Monday, February 16, 2009

Racing in the BKK

This last weekend I ran a “mini-marathon”, 10.5 km, in Bangkok at Suan Luang Rama 9 Park. The race started at 6am, which meant that me and one of my thai friends had to get a taxi at 3am so that we could make it there at 4:30am to warm up and get our racing stuff. So I had to wake up at 2:45am to get ready for the race, which is crazy. When I left my apartment complex at 3am, the security guard asked me in thai where I was going, cuz im sure I looked funny leaving at 3am in skimpy (in thai standards) running clothes. I went with one of my thai friends from my town and met a couple of my other English teacher friends there at the race too.
The Prime Minister came to the race and made a speech and then he came to the front of the runners at the start line and got his picture taken- I was in the front so I am probably in some of the pictures of him at the race- wherever those pictures went- but I was inches from him, it was crazy. He had body guards all around him though. Fun politics in Thailand.

The race started at 6:15… Thai time I suppose (it was supposed to start at 6am), and the starting gun was a fog horn. It was still dark out for most of the race, the sun started coming up around 6:30am. The park was nice to run through, and 10.5k went pretty fast. It wasn’t too hot out yet either, but still humid. I finished 1st in my age category and 2nd overall- but 1st place was only 200 meters ahead of me- I probably could have got 1st place but I didn’t sleep much and I went thai boxing the day before- excuses. I was happy with 1st in my group though. I got a trophy. One of my English teaching friends, Claire, got 2nd place in our age group. She wants to start training with me, so maybe we’ll start doing that.

After the race it was awesome because there was so much free food. At Lincoln races it is just a few bagels, a pop, water and a banana, maybe a cookie. But here it was soymilk, milk, donuts, thai rice dish, thai noodle dish, seaweed snacks, tuna sandwiches, pop, water, Gatorade, cereal, oranges, and bananas (and you could take whole bundles home with you.) And it was free for participants as well as spectators- then I understood why so many people were there to watch!
It was also interesting/weird that one of the only stands that they had at the race that was selling stuff was a sauce stand selling stuff like fish sauce, so it smelled like fish sauce after the race- gross. They love that stuff here though and its in everything. Yesterday at my school they were eating raw mango dipped in a spicy fish sauce thing- it smelled horrible and tasted worse. Yuck. I told them I like my mangoes sweet and ripe.

So yeah all in all the race was a lot of fun and I will do it again. Everyone was asking me where I was from and stuff, and we had to put something down for our “team” we run on, so we put Team USA. We were representing the USA at the Don Bosco Mini-Marathon in Bangkok on February 22nd 2009. Yep. 1st and 2nd place.

2 comments:

Darwin said...

Way To Go Team USA!!!!!

Fritz said...

Hi Amanda,

Congratulations on your race, great job.

This my first look at your English Teaching blog, and it would be great if you could add a few photos. A picture is worth a thousand words as they say.

Or do you have another blog with photos?