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trackrunner
Joined: 27 Nov 2007
Posts: 832
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| Posted: Mon May 26, 2008 10:54 am Post subject: |
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how far is it?
Back in college on SUU's cross country team I ran from Lee's pass to Kolob arch and back. I brought nothing but running shorts and a tank. Backpackers thought I was crazy so they stopped me and gave me water, food, granola bars, beef jerky. Best run ever. :2thumbs:
I'm going to have to try Lee's pass to east entrance. Nice job bo :nod: |
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Bo_Beck
Joined: 02 Dec 2005
Posts: 775
Location: Southern Utah
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| Posted: Mon May 26, 2008 6:52 pm Post subject: |
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trackrunner wrote: how far is it?
Back in college on SUU's cross country team I ran from Lee's pass to Kolob arch and back. I brought nothing but running shorts and a tank. Backpackers thought I was crazy so they stopped me and gave me water, food, granola bars, beef jerky. Best run ever. :2thumbs:
I'm going to have to try Lee's pass to east entrance. Nice job bo :nod:
My stimulous was my ex-boss Terry Tucker. He was reading the books about hikes in Zion. It was about 1985 or so. The descriptions he read about the trails is that they were best done in Spring. I believe he was reading the books around June 19th. He thought if he wanted to do the trails that he better do them all before summer. So he did...the next day! Thus started what we have reffered to as "Stupid Hikes". He and I tried a stupid hike back around 1992. South Rim to North Rim to Jacob Lake in under 24 hours. We bombed (an epic story in itself). Way too much snow! I think "Bushwacker" wants to try an R2R2R one of these days. I'm feeling pretty good. Sounds like a fun one?
You'll love the Zion hike (or run) a lot. Do it! |
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Bo_Beck
Joined: 02 Dec 2005
Posts: 775
Location: Southern Utah
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| Posted: Mon May 26, 2008 6:54 pm Post subject: |
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trackrunner wrote: how far is it?
49-50 miles? |
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trackrunner
Joined: 27 Nov 2007
Posts: 832
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| Posted: Mon May 26, 2008 8:46 pm Post subject: |
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Bo_Beck wrote: trackrunner wrote: how far is it?
49-50 miles?
And you did that around 14 hours. :eek2: Is it not hard? Becuase 14 hours for 50 miles is moving. :eek2: |
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erial
Joined: 22 May 2006
Posts: 256
Location: wake forest nc
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| Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 4:15 am Post subject: |
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One of the fellows in the video, Karl Meltzer, will be attempting to break the record of traversing the Appalachian Trail later this summer.
He'll have to do the equivalent of running Zion everyday for 40 some days straight. And he'll have to contend with the infamous east coast heat and humidity while doing so. |
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Bo_Beck
Joined: 02 Dec 2005
Posts: 775
Location: Southern Utah
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| Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 6:57 am Post subject: |
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erial wrote: One of the fellows in the video, Karl Meltzer, will be attempting to break the record of traversing the Appalachian Trail later this summer.
He'll have to do the equivalent of running Zion everyday for 40 some days straight. And he'll have to contend with the infamous east coast heat and humidity while doing so.
What an UNBELIEVABLE feat. It's just so hard to imagine consecutive days of long miles. The body and mind must be unbelievably conditioned to be able to do this! I look forward to the documentary. :2thumbs: |
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tanya
Joined: 18 Oct 2005
Posts: 5720
Location: St. George
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| Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 11:23 am Post subject: |
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Check this out. These guys posted this link to my Zion blog this weekend.
http://adventurerun.wordpress.com/2008/05/26/zion-traverse/
blog
http://zionnationalpark.wordpress.com/2007/05/12/2007-far-far-fest-hiking-across-zion-in-a-day/
Dang.. you and I were going to hike this, this month, but the days clicked away so fast :ne_nau: |
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Brian in SLC
Joined: 01 Aug 2006
Posts: 445
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| Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 12:11 pm Post subject: |
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tanya wrote: Check this out. These guys posted this link to my Zion blog this weekend
http://adventurerun.wordpress.com/2008/05/26/zion-traverse/
Yeah, those guys are fast.
Ryan and Jared did Pine Creek in just a shade over 30 minutes. Jared recently did Keyhole, standard hike, in 11 minutes.
He did hold the cirque traverse record in the Wind Rivers for awhile.
Lotta horsepower there. Wierd combo of pretty high end climber (only and/or first one day ascent of Sendero Luminoso in El Portrero Chico...onsighting up to 5.12c...yikes) and very talented long distance running (Karl has one a bunch of ultras, and, Jared finished 4 at Hard Rock with a bad foot).
Will be interesting to see what they can pull off in the next few weeks. Stay tuned!
-Brian in SLC |
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erial
Joined: 22 May 2006
Posts: 256
Location: wake forest nc
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| Posted: Wed May 28, 2008 6:24 am Post subject: |
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Accounts of other recent park runs:
http://ericjlee.com/Trip%20Reports/WhiteRimRd.html
http://www.charlieroberts.com/archives/75 |
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erial
Joined: 22 May 2006
Posts: 256
Location: wake forest nc
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| Posted: Wed May 28, 2008 8:57 pm Post subject: |
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And long traverses are not just a guy thing. From Trail Runner Magazine:
Jennifer Pharr: Fastest self-supported traverse of Vermont's Long Trail
Green Mountain Club members celebrated their completion of Vermont's Long Trail's final segment in 1930 by lighting flares from every summit in the Green Mountain Range, which arcs from the Massachusetts-Vermont state line to the Canadian border.
On August 8, 2007, 24-year-old Jennifer Pharr felt like rejoicing in a similar manner after covering the 270-mile distance in a record 7 days 15 hours 40 minutes. Previous record holder is Dr. Warren Doyle, who, in 1978, covered the distance (unsupported) in 8 days 13 hours 25 minutes. Ted "Cave Dog" Kizer is owner of the Long Trail's fastest overall recorded journey (with outside support) of 4 days 14 hours.
Doyle, along with ultrarunner David Horton, is an unofficial record keeper for the Appalachian (AT) and Long Trails. He is the Interim Director of the John B. Stephenson Center for Appalachian and Comparative Highland Studies Institute at Lees-McRae College, and has thru-hiked the AT fourteen times. Most thru-hikers and runners inform him of their record attempts on significant Eastern hiking throughways and Doyle verifies their claims primarily via an honor system, and more importantly, through the Appalachian region's hiking and ultrarunning community grapevines.
Pharr, of Hendersonville, North Carolina, completed the Appalachian Trail in 2005 and the Pacific Crest Trail in 2006, but yearned to thru-hike a substantial trail in a sustained push. "I wanted to immerse myself in the trail and give it my all," says Pharr. "Nothing could have taught me more as pushing my limits on the Long Trail."
Pharr's unsupported journey began each day at 5 or 6 a.m. She averaged 30 miles daily, hiking until 8 or 9 p.m., snacking all day. She had mailed three shipments of food to towns along the trail to restock her food supply. Pharr's 10-pound pack contained food and clothing, but no tent, as she slept under the stars, and when weather looked threatening, stayed in Green Mountain Club huts.
After blitzing through 45 miles the first day, Pharr awoke on the second morning to a swollen knee and ankle and later that day, suffered a bee sting on the same leg. Mildly allergic, she endured a painful and swollen leg for two days, icing it in streams wherever possible, doubting her ability to continue.
But day four was a turning point. "I had physically overcome a great deal of pain and was now ready for the challenges ahead," she says.
After graduating from Alabama's Samford University three-and-a-half years ago, Pharr works seasonally for six months at a North Carolinian summer camp for girls and then travels and hikes the remainder of the year. She took up ultrarunning shortly before her Long Trail attempt, running Virginia's 2006 Promise Land 50K in 7:00:19 and the 2007 Holiday Lake 50K in 5:34:14. After her record-breaking hike, she also completed Lynchburg's Mountain Masochist 50-miler in 9:41:21.
Pharr is considering a thru-hiking speed attempt on the Appalachian Trail next summer. "I know that hiking strong, fast and smart can teach you specific lessons, and [being really fit] is a gift that will not always be available to me," says Pharr. "So I want to take advantage of it while I can."
Pharr's Long Trail sojourn profoundly changed her. "I am not the same person that I had been at the start," she says. "Endurance hiking had taught me to unburden myself from physical gear and emotional ties that slowed me down in the past, and in turn focus on what is positive in my life."
Pharr didn't keep a blog on her Long Trail record-breaking hike, but a thoughtful write-up on her 2006 Pacific Crest Trail hike can be found at www.brmsstore.com/blogs/jennifer
*****
FYI: Next month after wedding and honeymoon, Pharr will really go far as she'll head south from Katahdin going for the women's AT speed record. |
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tanya
Joined: 18 Oct 2005
Posts: 5720
Location: St. George
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| Posted: Fri May 30, 2008 8:00 am Post subject: |
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| Did you see all this Bo? |
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