Monday, May 12, 2014

Pittsburgh 10 Mile Training Run


Training for any major distance event brings about the 10 mile anxiety run.  My 10 mile training schedule fell right on a busy, rainy, mothers day weekend.  I checked the rain schedule....ok I stalked the rain.  I checked every weather outlet for 48 hours working to identify a 2 hour time window with less than a 40% chance of rain.  They all seem to point to early Saturday morning.  So by 7:30 AM I was standing at the foot of one of my favorite training places in Pittsburgh.

My route took me from my familiar weekend running spot the Eliza Furnace Trail (parking at swineburg street).  Once I hit downtown I headed over the smithfield street bridge doing a few laps around station square and back over the bridge linking into downtown.  If you are not familiar, the Smithfield Street Bridge is one of the prettiest, most photographic bridges in Pittsburgh.  Running back across watching the sun wakeup the city is truly an amazing inspirational moment.  



From there I took a trip through Point Park running through the mist of the fountain and finding my new BFF hank the english bulldog.  

Running out of Point State Park traveling the edge of the city past the convention center to a Pittsburgh Saturday morning favorite, the Pittsburgh Strip District.  One of my favorite things about early morning runs are the locals I meet along the way.  The Strip did not disappoint.  I hit this stretch just as the shops were rolling the awnings down to open.  Further along Penn Ave I passed the local fire house using the nice weather to wash the fleet.  Everyone I passed gave a friendly wave making me feel like I was running an actual half marathon. 

Turning around I ran Penn Ave to Grant Street straight back to the trail head and traveled the Eliza furnace back to my car.   

I have said it many times but running through the city neighborhoods before 9AM is one of the most ZEN runs I can think of.  The city is just waking up with you, quiet streets, friendly locals and really shows you why it's a Pittsburgh neighborhood vs. a giant city. 

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