LEELANAU PENINSULA (9/16/06) - Want to make a friend jealous over
a running experience she hasn't had yet?Describe the Harvest Stompede.
Say to her, Put yourself in the scene, friend. You wove through a milling,
mulling crowd of more than 1,000 athletes and spectators at late late
registration at Ciccone Vineyards, the highest ground for miles around.
A morning sun shone on the West Arm of Grand Traverse Bay a mile to
the east and a few hundred feet below along Hilltop Road. A faint haze
of a late-summer day softened the Leelanau surroundings, lush green
and rolling, spread out in every direction like a tapestry.
You couldn't help it, no matter how you steeled yourself for a hilly race to
come, if you paused at whiles in warming up to drink in a view.
But lest you live too much in the moment, friend, go back to a day earlier
before you put yourself in the race and in the rest of a festive day on the
peninsula.
You checked in on Friday evening for late registration at Bayshore
Resort in Traverse City. A flotilla of small boats dotted the West Arm like
a flock of birds. Later you fell asleep to a sound of waves lapping a
shore, getting the good night's rest you craved before a gruelling race.
Next morning, some 10 miles from Bayshore Resort, on Ciccone's
hilltop, race director Nate Rouse and vintners association spokesman
Rick Coates welcomed 900 runners and walkers to the sixth year of the
Stompede, to the seven-mile and 5K events, then sent them down a
slope through a vineyard to the start/finish line. Walkers accounted for
more than half the field.
As the race began, participants filed between rows of grapevines and
fruit trees. Some of the vines still had bunches purple fruit. Climbing up
and pounding down a course as tossed as storm waves on the West
Arm, runners picked their way over grass, dirt, gravel, sand, wood chips,
ruts and weed stubble.
Rouse said he designed the course for difficulty five years earlier, for the
first running in 2001, after one of the Ciccone family brought home from
Italy an idea for a race through a vineyard.
"I created it with the diehards in mind," he said. "I knew it would never be
a big, easy 5K."
He said the race passed through 11 properties. "There are 14
landowners that make it possible. Of those, three are wineries."
In the second of seven miles a Traverse City runner gestured across an
open field at a low point in the course. "We used to run over there."
How many times had he run the race?
"All six. It's uphill from here on in."
The steepest, longest climbs were at the markers for miles three, four
and six. Midway through, the course skirted a vineyard - where
electronic distress cries of a hawk and other birds warned off thieves on
the wing - then plunged among vines covered in netting, three times
making a transit down side-by-side rows from end to end.
Jim Prevost, of Columbus, Ohio, likened the white netting to shrouds.
"This is surreal."
Runners around Prevost likened themselves rats in a maze. One almost
veered back inside at the vineyard's exit. If he'd gotten lost in the maze,
he would've missed, at 4.7 miles, a "look" sign pointing toward a grand
view of the bay and Mission Peninsula. He would've missed a finish to
be proud of at seven minutes slower than his PR for seven miles.
Take a look, friend, at the age and speed profiles of the 398 finishers at
the two distances, starting with the overall winners, and you might
conclude the Stompede is not for the young or faint of heart.
In the seven-miler, Rod Budnik, 38, of Traverse City, was first among
men at 43:42 and Melissa Bergeron, 42, of Muskegon, was first among
women at 51:12. In the 5K, Ken Flannery, 46, was first among men at
19:46 and Laure Coulston, 24, was first among women at 25:58.
Dennis Grantz, 57, of Alto, earned double applause. Grantz the runner
won the masters and placed second overall in the seven-miler at 45:43.
Grantz the artist, a photography instructor at Kendall College of Art and
Design in Grand Rapids, created a logo, a running shoe stomping on a
bunch of grapes, for the long-sleeved shirt commemorating the 2006
Harvest Stompede.
You knew all along, friend, the race's finish wouldn't put a capper on
your Leelanau excursion.
You could take your choice of a wine-tasting tour of 13 vintners, from
Cedar in the south to Omena in the north, and of art and epicurean
festivals in Traverse City.
You could wait beside a road to cheer on the Tour de Leelanau bike
race, sanctioned by USA Cycling, 100 miles from point to point for men,
66 for women.
You could stop off in Leland at a Fishtown festival for a look at a classic
boat show, a classic car show and an art exhibit of Leelanau landforms.
A festive day across the peninsula was reason enough to give your
heart to the orchards.
It could make you think of a poem by James Wright about sampling
grapes in the south of Italy. "I have just eaten one. I have eaten the first
fruit of the season, and I am in love." MR