My Big 50

”What? You’re turning 50? You don’t look it!”

A little late for that one, but thanks.

“Oh! You’re running your first ultramarathon!”

Nope. That was in 2022, but you’re getting closer… because that was my “little 50.”

“What race it is?”

The Trail Animals Running Club Stone Cat Festival! Yeah, it’s not just a race – it’s a festival.

“You’re running 50 MILES…?”

Yes. Yes, I am.

Well technically I’ll be running, walking, and eating 50 miles, but as any seasoned ultramarathon runner will tell you, “ultramarathons are one part running, one part walking, and one part eating.” I think Brendan Leonard had a graphic that illustrates this but I can’t find it. If I could, it may have looked something like this.

Why is that? Because at some point, even Kilian Jornet walks and stops for a food break when running 100 miles. Me? I plan to follow the advice of a veteran 100 miler (whose name escapes me). The advice he received when running his first ultramarathon was simply “walk the uphills, jog the flats and downhills.” Given that I am running a loop course, I will be walking less than I will be running because there can’t be more uphill than there is downhill, but there will be flats. Also, there will be roughly seven aid station stops along the way where I will refuel.

Will I use poles? I got clearance from the race director to break out my Leiki poles for the last 12.5 mile lap but I’m really hoping to not need them! I’ve run the entire course twice, both times with poles. Both times it felt like they were slowing me down. That said, having a set of crutches available to me during the last lap will be comforting, even if I don’t need them.

What am I packing for food? A variety of UCAN gels and bars, and assorted LMNT electrolyte powders, and Cheez-It crackers. I used to pack M&Ms, Clif bars, and Gu gels, but my stomach seems to have gotten less tolerant of sugars recently, so the above combo of salty crackers, gels, and electrolytes seems to work better for me.

What am I wearing for shoes? My Altra Lone Peak 5s with over 400 miles on them. The treads are still strong. I have a pair of 7s that I’ll bring along just in case I need a switch. I’ll be wearing Injinji socks, and my Salomon Adv Skin 12. Of course, I’ll be counting on my Garmin Forerunner 955 Solar to track all my stats and help me navigate when needed. Finally, I have a sticker like this for my car. You know, to make it official.

Sonos vs HomeKit, 2025 Edition

At some point in the past I connected my Sonos system to HomeKit. I have no recollection of doing this, but obviously I did it because my Sonos speakers show up in my iOS Home app.

I have a range of Sonos equipment – some of it dating back to 2012. I started with a few Play:3s and a Play:5. Today I have Era 100s, Roams, a Beam, a couple of Amps, Play:3s, Play:1s, and Ones.

At the risk of jinxing myself, the system has been quite stable for the last year or so. I moved most of my older hardware to my place in Vermont, where there’s less wifi interference from neighbors, leaving most of my newer equipment in Massachussetts. Maybe the newer stuff handles wifi interference better? Not sure, but in the past, I regularly had to move the channels that my Sonos was on, and had frequent drops and other issues with AirPlay.

However, one issue had persisted. My Bedroom Era 100 would frequently fail to let me AirPlay to it. I would have to try again after a looooong pause where whatever I was trying to play from my iPhone would continue on in the background, silently, then it would fail. I would have to stop the podcast or music, rewind it, try again to AirPlay to the Era 100, possibly fail again, and then finally it would work. Alternately, I could just reboot the Era 100 and it would start to work immediately.

I opened a support ticket with Sonos on this. They directed me to move the unit and suggested it was wifi interference. I swapped the Bedroom Era 100 with the Bathroom 1 One. Remarkably everything worked fine. So if it was wifi interference, it would seem the older One was more tolerant of it, and the newer Era 100 was happier in the Bathroom. I swapped the room names in Sonos. Life was good.

For a day.

Then I told my phone to AirPlay to the Bathroom 1 speaker. I heard nothing. Then I listened closely and heard music… from upstairs… in the Bedroom. Hmm. I looked in my Sonos settings and, sure enough, the Era 100 thought it was in the Bathroom 1, and the One thought itself in the Bedroom. “Huh. I was sure I fixed that. Oh well.” I swapped the room names again.

And a day later, they had swapped back.

Because I can be stubborn, this pattern persisted for weeks. I would change the speaker room names, and they would change back. Finally, I logged a ticket with Sonos. The agent in chat helpfully suggested that my integrations (Alexa or HomeKit) could be to blame.

I went into my HomeKit settings and – sure enough, they had the wrong names. By this point – for some reason – only the Bedroom (Era 100) was an issue. As a result, I had two Bathroom 1 speakers (which is GREAT when you’re trying to rename or move things… “Wait… WHICH Bathroom 1 is this again?”

After much struggling – and failing – to rename the Bathroom 1 speaker, I ended up just deleting my Bathroom 1 room speaker altogether. Problem solved. Now when I tell my iPhone to AirPlay to Bathroom 1 or the Bedroom, I am (reasonably) confident that it will go to the right place. Phew. I have no speaker showing up in Bathroom 1 anymore, or the Bedroom, for that matter. And I don’t really care since I’ve never really used HomeKit to control my speakers.

This raises the question “if I DID want to use HomeKit to control my Sonos speakers (which I removed from HomeKit), how would I add them back?”

No idea. That’s a topic for another blog post.