Lake Padden Loop and Swim: Not so Fast...

This weekend was a rough one on the trail around Lake Padden, as the weather doesn't seem to be coinciding with the date (snow last weekend). With each morning, getting out of the car, looking at my MP3 player, and wondering why I didn't sleep in, I wonder when this feeling will start to dissipate.

My main motivation still ignites from getting beat by the woman in the Bumble Bee costume at the Jingle Bell run this year. It was a huge costume. And she beat me by a couple of lengths. I think she was running to Clay Aiken, and you can't beat that.

I vowed never to get beaten again by someone in a costume, after the "push-up" contest debacle against Goofy at Disney World this year (look at the size of his head, you can almost smell the Human Growth Hormone). But each day at Padden, I tap the Dr. Pepper machine, start my watch, and cruise past the tennis courts, the horse trails, and into the woods. Depending on the direction you run in, it varies in what you're workout will be. Could be flats for a while if you run clockwise, or immediately into the hills, and want to stay out of the winds that whip across the lake, and run counterclockwise.

Lake Padden is a gift, wrapped in a 2.6 mile loop (still trying to break 19 mins), about 5 minutes from the Sehome Haggen's. Surrounded by parks, fields, access to Galbraith and a couple great lengths of single track, you're only problem could be finding parking during the summer. And a lifeguard, as budgeting cuts have taken their toll on staff there. But barbecue, bring your dog (leashed here, unleashed there), and as long as you keep the two mutually exclusive, you can get an idea of why parks were created in the first place; to bring folks together in the Great Outdoors.

And yet, alone, on the morning of April 2nd (afternoon sun wasn't going to help much), I decided it was time to start swimming again, and waded into the Lake for a length across and back. I got to about my calves, then dove in, and after the Lady of the Lake stole the breath right out of me, I got right out. On the list of Bad Decisions I've made this year, this one hit the top ten. But we'll get there.

The location of Padden, off of Samish Way, makes the swims deviate from commonplace; high winds can produce an ocean-like chop, fog can set in, and by the time you're halfway across the lake, you can get pretty disoriented. And then there are the mornings where it's coffee table of glass, and the sun rises as you make your way back to the beach, and the chill of the water can't even knock the smile off your face. But it tries it's best, and this year, got the jump on me.

Sticking to a couple runs in the Chuckanut area for the next weeks will make my list for good decisions this year, and before I try to tap the Dr. Pepper machine at 18:59, give the Lake another go in May.

Advantage, Lake Padden.
Chris McNamara

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Trail Running In Bellingham; Morning Loops

In the first couple minutes I begin running, the same phrase comes to mind: This is going to be painful. Coming from a competitive family that did some sort of race every weekend, my usual reply when asked to run was that I was old enough now to stop running, and stay and fight. But talking with other runners whose motivation was more of the journey on the trail, it was blindingly evident I was missing out. It's the places you run that make it more exciting, and that's been burned into me more and more as I'm trying 2 new runs in Bellingham.

The North Shore Trail is six miles there and back (and then some if you tag the fence at the mid-mark) and runs most of the perimeter of the East side of Lake Whatcom, looking back on the homes on Coronado, Strawberry Point, and most of Gates 1 and 2 of Sudden Valley, with a few peaks from homes in Gate 5. This trail is about 8 feet wide, compacted gravel and dirt, wide enough for a morning group of coffee drinkers to walk four abreast, making it just about impossible to not say "Good Morning". The whole run you're looking to your left or right at pristine water, incredible landscape, and a waterfall here and there, thrown in with a couple of well-built, and sometimes slippery bridges. And very dog friendly, with a great beach at the end for my friend's dog, Caymus, to cash in on fetch with a piece of driftwood, after very humbly "holding back" the entire run. It gets a little dodgy during the fall, with the leaves covering a lot of the rocks that could turn an ankle, and turn a winter into "the time I actually read those books assigned for summer reading" and no one should have to read Life and Death of a Salt Marsh. No one.

Looping down through the Dog Park in Fairhaven, through Downtown, and onto the Boardwalk is surreal. Again, your skirting the shoreline for a good portion, looking up at South Hill, and for a little motivation on your way to Bellingham, you pass Wood's Coffee, one of the best things to happen at Boulevard Park since I got free coffee for bringing a Pomeranian, which sounds like a Poker term for bluffing, but actually happened. Continue around the bend and along the rest of the trail, and it will bring you into Bellingham, behind the bike shops there, the Tai Chi class that practices out back during the summer. With a left when you hit the street, that'll bring you right to where the Farmer's Market is every Saturday during the spring and summer. You can stop here, or at the local Brew Pub (Cheers, Nolan!) or run into downtown. There's always something going on.

So many runs in Bellingham....I hope you try out these two, one's a little country, one's a little more rock and roll.

Keep an eye out for a Pomeranian.
Chris McNamara

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