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The Barkley Marathons
Heard of this? It's not for sane folks. I've ran most of my life, but I'd never even attempt this.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barkley_Marathons One of my friends, an Ultra Runner, got in this year. He's on his way there, starts sometime in the next few days. "The Barkley Marathons: The Race That Eats Its Young" used to be on Netflix. Well worth the watch if you can find it. <iframe width="560" height="315" src="https://www.youtube.com/embed/UQmoxlUy33A" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture" allowfullscreen></iframe> |
Wow, "in 25 years, only 10 people have finished."
I just don't have the desire to try to push myself that hard / that far. If it was life/death, then sure, I'd try to do what I had to do, but for "fun," nope, nope, nopety, nope, NFW. The ultra marathon folks are already pretty nutty. :D |
I’ve heard about them, and even in the crazy group of runners I know, this is viewed as totally insane.
Have you had your friends head examined? 🤣 |
Only 15 runners have finished since it began in 1986, 55% of the events have had no finishers.
Pete’s head is fine... just wired differently. However, he did beat the horse in Man v Horse in Prescott a couple years ago. Sooo, maybe? *Correction- I'm not certain he beat the horse, but he's ran it many times very competitively. |
Humans used their brains, and developed cars, motorcycles, boats and aircraft to go long distances with minimal effort. I am not going to ignore all that inattentive thinking.
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Ha ha! That's so true Glen!
I'll just sit back and watch the carnage unfold. But I will say some the run accomplishments I've seen over the years are truly humbling. |
There is or was a race of natives of Mexico that caught deer by just running them down. A human in top shape can run longer than a deer. It will fall over from exhaustion, and they just walk up to it and cut it's neck. I assume they had to be doing the running in a area with no heavy trees of the deer would just vanish into the forest, and it is hard to run thought heavily wooded areas.
I prefer to go to the local grocery store to stock up on food. I really do enjoy modern amenities. |
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Conch was blown at 2:04am EDT Friday Mar 18th.
Cig was lit at 3:04am. It has begun. The heavy rain let up at the start, but it will return Friday evening. Temps will range from mid 60's to mid 30's throughout the weekend. |
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Sounds like a wonderful experience! Wish I was there taking part. |
Well, crap.
After only 5.5 hours, my friend Peter has dropped out. Highly irregular for him. Have to guess due to injury or disorientation. They're sent out with a map and a compass...in east Tennessee heavy brush. No word from him yet. Got the news through other friends that got their update via Twitter from the Race coordinator. |
I think I know some of these guys. Crazy bastards
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In some ways, that's an insult to the word "crazy". :D
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Clearly your buddy came to his senses!!
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I don't understand what makes it so hard. To finish in 60 hours, you have to maintain a pace of 2 mph. That's not very fast.
The Badwater (Death Valley) Ultramarathon is 135 miles long with 13,000 feet of elevation gain, and run in July when it's usually 120 degrees or more. And people finish it in well under 30 hours. The record is 21:33. That's a pace of over 6 mph. The Barkley Marathon must harder, but how is that possible? It must be the terrain. The Badwater is on roads and good trails, while the Barkley appears to be on very steep terrain in forests with no or few trails. I posted a thread recently about my excursion into a wildfire zone that required scaling hillsides so steep I had to cut foot holds in the ground and use my hands. I probably covered no more than 3 miles, but I was more wiped out than I had been on a 17 mile hike up and down Mt. Diablo, with 4100 feet of vertical. So yeah, it must be the terrain. |
Barkley is over 100 miles, 54,000 feet elevation change, 2 water drops. Watch the trailer, better yet, queue up the Doc on Prime.
You’ll change your tune.. Btw, that Badwater run is tough, but many folks finish every year. Only 15 have finished Barkley and no women have ever finished. |
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Crazy terrain with no trails and it appears, basically no support of any sort (probably other than some sort of emergency medical and some way to track the folks). I guess you've got to figure out where you're supposed to go on several check points and hit each one 5 times. "Badwater Ultramarathon" sounds like something else that I'm not interested in attempting. |
Yeah, I said change, but it's gain. That's what I was thinking, but the words came out differently. From the Wiki page "with 54,200 feet (16,500 m) of accumulated vertical climb".
To understand it fairly, watch the doc. Remember when James Earl Ray escaped from prison in 1977? This is the inspiration for the race's creation. JER made it 8 miles in 55 hours, then he was caught. A local named Gary Cantrell said "hrumph ( I'm paraphrasing ) I could do better than that"...thus the Barkley's was born. Just know the experts in this field call it the most challenging run in the US. Not the world, there are way tougher ones in Europe. I did the Presott Half without training and they tout it as one of the toughest. But that was all road and gravel surfaces. My ass was thoroughly cooked when I finished...but I finished running across the line. Too smoked to even sit. Just kept moving....to the bar. ;) And there were water and aid stations all over. Mind you, I grew up about 90 minutes from where the Barkley's is. I have hiked/camped all over that stuff. To set out alone without tech...nope. That ain't me. |
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