Nuun Ambassador Hailey Manning Shares her Wildflower Triathlon Experience: Car-camping, Fried Chicken, and oh yeah, a Podium.
I was SO excited for Wildflower weekend this year after missing it last year for Ironman St George.
I am training for Ironman Texas on May 21st, so there would be no taper, only a few days of rest before Saturday. This meant I had set no expectations for myself as the field at Wildflower is always stacked with some of the best
competitors from around the country…case in point, the podium ended up being from Washington, Idaho, California, Utah and Colorado and I think we might have had a Nuun athlete from every single state participating!
Having zero expectations is always good as it lets me be very relaxed before the race
and usually yields great results.
I opted to camp in the car, which is just as cozy as any tent with a mattress and settled in with fellow campers who, not racing, decided it was time to crack a bottle of Jack on Friday night. Ear plugs? Check. I even offered
to hydrate them with some Nuun, but they passed. Their funeral, not mine. I slept better than I normally do even in my own bed and woke upSaturday morning at the pleasant hour of 6. They left the ladies for last
this year which meant I was to go off at 9:15…better get your sunscreen ladies, it’s gonna be a hot one! One of my favorite athletes and fellow Nuun’er would be out on course, Leanda Cave. Super psyched to see how well she raced, she was eventually 8 seconds off the course record!
A big bowl of Leapin’ Lemurs and a bottle of Nuun later and I’m ready to head down to Transition to get set up and prepped for the day. I found lots of friends down there which always makes the morning go by quickly, and takes away
any nervousness. I knew it was going to be hot as there was no typical “Wildflower Fog” in the morning, only bright sun and already warm at 8AM. I double checked my hydration (Nuun anyone?) and sunscreen plan (which totally failed on my shoulders) and headed down to the water. The gun went off and I started in the front row hoping to catch some good feet and ended up being the feet. I was with the front 3 girls until the turn around, all of us swimming next to each other (not the best drafting strategy) and then the buoy came. I could feel the current helping us on the way out and had prepped for when the turn came that it would not be nearly as much fun on the way back
in. I was SO right, chop-chop-chop went the water and I got a bit off the pace. I reeled the top gals back in by the end and came out in 4th position and got out of T1 in 3rd.
After a small mishap with getting my already clipped in shoes on…I do this at every race, why was there a problem Saturday?!! I was onto the bike. The plan was to ride as if there was no run afterward and see how that went. Being that we had gone after ALL of the men, and we had swum over about a quarter of them, it was now time to take more down on the bike. It was so windy that I felt like I was back in Kona! I tried to legally use each person in front of me as a draft as I passed them; sling-shoting my way around the course. This worked until I found myself in no mans land head on with the wind. No problem, everyone is facing the same thing. Nasty Grade came and went and the Energizer Bunny was waiting at
the top for us as always beating his drum signaling the end of the hill. 12 miles to go. I continued my rolling buffet of calories and Nuun and spun into T2 feeling pretty good.
Back in T2 there were very few bikes racked and I told myself that I have been working on my run for years, now get out there and do it! Year by year, race by race, fewer and fewer women are passing me. When I first started racing, I used to dread the run, the time when I would go from being a top contender to fading to top 10 if I was lucky! So I started running and fueling. I must have had a gel every 2 miles and let me tell you, this was MAGICAL! No bad mental spaces on the run and I felt fantastic. The first 8 miles of the run are all on trails and the first 5 are VERY hilly…don’t even ask me about mile 4-5- the split was ugly and the pace may have included some walking. May have. Getting to mile 8 is always good and went by quickly. This is the section through the camp grounds and the crowd really rallies you here. I saw friends cheering for me and those happy to see some of the lead women coming through. Mile 9 Brings
the 1st and only opportunity to see the competition and where you are in the standings. 1,2,3,4,5…OK I only counted 5 and then me. I turned and then a minute later saw 2 gals gunning for me. I knew out of the 5 in front of me that at least 3 were not in my AG. OK, Hailey-keep it in your pants and you could do this. Run for your life! 11-12 was a long slightly uphill mile and I started to feel the fatigue set in. I checked back and didn’t see the other two girls and knew that mile 12-13 is all downhill and I had better work it. And work it I did! I hit the line in 5:17, feeling good.
Turns out 5:17 was good enough for 3rd in my AG and 6th woman OA. At Wildflower?!! Ohhh buddy I was excited. Protein shake me baby!
The only disappointment on the weekend? My ritual of passing by a Dairy Queen after every race was not to be this year. The Gonzales DQ has been closed and is up for lease…not that it would have been open at 8AM on my drive home, but I had to at least try. I made up for it later Sunday night with local fried chicken, a cheese plate and some coconut macadamia nut gelato. Gets me every time.
Now I will rest, recover and get ready for 20 days from now in The Woodlands, Texas for the first Ironman of the year. Here’s to having the third race of the year go as well as the first two.
Your
Fellow Nuun-er,
Hailey

Wonderful story about Ironman training and races. I am still amazed how athletes are able to do these long endurance races – way to go Hailey!