
Once we were in the transition area setting up, we started to see people we knew - friend Stephen was there, teammate Lauren was there. Then Karoline and Bill showed up (they were the other two on Karen's relay team). We spotted Dave from our team. Finally, while we were standing in the water waiting for the race to begin, we spotted our running buddy, Kathy, and exchanged quick "good race"s, then boom! we were off.
The water felt fine, and I was right in with the pack for a while there. Then, inevitably, I fell further and further behind. It's always this way, but I just focused on swimming. We went two laps, and, miraculously, I didn't ever think about quitting or panicking. As I sited the finishing chute, I could see everyone standing under umbrellas. Huh, guess it'sl raining. I came in at my usual 40 minutes for the .92 miles, and then had to cover a LOT of ground to get back to transition. I had a quick T1 and was off on the bike.
I hadn't been on the bike in many weeks, and it felt very difficult. And I couldn't get my Cat Eye to turn on. I spent a good amount of time wrestling with it, and even contemplated giving up on the whole race - how can I ride my bike when I don't know how fast I'm going or how far I have to go???? Wahhhh! I was leapfrogging with a 58-year-old woman on the bike who couldn't get her Cat Eye to work either. She'd catch me and pass me, then settle into a speed that was just a little too slow - I'd either be drafting, or have to pass her. The rain pelted us on and off the whole way, sometimes in a huge downpour, sometimes in a mist. It felt like pebbles hitting my face. I came in just slightly ahead of my 58-year-old into T2, then got stuck behind one of those guys who was just strolling with his bike, checking his look in the mirror, chatting with his wife, his friends, his inlaws, doing the old "call me" gesture. "Hey, buddy, I'm trying to not come in last in my age-group here . . ." I finally got around him once he left the fenced-off chute. Had a quick T2 and hit the run, asking Bill (who was cheering and lounging at this point since his relay swim split was finished in record time) "Which way to the run? Which way to the run?" Bill helpfully pointed the way.
If my bike split was blah, my run split was even blaher - hills, hills, hills. To make matters worse, at one point in the run, someone in the neighborhood had pulled down one of the arrow signs. Runner after runner came to this point in the race and was baffled about which way to go (we all commiserated after the race). I probably wasted around a minute before another runner caught up to me and asked one of the neighbors "Where did the runners go?" and the neighbor (perhaps he was the self-same person who pulled down the sign?!) pointed.
I finished with a smile as you can see in the photo, DESPITE getting lost. And, ahem, did I mention the hills?
Glad we all went - Karen's relay team came in first for relay teams, I came in third in my age group, and ALL of our friends placed in their groups, too! We were an eight person cheering squad out there, and kept going up to collect all of our medals. Whoo hoo! Oh, and BTW - turns out there was a tornado the following day in Bonney Lake. A TORNADO. Now who's macho, racing in weather that produced a tornado and all?

Faster swim times, here I come!