Day care 5K race won by a 9-year-old

FALLS VILLAGE — A 9-year-old boy from Winsted won a 5K fundraising race in Falls Village on Sunday, May 31. The second finisher was a 15-year-old boy from Amenia. Their youth is perhaps appropriate, as this race was a fundraiser that benefits children: It was organized by and benefits the Falls Village Day Care Center.

The two youngsters came out ahead of a field of 42 runners, many of them experienced racers.

Tyler Schumacher finished with a time of 20:58, about 13 seconds ahead of Joe Butts, whose finishing time was 21:11. 

This was the first 5K the day care center has ever offered. Board members Colleen Foley and Cathleen Caranci said theywere thrilled by the turnout of 53 competitors (including the entrants in the kids’ 1.5-mile fun run), which exceeded their goal of 50 entries.

A huge help was the participation of a number of members of the Run 169 Towns Society, a group formed in 2012 whose members want to run in a race in every town in Connecticut.

Adam Osmond of Farmington (age 47, who finished fourth with a time of 23:57) was one of the founders of the group. Members join online through either the website at www.debticonn.org (that stands for Do Every Blessed Town in Connecticut) or on Facebook. 

Group members share information on where and when races will be held, and they also post information on where they are running. 

“There’s a big race in Mystic today,” Osmond said. “Otherwise we’d have had even more runners here today.”

Although the society members come from towns all over the state, they connect at races and some train together. 

“It’s free to join,” Osmond said. “Our motto is,  ‘All you have to do is show up and run!’”

First on the calendar on Sunday morning was a 9:30 fun run for children, from the day care center (which is halfway down Page Road, facing the exquisitely scenic Hollenbeck Preserve of The Nature Conservancy) to the intersection with Route 126.

Will Graustein, founder of Greystone Racing (the official timekeeper for most road races in Connecticut), gave the children a pre-race pep talk. He warned them not to pace themselves.

“Steady wins the race,” he said before sending them on their way.

About a dozen children went flying off down the road, returning 10 or 15 minutes later.

Then the adults lined up at the intersection of Page Road and Route 7. Graustein also gave them a pep talk, and noted that it’s always exciting to run in a “first” race, as the kinks are worked out and the organizers learn how to perfect their event.

They then took off along Page Road, pacing themselves (perhaps inspired by the roadside sign saying, “Slow, Day Care Center”).

The top finishers came in ahead of the heavy rain that then fell throughout most of the morning (perhaps staying dry was an incentive to complete the 5K course as quickly as possible).

The members of the Run 169 Society shared some tips with the race organizers, hoping that the event succeeds and is run every year. 

“We want our runners to be able to come here, to help them get in all 169 towns in the state,” Osmond said.

The final times for all the runners can be found online at www.greystoneracing.net.

According to their statistics, the youngest runner to complete the course was 2 years old (presumably accompanied by a parent and traveling in a wheeled conveyance). The senior racer was Kevin MacDonald, 58, of Norwich.

All the competitors were Connecticut residents, except the four members of the Butts family, who traveled from Amenia.

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