Forums >Racing>Boston Marathon 2012
From Jeff Galloway's Running Book:55-60 degrees.....1%60-65 degrees.....3%65-70 degrees.....5%70-75 degrees.....7%75-80 degrees.....12%80-85 degrees.....20%above 85.....forget it, run for fun
This chart might help those of you running to adjust for the heat you might run into at Boston.
Not scientific, but he found it to be true for most amateurs.
--Jimmy
running log / profile / Crusted Salt comic strip / blog / running of the bulls
I credit the tens of thousands of spectators lining the whole course who were ferrying water our from their houses to help the runners cool themselves off. I doubt that happened much at Chicago.
People at Chicago reported that they received help from spectators who pulled out the occasional garden hose and from people that were buying drinking water with their own money. I just don't see where on the majority of the course a spectator could pull out a hose to help the people out. There are no "houses" along the route. There are apartment buildings and condos. We are in a major urban area and the race runs on main streets that stay close to downtown. If you don't have grass you don't need hoses. Boston is run through suburbs. The courses are apples and oranges.
"Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men's blood." -Daniel Burnham
A Saucy Wench
I am shocked, shocked that Trent did not charge extra for the Monkey, when heavy rain was forecast (and happened). It is outrageous that Monkey runners might get extra discomfort without paying.
I shoulda framed my bloody sock with the bib instead of throwing it out in the Microtel. THAT is memorabilia you cant get at an expo.
I have become Death, the destroyer of electronic gadgets
"When I got too tired to run anymore I just pretended I wasnt tired and kept running anyway" - dd, age 7
mileage hound
There are no "houses" along the route. There are apartment buildings and condos. We are in a major urban area and the race runs on main streets that stay close to downtown. If you don't have grass you don't need hoses. Boston is run through suburbs. The courses are apples and oranges.
This was my point. Not that people from Chicago did not care to help. The last 3 miles of Boston, where the spectators were gated back and the course was downtown, sucked as much as I'm sure much of the Chicago race did.
2013 goals: Kick some arse. Moreso than 2012.
"If you want to be a bad a$s, then do what a bad a$s does. There's your pep talk for today. Go Run." -- Slo_Hand
"Determined is what I am. Maybe a little sick in the head? Ok who am I kidding ALOT sick in the head" -- rockenmamaof5
Marathon virgin with a question for the veteran marathoners. I'm packing my orange plastic bag and wondering if there's anything important I forgot. Contents so far: towel (aka portable changing room), dry clothes, flip flops. Anything else?
Awesome
I packed some crazy stuff, too. The silliest: cheese. Yep, I packed cheese. I like to snack on cheese and crackers. What if there's no cheese in Boston? (And, I'm probably still going to eat it even though it was unrefrigerated for 5 hours). Coming in for a close second: an empty Deer Park water bottle for race day. Clearly, I think Boston is some third world country or something.
Might I suggest for you a trip by Formaggio Kitchen at some point today?
http://www.formaggiokitchen.com/huronave/locations/southend
This girl is on fire.
2013 PRs:5K: 20:43
10K: 43:44
10M: 1:09:15HM: 1:34:37
M: 3:23:53 (NYCMQ, BQ-20)
Since no one will be running that fast anyways, perhaps this would be the ideal race to break a stunt running world record. Fastest male backwards marathon is 3:42:41 for the men and 4:42:39 for the women. Looks soft to me.
Might I suggest for you a trip by Formaggio Kitchen at some point today? http://www.formaggiokitchen.com/huronave/locations/southend
Eye of Sauron
And once again Mr. Wizard (aka: Stevie Ray) explains the internet.
I won't be getting to Coolidge Corner (I thought Kenmore seemed like a bad idea) until 12:45 and don't know that area well. I want to tell my friend where I'll be but I don't know the area well. She plans on running the race in 3:45. Any suggestions on where to stand so she'll have a chance of seeing me??
Just pick a side of the road (left or right). You would be surprised at how easy it is for people to pick you out and you hear them. If you know which side to look to, it makes it pretty easy...
And you can quote me as saying I was mis-quoted. Groucho Marx
Rob
there are folks everywhere in orange jackets. If they are chilly right now they should be just fine tomorrow.
I laughed.
They have these things called "water bottles". What you do is, you put water in them. That way if it's hot and you need a drink but aren't near a water stop, you can drink some--right out of the bottle! Some of them are even refillable.
"Able to function despite imminent catastrophe"
"The most common question from potential entrants is 'I do not know if I can do this' to which I usually answer, 'that's the whole point'.--Paul Charteris, Tarawera Ultramarathon RD.
"They just couldn't believe that somebody would do all that running for no reason."--Forrest Gump
Boston Marathon 15 April
Big Sur Marathon 28 April
Bighorn 50 Mile 15 June
Tahoe Rim Trail 100M 20/21 July
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