Back to Honolulu Marathon Information & Reviews
Rodney Whitaker from Portland, OR
(1/4/2008)
"Awesome marathon to run or walk" (about: 2007)
1 previous marathon
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 5 This was my first marathon ever and we've already booked our hotel for 2008. I recommend getting a hotel room near the finish line. Get there a couple days early and enjoy Hawaii. There's a great crowd all along the course. I've run several half marathons and never had this much fun. Well organized on all levels. | |
Mike West from Bethesda, MD (USA)
(1/1/2008)
"Just Another Day in Paradise!" (about: 2007)
3 previous marathons
| 3 Honolulu Marathons
COURSE: 5 ORGANIZATION: 5 FANS: 5 This was my 3rd Honolulu (and 3rd career marathon). If you're going to make this kind of effort, why not do it in the most beautiful place in the world, with the most helpful people in the world organizing and supporting it? Too bad it rained torrents on us all 45 mins. before the race and then again 15 mins. into it, but hey, remember... you're in paradise and the rain (AKA "liquid sunshine") is pretty warm.) I ran the Honolulu twice in the mid-80's, and somehow talked my wife into going out this year so we could walk it together (she and I are 56 and 58 years-old respectively. We lived on Oahu for 7 years in my Navy career and I'd give anything to retire there, but that's another story....) I understand the concern that race organizers have these days regarding heat, but a 5 a.m. start means a lot of running in the dark. I'd love to see a 6 o'clock start; it just doesn't get that hot out there to be concerned about it. The major "downer" for the event was the finish area. Totally swamp-like due to the rain (guess we can't blame anyone for THAT), but it also wasn't obvious where finishers were supposed to go right after finishing. But we figured it out in just a few minutes. Can't stress enough the "aloha spirit" of the Islands. These are the nicest people in the world, and the entire staff and volunteers really do their best to make this a great experience for the contestants. I'll be back in '08 with my college roomy, with whom I ran it in the 80's; my wife says that block is "checked!!" Interesting stats: of the 27,000 entrants this year, about 2/3 were Japanese, and 2/3 of them were first-timers. Aloha to all, and see you in December!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! | |
R. H. from Maltby, England
(12/31/2007)
"mixed emotions in Honolulu" (about: 2007)
6-10 previous marathons
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 2 ORGANIZATION: 4 FANS: 3 We brought a party over from the UK to run this year's event and having already read reviews on this page, we had some idea of the pitfalls. For example: 1 Runners and walkers merging together 2 Lack of food and confusion at the end of the race 3 Heat and humidity However, race day came and some of us made sure we had a good start, so we did not encounter problem 2. I had a calf muscle injury 3 weeks prior to the event (cold weather training in UK doesn't help), so my expectations were low. What would hopefully have been sub-4 hours eventually became 4.55, making it a long morning. Most of the runners got longer times than expected, however, which given the rain, could not be put down to the weather. It could have been jet-lag from the 7.5K mile journey, but we came via a 3-day stop-over in San Francisco, so we should have been refreshed. The course was not particularly brutal, so maybe we all had off-days - who knows? General thoughts are: 1 Expo was excellent - much more laid back than London. 2 Tee-shirts very good - we do like the technical shirts in UK. 3 Race start - good if you go early and get as far to the front as possible - being honest is usually best policy, but if you want a good time/or are nursing an injury, you need to be sensible. 4 Course - rubbish. Long and boring dual carriageways - no major highlights and not enough variety. 5 Rain - who cares? We Brits are used to it. 6 Drinks stations - good with the exception of having iced water in the latter stages. At least one runner suffered from sickness as a result. 7 Finish area - a joke. We trundled around in mud (and other things) trying to get our tee-shirts. Signs were very confusing, pointing first this way and then the other. I did not even try looking for the cookies and apples, so cannot comment on their edibility (or lack thereof). 8 Medals - good. I like the shell ribbon as it gives makes it different from the others. Overall not a bad event, but there is one very serious issue that I wish to make. Letting kids under 17 (some under 10) run this race is little short of barbaric. No way would this happen in England and I am amazed and saddened that it happens in a major American marathon. Permanent damage to growing bones could result from youngsters attempting 26.2 miles, no matter how long it takes them. Anyway, let's hope someone looks at the age limit again and common sense prevails. Overall, we had a fantastic holiday and sort of enjoyed the race. The organizers could do with coming over and looking at some of the major European marathons to pick up on some of the points made. | |
J. N. from Austin, TX
(12/31/2007)
"I don't think I'll be back" (about: 2007)
4-5 previous marathons
| 2 Honolulu Marathons
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 4 Ok, so how bad can it be? After all, you're running in paradise, right? Well... not exactly. I've run two Honolulu Marathons so far, and must say that 2007 will be my last. I love vacationing in Hawaii and love experiencing the cosmopolitan culture, the food, and the lifestyle, but not the marathon. Here's why: 1. You MUST use a corral system for that many runners - either the runners don't understand English to know where their pace group is or they don't care. But because of this you are constantly dodging slower runners. I'm not saying that I'm Lightning McQueen here, but I'm trying to run a 9-minute-mile pace and am dodging people (running 4 across) running a 12-minute-mile pace. I lined up near the light post that read "4 to 5 hours." I dodged slower people for at least 4 miles. 2. Turn UP the sound system or place more speakers along Ala Moana Boulevard. You can't hear the announcer at the starting line, you can't hear the national anthem play and you can't hear the gun go off. It's just too loud among the masses. It would be great if the race officials could either turn it up, or add some speakers. 3. Use better pace signs. The current method the Honolulu Marathon uses is to have pacers wearing bibs on their backs with the finish time. (I don't recall seeing actual signs carried by the pacers.) This makes it hard to see unless you've lined up near the right pacer, not just lining up near a sign that generically says "4 to 5 HOURS" for goodness' sake. 4. Start later in the morning. After all, the marathon has permits with the city to keep the streets closed for the marathon for as long as the runners/walkers take to complete the course, so can they start the race at 6 or 7? That way you can see China Town, Waikiki Beach and other things as you're running past them. 5. The out-and-back course isn't scenic and is boring. While on the highway portion of the marathon course, you're at mile 11 and you're seeing runners coming back and they're at mile 18. It makes for a boring course (at least that portion of the course is boring) and is hard to keep going when you know that 7 miles later, you'll STILL be on that same stretch of highway. 6. The finish line support is terrible. I'm not talking about the fecal-infested mud; I'm talking about the FOOD. WHY am I paying $125 for a marathon (even when there is not a "commemorative chip" given out anymore) when there is no runner support at the end? You have clothing pickup, t-shirt/medal pickup, and finisher's photos at the end, but if you're not with a Japanese-supported tour company, all you get is an apple. There was a cookie? Gee, I missed the cookie. 7. Clean up the animal feces at the finish line. No, you can't control the torrential rain that occurred that morning, but race officials CAN control the feces left behind by the zoo animals that share the same park. Pick it up for God's sake! Thirty-thousand people at the finish line after a heavy rain only made it worse, and with open blisters on my feet from running in wet socks/shoes, I wasn't thrilled about having bacteria-infested mud all over me. If it were just mud, it wouldn't be a big deal. But it wasn't just mud - there was crap in it too. 8. RFID tag equipment failed - though I think they got my and my husband's time correct. Here are some reasons to run it: 1. It's Honolulu. You get a great fireworks display at the start, run past the Duke Kahanamoku statue on Waikiki (only it's too dark to see it), run around Diamond Head, run through Hawaii Kai past the building where Hawaii 5-0 was filmed, and run through Kapiolani Park at the finish (which is a beautiful park). 2. They served Gatorade this year. Last year, this terrible stuff called Amino-Value or Amino-Vital (I don't remember which) was served and it was baaaaad. If you've never had the pleasure of tasting it, it's like drinking stale alcohol. You'll burp that taste for the rest of the marathon. Last year, the Amino-Vital was so bad that I wasn't drinking it as often as I should have, which only caused me more problems. So I was glad that they had Gatorade. 3. The volunteers are the best. Let's face it: with every marathon, the volunteers make it possible, and this marathon has thousands of them. Without their efforts, this marathon wouldn't exist. They really do a good job. 4. Water stops well-stocked. Nope, no "Chicago Marathon"-esque problems here! There was plenty of water and Gatorade at all water stops. Perhaps it's a marathon you should run at least once, but we'll choose to run another somewhere else. | |
C. E. from Seattle, WA
(12/24/2007)
"Fun if you aren't looking to PR" (about: 2007)
6-10 previous marathons
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 4 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 5 I actually like this course, and the weather this year couldn't be helped. A few comments: The shuttles to the start were so well organized! Stay near the finish not the start. This also makes the rather lame finisher's area a non-issue. The manholes in downtown need to be marked! If it is raining, they are slippery as heck. The volunteers were awesome! There is no age limit. I was astonished to see young children being dragged along the course. | |
E. H. from East Bay, SF, CA, US
(12/19/2007)
"Exactly about what I expected" (about: 2007)
2 previous marathons
COURSE: 4 ORGANIZATION: 4 FANS: 4 First off, to clarify things mentioned by others: *Yes, the shirt was indeed a tech tee, and yes, it was a horrible yellow color. *Finisher's certificates, if they were not picked up, are to be mailed in February. *You could wear the medal on the shell lei. Ya know the way you attach an airline luggage tag to your bags (think about it....)? You could do that, but they could have done something more obvious. *For everyone's complaints in the past, they served Gatorade, not Amino Vital, at aid stations this year, even though the latter is now available in the US. *The finish area was indeed a swamp and smelled like the adjacent zoo. Not too much I guess could have been done to prevent that. I read all the reviews here prior to entering, so it pretty much lived up to my expectations. Even though I live in the Bay Area, my husband is from Honolulu and his parents live there, so I had a mobile support crew and wasn't subjected to the whole transit afterwards problem. When we arrived at 4:15 that morning, we could park in the Ala Mo'ana Center right by the start area. I also knew of the pathetic post-race food, so I had family waiting with real food afterwards anyway. I entered this race to have a fun time and enjoy myself, which is the point of running to me, and I did. No PRs for me; just warm weather and 6-hour jog with 28,000 of my closest running friends. I feel for the folks who were screwed by the faulty timing system, though. Anyway, the corral start system would have indeed been nice. I had to wait until about 20 minutes to actually cross the start line as I was honest, and by that time they were letting race day walk people start, which was NOT cool. I had to run through some massive, ankle-deep puddles early on because of the walkers and got some resulting nasty blisters. Loved the Japanese and their enthusiasm (and costumes and cute shirts). Slightly related, I loved that with all the Asian participants there were more than enough smaller-sized finisher shirts. Being a slow runner, I have plenty of L and XL shirts from events hiding in my closet because they ran out of the small that I requested earlier in the race. The aid stations were well stocked with water and drink by enthusiastic volunteers. I agree that it wouldn't be that hard to get some bananas or persuade the fine folks at GU or Clif Bar to donate or offer a deep discount on 50,000 energy gels. If I didn't know about it beforehand, I would have been outraged at the apple and cookie refreshments. Actually, I'm still not pleased. Common, mini Clif Bars or Luna Bars? Something with protein is needed for muscle repair. (I had a post-race tofu burger at Zippy's!) I enjoyed myself (except the blisters!). If we visit family at that time next year, I would definitely do it again. | |
b. c. from Alexandria, VA, USA
(12/19/2007)
"My first and last Honolulu Marathon" (about: 2007)
4-5 previous marathons
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 2 This was my 5th marathon and my first in Honolulu. The marathon started at 0500 hours and I did not like running in the dark for 2 hours... not to mention the rain. The course was not that great and most of the spectators were from Japan and only cheered the Japanese runners. After running 26.2 miles, the only free food provided to finishers were red apples and cookies. There were several "private" tents with plenty of refreshments for "Japanese only." I understand the marathon caters to the Japanese because they provide a boost to the economy, but I felt discriminated against. I will continue to run marathons in the mainland, where every runner is treated equally. | |
D. B. from Canada
(12/17/2007)
"Choose another one if you care about time." (about: 2007)
1 previous marathon
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 4 Starting line is chaotic at best. Way too many people ignoring race etiquette, walkers at the start of the line, walking in the middle of the roadway (oh and on both left and right sides as well) sometimes 4-5 people across and no room to squeeze through. Be prepared to break your stride lots, particularly going up Diamond Head (which really isn't much of a hill at all but is full of walkers!!). I disagree with some of the previous comments in that I was never able to break free of the congestion and always found myself weaving and darting around those with a much slower pace. Aid stations were particularly frustrating in that regard. A plus side: the people who came out to line the course with cheers (some of them had to endure a soaking rain) and the volunteers. The volunteers were all awesome. Really pathetic "grab bag" at the race expo. Considering the size of this marathon, the free loot (or total lack thereof) was very disappointing. | |
Robert Hahn from Houston, TX
(12/17/2007)
"Good but not great" (about: 2007)
11-50 previous marathons
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 4 FANS: 2 PROS -Fireworks at the start were great. -I've read complaints about the finisher's shirt and the medal, but I actually thought they were really good. I guess it's just a matter of opinion. -Plenty of course support during the marathon. -The Legends 5K on Thursday was a great relaxing way to meet other runners and have an easy run as well. -The pasta dinner was the best I've ever been to. CONS -For a race with 28,000 runners, there must be a corral system. I lined up according to my expected finishing time and spent the first 5 miles of the race weaving past slow runners and even some walkers, how frustrating! For a race of this size, please use corrals! -They don't mail you a finisher's certificate or results booklet; you have to pick it up the day after the race. Unfortunately, my wife and I had to leave the next day, so we couldn't pick them up. So for a $125 entry fee, the Honolulu Marathon won't even mail these items to me; again, how frustrating! -They don't allow race-day clothing drop-off; you must do it the day before the race. Again, this is very frustrating because I like to wear a set of sweatpants and sweatshirt to keep warm before the race. At every other marathon I've been to, I take them off about an hour or so before the race and drop them off at clothing check-in. I couldn't do that in Honolulu and just had to leave them on the side of the street. -My final con isn't really that big of a deal, but it would have been nice if they played some music at the start line before the beginning of the marathon. I got to the start at about 2:30 a.m. and waited for over 2 hours before the race started. Some music being played over the loudspeakers would have helped pass the time instead of sitting in silence. Overall, it is a good race and I would recommend it to others, but there are some things the organizers need to take care of before it can become a great marathon. | |
J. H. from NYC
(12/17/2007)
"Reiteration" (about: 2007)
3 previous marathons
| 1 Honolulu Marathon
COURSE: 3 ORGANIZATION: 3 FANS: 4 Many before have already mentioned these in the past on this website that the Honolulu Marathon organizers need to fix some of its persistently problematic issues. Let me reiterate. The start: 1. Please separate the walkers from the runners. Sure, after 5 to 6 miles in the race, you can find your pace group, but early on I can easily see people tripping on other people and fall. I am sure it's already happened many times, but it's only matter of time runners collide into walkers and cause some serious injury. That would be a major medico-legal issue for the organizers. 2. Maybe a wave start according to pace group might be an option, like at the NYC Marathon. 3. The downtown roads need to be fixed. I just wonder how many ankle sprains there were this year because of the bad roads complicated by puddles of water. During the race: 4. Please get some mile markers that people can actually see while they are huffing and puffing. Black -colored mile- or KM-markers just don't cut it. Make it orange or neon green so they attract eyes. Have an elementary schools in Hawaii make a project out of it. The finish line: 5. Is it that difficult to get some bananas at the finish line? 6. Tents at Kapiolani Park set up by Japanese tour companies and sponsors only catering to Japanese are extremely disheartening. They either need to do this somewhere else or make it open to American runners. Where is the runner camaraderie? The running community shouldn't accept this. It shouldn't exclude or include groups of people based on which tour operator you used. This is not anti-Japanese. In fact, I love the huge groups of Japanese runners storming Waikiki and those Japanese cheers that get you through the race. We should all share the glory of finishing the marathon together no matter where you come from. 7. I couldn't believe the bus wanted two-dollar fare for every finisher to get back to hotels. For the money all the runners spend to get to Hawaii/food/lodging, the small chump change is not a big deal for me, but is it a big deal to the state of Hawaii and the organizers? Is nickeling and diming from all the tourists the modus operandi for the state of Hawaii? Especially when the entrance fee is already so high... It is not so strange that Japanese runners outnumber American counterparts when you consider all this. So many Americans want to come here, if you just make it possible. Show us some hospitality. The running community is an ultra nice group of people, and most of us are pretty well off and want to be shown true hospitality. Even though I've listed out many criticisms above, I do have to say that Hawaii is a beautiful place and the Honolulu Marathon is one heck of an experience. Now if they can improve it a little bit... |
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