really love this collection of devices. Not included in the HealthBox but considered to be part of the Connected Fitness product portfolio are UA Wireless Headphones, which I haven’t had the opportunity to try but I would love to check out.

While Health Box is available at SportChek in June and Best Buy, later this summer, you can preorder at UA.com and will ship to Canada beginning May 23.  As for me, I’m continuing to use the HealthBox devices, so if you have any questions, connect with me on Twitter or Instagram and I would love to share my thoughts with you.

 

 

 

 

 

The Ultimate Destination Race Day Checklist

Packing for a destination race can be tricky. Between the potential weather changes to knowing you’ll have the food you’re used to on race day, keeping it all in one carryon can be a challenge. Whether you’re headed across the country to the BMO Vancouver Marathon or around the world, here’s your checklist that will take you from start to finish no matter where race day takes you.

Get In Gear

Keep it simple: Running shoes, singlet, sports bra, shorts and socks should all be going into your carryon. While you may want to pack additional items, including your post-race attire, you don’t want to risk losing your gear somewhere along the way. Also, if you know there’s a chance of a little rain, as it can in Vancouver, a large garbage bag folds easily, is lightweight and will keep you warm and dry.

Tech Talk

From start to finish, having your playlist ready to go is key for nearly every runner. Factor in whatever your tunes are playing from is probably also doubling as your camera, which means having it along for a few quick race route photos. Even if you never think you’d stop for a photo op on race day, races including the BMO Vancouver Marathon offer spectacular views you’ll want to take advantage.

Running Essentials

Sure you’re racing but you want to feel comfortable too and you’re hotel bathroom isn’t your usually equipped home one, where you can easily reach for the body glide, band-aids and sunscreen. Have a race day beauty kit with sample sizes (again fits in your carryon) of these items, along with anti-inflammatory crème, and ibuprofen. It’s also a good idea to toss in extra safety pins, and shoelaces.

Post Race Wear

Being comfortable post race is key. No matter what the climate you’re bound to have a bit of a chill once you cross the finish line. Packing a change of clothing, including an extra t-shirt and light sweatshirt will help keep your core warm until your body adjusts. And that garbage bag can also double as post-race rain gear, so toss an extra one in, just in case.

Trail Blazer

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Ray Zahab on his life off the streets

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A funny thing occurred to me the other day as I was doing my best to run one of the snow-covered trails by my place and stay upright. Here I am, struggling to run on what’s left of the packed ice as winter melts away to spring when I could be out on the road logging the training hours…but I’m not. It seems these past years I’m rarely on the road, even for my speed work I am on the trails.

I really like trail running. Scratch that—I love trail running. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoy road running. I like the races, the Ottawa Marathon, Calgary, Manitoba, they’re awesome—but there’s something about being in the woods, running trails in all seasons and all conditions that draws me in. Maybe its the fact that for me, the training is much more specific. It takes me at least a year to train for one of my running expeditions, and getting used to being on unstable terrain is critical. When I ran across the Gobi desert in 2013, half of it was completely cross-country on a gnarly mix of rocks and sand. Believe it or not, the trails in Gatineau Park where I live (and the training trips to the White Mountains) helped me negotiate that desert, and lots of others.

It’s about more than race times or adventure. At the risk of sounding hokey, I just love the way you feel more connected to nature.

I love the unpredictability of the woods! I’ve seen bears, deer, coyotes, snakes and all sorts amazing wildlife while running in Gatineau Park. I love the early morning runs, right after the kids are off to school, where the forest is extra quiet—almost meditative. The early morning runs when the air just feels so pure and oxygenated. I love the rare evening runs I still head out on late spring, when the sun is setting, and you come home purged of stress, and totally relaxed and renewed.

Spring presents a whole new aspect to trail running. Once the trails are packed, they are like running on a low impact highway through the forest. The exact same trails I run in summer look and feel completely different in spring. It’s like being transported to a whole new world. And then there’s snowshoe running. Insanely difficult and challenging, but insanely fun, too! As a matter of fact I feel way stronger on my runs come spring after snowshoe workouts in the winter.

My daughters, although still very young, have taken to trail running, too. My wife runs ultra marathons, so I guess you could say it’s a family affair. Weekends in the summer are the best for finding our own mini-adventures on the single track, with the kids leading the way, choosing their final destination (usually snack oriented).

How do I get started trail running? That’s the question I get asked most by people who want to come up to Gatineau Park, or anywhere else where a network of trails exist. I get it. I remember my first trail run, being uncertain about what may lurk in the woods. My answer is always the same. Start out with trails that are the most travelled, graduate to more challenging trails over time, and before you know it, you’ll be running in places and terrain you never thought you would. And that’s when you’ll fall in love with trail running, too.

L’Endroit Ou J’Aime Courir

By: Sarah Bergeron-Larouche

Étudiante en chiropratique à l’Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières et membre de l’équipe élite Salomon, je suis une amoureuse de la montagne et du «  no man’s land » . J’ai découvert le trail running, il y a bientôt 4 ans, et ce fut le vrai coup de foudre ! En sentier c’est tout simplement naturel : j’ai de l’entrain, de la vivacité ; les pieds se placent instinctivement ; j’ai l’impression de voler ; je rentre dans la zone, c’est presque « animal »!

Tout le monde a sa raison personnelle de courir et les motifs sont aussi variés et uniques qu’il y a de personnes qui courent. Pour moi, une partie de ma motivation vient du sentiment de satisfaction et d’accomplissement, mais principalement de la découverte. En fait, la course en sentier m’amène à des endroits où je n’ai jamais été, autant sur le plan physique que mental. J’ai la chance de courir dans les plus belles trails du Québec et ça me donne envie de découvrir les plus beaux paysages sur terre. Mentalement, le trail m’amène à des endroits uniques, où je me sens vivre le moment présent. En fait, le trail devient mon excuse pour explorer des lieux que je n’ose imaginer et que je ne découvrirais pas autrement qu’à la course.

Les pensées de Bernd Heinrich, biologiste, professeur et écrivain, au sujet des motifs qui nous poussent à courir me semblent logiques et rationnelles: « Pour une raison quelconque, la course semble naturelle. Ça ce rapproche de ce que plusieurs autres animaux font. Lorsque vous regardez des gens prendre le départ d’une course, poursuivant leur rêve, c’est comme s’ils partaient à la chasse à l’antilope. La course est mouvement extrême et significatif parce que le mouvement c’est l’essence même de la vie. Dans le mode de vie moderne, nous ne sommes plus des chasseurs et nous sommes déconnectés de que nous avions auparavant à faire. Pourtant au fond de nous, nous serons toujours des coureurs. »

J’aspire à me mesurer de grandes figures du trail running, mais je désire rester équilibrée. En fait, j’admets que jongler entre les études et l’entraînement est un défi perpétuel. D’autant plus que le doctorat en chiropratique est le programme universitaire le plus lourd au Canada en nombre de cours et de crédits (245 crédits; une moyenne 25 crédits par session). Par ailleurs, j’accumule quelques frustrations car il n’existe par de programme supportant les étudiants-athlètes (même que je suis réprimandée pour des absences suite à des participations aux championnats du monde). Cependant, je suis extrêmement chanceuse car j’ai l’équipe Salomon qui me soutient dans mes aspirations!

Essentiellement, peu importe le niveau de performance, je veux entretenir la passion, la partager avec les autres et la transmettre à la prochaine génération. Le trail running c’est une grande famille, des gens passionnés avec des valeurs qui me rejoignent. Je ne me suis jamais sentie autant chez moi qu’avec une gang de « trail runners ».  Et heureusement, la course est populaire et le trail gagne de nouveaux adeptes à chaque année.

I Eat the Canadian Death Race for Breakfast

Meet Alissa St. Laurent, she works in an accounting office and beat every other racer—including the men—at the most treacherous trail race in Canada

By: Eric Koreen

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Running the Canadian Death Race is an undertaking. The course is 125 kilometres long, but it is not simply a matter of navigating flat city streets or running around a track in excess of 300 times. Befitting the word “death,” completing the race involves dealing with more than 17,000 feet of elevation change, with all of the toll that comes with ascending and descending mountains attached. Depending on whether you are in town or in the mountains, or if it is night or day, it can feel like summer or winter. There have never been any incidents, but sometimes a runner will come across a bear. That would be distracting.

Beyond that, there are time cutoffs along the way. Failure to meet a minimum time standard at any of those points results in not even getting to finish. It is easy to, at once, admire and fear for the sanity of anybody who manages to cross the finish line.

Last summer, Alissa St. Laurent did not only finish the Death Race, but won it. In the 15-year history of the Grande Cache, Alta., event, she is the first woman to do that, needing fewer than 14 hours to dust the field. A week later, the 31-year-old was back training with her pals at the Fast Trax Run and Ski Shop in Edmonton. Having just completed one of the most grueling races in the world, she was not in peak form. The Death Race saps a lot from your legs, and it takes a while to get that bounce back.

Gary Poliquin, who had been running with St. Laurent for more than two years at the time, recalled that they were set to do a run nicknamed the “roller coaster.” You can probably figure out why.

“When we got there, there were a couple of mountain bikers that were there. They kind of looked around and said, ‘OK, we’ll go ahead,’ in their snotty way,” Poliquin remembers. “As soon as they said that I said, ‘Oh no, crap.’ The mountain bikers took off. I knew as soon as they made that comment, Alissa was going to go after them.

“We caught the first cyclist after about five minutes and he was in shock. We caught the second cyclist about five minutes after. He knew she was chasing him. He was going, and finally she just booked it past him. And it was kind of like, ‘la, la, la.’ It was one of those competitive things where it was like, ‘Oh no, he had to make the comment.’”

In a way, the anecdote is counter to who St. Laurent is. She has won her share of races, but is not in it for the victories. With the Death Race win, she became an advocate for the potential of women in endurance races (and in other athletic endeavours), a position she is excited to find herself in. However, she does not run for medals, titles or causes.

St. Laurent, almost comically, considers herself an “average” athlete. She had no high school or college background as a runner; her specialty was trail hiking, something she got used to growing up in around the mountains of southern Alberta. She took up long-distance running in 2011 — “I still remember my first double-digit run. I ran 14 kilometres,” she says with a laugh — but normal marathons did not scratch a relentless itch.

She quickly made the switch to trail ultramarathons. The trail part was a no-brainer: Given where she grew up, she calls mountains and valleys “home.” Poliquin says St. Laurent seems to “regenerate” after she returns from one of her frequent trips to the mountains for training sessions.

Getting used to the extra distance was a bigger hurdle.

“You just can’t fathom that (distance),” St. Laurent says. “I get the same questions: ‘Do you do that all in one day at lunch?’ I felt the exact same way. It was like, ‘I don’t even know how that is physically possible.’ But then you start hitting these milestones. I did a 50k and it didn’t kill me. I was back at it the next day.I

“Slowly you start setting bigger goals and changing what’s normal for you. It added up quickly. I realized that I kind of liked more and more, the bigger, longer distances. It didn’t seem like that much work to be out there for that many hours. It surprised me. It did.”

That it does not seem like much work to her is key to her rapid success. Sandwiching her job at an accountant’s office, St. Laurent wakes up at 6 a.m. each morning for shorter runs. There is always more to do after work, too, with longer runs and cross-training to improve her strength, particularly in her core muscles. St. Laurent calls herself kind of “nerdy” about her strength and mobility work.

“From that consistency,” says Jack Cook, the owner of Fast Trax, “the results always come.”

They certainly have. In addition to winning the Death Race, St. Laurent was the top woman in the 100-mile Sinister 7 in July, and set the women’s course record in the Cascade Crest 100 Mile race later in the year in Oregon. She professes to loving the 100-mile distance, and it is a struggle for her to keep her ambition in check.

“We were a little concerned this past fall. You need a break. The body needs to take a break,” Poliquin says. “It can’t function at high levels (that consistently). It was totally against her will. I think it was bronchitis. Mother Nature said, ‘OK, Alissa, I’m going to kick the snot out of you so you can’t run.’ It was the best thing for her.”

“I definitely have respect for that distance. It does take a lot out of you,” St. Laurent says. “I know I’m limited to how many of those I can fit into my year. I’m trying to gradually work up to it. I’m in it for the long haul. I don’t need to cram everything into one year.”

Since a disappointing performance at the IAU Trail World Championships in France in May, St. Laurent has been focusing on improving her downhill running, deemed to be the difference between her and the leaders in that race. Poliquin now estimates her downhills are as strong as her uphills, a worrisome proposition for her opponents.

She will return to France in August to run a 166-kilometre race at Mont Blanc, the highest point in the Alps. It is where she struggled last year.
“It terrifies me,” St. Laurent says. “I want to do and see things like that — things that scare me.”