Two years after my last attempt, I returned to the northernmost tip of Öland for another 50 kilometres of learning humility. In 2023, I had gone out far too hard, trying to stay with the elites, only to find myself completely burnt out by the 30k mark. I had to walk much of the remainder, humbled and exhausted.
Determined not to repeat the same mistake, I set out yesterday with a modest target: a steady 5:20 min/km pace. My heart rate was a bit high – hovering around 150 bpm – but I felt strong. The course, a mix of bike paths, sandy beaches, and the occasional patch of rocks, carried me to the halfway point in Byxelkrok in 2 hours and 14 minutes. At that point, I was still on track for a 4:39 finish.
Crossing the poppy fields of Neptuni åkrar under a merciless sun and with no wind in sight, I still managed to hold a 5:30 pace, confident that I would stay well ahead of my five-hour goal.
But by the time I reached Grankullavik, the cost of last Sunday's brutal Alpaca run – five loops, 56 kilometres, and 3,400 metres of elevation – came due. My leg muscles were toast. No matter how hard I tried to push, all I achieved was a higher heart rate and a slower pace. By the full marathon distance, I was done. Again. All I could do was to walk it in.
Nauseous and defeated by the heat, I crossed the finish line in 5:38, eight minutes faster than last year, but still a bitter disappointment. And yet, I loved it. The race, the exposure, the strange beauty of northern Öland, there is something about this place that keeps calling me back.
Labels: running