TALES FROM THE TRAIL (AND SOMETIMES THE ROAD TOO)

Sunday, December 9, 2012

Lost Lady

Currently I’m in the midst of a nightmare phase.  As a child, nightmares periodically plagued me.  As an adult, years (sometimes many) pass between nightmare phases.  This current time of nightmares has been hanging around for several months.  Sometimes they’re filled with fear, other times extreme anger.   This morning I dreamt that I came upon a stream and noticed a body sinking to the bottom.  I remember that he/she was draped (almost wrapped) in flowing white clothing.  I rushed to the water and reached beneath, urgently trying to lift the person out before he or she drowned.  I don’t recall anything else. 

Hubby notices my moods after nightmares and comments, “It was only a dream.”  And they are only dreams.  But they affect my mood.  When I wake angry or frightened I find it difficult to start the day off smiling.  This morning I woke for an early run, walked out to the living room and went straight to sleep on the couch.  I began my run 3 1/2 hours later than planned.

Today’s running goal was to get my legs used to a faster turnaround.  I run so many hills, that when I reach a flat,  I find I keep running in recovery mode.  My legs don’t pick up the pace.   Inadvertently, I’ve trained myself to run slowly. 

So, I went for a 15 mile flat run today.  I didn’t try and race it.  But when I glanced at my garmin, I purposely picked up my pace and tried to keep it up.   I ran down to the beach first, and hopped onto The Bike Path (which I call The River Walk) and ran it into San Juan Capistrano.  I ran like a trail runner, that is armed and with a pack, so I probably stuck out among the many walkers, runners and bikers making their way along San Juan Creek.  (By armed I mean, pepper spray in my pocket and a knife inconspicuously clipped to my pack). 

Picking up The Bike Path where San Juan Creek meets the Pacific Ocean:

Trabuco Creek just before connecting to San Juan Creek:

I love this bridge!:

I ran off The Bike Path and ran through the Los Rios District – a lovely historic neighborhood.  It was crowded with people eating in the diners, shopping the antique stores, perusing the adobe museums and even waiting for a train.   Memories of any nightmares had vanished as I ran on through, at one with the festiveness.

I caught Trabuco Trail after running through a long grassy park filled with tall trees turning autumn colors.  Trabuco Trail was empty.  I crossed Trabuco Creek, ran past orange groves.  Then I crossed beneath the road and ran to Arroyo Trabuco Trail where I turned around and headed back. 

I continued picking up my pace every time I glanced at my garmin.  And it looked like I was going to run a negative split for the first time in a long time. As I ran Trabuco Trail along the orange groves, my ear buds humming music in my ears, a man approached me.  He was yelling, but I couldn’t understand at first what he said.  “Help me, please!” he pleaded.  “I can’t find my wife.”  He seemed on the verge of tears.

Of course, my first reaction was caution.  I stepped back as he approached me, his hands out, his face full of fear.  Looking him over, I listened while assessing.  All the while, I watched for a lunge or any quick movement on his part.  It is after all, a common trick that killers use.  They pretend to need help before grabbing their victim.  I took quick glances around and noticed a couple people no more than a quarter mile off.  Not only that, I believed the man. 

Problem was.  He spoke Spanish and knew very little English.  I speak English and know very little Spanish.  He was frantic and spoke quickly.  We used a combination of gestures and broken-English/broken-Spanish to communicate.

I learned this:  His wife was on this trail not too long ago.  Now she was gone.  There was a white man standing where we were standing when this desperate man last saw his wife.  She had gone off to pick some oranges. 

“Could she have gone back to the car?” I ‘questioned.’ “Is that the elderly white-haired man there in the mustard field?”  “You go look in your car and ask the man, and I’ll look through the grove.”  I asked also what color she was wearing, he responded, “colorful.” 

He ran off turning back to me, “Please, please help me find her.  Don’t leave!”

I went into the grove where only a few trees still had oranges.  I concentrated on those trees with the oranges.  I looked for a mass of color at the bottom of those trees in case the woman had fallen or something like that. 

Assured that the woman was not in this orange field I took to the trail again and ran toward the equestrian parking lot hoping to learn that man had found his wife waiting for him there.  I found him running on the trail back toward me.  She was not at the car.

Oh, how hard it was for us to communicate!!  He kept saying, “Oh my God!  Oh my God!”  There was no way I could leave him without him finding his wife.  Using our gestures and broken-English/broken-Spanish, I learned her name, where he had last seen her, and that she was 65 years old. “Oh my God, I have to call my family,” he said.  Somehow we communicated that we would split up on our search. As I left him he was weeping on the phone, communicating to someone in Spanish.

I assured him that I would return and took off toward more orange groves, and more importantly, TRABUCO CREEK.  Though I never thought it outright, in the recesses of my brain, I feared the creek. 

I hollered out her name and listened closely for any responses.  I looked through the fields, focusing on the orange trees.  No one!  I continued on running toward the creek, when a gray-haired lady wearing a pink sweater, walked quite slowly over a small hill toward me. 

I called out her name.  She looked at me questioningly.  “Como se llama?” I said. 

The woman gave me a different name.  She had a peaceful, serene look on her face, as if she was enjoying her walk immensely.

She spoke only Spanish to me.  Confirming with gestures, I was able to determine that she was there with her husband who was waiting for her at the car.  “How old are you?” I asked in English.    “65,” she answered back in English.

“Come with me,” I said and held out my arm.  We began to walk, but oh so slowly.  I couldn’t stand the thought of her husband going through another second of pain, so I looked the woman in the eyes and said while pointing down to the ground, “You keep walking on this path!”  She smiled and nodded and continued walking in the same direction as I took off running to find her husband.  I found him within minutes running toward me.  When he saw his wife, he broke down weeping.  He thanked me over and over and hugged me.  He also apologized over and over again.  I told him, no need, everything’s okay.  I also told him that she gave me a different name.  He said that’s the name of her child.  And then again through gestures and broken-English he communicated to me that his wife had recently endured heart surgery.  Since then she has had bouts of dementia. 

The man was overly thankful for my aid and continued weeping as he spoke lovingly to his wife in Spanish.  He continued to put his arm around me, thanking me, apologizing, though I felt like I really didn’t do much.  I merely came upon his wife. 

I can still picture him perfectly, his pain and his joy.  I doubt I will ever forget him or his wife.  I took off running after the husband and wife reunion, and I didn’t even get his name.  I know her name, and her daughter’s name.  But I will probably never see the man again, and oddly, I feel like we are friends now after going through this today.

The remainder of the run was light, stress-free.  It was on my way back that I remembered my dream.  I’m certain it had nothing to do with today’s event.  HOWEVER, if I hadn’t started my run 3 1/2 hours late, I would not have come upon the man, we would have never met and become friends for about 20 minutes.

Some pictures from today’s run:

The Los Rios District:

Downtown San Juan Capistrano:

Headed toward Trabuco Trail:

Trabuco Trail:

Arroyo Trabuco:

Friday, December 7, 2012

Take Two

Today’s run ended my “rest while running” time.  I thought it apropos to end my “rest” by attempting the run that seemed to set the downward spiral in motion during my training last September. 

I set out running Bommer Ridge in dense fog this morning headed for Old Emerald.  I took a wrong turn last time, which resulted in pure HECK.  This morning I accidently took Bommer ridge down to Willow Trail, which I do every single time.  That was no big deal.  I just had a short uphill run to get back on track.

 

I came upon one other runner on this lovely, yet eerie morning.  He turned around and joyfully hollered a greeting.  Bundled up from head to toe, I couldn’t tell right off if I knew the man.  I mean, he kind of looked familiar.  “Do I know you?” I asked.  (I say that more than ever now that I’m a trail runner).  Turns out we didn’t know each other.  My friends and family who don’t run trails think that this sport is small.  And it is.  BUT to me, it’s a huge sport.  I constantly come upon people at races and on the trails that I’ve never seen before. (And I stay in my own state!)

Anyway, a thick gray coyote looked on at me through the mist as I ran onward searching for Old Emerald Trail.  I felt certain I missed it last time because it was not marked.

I focused off to my right for an unmarked single-track.  Eventually, I found a distinct single-track.  Unmarked.  It didn’t look familiar.  But keep in mind, when I run Old Emerald, I run up it.  I ran down Old Emerald just once. 

So, I ran that single-track down the hillside and told myself firmly, “If you get into trouble, TURN BACK.”   I noticed bike tracks, no footprints.   Nothing looked familiar.  With the fog so thick, I could not make out my surroundings very well.  Then finally, I noticed a ledge down below that could probably give me a good view.

From the ledge, I could see the meadow I was aiming for, way, way off in the distance.  Problem was, there was a ridge between me and the meadow.  I was on the wrong trail.  It’s pretty much a straight shot to the meadow from Old Emerald.  I would definitely remember having run over another ridge.

So, I ran back up that single-track, a little proud of myself for not taking the trail anyway, just to see what would happen.  Smile

Back on Bommer Ridge, I came upon another single-track.  I ran a short distance of it, to the edge, before its descent.  I could still see that ridge.  Wrong trail.  And so, I continued onward, confident that I would find Old Emerald because here and there I could see an outline of the ridge that separated the canyon from my meadow.  Sure enough, soon after the other ridgeline sloped down to nothing, I came upon this trail:

Unmarked?  It may seem so.  I felt vindicated.  That is until I turned around and saw the trail marker, clear as day on the left edge of Bommer Ridge.  I ran down Old Emerald with great focus and renewed energy.  At the bottom, I ran probably twenty-five feet before I came to Old Emerald Falls Trail.

Entering Old Emerald Falls:

The meadow!

The climb out of Old Emerald Falls was a chore.  It was single track, and in places technical, which took my mind off the difficulty.  From there I caught Moro Ridge and ran it all the way to the ocean (well, I had to take a couple other trails).  I saw these two, seemingly tame deer as I made my way down B.F.I. Trail:

Running beneath Hwy One for a view of the grand Pacific:

From there it was all uphill, a lovely, cool uphill.  The last run of my “restful running” couldn’t have turned out better. 

Running Bommer Emerald Falls Morro Ridge BFI No Name loop 12-7-2012, Elevation - Distance

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Autumn is the Best Time for a Trail Run

Autumn is the best.  The weather is cool.  The fog is sometimes thick.  I can see red crawdads in the streams.  Blue Herons have returned and swoop through the sky with their giant wingspans.  Rattlesnakes hide.  The leaves turn color.  Ferns sprout a light lovely green, and mushrooms push up along the trails.  And rain comes down in California just enough to get the creeks flowing good again.

Such was today’s morning autumn run. 

Running Up Rock it down Meadows 12-5-2012, Elevation - Distance

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A-Okay

I ran trails this morning and was so very tempted to run for endurance and push for extra miles.  But I fought against the urge.  I had told myself that I wasn’t going to train (in any way) until early December.  I was going to rest (while running).  And gosh darn it – I’m going to see this thing through.

Back when I DNF’d Saddleback, I felt pretty low.  Not low necessarily because I decided not to finish the race.  I felt low because of all my downfalls and general mental weakness.  Saddleback just kind of showed them to me all at once – like a wide opened book.  Afterward, I even caught glimpses of thoughts wandering through my mind, thinking that I should quit running.   

Quit running?  Ha!  What then would I do?  (Oh I don’t know . . . perhaps become a better mother, better wife, have a cleaner house, keep groceries stocked, play with our dog, maybe paint the house, finish writing my novels, try and sell my finished novel, read more, finally get a full-time job, clean out my filthy truck, aid the needy, volunteer more at the boys’ schools, be available more to people, in general, and specifically to my family . . . )

This “rest while running” month has really helped me realize that I wouldn’t be half the person I am without my trails.  Sure, I’m not perfect.  I’m not as strong physically as I want to be.  I’m not as strong mentally as I want to be.  Running actually helps me deal with my imperfections, helps me accept them.  I just had a bad day, a bad month perhaps . . . that happens in endurance running.

So today, I didn’t put in those extra miles.  I ran to rest.  I ran up a steep incline (Mentally Sensitive).  And though I suffered going up, at the top, EVERYTHING WAS A-OKAY.  Who cares if I STILL haven’t dropped my extra weight.  I have 3 beautiful sons and a wonderful husband at home.  Who cares if the recession has hit us hard.  Our middle boy hasn’t had a seizure in over 2 years!!!  Who cares if the house needs painting and we can’t afford to paint it right now.  We have a house.  Who cares about all that junk.  I have my trails.  I think I have only God to thank for that because I was the last person in the whole wide world to ever run, much less run mountain trails.  It just happened.  It was a gift given to me.  And I don’t know why. 

Smile

Standing before my dirty truck ready to run (& my truck runs and it has tires with good tread AND it seats five!):

Running the flat part of Meadows Trail toward Mentally Sensitive:

Running Mentally Sensitive was SO HARD, BUT OH SO WORTH IT:

An ear warmer serving a dual purpose.  When no longer needed for warmth, it becomes my snot rag (Ewwwww, she wears a snot rag on her vest????):

Finishing up Car Wreck Trail, so lovely and velvety green:

Oak Grove Trail:

Running Big loop at Aiso, up Mentally Sensitive down Car Wreck 11-28-2012, Elevation - Distance

Tuesday, November 27, 2012

STILL Not Training

I wrote that I wasn’t training (for now), and I’m sticking to it! Like I mentioned, I’m resting while running.  This morning was my “short” run, an out-and-back to Top of the World in Laguna Beach.  This is a nice hilly run, not too steep at all, but a good work-out.  Once I reached the ridge, it was rolling hills, REAL rolling hills, not those hills that some people (and I won’t mention names) call “rolling hills.”  (You know, those hills that you have to grasp at branches, scrape your knees just to climb Smile). 

It’s full-on autumn here, which is a delight.  But this also means that I almost always overdress.  Like I did today.  The weather was cool, even cloudy and darkish at first.  But, after climbing the first hill (Cholla Trail – not a rolling hill), I was ready to strip off the long sleeves.

But I managed.  And I managed happily. 

Here’s to running while resting!!

Cholla Trail:

Top of the World:

Looking at Saddleback Mountains:

Running Cyn Vistas out and back to top of the world 11-27-2012, Elevation - Distance