My new motto: At a distance. For a distance. As I was
writing my weekly running column for the Poughkeepsie Journal this morning,
that’s the phrase that kept coming to my head. I was writing about my buddy
David Osterhoudt (Davey O!), who celebrated his 43rd birthday on
Saturday morning by running 43 kilometers. For those keeping score at home, 43km
is 26.719 miles – a little longer than the standard marathon distance of 42.195
kilometers (26.2188 miles). His original idea was 43 miles for 43 years, and he
wanted me to do it with him. I was very reluctant, because that’s a long way to
go in my broken-down, washed-up condition -- not to mention my pandemic “training”
consists mostly of brisk walking and almost no running. By myself, of course,
with just podcasts and music as my company. He persisted and then convinced me
by settling on 43km. That, I can do, without trashing my whole day – and,
really, what else do we have going on?
Davey O grew up in Staatsburg, a historic village within the
Town of Hyde Park. Readers of this fancy blog probably know Staatsburg village
as the sleepy burg we drive through on the way to our Mills Hills workout
during cross country season. Older readers remember it as “Ogden Mills Estate.”
Its official name is now the “Staatsburgh State Historic Site.” Dave O’s idea
was to run from one historic 1700s-era mile marker -- right in the middle of
the village, across the street from his dad Odie’s house, which served as our “run
headquarters” -- north to the next one, a mile up the road, about a half-mile
past the historic site. Back and forth, back and forth. He knew I would go for
that sort of tedium.
I’m pretty slow, so I started a lot earlier than he did; got
in 8 miles before his truck appeared in Odie’s driveway. He caught up to me
(not that difficult to do, at my snail’s pace), we ran together – at a very
acceptable social distance, opposite sides of the wide road – for about five
minutes before he took off at his very respectable running pace. I shuffled
along at a 5 miles per hour jog/walk for the whole morning, listening to
podcasts and music. He lapped me several times and we saw each other a bunch of
times – always at the opposite sides of the road, as we always ran against
traffic. The timing was good. After 13 out-and-backs, we had to tack on the extra
distance to get to the 43km total. We finished around the same time midday – he
in a very respectable 3:49:25 (8:35 pace), me at a very slow 5:20:27. His
family was there as he finished. Several members of his immediate family he
hadn’t seen in several weeks!
So yeah. We cannot run in groups anymore for the time being.
We SHOULD not run in groups anymore. Most rail trails, parks, etc., are too
congested with runners for any sort of group runs, even solo runs. But an old,
wide country road with just a few of us – two of his other running buddies came
and paced him for parts of his run – for a few hours? That’s doable. For now. For
a distance. At a distance.
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ReplyDeleteDavey O, repping the Marist gear- neat! Maybe Pete will someday be wearing a "M.A.M." singlet?
ReplyDeleteI grew up in the village of Hyde Park, so I do remember "Odgen Mills"-- and in the 1960s, my parents and I would swim in the Hudson River at a small sandy beach, down the macadam road below the mansion.