Save your money for shoes or running shorts and let’s talk about tricks for getting more miles out of your recreation budget.
Some of the best tips from our friends at Runners World include:
Local  races are cheaper, sometimes offer food and are a great way to meet new  running partners. The side benefits – you may be the fastest one there  or for your division and this can be a prize category along with  bragging rights. Always plan ahead for your race and pre-register. For  big races this can save you $25 on the entry fee. If you travel to run  then plan to carpool and room share with running buddies to trim costs.  Pack a lunch to share and carbo load together.
Always support your  local running store when you can. No shipping and the immediate  gratification of having what you need and keeping a shop open near you.  Ask if they’ll meet whatever catalog price you saw too – it never hurts  to ask and a good business person can always find a polite way to state  what they cannot do.
Volunteer at a race – often you can still  run it and maybe at a reduced fee in exchange for your time. It is a fun  and different way to be involved and it is what keeps area races going.
Fall  is a key time for shoe models to change and whenever you see the new  shoe guides hit the newsstand that means it is time to pick up whatever  model you were running in for a better price as it goes off of the  shelf. If you are a very common size you may need to jump on this a bit  sooner to get your shoes but the pay off is worth it. They do not go bad  in the box and most folks do not see a shoe size change annually.  Roadrunner, REI, and zappos are all good sites for shoe sales when the  style season ends. Remember taht Morgantown Running also has sales on the old models and you need not pay shipping.
Buying multiple pairs of shoes that work well  for you does a few things. You are not pressured by style change when  they phase out something that is working well for you. Secondly when you  rotate shoes they last longer on account of the fact that the  supportive foam (the only thing that really wears out sometimes on a  shoe) has 48 hours to rebound every time you run your shoes.  Getting  them an air-out time and allowing foam to recover allows me to run two  pair at a time, possibly 50-100 miles further than I could otherwise.  Many runners benefit from this practice and it adds up over the cost of  several pairs.
There is an increase in folks who run to work or  run home after work and anyone who has an HR department at their  workplace they should ask about any incentive that is offered for  employee wellness or carbon savings. You are saving on gas or parking  fees, gym membership and keeping your workplace insurance bills low so  anything you can gain in reimbursement would be gravy.
Several folks  have gotten a spouse, relative or buddy to run and this replaces their  time at the bar or coffee stop with a cheap and healthy habit they do  together.
Switch to real food. Better for you and less money too.  Often times an easy grocery store substitute can replace expensive  energy gels and Gatorade. Diluted fruit juice works for some folks and  others just use less powder than the mix calls for (and Gatorade powder  is far better and cheaper than paying for water and high fructose corn  syrup) fruit leather, pretzels, honey, or any road tested thing you like  is less money than a Powerbar. I am a big fan of PB&J on wheat.
Our  area running clubs; Elkins Roadrunners and WV Mountain Trail Runners  are very affordable ways to meet folks and their events are low budget  and very fun affairs. Sometimes there will be apparel available that is  great for running in and some clubs do get discounts from retailers – it  pays to ask.
Your loved ones now know you are a runner so be  specific when your birthday or Christmas comes and give them your shoe  size and model;  for what is the most costly and most often purchased  item on your list.
Remember that big races are now often giving  out technical fabric race shirts and these are your "two for one" deals  on running apparel. When it comes to outerwear, shorts and shoes: this  often remains an expensive spot in the starting runner’s budget.  Remember that in days of old, wool was the original technical fiber and  it still works great for everything but summer running. It is also  already in the closet or at the secondhand store. I have always been a  deal hound at the army/navy store for this kind of technical clothing  for being outside. A funny and informative recent column  sent Runners World staffers to the big box stores to shop out any  clothing that looked like it would get them through weekly mileage and  they only had $100 to spend for a complete outfit. Sports Authority and  Amazon came up as the best bets for this shopping challenge. Two stores  had brand name shoes and the shoes were similar to the manufacturer’s  regular shoes with technology that was just several year older than new –  yet good. Clothing from Starter, Champion, and Nike all turned out have  some items that were acceptable to the testers, just simply did not  last as long as what they were accustomed to. (Understand that the RW  magazine editors all run in the newest free stuff to product test every  month so they set the bar unfairly high.)
Runners World polled  folks on their spending habits and found that 3% folks spent less than  $100/year on running.  The largest group 28% spent $250-499/year on  running and an almost equally large number spent more than $1000/year ( I  would guess that this accounts for travel to destination events) Recent  polling shows that runners spending has held pretty constant in the  current climate as well. Folks have a good habit that they cannot give  up and they will continue to run even if they downsize a bit.
I hope  some of these ideas and tips will help get you further this year. If you  have others please post them to the facebook site. 
 
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