They hand you a perfectly ripe peach at the finish line! |
The first two features were very apparent yesterday, with one of the warmest starts in recent history. (As for hills, my town where I train is so hilly that I somehow barely noticed the hills in the race.) It turned out to be the very first heat advisory day of this year. We stayed overnight at a hotel right at the start site. The wheelchair athletes took off at 6 AM, then the elite athletes at 7 AM, and then the rest of the runners in waves that set off every 5 minutes. My turn came around 8 AM and it was already sweltering- I felt like I was swimming in warm soup.
At the start line |
The race is one big party, like you're in a parade going down main street. Streets are lined with cheering spectators hollering and holding signs. Sweet little kids hold up homemade posters saying "Touch the button to power up". I spotted inspirational quotes on perseverance, funny signs saying "You look hot" (accurate) and "That's a lot of hard work for a banana" (more like a lot of hard work for a peach and a T-shirt).
Some spectators hand out treats, everything from pieces of banana to power drinks to mimosas and beer! Musicians and DJs hype up runners are at different points on the route. There were runners in themed costumes- I spotted Uncle Sam, Lady Liberty, King George V (top half of the costume worn with shorts lol), a bride in a veil. The whole spectacle is wonderfully distracting. The hardest part was weaving through throngs of people, many of whom are walking or jog-walking.
Watching the early waves through an 11th floor hotel window |
Heat watch at the Peachtree yesterday |
In fact, the race was ended early ("black flag") because of weather conditions. Luckily, >95% of people had finished by then.
Southern hospitality is very apparent as you finish the race in Piedmont Park- we were greeted with cold water, perfectly ripe peaches, and troughs of soda. And the coveted finisher T-shirt.
I don't think I will do this race again. Racing in the heat requires training in the heat and that's just not fun. But am I glad I did it once!
This year's lovely T-shirt design |
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Reading: A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian, a 2005 novel by Marina Leywcka. This work of fiction is in the domestic fiction genre and was a very quick and engrossing read. The reviews keep describing it as hilarious and comical but I don't know...at best it is tragicomic. The book is written in first person by the younger of two Anglo-Ukrainian sisters; she is the peacetime baby and her older sister is the wartime baby. The family has endured harsh struggles and are survivors of tough political times before she came along. The sisters are at feud over- what else but- inheritance, but they put their feud aside when their 80-something widower father wants to marry a 30-something Ukrainian woman who they label as a golddigger. The book depicts the struggle of family relationships- an elderly dad asking his middle-aged daughters to mind their own business about his new relationship, even as he asks them for money to buy his girlfriend the fancy cars and stoves and vacuum cleaners that she demands.
Watching: Schitt's Creek on Prime (Freevee). It is a great little sitcom about a filthy rich family that finds themselves penniless overnight, and living in a motel in a forgotten town that they bought as a joke years ago. I watched some episodes as in-flight entertainment some time ago and am happy to watch the whole series now.
Tell me what you're up to, during this first week of July.
Congratulations!! So thrilled that you were able to do this!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!
DeleteCongratulations on running and completing the Peachtree race! Your writeup reminds me so much of the NYC Marathon, with the cheering spectators, amazing volunteers and wonderful carnival-like atmosphere. I have never run any race, leave alone the marathon, but have "participated" as a cheerer and clapper :)
ReplyDeleteI had quite a chuckle at your hassleback potatoes!! The official spelling is hasselback, but your version is so much more evocative!
Enjoy the rest of your summer!
LOL I stand corrected! Hasselback indeed, and not such a hassle! I think the term "hasselback" comes from the Swedish, where the dish originated?
DeleteThanks! I too have been a cheerer and clapper during each of the NYC marathons when I lived there (a block away from the race route). And never will I run a marathon. But I love that the Peachtree is inclusive and being the more manageable distance of 10K, allows runners like me to participate in a "big, famous race".
Congratulations on running the peachtree race. Sounds like a great achievement and great fun, especially to be greeted with peaches at the end.
ReplyDeleteI am with you on the brilliance of zucchini pizza - we have had it on pizza at home quite a bit lately. We also love hasselback potatoes My aim this week is to make borscht which I am sure would go down well in the history of tractors in Ukrainian - it is much more soup weather here but I am jealous of your peach weather.
Thanks, Johanna! It was great fun and I can see now why people love races so much.
DeletePeach weather is killing us this week ;) ah the heat and humidity! I am hiding indoors.
Zucchini on pizza is indeed very special and very new to me. Cold borscht sounds really good right about now.
Congratulations!! What an achievement!! Training and running the race gives you the bragging rights! Hope you are very proud of yourself!!!
ReplyDeleteSchitt's Creek tends to grow on you. I enjoyed it more the second time with my girls. .
Will definitely try out the pizza this summer.
Thank you!! I am just glad that the sweat and tears paid off- each run is a struggle for me LOL.
DeleteWell done Nupur!! I love Zucchini and will give this a try! Shubha
ReplyDeleteThank you, dear Shubha!
DeleteCongratulations on Peachtree ! Its really brave of you. I have never done it as I am scared of July heat. What an interesting story novel you are reading.
ReplyDeleteI don't know that I'll ever do it again! The heat is a lot to deal with.
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