My nephew brought me to this place by car at Suba, Paoay, Ilocos Norte in the afternoon of Thursday. This place is almost 14 kilometers away from Laoag City and it is 200 meters away from the South China Sea. He was the one who took my pictures with the sand dunes as my background. This is the same place where the late actor Fernando Poe, Jr would shoot most of the fighting scenes in his “Panday Movie Series”. This is also the place where Tom Cruise’s made a film shooting of the movie “Fourth of July” in 1987 (?).

I was using a Puma Runner’s Cap, Inaugural City of Angels Half-Marathon Finisher’s T-shirt, ASICS Gel-1120 shoes, Adidas shorts, Ipod Nano, GF 305, and 2.1-liter CamelBak.

I started my run along the sand dunes with a slow pace taking those trails I could see in the middle of the vast land area. Basing from my GF 305, I was able to cover a distance of almost 5 kilometers along these sand dunes.

I finished my run along the sand dunes at the same place where I started. From here, I followed the road going back to Laoag City. However, I did not go directly towards Laoag City, instead, I went further south going towards the town of Paoay. I was able to run almost 5 kilometers when I reached Km Post 5 before the town of Paoay. From there, I made my turn-around and proceeded north towards Laoag City.
At Km 12, I started to eat the Protein Power Bar which I bought at GNC while running. I finished eating the Power Bar after running one kilometer and at the same time taking a sip of water from my CamelBak. It was already getting dark but I maintained my direction of running against the traffic, taking extra careful with the tricycles. Tricycles plying on the road are very deceiving during nighttime. At a distance, you could only see the single headlight of the motorcycle but you could not see any light/s coming from the “side car” attached to the motorcycle. As a rule of thumb, I have to run towards the dirt part of the sidewalk whenever a vehicle is about 50 meters infront of me.
At the crossing of the road to Gabu Airport and Suba Road, I turned left and proceeded towards the airport and reached the place going to Barangay Bengcag which was a good 1.5-kilometer distance from the crossing. Along this road, I could see group of men drinking “basi” or GSM with pulutan but they seem not to notice me. I’ve been warned by my friends here in Laoag City not to run to places where there are “drinking men” along the road as they might make some harm to “strangers” in their place. But what I do in places where there are people on the road is to smile and wave my hand at them and tell them, “Apo/Ama, lumabasak pay” (“Sir, I am just passing through”) and most of them smile and answer back positively. Hmm..one of these days, I’ll be known as the “old runner” who goes around to the far-flung barangays in Laoag City waving his hands to people along the way with a Nathan Water Belt/CamelBak and a bottle of Propel on my hand.
How I wished I could reach the airport but it was too late already and made my turnaround at Barangay Bengcag and proceeded to Laoag City. After reaching the end of the Padsan Bridge (Laoag Bridge), near the City Hall of Laoag, I was already at Km 26 and my legs were still okey. When I reached Rizal Street going towards Barangay Dibua South, my Ipod Nano stopped and I had to reset it with another artist/album. I had to walk while trying to select the music in my Ipod. I selected Bob Marley’s music for the last leg of my non-stop run. After 200 meters of walking, I resumed my run. Bob Marley’s message in his songs and the beat of reggae made my pacing more consistent.
On my last 4-kilometer, while about to reach the bus terminal of Partas Bus, I was tempted to take a tricycle to take me back to the house of my sister as it was about 9:00 PM already. I resisted the temptation of those tricycles lined up infront of the bus terminal waiting for arriving passengers as I didn’t feel any pain yet on my legs and body. It might be the slowest 3-4 kilometers in my running workouts but I was able to reach my destination without any severe body pains.
So far, this is the longest run I had in preparation for my next marathon. I ran a distance of 31.34 kms in 4:03:21 hours, a non-stop run (except for the 200-meter walk) to include almost 5-km run along the sand dunes of Paoay. I felt good but tired after the run. I didn’t had any signs of reaching my “wall” up to the very end of my long run.
The Camelbak I had with me during the run was an added weight (4-5 lbs with 2 PowerBars & 2 packs of SkyFlakes inside the zippered pocket) to my run but it gave me the confidence to have enough water & food along the way and be able to run non-stop from start to finish. From time to time, I had to pull the end of the shoulder straps to tighten the CamelBak’s fit to my body to prevent it from swaying from side to side. CamelBak is only advisable to long runs where you want to test your body how far it can go without any stops. The feeling of the pack hugged on my back maintained my erect posture while running (Bugobugo85 knows what I mean with this!). The 2.1 liter capacity of water was enough to hydrate me for the said distance as the air was cooler in the late afternoon and early evening.
This long run was not in preparation for my next race on this Sunday’s Half-Marathon but it was a test how far my physical endurance and mental attitude would go.
I hope to have more long runs like this in the following weeks to come.