Thursday, June 18, 2026

Another Sprint - Triathlon Is Not For Everyone

 

Couples Triathlon 

July 12, 2009

Walter Long Lake, Austin, Texas 

800 Meter Swim-11 Mile Bike-5K Run

 

I did this one with my old friend, Gary. 

He had done marathons but no triathlons until the event. He bought new equipment and trained in areas he had never trained in before.  Though, I am not sure how easy he thought this was going to be, to put all three disciplines together. He seemed to enjoy the training and the disciplines, but I wondered how he would like an event.

The swim went well, and the dreaded bike course seemed to be easier than I had imagined.  However, the first “killer hill” almost stopped me cold.  Then loomed the hill named “quadzilla.”  This bad boy almost broke me last year. Steep and long, it is just an incline without let-up.  Truly, this hill is a lung, heart, and quad buster. 

Surprisingly, though, it was not as hard as I had anticipated.  I had been doing more hill work in my training, and it seemed to have paid off.   Once over the bad hill, I started rolling.  After that bad hill, it was not far to the end of the bike leg.  I was going so well that when I turned the last corner to sprint to the transition, I turned too sharply.  The road had a steep edge to it that led down into a deep ditch.  My front wheel got past the point of no return and I went off the road.  Stopping was out of the question. I was on the edge of a steep, weedy incline and headed into the ravine.  The best I could do was stay up and ride it out if possible.  Thank God, I made that bumpy ride to the bottom of the incline, from where I got off the bike and walked it back up the incline to the road.

That cost me some time, but I had not wrecked, and my overall bike time was considerably better than last year.

The run was hot, and I had probably put out too much on the bike.  I had to walk once to get my breath back.  After finishing, I waited for Gary as I wanted to cheer him in for his first triathlon.  He was over fourteen minutes behind me and really looked bad coming in.  After he finally finished, I tried to console him by telling him I had had to walk once.  He said he might have run once.  I believe this was a lot harder than he ever imagined.  Years later, he has never done another triathlon, and as far as I know, has not ridden the bike again.  He said he would never do another. This is not for everyone.

A DAY UNLIKE ANY OTHER DAY by Marvin Dittfurth

Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Another Good Burnet Moment

 

Burnet

 

September 21, 2008

Burnet, Texas

 800 Meter Swim-16 Mile Bike-5K Run

My time was OK.  As usual, the swim was laid out far too long and the swim time could not be compared to other years.

 

 

The bike course was the same hilly affair, but went all right.  I died on that run.  However, I got 2nd place in my age group.   We called my son, who lived in Kansas, and told him about all the goings on, and we bought him a race shirt.

 A Day Unlike Any Other Day by Marvin Dittfurth - Ironman Story   https://booklocker.com/books/12152.html

Saturday, June 13, 2026

A Really Good Event- The Most Applause for the Last Place Finisher

 


CB & I 

May 3, 2008

Woodlands, Texas

500 Yard Swim-15 Mile Bike-5K Run

I was up for this one.  Instead of getting off to the side and the back of my swim wave, I got right in the middle, ready to rumble.  And I did.  Arms, legs, elbows, people swimming over me, and me swimming over other people.  It was an aquatic wrestling match, and I remember thinking, as I was right in the middle of it, “Goodness!  This is fun.”  I guess you never get too old to be a child if you don’t let yourself get too old.  When the violence cleared out and I was on the return portion of the loop. I saw a man just floating face up.  People often do this when they run out of gas on the swim, so I thought it was fine and swam on.  Later, I was to learn that a man in his fifties had died during the swim, and just about the time I would have been in the water. Did I pass him up? Could I have done anything? Hmmm

I went on to have my screaming bike ride – I look more vicious in the photo because I forgot my sunglasses in transition.  I had a decent run.  In all, it was good enough for second place in my age group.  At an event of that size and caliber, that means something.  I won an entry to the next year’s event too.   

However, the most impressive thing was that they gave an award to the last finisher.  A heavy girl stepped forward to receive her award and received a huge round of applause.  In fact, she received more applause than any of the winners.  To me, that says something about the personal quality of triathletes.  It was a good day.

 

 


Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Then Came Quadzilla - Good Sprint Event

 


Couples Triathlon

July 13, 2008

Austin, Texas, Walter Long Lake

 

800 Meter Swim-11 Mile Bike-5K Run

 

Energy, youth, noise, and a great venue.  Parking was right there at transition- really convenient.  Participant friendly is a rather good description of this event.  For the first time ever, I was allowed to pick up my packet the morning of the event.  Sure made things nice. 

 

The swim was 800 meters in Walter Long Lake.  Nothing spectacular but I did have a good swim. 

 

 

 

 

 

The bike was surprising to me.  Couldn’t seem to get going.  The hills were a steeper incline than I thought, and one came at the bottom of a hill after a sharp right turn. There was absolutely no momentum going into this hill.  I barely kept my bike upright getting over this bad boy and I was winded severely. 

 

Then came Quadzilla, a long and steep hill.  I was more ready for this one, but the result was the same. As slow as I was moving, I still passed lots of folks on this hill.  Several participants walked their bikes.  Some were wobbling all over the road, trying to stay upright.  I thought it would never end…but soon thereafter was the transition. 

 

The rest of the race was easy in comparison to the bike leg.  The run was some on pavement and some in the park.  The course doubled back close to the race area and they had people squirting water on us there as we made a turn with the crowd all around.  That was a nice touch.   It was hot.  I passed a young couple who were toast by this time.  When I got a short distance ahead, I heard the young man say, “We must really be in bad shape.  Did you see his age on his leg, and he is passing us?”    I did not feel complimented at all being considered to have some sort of age-induced disability.

 

The finish line could be seen from a distance, and I kicked in what I could.  The finish line chute had a few people in it, and they cheered.  The loudspeaker announced my name and said, “he’s 65 years old.”  Then I heard a murmur of people seemingly impressed and surprised.  I was the oldest person at this event of a thousand participants.   All in all a good event.

 

 

 

 

https://booklocker.com/books/12152.html   A Day Unlike Any Other Day 

Friday, June 5, 2026

Stuff Can Go Wrong- Another Sprint

 


Eastside Triathlon

 

June 29, 2008

 Baytown, Texas

 

500 Yard Swim-16 Mile Bike-3 Mile Run 

This was a small race for a good cause.  The little transition area was more than adequate.  Good talking to folks in a sort of laid-back atmosphere that you get sometimes with the smaller events.  The swim was in two –what I call- ponds.  Oh, they were large enough for the 600-meter swim.\

 

  We all had to go down to the lake (pond) to begin the swim.  The water vegetation was thick, and the disturbed vegetation and the swimmers wading in the mud roiled the water to the color of chocolate milk.  Bam! We went off, slinging weeds and trying not to put our heads down in the muddy water near the shore.  Finally, out a bit, and the water cleared, and we looked for the first buoy.  The course was a sort of serpentine affair back to the boat launch and transition area.  However, the struggle through the weeds had dislodged my timing chip strap on my ankle.  The loose end flaying in the water with every kick made me worry about losing the timing chip, having to pay for the thing, and messing up my event time.  Stopping, I reached down to my ankle. That slight touch freed the strap, and it came off my ankle.  By some miracle, it fell in my hand.  Grasping the strap and chip in my tightly clenched fist, I made my way through the course.  Swimming with one open hand and one clenched fist was not my choice of swim form, but it was all I could do at the time.  During all this chip grabbing, I lost my bearing on the course and ended up cutting the course without realizing it. When I did see what had happened, I swam back and made the course correction.  This was a rocky start, right then.  Finally, I made it to the boat launch, and a volunteer helped me up the slippery boat ramp.  The timing mat was right there on the slope and I told the volunteer to get me clocked in and tried to hand him the chip with my free hand.  He was lost.  Finally, he got it and waved the chip over the mat and it made that telltale “beep”.  Ah, thank God, I got the swim.  That was touch-and-go for a while. 

After all that, I wanted to make up time on the bike. Hurriedly through transition, get my bike to get on the road.  My brake was dragging. What else?  I got the brake aligned right and moved through the transition area with my bike toward the exit.  There was my Pat at the exit, patting her head vigorously. What? I could not imagine why she was doing those weird head-patting movements.  My helmet!  I did not have my helmet on! I was about to leave on the bike without my helmet.  I would have been disqualified for that stupidity.  Back to my transition spot, get the helmet. Ok, what now?  Am I dressed?  

 

 

My Pat was laughing as I left on the bike. Standing, I built speed immediately.  I was ready to get on the road.  Everyone was getting passed. I was on the move.

 

 

 Then this young lady in her thirties came by on a quick pass.  As the bike leg wore on, I continued to pass folks and then up ahead was the young lady who had passed me so vigorously earlier.  I passed.  She passed back.  Speed built. I passed. She passed back.  Every time I passed, I would say something to the effect that she wasn’t going to let an old man pass her up, was she?  That usually did it.  I would soon be passed. It was fun.  Near transition, she made the final pass and we ran our bikes together into transition.  I came out first and later saw her on the out and back course.  She was done.  She won an award for her age division.  It was a great effort on her part.

 

 

I finished well and got second in my age group which was five years younger than the age group I should have been in.  It was just that I was the oldest man at the event and rather than putting me in my age group by myself, they put me in with some younger guys.

It was a lot of fun despite the early troubles, and I smile when I think about this day.


A DAY UNLIKE ANY OTHER DAY by Marvin Dittfurth on Booklocker and Amazon

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Another Pool Swim Sprint. Athens Again

 


Athens

 

March 10, 2007

Athens, Texas

300 Yard Swim-13 Mile Bike-5K Run

 

So far, this was my best performance at this event. Not too much is recalled and is amazing how these same events blend over time and hence, I am glad I am doing this triathlon scrapbook.

 

 

 I do remember it was a little chilly getting out of the pool.  My bike was good and in fact, was a PR for this course.  It would have been better if I had not dropped my water bottle in the last mile of the bike leg and gone back to pick it up.   The run was nothing special, except I did not die out there on it. 

 

 

 

Exiting the Swim and My Pat - Always There

 

 


Sunday, May 31, 2026

A Cold Sprint - A Frigid Bike Ride

 


Texas Sprint

 

April 13, 2008,

Aquarena Springs, San Marcos, Texas

 

500 Yard Swim-14 Mile Bike-3 Mile Run

 

I wrote an article on this one: A Good Day, which more fully explains the setting and events.  But the endgame is that it was 40 degrees with a north wind at the start.  The constant water temperature of Aquarena Springs of seventy-two seemed like it would be cold as I thought about it the day before.  Now, in the cold wind, it sounded pretty good just to get in the water.  I was right. Seventy-two degrees felt like hot tub water.  The swim was amazing.  The water was more than gin clear.  As I looked down into the deep water during the swim, it seemed as if I were suspended in air rather than water, that I might fall from whatever was holding me up there. 

 

It was a muddy swim exit and a long run on bare feet, over a rock-strewn driveway and parking lot.

 

The bike course headed into the cold north wind going out on the bike. Being wet from the swim I, as well as other participants,  became very cold, very quickly. 

 

The run was a curb jumping, limb dodging affair on an unspectacular course. The people putting it on were students in the local triathlon club and I think there were doing the best they could at the moment.  It was a relatively small event and I won second in my age group.  (see A Good Day)