Hood To Coast - Washington

Hood To Coast - Washington

Hood To Coast - Washington

( 1 review )
100% of reviewers recommend this race
  • Lake Isabella State Park to Seabrook,
    Washington,
    United States
  • June
  • Relay
  • Road Race
  • Event Website

Diane

Corbett, Oregon, United States
2 3
2017
"Inaugural Year"
Overall
T-Shirts/SWAG
Aid Stations
Course Scenery
Expo Quality
Elevation Difficulty
Parking/Access
Race Management
Diane 's thoughts:

First year and teams were limited to about 300 running teams (based on 292 finished) and 60 walking teams (56 finished). 6 runners covered 77 miles in one day (each runner ran 2 legs), so only needed one van and no overnight camping. Walkers had teams of 4 to 6 and they covered 52 miles in 8 legs. The start was at Lake Isabella State Park (about 30 min west of Olympia) and the finish was at Seabrook, WA (near Pacific City).

The event ran in a very rural area of Washington so traffic was not heavy, other than in some of the towns. The roads had a narrow shoulder so sometimes (sharp curves), things could've been dicey. However, the volunteers did a great job of controlling intersections and exchange areas! Race management also posted signs all along the route warning drivers of runners on the road and it looked like the signs were posted 1 - 2 days ahead of the event.

We did not have to provide a volunteer or to pay for one, which was really nice. One volunteer told us that race management had gone to the towns along the route and asked businesses to provide volunteers. THEY WERE GREAT!!

Although the course map had "water stations" noted, there were none. I saw only one table that had some cups and a cooler alongside the road in one spot - no one manning it. Our van would stop along the way to provide water for our runner and other teams were doing the saw. That seemed to work fine and probably prevented back-ups or congestion if there had been water stations. The weather was very comfortable, with clouds or partial sunshine until the later legs when the sun was shining. But my last leg (#12) also had lots of shade.
The shortest leg was just over 4 miles and the longest closer to 8.5. The average was about 6 miles. One leg was rated easy, 5 legs were medium, and there were 3 each of hard and very hard. It seems the longer routes were hard or very hard. There were no mountain ranges to cross as with the original HTC, but the inclines could be challenging, depending on your fitness level.
Registration for the even began on December 7 at 12:01 am, by 9am, the event was full! Teams who participated this year were given first chance (until June 11) at registering for the 2018 event. The next registration will begin sometime in December. My team has registered and we're looking forward to another successful event and fun times!
Not much in the way of swag - a nice T-shirt and finisher's medal, a bottle of water at the finish and a free beer at the after-party. Food was available at several food carts at the finish (but at a price - one teammate paid $14 for a burger). Restaurants in Seabrook were also doing a booming business.
Teams were offered a 20% discount on rental houses in Seabrook, but you had to rent for a minimum of 2 days. Friends on another team rented, but then their start time was at 3:15 so they had to drive to the start (77 miles away) around 12:30 am, so they got no sleep on Friday night (even though they tried to go to bed at 9pm). We stayed at a hotel in Olympia, WA and had a 4:45 start and still were up by 3am. Teams started every 15 minutes beginning at 3:00 am and until 6:30 am. Our team had an estimated finish time of about 12 hours and we finished in 11 hours - hopefully next year we'll have a later start time.

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