the original
Crow Athletics®
Mount Desert Island, Maine
The real deal - since 1991
official host club of the MDI Marathon
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Club Background

The exact origins of Crow Athletics are not that difficult to trace. A group of Mount Desert Island runners heading to the now extinct "Boston Primer" a 15 mile road race held in Readfield Maine back in the early 80s is the earliest usage of Crow as a team name. As they were traveling down I-95 heading south (Buick station wagon as big as a house) The car full of runners suddenly thought, running as a team might be fun. To do so a team needed to be formed so at registration they could all sign up as such. The names thrown out for possibilities (most not fit to print on this forum) ranged from the utterly ridiculous to much over used terms such as roadrunners, striders, racing team, track club and so forth. About at Newport (which is incidentally 26 miles from Bangor) someone pointed out those knarly Crows that line the highway eating dead things (that we all seem to run over in our big Buicks) Anyway, after passing another group of birds that literally wouldn't get out of the road even with a ton of Detroit's best iron heading for them. The team name for our day of racing at Readfield was born "Road Crows" we won the team division and the name went into retirement after being born and buried on the same day.

Moving all the way forward to the fall winter of 2001 -2002 another group of Mount Desert Island runners decided our island needed a running club only this time for more than a one day event. Again, many names were thrown out as possibilities (most again not fit to print here -- why do runners think up such sick stuff?) Gary Allen, who was in attendance on the Readfield trip told the story of the original "Road Crows", and Crow Athletics was formed shortly after and has slowly and steadily grown into one of the most forward thinking, outrageous running clubs in Maine or anywhere. Our namesake mascot the common Crow has appeared as a tattoo on several members shoulders. We have some who are among the best runners in Maine and recreational joggers from every age group. We love to point out to anyone who asks, 'Why crow?' that runners like crows won't get out of the road, are afraid of nothing, are found in every state, and seem impervious to the weather. "Roadkill" is a friendly little term we like to use in describing what we like to do to our competition. Please join our club. We are a recognized not for profit organization and your annual dues (only $10 bucks) will help us further our club and mission, running on Mount Desert Island.


This running club's got a few things to crow about

July 14, 2002
By John Rolfe, Portland Press Herald
© 2002 Blethen Maine Newspapers Inc.

The Maine Track Club has its chickadee symbol and the Aroostook County Musterds have their, well, you know (that "mus" there rhymes with "goose.")

Now a new animal has descended upon the Maine road racing/running club scene. Ladies and gentlemen, please cover your ears and welcome the raucous Crows.

This proudly ragtag, semi-organized flock of about 35 is based on Mount Desert Island and sprang up shortly after the MDI Marathon was created last October.

As Crows co-founder and MDI Marathon director Gary Allen explained, the usual pattern is for a club to form and then some time later create a marathon. But here, with typical Crow perversity, the marathon came first.

"We're not a big or traditional club - we're more independent souls," said Allen, a landscape designer who lives on Great Cranberry (a 10-minute hop across the water from Northeast Harbor).

"We have the unity of a club, but with independent spirits. I tend to do a lot of training alone, because I tend to think that way, and so do a lot of these guys. A lot of them are serious trail runners, like Peter Keeney and Peter Palmer, who just never came out of the woods. The club tends to fit what we are instead of us fitting into a club mold."

While not formed for competitive purposes, the Crows include runners with what Allen calls "pretty severe credentials." Among the founding members are club president Keeney, a formidable trail runner; Tom St. Germain, second at Bay State last year in 2:41:27 and owner of Jack Russell's brew pub, aka Crows HQ; masters marathoners David Painter and Kevin Johnson; and the aforementioned Palmer, a 50-plus guy.

"He is the current record-holder for the Appalachian Trail run from Stone Mountain, Ga., to Mount Katahdin, 49 days and 9 hours," Allen noted of Palmer in a follow-up e-mail.

"I run with him a couple of times a week and all I can say is I pity anyone who tries to beat him in the last 5K of a marathon." Allen, 45, has run a pair of 2:39s among his 47 marathons.

Top female Crows include Robin Emery-Rappa, who lives in Lamoine and is in the Maine Running Hall of Fame, and Bar Harbor Half-Marathon race director Sharyn Kingma. And among younger Crows, look out for Evan Graves and Judson Cake. At last week's track workout at MDI High School, Allen said, the two did a 3-mile tempo run in 14:50 while the other Crows, doing 200s and 400s, failed to gain an inch on them.

UMaine-Presque Isle student Graves, 22, was second in last month's Bar Harbor Spring 5K in 15:14 and first in the Aroostook Mile, in 4:15. And Cake, 24, ran 48:32 to finish second in May's Sugarloaf 15K and 15:10 to win the above-mentioned 5K. He's also the club's webmaster (www.crowathletics.com).

But not all Crows are hotshots.

"We'll gladly race anyone who wants to race, and we train hard, but we don't need to spend a lot of time talking about it," Allen said. "We're happy to exist in a very crow-like manner. We're just . . . here. Year-round, and in all kinds of weather. Everywhere. You know, just like crows."

And not quite all Crows are from the MDI area as the birds have picked up a few shiny objects from as far away as Hungary (new member Borbali "Bori" Kiss joined the club at last week's Beech Mountain Trail 5K/15K), and Miami (15-year-old Bryan Starkey, off a seventh-place in the South regional Footlocker freshman race, and a recent track workout guest.) Plus there's me, the token effete southern Mainer.

The Crows have their own eight-race series, which began at the Beech Mountain events (Cake won the longer in 1:02:41; St. Germain, 35, the 5K in 29:34, with Starkey second in 31:25). The series includes the Oct. 20 MDI Marathon and ends, appropriately, with a Halloween 5K and kids' mile. And the Crows have their own singlet, handsome but stark. "A Wyethesque rendering of a raven, from an antique woodblock," Allen called it, and no one will ever confuse its forbidding mien with that of the chirpy MTC chickadee-dee-dee.

The Crows even have some sense of a higher purpose as Allen said they would like to help Down East races become more efficient by bringing in services such as online registration and chip timing and helping certify courses.

And as the club has its origins in a group of longtime friends, this weekend they are putting on a 24-hour relay on the MDI High track to benefit Cranberry Islander and marathoner Jeff Weisbruch.

Weisbruch, an accomplished chef and artist just starting a career as a physician's assistant at Eastern Maine Med, was recently diagnosed with a malignant brain tumor and had surgery in Boston on June 21. The all-comers benefit run began at noon Saturday and ends at noon today. Weisbruch plans to do a ceremonial first lap and final lap.

To the best of Allen's recollection, the original Crow idea goes back some 15 years, to a trip he and brother Larry Allen and O.J. Logue took to the Boston Primer in Readfield, Mass. They somewhat jokingly entered the race as a team of Road Crows. While the name has lain dormant down the years, the feisty Crow, er, philosophy (to lend it a sort of spurious dignity) has persisted.

"Crows are as plentiful as runners along roads and highways. Motorists pass them with the same indifferent, never-saw-them stare," Allen cackled. "Crows, like runners, get no respect, are out in all weather and are always in the road."

And the world is rich in crow legend. For example, crows have been symbols of virility in medieval times, are revered as tricksters in Native American lore and were messengers to Odin. How exactly the MDI Crows will enrich Western civilization remains to be seen, but personally I am looking forward to the rhinoceros I have been assured will appear somewhere after mile 18 of the MDI Marathon.

John Rolfe of Portland is a staff writer and a member of Crow Athletics. He can be reached at 791-6429 or at: jrolfe@pressherald.com




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