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Outer Banks Vacations

Congratulations Runners! 2009 Outer Banks Marathon Results

Beautiful OBX Weather & OBX Marathon 006 Beautiful OBX Weather & OBX Marathon 003 Beautiful OBX Weather & OBX Marathon 007

Congratulations to the 2009 Outer Banks Marathon, Half Marathon, 8K, Fun Run & 5K runners!

There were over 6500 participants this weekend…the biggest turnout yet!

It was a classic fall day on the Outer Banks with sunny skies, warm weather, and a light westerly breeze.  Possibly a bit warm for the runners, but not too bad, and the enthusiastic spectators definitely enjoyed the race and the weather.

Results: (Full race results)

Top Male Finisher
Ryan Woods    2:32:37.94

Top Female Finisher
Kelley Taylor    2:55:40.21

Top Master Male Finisher
Bill Shires         2:43:44.03

Top Master Female Finisher
Sarah Smith     3:10:31.97

Top Wheelchair Finisher
Angela Dykes   2:19:26

Here’s a great list posted by one of the runners after completing the marathon.

Good stuff about the OBX Marathon:

  • Incredibly, most (meaning more than half) of the course is shaded, either in neighborhoods or on wooded trails or roads.
  • There WERE spectators! And they were enthusiastic. I taught a few little kids how to high-five, or I could hear their parents teaching them after I had swished by with my hand out.
  • There are some small, rolling hills on a road that goes through the woods, and there is a tall bridge, but otherwise it’s really quite flat.
  • There is a REAL expo. Not a huge one, and some of the booths were selling real estate, but running gear was plentiful too.
  • They started the race in corrals, honor system, two minutes apart, which worked fine. I like that, even with just 1800 runners. My corral started 10 minutes after the first one, but it was the right place for me.
  • Transportation is an issue in point-to-point marathons, and they did it well. We parked at the finish and took a bus to the start, but you could do it the other way too.
  • They had put out “Burma Shave” signs along the way, telling facts about the area (highest sand dune in the USA, first flight, whatever, even some bad jokes. If you don’t know what a Burma Shave sign is, your youth may be a minor hindrance in reading this blog :-)
  • Example series of signs:
    • First successful flight
    • in motor driven heavier
    • than air machines by
    • Orville and Wilbur Wright
    • December 17, 1903
    • Kill Devil hills, just south of Kitty Hawk
  • There is a lot of history here, including the first powered flight and Roanoke Island. It might be worth an extra day (or several) just enjoying the Outer Banks. The beaches are delicious – be sure to get a motel with access.
  • The race goes right through the Wright Brothers Memorial.
  • And it goes along the waterfront for some distance (unlike Kiawah Island, you can actually SEE the water!).
  • There is a swashbuckling pirate theme to the whole marathon (arrrrgh!).
  • Nice booty bag (expo bag), nice long-sleeve tech shirt.
  • People were very nice to my sweeties, even though they were near the end of the race.

November 9, 2009 Posted by seasidevacations | OBX News, events | , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

ESPN Surfing Focuses on Outer Banks Surf and Culture

The Outer Banks ranks high on most surf lists; Surfer even named Kill Devil Hills number six on its list of “Top Ten Surf Towns.”

It offers world-class surf conditions; ideal conditions for beefy, fast waves, and shifting sandbars that create the strong potential for heaving, chocolate colored “barrels” (i.e. the hollow area inside the wave that is created when a select few waves crash) if you are lucky enough to be in the right spot under the right conditions.  A short continental shelf, winds out of every direction,  and 200 miles of curving coastline hanging into the Atlantic Ocean come together to create quality waves in a variety conditions, and on the days when the stars align, the OBX has waves that match most spots around the world.

Two professional surfers developed and honed their skills along the OBX coast, and along the way they earned their “stripes” among a grizzled but caring local surf culture.  Noah Snyder and Jessie Hines grew up on the Outer Banks and learned their way among the waves at all of the local spots.  Both have achieved great success in the professional surfing world; Jessie was even featured on the cover of Surfer last fall displaying his proficiency in the coveted barrels.

A great demonstration of the Outer Banks’ incredible surf and surf culture can be found in Noah’s Arc, a professionally developed surf film that documents Noah’s development as a professional surfer.  Another great exhibit of Outer Banks surf is a narrated slideshow created by Surfline and narrated by Noah and Jessie.  The slideshow offers a lot of great insight’s on the local surf and culture from Noah and Jessie, and the end of the slideshow gives a great description of the elements that come together on the Outer Banks to offer such impressive surf.

Jon CoenJohn Coen, an ESPN Surf columnist, has spent the last week on the Outer Banks chasing waves, taking in the unique OBX culture, and reporting his experiences.  Coen’s expose on the Outer Banks’ surf and culture spans four articles, including an in-depth interview with Noah Snyder.

Coen’s first article touches on some of the basic elements of youthful surf trips to the Outer Banks; great waves, communing with nature, and nights spent braving the elements in rickety tents in one of the local campgrounds.  Coen moves on to focus on one of the Outer Banks’ most basic and enduring features; wind.  Some level of wind is pretty much a constant everywhere, but the wind seems more pervasive and more forceful on the Outer Banks.

Fortunately, wind is one of the critical elements of great surf.  Wind has the potential to wreak havoc on waves, but if it is blowing mildly off shore (westerly winds on the Outer Banks), the wind can create smooth glassy waves that offer the potential to carry for great distances.  Coen goes on to explain that the Northeast winds ruined the potential for surf on his first day of the trip, but all was not lost because it was a classic fall day on the Outer Banks with sunny, 80 degree weather.

Coen’s second piece focuses on the art of photography.  The Outer Banks has a tremendous amount of pristine natural environments, including multiple nature preserves, and a National Seashore.  In addition, there is opportunity for photographs of sunrise and sunsets over large bodies of water that can create dazzling natural effects.

Coen focuses on the art of surf photography, and highlights two local talents; Mickey “2M” McCarthy and Matt Lusk.  Coen interviews Mickey, who has been a part of the Outer Banks’ surf culture for 29 years.  Mickey goes on to say, “”What attracted me as a surfer and photographer to the Outer Banks some 29 years ago, was the power and consistency of the surf — the natural beauty, the no man’s land of Pea Island, the wildlife and the sunsets.”

Hurley.com - Matt Lusk Matt Lusk

An interview with Noah Snyder encompasses Coen’s third article.  The interview starts by discussing some of the great OBX swell from October, and Coen then steers the discussion towards the local culture; construction, tourism, changes Noah has seen over the years, before circling back to surfing and touching on Noah’s surf film, Noah’s Arc, and Noah’s desire to be remain part of the Outer Banks.

Coen wraps up his four-part coverage of the Outer Banks surf and culture with a piece that finishes where he started; wind.  The wind was less than ideal for Coen’s surf trip to the Outer Banks, but as Coen points out, “There was something to ride all week here, and true to the legend, this place really does pick up swell from every direction (thanks to its positioning and that narrow continental shelf).”

November 9, 2009 Posted by seasidevacations | OBX News, surfing | , , , , , , , , , , , , | No Comments Yet