Fairfax Cross County 40 Miler Fat Ass
March 10, 2002
By Jaret Seiberg
Eleven Happy Trails members were among the 24 runners who completed the
second annual Fairfax Cross County 40 Miler on March 10.
Everyone also had to have had a great time at this event,
which had
only three finishers its first year. This year 39 of us did at least
some
of the trail, with the majority of those going less than the full 40
miles
dropping out at mile 36.7 where the cars were parked.
Seth Mosier finished first in 6:50:00. Top VHTRC member was
John Hayward,
whose fourth place finish was pretty impressive given that he got
seriously
lost and ended up running with myself and Kerry Owens until mile 32.
Top
female finisher was Susan Baehre, also a VHTRC member.
The other VHTRC members to finish were Michael Bur, Jaret
Seiberg (that's
me), Kerry Owens, Nick Satriano, Bill Turrentine, Victoria Kendall,
Farouk
Elkassed, Caroline Leean-Stearns, and Noelle Olson.
The course follows the Fairfax Cross County trail, which
essentially
is a combination of existing trails that get a runner from the southern
part of the county to the Potomac River in the north. Surfaces vary
from
dirt to paved trails to neighborhood streets. I'd estimate about half
the
course qualifies as trail running.
The start was just off Rolling Road on WadeBrook Terrace. This
was not
a conventional start. Race director John Coogan, who ran the course and
finished sixth, had encouraged those who might not finish while the sun
was still up to leave early and apparently more than a dozen took him
up
on that offer, some leaving as much as an hour before the 8 a.m. start
and others just a few minutes early.
When the main pack finally left, we ran along the Pohick Creek
for several
miles before detouring through a neighborhood to reach the Accotink
trail.
For the next 25 miles or so I was pretty much with the same group,
including
Happy Trails members Kerry Owens, John Haywood, Amy Bloom, and Steve
Platt.
We enjoyed an aid station at Wakefield Park where a large
chunk of the
pack had reassembled. This meant we all arrived at the first major
river
crossing together. There was not way to stay dry, unless you were Amy
Bloom
who got Steve Platt to carry her across the creek.
The trail switched to pavement and we left the beltway to head
west
into Fairfax. Around Chain Bridge road, the group I was with split.
Michael
Bur and Kerry Owens were going straight while Steve Platt, Phil
Pommerering
and James Kotwicki went right. Amy Bloom and I followed the larger
pack,
assuming they better understood the directions at this point.
In fact, Phil understood the directions so well that he was
able to
replace a road section with a trail section that include three storm
drain
crossings. The down side was wet shoes, but we eliminated a boring
stretch
through a neighborhood for some dirt. We got to the Oak Mar aid station
about one minute behind Bur and Owens, so the distances had to be about
the same. Perhaps the course should be permanently rerouted this way?
At this point we transferred into the Difficult Run stream
valley, which
we followed off-and-on all the way to Great Falls park. Much of this
section
was on dirt trails paralleling the stream. We did detour out of the
stream
valley several times to stay on the Cross County Trail. This included
cutting
through a subdivision to reach the Glade Road aid station.
By this point, our pack had splintered. It was just myself,
John, and
Kerry. John only was with us because we had the directions and the map.
We got let him go at this point by giving him the map while we kept the
directions. He sprinted off, making up an amazing amount of time.
After a short stint on the WO&D trail, Kerry and I were
back in
Difficult Run. We passed through the final aid station, located at
Colvin
Run Road and Leesburg Pike, before entering a four mile stretch to the
Difficult Run parking lot off Georgetown Pike.
We caught up to Steve Platt and Amy Bloom at this point. Steve
once
again carried Amy across the river, ensuring her feet remained dry. For
some reason, he ignored pleas for similar service from Kerry and me.
Several folks ended the run here because this is where we left
the cars.
Great Falls Park does not open early enough to use its parking lot,
even
though that is where the run ends. Steve and Amy were kind enough to
transport
my dry bag to end as Kerry and I pushed on for the final 3 miles to the
visitor's center.
After a big climb and ensuing downhill, pizza and a small
group of runner's
awaited us as we finished in 7:37.
Though not a convention run, the Fairfax 40 Miler was a blast
and I
hope it becomes a long-standing tradition. It is very low-key, though
organized
enough so you can comfortably complete the course only having to carry
a water bottle. Having to use the maps and directions to navigate adds
an extra element of quirkiness to the event.
Hope to see you all out there next year.
Happy Trails,
Jaret Seiberg
Virginia Happy Trails Running Club
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