Years ago, on the
way home from the Arrowhead, I stopped by a ski shop in Minneapolis
to try on ski boots. I knew I needed a new pair, a pair that fit,
and since the shop had a good selection, I took advantage of it.
Since I had no intention of buying—I knew I could get them at cost
elsewhere, but was just using the shop—I bought a ski
mountaineering magazine as a sort of “thank you.” Now I've never
done ski mountaineering, I can't truly claim to have done downhill
skiing or mountaineering, but the magazine had some amazing photos.
The writing on the other hand—every trip report was exactly the
same:
It was a long trip
in the (car, boat, helicopter) to (exotic location). We were really
excited to be in (exotic location). We got one last good night's rest
then (skinned, snowshoed, dogsledded) as far as we could before
setting up camp. We were nervous about (avalanches, crevasses,
overhanging seracs, rock face), but tried to sleep anyway. We got up
before dawn and skinned up as far as we could go. Then we had to
face the (avalanches, crevasses, overhanging seracs, rock face), but
we made it. It was beautiful from the top. We could see all the way
to (other exotic location). Then we shredded the pow on the way
down. The end.
I was bored. The
genre was dull.
Now I admit that not
every trip goes according to plan. If something went wrong then
you've got an interesting story, but that's not good writing, that's
a lucky break for your narrative (unlucky for the folks involved).
I've written my share of “something went wrong” stories. They're
fun to write. They get a lot of hits. They can be the most useful
to read too. But, all happy trip reports are alike; each unhappy
trip report is unhappy in its own way.
What can I say about
the Iron Knee 25k? The race was beautifully managed by the Mountain
Madness folks. There weren't too many people. The aid stations were
well stocked. There was even a long climb called “The Powerline”
that, yes, ran along a powerline right-of-way. There were rocks and
roots. There were smooth, fast sections. There were views of mountains and water. I had a good run, but I
was out of shape. I was more sore afterwards than I wanted to be.
It was too short. It was a happy race.
But maybe that's not
all there is.
This was my first
glimpse into a community of runners here in Vancouver. It was my
first time seeing people who I felt like I knew. Who I connected
with. I struck up conversations with folks at the start line. They
seemed to understood how hard it is to get out and do something in
this fenced in city. They understood that it isn't the outdoor
paradise that is promised. That long trip to the start wasn't by
boat or car or dogsled, it was two hours by foot and train and bus and it
started at 5:30 in the morning. That long powerline climb featured
signs with each runners name and a message for each of us. Mine
read, “If it got any easier, it wouldn't be a challenge.” Did I
get any names; did I make any friends? No. But for a little while I
felt like I was home.