Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot returns and we love it!

Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot returns and we love it!

Pam at Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot

Pam LeBlanc jumps with happiness at the finish of the Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo

It felt great to get out and run the Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot this morning.

I logged a slow time – 2 minutes slower than 2019 and 4 minutes slower than 2017 – but I’m OK with that. I’ve been focusing on other things and haven’t put in the miles lately.

It’s always fun to head downtown and watch the turkeys on parade. Here are the highlights of this year’s run:

 

Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot runners

Runners in costume prepare for the Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo

  1. Running across the MoPac access bridge just as a train locomotive rumbled past and blew its horn.
  2. Gazelle’s running coach Gilbert Tuhabonye’s smiling face as I ran past him on Cesar Chavez Street.
  3. The guy who ran the entire race in a plush turkey suit. That had to be hot and heavy.
  4. Listening to Rob Hill call out everyone’s names (including mine!) as we ran past on the First Street Bridge.
  5. Listening to the patter of thousands of running shoes on pavement. I love that sound!
  6. The beating of drums on the porch of a church that we passed.
  7. The signs people held along the way, including one that said, “Hurry up and finish so we can drink!”
  8. The weiner dog in a red knit cap.
  9. That feeling of finishing a run. I’ve missed it!
  10. Running through downtown Austin with thousands of people just happy to be back on the streets after so many race cancellations.
    Runners at turkey trot

    Runners prepare for the 2021 Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo

 

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ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot set for Thanksgiving Day

ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot set for Thanksgiving Day

Pam LeBlanc nears the finish of the 2019 ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo[/caption]

Turkeys, prepare to trot!

This year’s Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot goes live again, with both a virtual and an in-person race on Thursday, Nov. 25. Specific details and safety protocols approved by Austin Public Health will be announced as the date gets closer. Register and find more information at thundercloud.com.

Participants can choose from a 5-mile timed or non-timed run, a 1-mile walk or a Kids K. The Stepping Stone School Kids K begins at 8:45 a.m., followed by the timed 5-mile at 9:30 a.m., the untimed run at 9:35 a.m., and the 1-mile walk/run at 9:50 a.m. Registration ranges from $12 for the Kids K to $32 for the timed 5-mile run. Prices increase after Nov. 14. Registrants get either a long-sleeved T-shirt or a $10 gift card to ThunderCloud Subs, a Trot headband and wristbands, or a bandana.

I run the race every year. Last year, that meant trotting around the Allandale neighborhood with my husband and two friends for the virtual event.

virtual Turkey Trot Andrew Lochbaum, Pam Finney, Pam LeBlanc and Chris LeBlanc at the start of their 2020 virtual Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc self timer photo[/caption]

Organizers say because the 2020 Trot went so well, they’ll keep a virtual component this year and beyond. Virtual participants can run or walk wherever they want on Thanksgiving Day.

Turkey Trot benefits Caritas of Austin

All proceeds of the event go to Caritas of Austin, which has received $4.4 million dollars from the Trot since it began in 1991.

“Caritas of Austin needs our support more than ever, to continue helping thousands of people to get off the streets, realize their full potential, and contribute to our community,” says Mike Haggerty, co-owner of ThunderCloud and executive director of the Trot.

Caritas broke ground on its first ever residential center this year, Espero Rutland, which will have 171 studio apartments and supportive services.

Turkey Trot A turkey leads off the start of the 2019 ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo[/caption]

Socially distanced packet pickup will be offered on multiple dates at First Texas Honda, or packets can be shipped for an extra charge. The dealership will also donate a new Honda Accord for the Trot raffle ($25 per ticket or five tickets for $100. Tickets can be purchased online or at packet pickup between now and Thanksgiving Day.

 

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Want to run nekkid? Race the Bare Buns 5K on April 10

Want to run nekkid? Race the Bare Buns 5K on April 10

 

In 2017, I ran the Bare Buns 5K race in McDade. It was breezy. Leilani Perry photo

In 2017, during my self-proclaimed Year of Adventure, I peeled off my clothes one fine spring morning and ran a naked 5K race.

It felt weird at first, lining up with about 130 other runners, most of whom were wearing nothing but running shoes. But once the starting horn blew and I started scampering over pine needles and zipping through a hay field, I shed my inhibition and it felt pretty much like any other race – just a tad breezier. (You can read about my experience here.)

The year I ran the field was about three-fourths male. And women are allowed to wear whatever clothing they want – from sports bras to pasties. I chose to go naked, save my shoes, socks and a straw cowboy hat.

In the end, the lack of clothing made me run faster. I ran so fast, in fact, that my hat blew off and I finished first among the female contestants. It was a slow field, trust me.

Start of the Bare Buns 5K in McDade in 2017. Pam LeBlanc photo 

On April 10, Star Ranch will host its 24th annual Bare Buns 5K Fun Run. The race serves as a qualifier for the American Association for Nude Recreation’s 5K running series.

The event starts at 1 p.m. at the nudist ranch, located 10 miles east of Elgin in McDade.

Registration is $35 for adults or $15 for children. You must register in advance; no race day sign ups are allowed. To register, call 512-273-2257.

Can’t make the April run? Mark Oct. 9 on the calendar. That’s the date for this year’s fall companion run, the Chilly Cheeks 5K.

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A new trail race this April starts at the banks of the Devils River

A new trail race this April starts at the banks of the Devils River

Runners take to the gravel road that cuts through Devils River State Natural Area in West Texas. Beau Hester photo

Some of my favorite races have taken place on trails that cut through the desert scrub of West Texas, events during which I’ve also tripped and shredded my knees and stabbed my butt with cactus needles during a mid-race pee break.

Now there’s a new adventure to add the trail running calendar – the Devils River Run for Hope.

The first-time event, scheduled for Saturday, April 24, begins on the banks of the Devils River, then follows gravel roads through the Devils River State Natural Area and finishes at nearby McKenna Ranch. Runners can choose from a marathon or half-marathon distance, and should expect rugged, undulating desert terrain, with views of nearby hills and canyons.

“It’s intense,” says assistant race director Jessica Hester. “It’s going to take them gradually uphill the majority of the marathon.”

Race entry will be capped at 70 athletes, who must wear masks except while they are running. The start will be staged, with groups of nine heading out every 2 minutes. A post-race party will include a raffle and auction, live music, and barbecue.

The draw of this race, besides my love of the river and its surrounding terrain, is tied to the race organizers.

I met Beau Hester, superintendent of the Del Norte Unit of the Devils River State Natural Area, five years ago, during a visit to the remote park, located about 200 miles west of Austin between Rock Springs and Del Rio. He told me then that he and his wife Jessica had lost their 8-year-old daughter Brooke to cancer. This race benefits Brooke’s Blossoming Hope for Childhood Cancer Foundation, a non-profit organization they created in her memory.

The new race will start at the river and finish at McKenna Ranch. Pam LeBlanc photo

“We learned through her fight there was this niche that needed to be filled. We also learned how heavily underfunded pediatric cancer was,” Jessica Hester said. She described her daughter as bubbly and tenacious. “You wouldn’t know she had cancer except she had no hair.”

Brooke lost her hair seven times during her treatment, and helped make flower-adorned headbands for other children going through chemotherapy. Today the Del Rio-based foundation provides headwear for patients and raises money that goes to pediatric cancer research.

Dr. Giselle Sholler, a leading pediatric oncologist and researcher who treated Brooke, plans to fly to Texas from North Carolina to run in the race.

Packet pickup will start at 5:15 a.m. at McKenna Ranch. From there, runners will be shuttled to the race start on the banks of the Devils River at Devils River State Natural Area. (It’s a slightly less than 1-mile walk from the shuttle drop-off to the starting line.) The half marathon course will end at the midway point of the marathon course, and those runners will be shuttled the rest of the way to the McKenna Ranch.

Registration is $127 for the full marathon or $117 for the half. Entry fee for runners who raise $1,000 or more for the non-profit will be waived.

All proceeds will benefit Brooke’s Blossoming Hope for Childhood Cancer Foundation. Half will be used to create care packages containing headwear, capes, crowns and books for cancer patients; the rest will go to pediatric cancer research.

“We really want people to see the community of Del Rio and the beauty of Lower Pecos,” she said. “We know those are things our daughter would have enjoyed.”

For more information, visit www.DevilsRiverRun4Hope.com. For more information about the foundation go here.

 

 

 

 

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Vote for the Butler Trail in this poll

Vote for the Butler Trail in this poll

The boardwalk is part of the 10-mile loop of the Ann and Roy Butler Trail in downtown Austin. Pam LeBlanc photo

If you’re a regular on the Ann and Roy Butler Hike and Bike Trail that loops around Lady Bird Lake in downtown Austin, you know it’s much more than a path – it’s like the city’s collective family room.

Walk or run the 10-mile trail and you’ll get views of rowers on the Colorado River, towering cypress trees that shade its northern side, Barton Creek, and the sleek metal and glass outline of the city’s core. You’ll also probably run into a friend or two.

Now the trail has been nominated as one of the country’s best recreational trails in the USA Today 10 Best Reader’s Choice Travel Awards.

Trees arch over a section of the Butler Trail near Zilker Park. Pam LeBlanc photo

When I checked today, the trail was holding third place of the 20 nominated trails. Voting is open through Feb. 15, and you can vote once per day.

At the moment, the 130-mile Chuck Huckelberry Loop in Tucson, which is open to pedestrians, equestrians, cyclists and skaters, was at the top of the list. The 19-mile Swamp Rabbit Trail that follows an old railroad bed along the Reedy River in Greenville, South Carolina, was in second.

Also on the list of nominees? Buffalo Bayou in Houston, the Atlanta Beltline, the High Line in New York City, the Katy Trail in Missouri, the Rio Grande Trail in Colorado and the Maricopa Trail in Phoenix.

Want to see our local trail win? Go here to vote.

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