America has been marathon-mad for decades but after you
have run a few of them they begin to seem a bit ho-hum. At least
for me. There are currently hundreds of active marathons in U.S.
cities, with more than a million participants
II some seriously competitive, others dressed in
clown suits or walking backward. It is fast becoming a fun run for
the masses.
So in the proud American tradition, the real thrusters
need something bigger, better and more expensive. They appear to
have found it in the 24-hour race, a kind of grown-up slumber party
without the slumber. The courses are known for their scenery but
about half the race is run in the dark, depending on the time of
year. Runners’ individual Petzl headlamps
showing the way around the pot holes.
In the Boston area, teams are already training for next
spring’s 200-mile race along the shore of
Cape Cod all the way to the end point at Provincetown. I plan to
join in — or at least attend the
post-race party that brings these events to a roaring
climax.
Of the 16 races now established by the Ragnar
organization, the leader in this ultrarunning event, other events
on the 2012 schedule include races starting in Washington D.C. and
following the Potomac River Valley, descending the Florida Keys,
and threading the Northwest Passage in the Seattle area.
The 24-hour endurance test is a uniquely American
phenomenon, a challenge that seems to speak to the best of the
can-do genes in the American makeup. It offers participants the
chance to emerge from the pack of ordinary runners and earn
bragging rights wherever couch potatoes gather.
The races have mushroomed from about 18,000 runners a few
years ago to more than 100,000 expected in the next season,
including all organizers. The wimpy Europeans and Asians aren’t
interested.
Nobody actually runs for 24 hours but teams of six or
twelve runners break up the course in legs of 5 to 8 miles,
leapfrogging their way in the team’s van
to the next exchange point and grabbing the baton. Catnaps in the
back seat are about the only hope for rest.
Runners say they like the shift from the solitude of the
marathoner to the togetherness of the team concept. Bye-bye
“Loneliness of the
Long-Distance Runner”
(Alan Sillitoe’s famous short story
of 1959). Team members are expected to train hard for the ordeal.
They run for the greater good of the team, and draw extra stimulus
from their fear of letting the side down.
I recently spoke to Tanner Bell, based near Salt Lake
City, co-founder of the Ragnar Relay Series.
“Taking part makes you a member of a
tribe,” he told me. Veterans flaunt their
branded gear in public and watch for opportunities to connect with
fellow survivors of this grueling contest.
His fitness evangelism reaches a peak when he describes
the races as a “gateway to an active
lifestyle.”
The 24-hour participants are a bit like the triathalon
crowd, a breed apart. Last week I saw a bumper sticker in Boston
that reads “103.5”. The
guy’s vanity license plate is
“Tribum.” It’s
okay. The right people get it.
Always in the background is a patriotic feeling of
“America the Beautiful.” Bell says the races
celebrate the diversity of the landscape, with courses mapped out
specifically for their historical significance or natural beauty.
His staff is continuously looking for interesting new itineraries
to inaugurate across the nation.
Operating these relays is not cheap. Entry fee per team is
$1200, most of which goes to laying out the course and monitoring
the event. Local charities are hand-picked by the Ragnar people to
benefit from the surplus.
The endurance element puts extreme stress on participants,
which I guess is the point. Like other endurance tests that are
gaining popularity — Iron Man, boot camp for adults, Fatpacking,
the triathalon, the Rock and Roll Marathons — the objective is
often merely to finish the course unaided; to survive. Most manage
to do so, although in the Ragnar medical teams are stationed every
30 miles to pick up runners in trouble. Bell says accidents are
rare, but he acknowledges that two runners have died
— one was hit by an inebriated driver and the
other was overextended.
“Some participants want to push themselves to
the max,” Bell said,
“but others take it easier. We want this to
remain a very accessible event, open to all skill
levels.”
I plan to be at the back of the pack.
Hal Jordan| 11.1.11 @ 5:09PM
You runners are just crazy. Maybe you could pick up a few of those OWS folks and get them some exercise.
Here's an event for ya out in my neck of the woods, http://www.outtherecolorado.co.....-s-14.html
PCC| 11.2.11 @ 4:22PM
The "uniquely American" event described is a rip-off of endurance runs that have been ongoing around the world since the early 1980s.
As for no "wimpy Europeans and Asians" being in the race, maybe that's because they're off doing much more rigorous races, like the 100K, 14-hour overnight Maclehose Trailwalker, in which four-person teams complete the entire event, unlike the wimpy Americans who only do "5-8 mile" legs.
The author should get out more and leave his ignorant American chauvinism behind.