2.5 miles
2 trails
70 degrees
humidity: 67%
Tried an experiment today. Instead of running early when it was much cooler, but very high humidity (97%), I waited and ran when it was much warmer, but with lower humidity. The hypothesis: the humidity is more of a problem than the temperature. Observations: fatigue, abundant sweat, slow legs, needing to walk sooner and for longer, not much fun. Tentative conclusion: heat affects me more than humidity. Of course, other factors to consider include: a different time of day, direct sun. My scientific method here might be half-baked, but I’m accepting the conclusion. No waiting until later to run! When in doubt, go earlier.
As (almost) always, I’m glad I went for a run by the gorge. A beautiful fall afternoon! A bright blue sky, rusting leaves, clear paths.
At the beginning of my run, I chanted the opening section of my Running Chant: River — flow flow flow / slow slow slow / flow flow flow / slow slow slow. The goal was to quiet my mind and fall into the rhythm of my feet. An idea: why not have a page filled with these opening words as part of my Girl Ghost Gorge collection?
3 visual options:
- a page with a line of flow then a line of the word slow
- 2 or 4 columns, one with flow, one with slow — you can read it vertically, down the lines, or horizontally, across the columns
- a page of flow flow flow / slow slow slow in very faint print, with only a few of the words in regular (or bold?) print
10 Things
- empty bench at the Horace Cleveland Overlook
- trickling water at the 44th street ravine
- the steady falling of water at the 42nd street ravine
- a friendly biker on the walking path below — hello! / hello
- 2 people at the folwell bench, one of them leaning over looking at their lap — were they holding a phone?
- graffiti — can’t remember color or what it said — on the limestone retaining wall
- a squeaking sound from across the river — a bike?
- someone squatting at the edge of the 38th street steps, talking on the phone
- a trace of color — yellow, pink — on the 38th street steps
- kids’ voices drifting over from across the road — recess