Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Race Report: Dragonfly Jackal Marathon

On June 24, I ran the Dragonfly Jackal Marathon.  This was the fourth race of The Jackal Marathons.  Like yesterday’s race, we were running on a paved loop through Pinson Mounds State Park.  I assume the name of the race was inspired by the abundance of dragonflies in the park.

The first two races of this series were in the woods, so I didn’t need to apply sunblock.  Yesterday’s race had a lot of sun exposure, so I should’ve used sunblock, but I forgot.  I realized it later in the day when I noticed how deep a tan I have on my arms and legs.  Today, I remembered the sunblock.

Running marathons every day can gradually wear you down.  Running them in extreme heat really takes a toll on you.  This was my fourth straight day running in extreme heat and humidity, and it was catching up to me.

I didn’t sleep well.  I woke up during the night feeling borderline sick.  I don’t think I was replacing enough of my electrolytes.  I got up before my alarm went off, so I could go down to the lobby and see what salty snack foods they had.  I didn’t have anything salty in my room.

I bought some BBQ flavor potato chips.  It’s not the healthiest choice, but it’s hard to find anything with more salt than that.  That seemed to settle my stomach.  I also ate my usual pre-race breakfast of tea and a cinnamon roll.

After applying sunblock, I also applied a layer of bug spray.  When I was done getting ready to leave, I went back down to the lobby and bought another bag of BBQ chips.

When I went out to my car, I immediately noticed two things.  First, there was dew all over the car.  There wasn’t going to be any relief from the high humidity.  The other thing I noticed it that there wasn’t a cloud in the sky.  The sun was going to be brutal again.

Today’s race scared me.  I didn’t know what I could do to handle the heat better.  When you’re out in the sun, on the hot pavement, it feels like you’re getting baked.  Going at a slower pace doesn’t help.  It just means you’re feeling that heat for a longer time.

About the only thing I could do was try to lighten my load a little.  Instead of keeping my phone in my fanny pack, I left it in the car.  Instead of carrying a 22-oz. bottle, I switched to a 16-oz bottle.  They had a self-service aid station about two third of the way through the loop.  If I needed more water or Gatorade, I could refill there.

I was worried about getting enough electrolytes.  Rob, who does this series regularly, gave me two packets of powder for an electrolyte drink.  Early in the race, I alternated between the electrolyte drink and water.  Later in the race, I alternated between Gatorade and water.

Yesterday, I ran most of the race with Tim.  Today, Tim ran faster, and I ran slower.  The aid station was set up in a parking lot near the picnic pavilion.  To get up to the trail loop, we needed to go up a small hill.  The first time I went up this hill, it felt unusually tiring.  I was so slow that I quickly fell behind Tim and most of the other runners.  I ran my own pace, and I was on my own for most of the race.  There were a few runners behind me, but not many.

The first mile of the loop was mostly shaded, and parts of it were downhill.  This was the easiest mile of the loop, so I usually forced myself to run the whole thing.

Later in the loop, there were long stretches that were in the sun.  I learned yesterday that walking these sections isn’t a good strategy.  You don’t want to be in the sun any longer than you have to.  Having run this loop nine times yesterday, I already knew where it was sunny and where it was shady.  I timed my walking breaks so I was always walking in the shade.

I spaced my walking breaks in a way that let me take a drink during each walking break.  I usually drank three to four ounces at a time.

There was a building with bathrooms with just under a mile left in the loop.  Outside of this building, there were large containers of water and Gatorade.  In the early laps, I was usually past this building before I emptied my bottle, so I didn’t feel the need to stop and refill.

For the first lap, I noticed that my average pace was about a minute per mile slower than yesterday.  That trend continued through the whole race.

Starting with lap two, I always put ice in my hat before starting the next lap.  The first time I did that, I put so much ice in my hat that it wouldn’t fit on my head.  The hat was sitting loosely on too of a layer of ice.  It felt awkward, but I quickly accepted that.  It wasn’t a problem as long as the ice and the hat both stayed in place.  There wasn’t any wind, so I didn’t have to worry about my hat blowing off.

I usually took my first walking break as I was going up the hill leading out of the parking lot.  That’s also where I took my first drink.  One advantage of drinking right at the start of the lap was not having as much weight in my bottle for the rest of the lap.

Yesterday, I didn’t start to notice the horseflies until the fourth lap.  This time, I got my first bite in the first lap.  After that, I had one or two bites in each lap.  It didn’t seem like my bug spray did anything to deter them.

The ice in my hat didn’t melt until halfway through the loop.  With that in mind, I put just as much ice in my hat on every lap.

In the previous three races, I sore a bandana that was soaked in ice water.  During my third lap, I realized I had forgotten to wear it today.  It was in the insulated bag with my ice, so I put it on before starting y fourth lap.  It felt really good when I put it on, but it only felt cold for one lap.

The temperature climbed a degree or two with each lap.  The big change, however, came when the pavement started to heat up.  I was in the second half of my fourth lap when I first started to feel the heat rising from the pavement.  After that, it got more intense with each additional lap.

I was extremely disciplined about not walking during the long sunny stretches.  It got increasingly difficult, but I always forced myself to keep running into I reached a shady spot.  Then I could take a walking break.

With the sun shining from above and the heat rising from that pavement below, it feels like you’re in an oven.  Walking doesn’t help.  You keep getting hotter as long as you’re in the “oven.”  The last thing you want to do when you’re in an over is spend more time in it, so I moved at the best pace I could manage until I reached the shade.  At times, I felt like Alec Guinness in “The Bridge on the River Kwai.”

During my fifth lap, I needed to make a bathroom stop.  The bathroom was air conditioned, but I wasn’t in there long enough to cool down significantly.  I stayed in there only as long as I needed.

By now, I was finishing my water or Gatorade before I reached this building.  I never stopped to refill there, because I had less than a mile to go.  It was easy to do the remaining section without another drink, because I knew I would take a drink break at the start of the next lap.

Yesterday, Hannah led the race from wire to wire.  It looked like she would do that again today.  Early in the race, she had a big lead, but Lindsay was starting to cut into it.  After my sixth lap, I paused in the start/finish area long enough to fill my bottle and put ice in my hat.  While I was still there, I saw Hannah finishing her eighth lap.  As I was heading out on my seventh lap, I saw Lindsay nearing the end of her eighth lap.  She was only a few minutes behind Hannah.

Before long, Hannah and Lindsay both passed me.  They were each on their last lap, and Lindsay was close enough to Hannah to see her.  I wondered who would win.  I wouldn’t find out until I finished that lap.

Lap seven was the first one where I had to start taking additional walking breaks.  I didn’t just walk when I was ready to drink.  I still only took walking breaks in shady spots.  I was just taking more of them.

I had to make another bathroom stop during that lap.  I wasn’t drinking as much as yesterday, but having to make two bathroom stops gave me confidence that I couldn’t be dehydrating too badly.

When I finished that lap, I saw Hannah and Lindsay in the parking lot.  I asked them who won.  Lindsay did.  I wish I could’ve seen that race unfold.

In lap eight, I did even more walking.  At times, I was able to talk to other runners who were still on the course.  Some were also on their eighth lap.  A couple were a lap or two behind me.

Before starting my final lap, I got my phone from my car.  We were running on a nature path, and this was the last time I would run this loop.  I wanted to take a few pictures.  Besides dragonflies, I was seeing lots of butterflies.  It took several tries to get a somewhat decent picture.

I also took a few pictures of the flowers.



Every lap, I saw a few signs like this one.  There were always trees in the way, so I couldn’t see very far in the direction they were pointing.

I didn’t know what the Eastern Citadel was, but I wondered if it was this structure, which I saw near the end of each lap.

Besides stopping to take pictures, I also did a lot more walking that lap.  I was basically walking every shady section and only running where it was sunny.  When I was close enough to the finish to see it, it was still a struggle to keep running.

I finished in 5:50:29.  I was quite a bit slower than yesterday, but I got it done.  When I was feeling sick during the night, I had my doubts.

After finishing, I needed to sit down.  I saw a few other runners sitting under the pavilion, so I joined them.  When I felt somewhat recovered, I filled my bottle with ice and ginger ale.  I hadn’t had anything to drink in the last mile of the race.  I needed something to drink before starting the 30-minute drive back to the hotel.

Yesterday, I brought a dry pair of shoes and socks.  Today, I forgot to do that.  I had to drive back to the hotel in soaking wet shoes and socks.

When I got back to the hotel, I stopped in the lobby to buy another bag of those BBQ potato chips.  It was the last bag they had.  I had food in my room for post-race refueling, but they were all sweet foods.  I didn’t have anything salty.

Twelve years ago, I set a long-term goal of running a quadzilla (four marathons in four days) in as many states as I could.  For purposes of this goal, all four races have to be in the same state.  This was my fourth day, making Tennessee the ninth state where I’ve run a quadzilla.  That was my primary motivation to run these races.  Had it not been for this goal, I might have seriously considered skipping this race.

This is a five-day series.  There’s one more race tomorrow.  I don’t need this one for my goal, but I figured as long as I was already in Tennessee, I might as well do the fifth race as well.

At this moment, I’m about 90 percent sure I’ll do tomorrow’s race.  I may regret that decision tomorrow.  Tomorrow’s race is considered by most runners to be the most difficult of the five.  It’s called the Native Jackal Trail Marathon.  It has sections of trail (with roots) and sections of road (exposed to the sun).  It’s also the hilliest by far.

At the moment, I can’t actually imagine myself finishing tomorrow’s race, but I’ve already registered for it, and I’m already committed to paying for another hotel night and another day of car rental.


Race statistics:
Distance:  26.2 miles
Time:  5:50:29
Average Pace:  13:22
First Half:  2:45:18
Second Half:  3:05:11
Marathons/Ultras in 2025:  15
Lifetime Marathons/Ultras:  550


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