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We Made It!!




Holy crap, what a race!

Plenty of stories from this one, but the only one worth telling right now is that we finally finished a FULL expedition length race as a ranked team, what a feeling!!

It was like a wildlife safari out there, we came across five snakes, one, a red belly black snake is one of the deadliest in the world, had a dolphin swim between our kayaks, noticed a black tipped reef shark shortly before we commenced a snorkel section, nearly biked into a kangaroo, not to mention seeing wallabies, a bilby, and a goana.

I think there was more, but am still in a bit of a haze with everything. We have an incredible condo rented out for the next five days and are just preparing a sweet BBQ dinner before hitting up the backpacker town of Airlie Beach. It will be awhile before I get updates and such on here, but we have almost 20 minutes of video of the race as well.

Awesome time so far...it will be hard to return home in a week...if I did not have my dog at home waiting I might have decided to get a bartending job and hang out for a few months!

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Almost There...

It just keeps going and going and going and going...I departed Vancouver over 31 hours ago and I am just getting ready to board my last flight, from Brisbane to Mackay, in an hour...make it end!

Although I have but slept a few hours since I left things are going good so far. I have already watched 4 new movies and managed to make it to Australia without having to pay a surcharge for my mountain bike...although technically I could have gotten in some trouble for it. Anyways, stories to come, one flight to go, then some serious zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.

GR

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Australia Here I Come!











I am having trouble believing that I will back be in Australia in just a few days!

I spent a full year in Australia and New Zealand in 2000 and had some the best experiences of my life...bring on the sand and surf baby!

Oh yeah, but first Team Helly Hansen-MOMAR will be competeing in XPD the Australian Epic Expedition Adventure Race, encompassing 800km of 'rainforest and reef'...there's even a snorkeling stage on The Great Barrier Reef itself!

You should be able to follow along on the XPD website.

Let's just hope that for the first time all year Team Helly Hansen-MOMAR can have a clean race and not get into any issues on the water or have any near death experiences!

As a small side note, I'm pretty sure we are the youngest team in the entire event, as I am somehow now the oldest member on my team...how the hell did that happen?!

GR

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Stage Two, The Connector and Juan De Fuca (55km)





So I ended up having to wait twenty minutes for the Gordon River water taxi. During which time I managed to down some vitamin I (Ibuprofen) and stretch my legs for five minutes. By the time I reached the opposite side of the water, and was greeted by Carlos and Roxy I was feeling 100% better than an hour earlier, buoyed onwards by the knowledge that I had at least made my only cut-off for my run. No matter what occurred after this point in time, I was sure I would at least crawl to the 'finish line'.

I had to 'check out' of the West Coast Trail and had a brief conversation with the receptionist. She asked my running time and after telling her it was 12h20m she congratulated me on being the fastest runner to have ever done the trail! I quickly corrected her, for I know at least two people who have completed it in under 10 hours, and assured her I would try to have them contact the trail office to update their information. I then asked about the runner from the previous day,

“I don’t know, maybe you ran past him because we still have not seen the guy here.”

She then went into detail about what a jerk the guy had been, and I immediately went about trying to convince her of what great people runners usually are. The last thing I wanted was for any future runners to be banned from this trail! She was also the very first person, outside of close friends, who I told of my intentions to continue onwards and attempt the Juan De Fuca trail as well.

“Really, wow, well be sure to call us when you are done and let us know how it went!”

“I will, thanks so much, you beautiful lady you, great area here, wonderful people, amazing landscape…did I mention how nice runners usually are?”

With that I was off and running the road connecting the two trails. Carlos would drive ahead a few hundred meters and wait for me to catch up. I initially started running with Roxy. I attached her leash to my backpack and was hoping she would help tow me along, instead she was dead weight, having run for a few hours with Carlos already that day. I ended up tucking her back in the vehicle after just a few minutes…I was 77km in and not even my dog would join me!!

About half way along the eight kilometer stretch of road from Gordon River to Botanical Beach I noticed a convenience store. Carlos was just up ahead and I threw my arms in the air like a crazed maniac in the hopes that he would see me…I wasn’t passing up on this one. I ducked inside and grabbed a half liter of chocolate milk! They also had a microwave which allowed me to heat up some of the quinoa I was packing in my drop bags. It was a beautiful afternoon and I really enjoyed the ten minute break in the sunshine.

Once the food was gone I was back to running the road again. It started to climb a few decent grades and I was forced into a fast hike within minutes. As I was approaching the Botanical Beach Trail Head, where the North end of the Juan De Fuca begins, I was left wondering why Carlos had stopped in my vehicle, in the middle of the road, with the reverse lights on? Less than a minute later my curiosity was answered as I nearly ran smack dab into a black bear!

The bear was very relaxed and hardly took notice of me at all, but I was glad to have a few hundred pounds of steal as a barrier between the bear and I. After a short video, I was into the parking area and my official transition point. Carlos unloaded my bins while I ran to the outhouse to change my clothes and reapply Bodyglide to every square inch of my body!

After topping up my bladder with Carbo-Pro, filling my backpack with food supplies and dropping Nuun tablets into my handheld bottles I was off.

A week out, I had been hoping to make it onto the JDF for 6:30pm. I officially started the trail at 6:27pm and was honestly in shock at how good I was feeling! The break between the trails, the lack of now having a cut off time to make and the social interactions with Carlos and some other people all helped to bring me back into a solid mental state, which immediately transcended into my running. I started at a pace that I had not been able to sustain all day. It lasted for all of a kilometer, until the climbing and descending began.

My goal for the JDF was to knock down as many kms as possible before nightfall, hopefully 20k or more. I had just under three hours to do so and put in as solid an effort as I could. After the first hour or so the adrenaline had worn off and I was once again back to feeling really spent and just trying to tough it out as best I could. My right knee was starting to flare up and it kept me on a steady intake of I.B. for the rest of the run. The soles of my feet were also getting pretty damn tired and letting it be known that they were well past their comfort range. On top of that my stomach was starting to scream at me as it was in desperate need of a full meal. The food that I was carrying would be the bare minimum to get me through the night.

As I was approaching about 15km, I crossed a bridge and had to skirt around a gentleman who was purifying water from the river. He took notice of my small running pack and started asking questions. Before long he had gotten it all out of me, (yeah, I hate talking, it was sooo tough for him to pry it out of me right!) and he looked at me in shock,

“When you pass through the campground, would you do me a favour please?”

“Sure, I think?”

“Would you tell my daughter what you have done so far today?”

“Umm, really? I mean, yeah if you think she would like to know about it, I’ll find her.”

“Thanks, she’s been having a bit of a rough day, I think this might help her out.”

As I passed through the campground I noticed a young girl of about ten and a woman about the same age as the gentleman on the bridge.

“Is that your father down on the bridge?”

“Pardon me?”

“Sorry, your father, is he purifying water? He asked me to come and tell you what I was doing out here today.”

“Yeah, that’s my Dad…”

“Well he just wanted me to tell you that I started running about eighteen hours ago back in Pachena Bay at the start of the West Coast Trail, and I’m trying to make it to the end of this trail in under 24 hours…if I am successful I will be the first person to have done so”

They were obviously in shock and after a second of silence they just erupted in amazement and appreciation for what I was attempting.

The Mother broke out with, “That’s incredible, you deserve a hug!”

All I could say was, “Honestly lady, I would LOVE a hug right now!”

She gave me the most wonderful embrace, followed immediately by her daughter and then again by her. It was such a small thing, to hug someone, a basic human interaction, and yet to me, at that moment in time, nothing else could have meant more, nothing. I will admit, being so exhausted and shattered I was nearly brought to tears…it was just so random and amazingly appreciated. Throughout most of the run I was going it alone, and hardly running into even hikers on the trails. This support from random strangers (we never even exchanged names!) helped to lift me back up to where I needed to be to continue through the night alone.

“Well we won’t keep you from your run any longer, get going, GOOD LUCK!”

I only hope they were able to read on my face how thankful I was to have briefly met them.

By nightfall I had reached 19km, leaving me with 28km to cover in the dark. As mentioned a few of us ran the JDF in the fall of 2006. Our time was 7.5 hours which works out to about 6km an hour…this was all we could manage while running it fresh. I had 28km to go and 5.5 hours to cover it in. That left me with a necessary pace of 5km an hour. Again, this does not sound like much, but the Juan De Fuca Trail has to be experienced to fully understand just how tough it really is. The high point on the JDF isn’t even much more than maybe 1,000 feet about sea level...I’m not sure of the exact height, but looking at this trail on a map you would never guess what it has in store for you. I just wanted to focus on hiking the hills as fast as my body would allow, for I knew this is where I would loose the most time if I did not stay focused.

I was now running through the dark and the only breaks I would get from the solitude of the trails at night were my few mandatory beach 'running' sections. It was the Saturday night of the long weekend and all the accessible beach areas were littered with drunken partiers. Most were very helpful with directing me to the trail heads off of the beach, as the majority of the JDF marking is not reflective and it would often be tough to find the trails that lead away from the ocean. At one point late into the night I stopped to ask the only visible person, if he knew where the trail head was. All he could do was sway back and fourth while he seemingly tried to determine exactly what this reflective figure with a headlamp shining into in his face actually was. I slowly asked again and it became obvious that he was now agitated, but still speechless. As I was about to try one last time I recognized the look in his eyes, he was so confused as to what was going on that his only solution was to try and fight his way out of it! As he was trying to stabilize himself for a confrontation I immediately started backing away and hoping that I could actually outrun him if need be! I was certainly in no shape to be absorbing any additional non self inflicted punishment!

Just after midnight, while struggling to stay on pace for my sub 24hr goal, my stomach basically threw in the towel. I did not puke, but thought for sure that I would. No matter how hard I tried, I simply did not have enough calories on me to get my body back to good. I stuffed down over 500 with a mix of Carbo-Pro, a snickers bar, some Cliff Shots and a gel. It did absolutely zero to relieve the discomfort. My stomach did not even flinch. It was as if it was talking to me, and I could fully understand exactly what it was saying...

"I'll let you have your 24 hours of running, la ti freakin da I really could not care less about all of this right now, but I'll let you have it anyways...however, at 24hr and 1 minute, I OWN YOU!! If your ass is not planted firmly in a chair by that point in time, look out cause you're gonna wish we had never met!"

"Deal"

All I could do was ensure that I stayed on top of my electrolytes. I made sure that I continued to consumed regular doses of my Nuun tablets and it seemed to be enough to at least keep me going in a straight line!

At my last beach crossing everyone was out for the count. I was 2am and all that stood out were the reflective fly sheets on most of the tents. I continued past all the campers and eventually found myself at a rocky headway. The water was slowly lapping into the cliff face and I was left wondering if I had mis-calculated my tides? I waded out into shin deep water and tried to see around the rocks. It took me all of three seconds to determine that if I had to continue along this route it was all but over until day break. Thankfully I had actually remembered to pack my JDF trail stats with me, upon referencing them I realized that I simply had to have gone too far. I should have had five feet of tidal leeway with this beach. As I doubled back I was very fortunate to accidentally spot a somewhat hidden trail head sign. I stopped to try and pry a rock from my shoe and the trail was but ten feet in front of me! Had I not stopped I surely would have returned to the camping area and dropped valuable time in the process. I hopped onto the trail and realized that I could potentially be done with my suffering in 90 minutes, with a bit of luck and an elevated running pace.

Again I was forced to dig deep and I somehow found a reserve of energy that I did not know I possessed. Surely most of it was fueled by the adrenaline rush of a potential end to my misery.

I seemed to remember the JDF trail relenting just a little bit in the last four kilometers...I remember wrong, way wrong! There were no breaks, none, not a single freakin km on that trail is given to you!

At 3:22am I found myself at the 2km to go marker. I had 42 minutes left for my sub 24...it was all but in the bag. I tried to run it in, but there was no point, everything I set out to accomplish was about to unfold in front of me wheter I ran or hiked. I tried to enjoy the final 22 minutes of the Juan De Fuca Trail. As painful an experience as it was, I knew that not a single memory thereafter would retain this information, in fact even now it takes a full on effort to recall exactly how much it did hurt at times. Instead my memories are of setting out to accomplish a lofty goal. One that many, including myself, doubted could be done as an individual. This was just 4km shy of being twice as far in distance as I had ever continuously run before, and over three times longer in time than my previous longest run (the 06 JDF run), yet I never once questioned if I would finish this route. Barring severe injury I was fully confident that I could tough it out...the sub 24 was up in the air and but icing on the cake at this point in time.

I fully realized how fortunate I was on this particular weekend. First and foremost, Carlos Castillo sacrificed his own long weekend to at least give me a shot at this one. The weather worked out perfectly. There was very little rain leading up to my departure and not a single drop throughout the run. Numerous sections of trail would have been significantly increased in difficulty with even the slightest precipitation. The tides, the tides, the tides. I have no idea what would be considered normal for the tidal changes on a typical day over this route, but I could not have asked for any better. The permit...well, as I learned, anyone who sets up on the Warden's doorstep at 7am is virtually guaranteed a day permit.

In less than a day I managed to experience the absolute highs and lows of the human spirit. I had met some great people on the trail, no matter how brief our encounters, and although I did not spot a whale, I did run through no fewer that a million sea gulls, witnessed a few bald eagles, apparently missed a cougar encounted by mere minutes, and came within twenty feet of running into a black bear.

These thoughts and more were flying through my mind as I managed to get my legs to kick and run the final 500 meters to the JDF parking area. I started screaming in joy and Carlos, having agreed to start running towards me had I not hit my sub 24, starting yelling back. I got to run the final 100 meters with Carlos and Roxy and when I hit that parking lot I had but one thought going through my mind...

Why didn't I pack a cooler of beer for myself!!!

I dropped my ass into a chair and every inch of my body screamed out in unison,

"THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!"

My official running time for the Juan De Fuca was 9hr and 17min, and all up I had taken 23hr40 to knock down the 130km. For a fraction of a second I contemplated running an additional 30km on the road to get my first 100 miler, then I smacked myself right in the teeth to snap my ass out of it...I wasn't going to move an inch under my own power for at least a full week!

Thanks to everyone for your pre run support and post run congrats. Australia for an 800km expedition race known as XPD in four days!! (just over a week till the event begins)

Thanks, as always, to Helly Hansen for supplying me with the best gear to tackle these challenges.

P.S. Anyone know of a 200km route that has not been run yet??

GR

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Stage One, The 75km West Coast Trail





Let me just start by saying one thing, Carlos Castillo is THE MAN, and none of this would have been possible without him!

The idea was hatched over a few beers in September 2006. A group of us had just run the 47km Juan De Fuca Trail, with times ranging from 7.5-9 hours. We unanimously agreed that the JDFT was a killer...and yet we all discussed what we could do to make it tougher?
How about an out and back? Boring.
What about linking it to another trail?
Then someone mentioned the 75km West Coast Trail, which finished just down the street from the North end of the Juan De Fuca Trail. There was a paved road connecting these two and the total distance added up to 130km.

The West Coast trail is a classic West Coast hike and is internationally known for it's high level of difficulty. There are dozens of hikers rescued off of this trail annually with numerous injuries and ailments, and the one season rescue record topped over 100 people!
With steep ladders, cable car water crossings, deep mud, rocky rooty trails, and lengthy beach sections, the West Coast Trail stood alone as a test of your trail running prowess. To tack on another sole destroying 53km after this...well that sounded like a great idea! We all planned to come back and give it a go in 2007.
After some further research we learned that these trails had never been successfully run end to end before. A few groups had attempted it, but without success.

Fast forward to the B.C. Day long weekend, August 4th-6th 2007. I had somehow managed four days off from work and without a major race in there I found myself without a good 'get out of town' plan. I racked my brain with different options and came up with everything from sky diving to flying to Wisconsin to visit some friends, but this 'West Coast Double' kept popping into my head. I decided to sleep on it but to no avail, when I awoke the next morning and my first thoughts were with the trails I knew it was time to go for it. I hoped that some of my trail running buddies would be able to join me but would quickly learn that all had to pass for different reasons. Each person wished me luck and said they would be thinking of me while enjoying the comforts of their own beds that night.

The WCT sells out months in advance, but I did learn that they issue five additional permits per day on a first come, first serve basis. So as long as I could get myself to Bamfield in time, I should be able to grab one of these for myself. On Thursday August 2nd I worked ten hours at North Shore Athletics, drove an hour to the ferry crossing, caught the 9:30pm ferry for an 11pm arrival in Nanaimo, and cranked up my music as I drove off into the night. I arrived in Bamfield at 2:30am and was forced to sleep in my car, with my dog no less. Just four hours later I awoke with the daylight, grabbed a chair, a book, some food and my dog Roxy and headed for the Warden's office. I knew they did not open until 9am, but I was leaving nothing to chance. All it would take was one group of five hikers to leave me stranded in Bamfield for the day. Roxy and I camped out right in front of their door.

At 9am the Warden arrived and issued me my running permit. All she had to say was,

"Oh. I have never issued a one day permit for the entire trail before!"

The fees for the West Coast Trail, even for just running it in a day, are $160.00, including your two mandatory water taxi crossings. Due to these water crossings there is no possible way to even consider 'poaching' the trail. This was not a thought I had, but for any other runners who might be wanting to run the WCT, know in advance what it will cost you and don't give the park staff any grief over it! There was apparently a runner who left the day before me and he fought tooth and nail not to pay this fee, frustrating everyone involved and potentially jeopardizing future trail running access to the WCT. It will only take a few jerks to push the park staff into banning us from it all together. If you intend to head out there for a run, let it be known that you are a runner and show them how great the running community is. We need to cover our butts from the one's that shouldn't be out there in the first place!

With my permit in hand...firmly in my hands, as I was now afraid to loose it! I headed into Bamfield for a nice cooked breakfast.
At noon my good buddy Carlos Castillo arrived from Victoria. He and Roxy went for a two hour run while I managed a nice one hour nap. We spent the remainder of the day chilling on the beach and swapping war stories. Carlos was great company and I enjoyed the opportunity to get to know him a bit better.

At 9pm I figured it was time to hit the tent. Roxy joined me and she was asleep within minutes. Although I had only slept 4hr the previous night, and I felt completely exhausted, my mind would not stop racing. Anytime I got close to falling asleep, I would all of a sudden get goose bumps as another thought about the following days attempt would somehow creep its way into my mind. It was a long and sleepless night and at 3:20am, without even looking, I was fully aware of the fact that my alarm was about to sound.

3:23am, BEEP, BEEP, BEEP, BEEP,

“Damn”

As I hit snooze, my second back up alarm sounded. I actually lay there telling myself how much I did not want to get out of my tent and try this stupid run. It was downright freezing out, it was 3:30am, I had hardly slept in two days and I was about to embark on a 130km run, c'mon, who was I kidding, this was insanity, just turn off the alarms, go back to sleep and tell everyone that you couldn't get yourself a permit for the West Coast Trail. At about that time I remembered that Carlos was sleeping in the tent across from me. He had offered to sacrifice his own weekend to come out and be my support crew, had boarded a 6am, six hour bus ride the previous day, and was getting up shortly after I left to drive seven hours to the end of the WCT. Then he would drive to the end of the Juan De Fuca Trail and camp in the parking lot until 4am on Saturday, at which point he intended to start running the trail back towards me in case I had gotten lost or injured. The man was a legend in my books and I would never be able to face him again had I slept in and blown my only chance at this run.

I dragged my sorry ass out of my tent. Shivering and sleep deprived I went about breaking down my campsite and getting my running gear ready to go. I had intended to start the WCT at 4am and I officially made it onto the trail at 4:04am. It was pitch black out and although I was wearing a headlamp it was not my brightest setup. I had sacrificed brightness for lightness, thinking I would not want to carry the heavier lamp for ten plus hours after the sun came up. For the first two hours of the run I was wishing the opposite.

I had hiked the West Coast Trail once before, in 2001. I did it in three days and most people told me I was crazy to attempt this, and that I would not make it through...oh if only those same people knew what the hell I was doing to myself on this day.

The winter of 2006-2007 was a rough one on the west coast. We were battered by wind storm after wind storm and the WCT was forced into a late opening in 2007. The cleanup was massive due to all of the downed trees that had to be moved, cleaned up or just sawed in half to allow the trail to continue. I vividly remembered the first 15km of the WCT as being a 'Golden Brick Road' that you could have run with your eyes closed. I was all of one kilometer into the trail before I hit my first ladder section! The ladders on the WCT are near vertical and in some sections climb over 400 feet! This first ladder was a few hundred feet up and I was left puzzled as to how I had forgotten such an element of the trail. I traversed a short section of route on top of the ladder and then proceeded down a few hundred feet of wood work on the opposite side. It was here that I noticed the old section of the trail that had since been closed. Due to the wind fall from the previous winter I was getting an early taste of what was ahead.

A few km down the trail, another set of ladders, followed by a section of forest that looked as if a bomb had been detonated right in the middle of it. There were dozens of huge trees strewn about in a mess of tangled tree trucks, branches and roots. There was a but a tiny chainsawed route through the middle of this mess, and once again I was left wondering what had happened to my 'highway' through the forest. I was only an hour and a half in and I was already falling off the pace that I figured I needed to sustain to make the 5pm water taxi cut off in Gordon River. This first part of the run was where I had intended to 'bank time' by hammering through it. Instead I was seriously struggling and starting to feel sick.

I don't know if it was the lack of sleep leading up to this run, my nerves getting the better of me, or something I ate the previous day, but I was having serious difficulty with consuming any calories, whether in liquid or solid form. I had to duck off into the bushes numerous times to deal with bowel issues that I had not experienced while running since I had diagnosed my Gluten Allergy nine months previous. Had I somehow consumed gluten while eating in Bamfield the day before? All I knew for sure is that I was suffering way more than I should have been this early into such a big run. I was constantly battling the notion that this was simply not going to be my day to do this. I needed to be at 100% to pull this one off and in my current state the thoughts of still running 115km did not seem possible. I knew I would hurt during this run, just not right from the start of it! I kept telling myself that maybe I was going to be doing the physical stresses backwards. I'd get the suffering out of the way early and then run easy through the rest of the run...although I am not a good lier and was having trouble convincing myself of this one. I put my head down and struggled onward.

I had a spectacular fall before the sun came up. I was running across a log bridge, with the logs having been halved and stuck in place going with the direction of travel. Moss had filled in a gap in the middle of these two pieces of wood and my foot shot right through the bridge. I was on my face and sliding before I even knew what had happened to me. It took me a good ten seconds to crawl back to my feet as I was not really enjoying myself at this point in time anyways. I had hardly eaten anything, was sick from the start, the trail was now tougher due to some newly re-routed sections and the chances of me actually making it through this thing seemed to be fading by the hour. I had a days worth of thoughts go through my mind in ten seconds flat, but the only thing that I heard was,
“Get yer G.D. Ass off the ground and get freakin moving again!”

As the kilometers ticked away I found it increasingly difficult to consume any food. I was in a bad downward spiral, as I could not eat because I was feeling sick and I was feeling sick because I was not eating. I forced down one Cliff Shot Block, about thirty calories and continued running. I was gaining some calories from my Carbo-Pro mix in my water bladder, but it was nowhere near sufficient enough for how much I was expending. I tried to eat a Snickers bar, but nearly spit out my one bite. I forced it down and ambled onwards, wondering what the rest of the day had in store for me.

It took me a full two hours and twenty minutes to cover the first 20km. Not a terrible pace, but still slower than I had intended.

The beaches were taking their toll on me early as well. There was virtually no runnable terrain on the beach sections. From time to time I would find some nice hard sand and make decent time but overall the ocean areas consisted of mainly small loose rocks and not only was I not able to run this stuff, but my left leg seemed to be taking a beating from it. As the 'up slope' leg for the entire day it seemed to be tweaking with each and every step that I took on theses rocks. I told myself that I had to stick to the forest at all costs. Even if the terrain in the forest was considered tougher, I believed I could make better time on it.

A major oversight on my part was forgetting my actual West Coast Trail Map! I was reviewing it while I lay in sleeping bag the night prior and in my hurry to depart I ended up packing up my tent with the map still sitting in a side pouch. I was kinda blind as to what the WCT had in store for me next, maybe a good thing, but it was tough to keep track of exactly where I was in regards to the more demanding and also more beautiful parts of the route. At about km 25 I crossed a bridge and there was a huge strand of flagging tape leading off to the left, although the main trail seemed to head to the right. It appeared to me that the main route would hit the beach and this obvious newly flagged route seemed to be yet another detour due to the winter storms. I followed the bright orange flagging tape, having promised myself that I would avoid the beach at all costs. There was a strip of tape every ten feet, and although it was not a completely definitive route, it was flagged well enough that I followed it with confidence. This section was not even close to runnable, in fact I continually wondered how anyone with an actual hiking backpack would be able to negotiate this terrain. After fifteen minutes I came to a major mud crossing, and was starting to question my chosen route. There was but one set of footprints through the mud. The WCT was completely sold out and there was only ONE set of footprints through this area...it made absolutely no sense whatsoever! I struggled for a minute with what to do and settled on retracing my steps back to the main route. Even if I ended up on the beach I would limit my losses to just thirty minutes, to go any further, in uncertainty, was putting my entire run in jeopardy. I mumbled and grumbled for the full fifteen minutes back out but would eventually learn that had I not made this call I would have ended up at Little Tsusiat Lake, which of course is nowhere near where I needed to be!

As soon as I hit the main trail again, and followed it just a hundred meters around the corner, I realized how silly I had been. The main trail continued onwards and a beach option was presented. Being without my trail map however, meant that I missed out on the most beautiful section of the entire route. Having hiked this trail before I was fully aware of the natural splendor of Tsusiat Falls, and intended to stop here for a quick break and some pics, instead, I ran blindly past on the inland route.

At kilometer 32 there is a water crossing in which you need to access a water taxi. There are two along the WCT and if you have not paid you trail fees you ain't getting across, in fact before the operators will not even say hi to you they have to see your actual WCT permit! I arrived at 8:40am only to discover that the boat operator does not start until 9am and he has been known to not show up until 10 or 11am some days! I decided that if he did not show up by 9:30am, I was going to have to attempt swimming this channel. It would be my only option for making the final 5pm water taxi to get off of the WCT (assuming that guy was there!). The good news was that my half hour detour was not going to cost me any actual time on the route, however, had I known that this boat did not operate before 9am, I probably would have slept (lay in my tent trying to sleep) for an extra hour and ended up with the same finish time for the WCT. I was completely relieved to see the a boat heading for me at exactly 9am!

Safely across and I was finally running into actual hikers. I was over five hours in at this point and had not seen a single person on the trails! However, taking five hours to cover the first 32km left me with little time to spare and all conversations were had in passing. Most looking stunned at what I was obviously doing, but the occasional person would ask,

“What time did you start?”

“4am”

“Good luck!”

The boardwalks through here made for some great running, but I was fully aware of how fortunate I was that it did not rain overnight, for this area would be a death trap with any moisture on it. I was still struggling to take in calories, but was able to make decent time through here, fueled mainly on fears of missing my final water taxi. I snapped a self picture at km 39, just over half way through the West Coat Trail, but I was suffering so badly that I could not even muster up a smile for it. The picture looks like I have just poured water over my head, but it is all hard earned sweat.

I inadvertently ended up back on the beach again from km 43-44 at which point you hike up another steep set up ladders to the Carmanah Lighthouse, which has incredible views out over the ocean. From here you get back onto an inland trail for a short distance before hitting the beach for an unavoidable 5-6km section, which I was dreading! At the very start of this beach run there is a full on vendor set up called 'Moniques'. They sell everything from snacks and pop to beer and cooked food! I had depleted my three liters of water just one km prior and was intending to stop at Moniques to hopefully get on top of my stomach issues. I was 45km in, had taken over six hours reach this point and had consumed virtually none of the food I was carrying. I had counted down the kilometers to the time when I knew I could buy a few Cokes and rest up for a few minutes. Moniques also has free fresh water, so I was able to top up my three liters of capacity while I downed my pop.

It was just after 10am and there were a few groups of hikers enjoying the scenery. The sun was starting to break through the clouds, as it had been a perfect overcast morning for running. All six people sitting here were enjoying an early morning Beer, in the sun, on the beach, while doing one of the most gorgeous hikes in the world...a big part of me wanted to call it right there and join them! I appreciated the short interactions with these people and departed after about fifteen minutes, feeling somewhat better.

There is something magical about Coca Cola for endurance activities. Its mix of sodium, sugars and caffeine just can't be beat and although I knew my body would eventually turn the corner with how I was feeling, the timing with the Coke consumption was almost immediate.

Although my calorie intake had fallen behind from six hours of running on empty, I still felt that I needed to run the beach away from my beer drinking compadres. It didn't seem right to just hike out of there after telling them what I was attempting to do (I never once mentioned the JDF portion to people, they were shocked enough at the WCT run that it did not seem necessary). I made it all of 2km down the beach before my left hamstring completely seized up on me. Once again doubts came rushing through my head. What was I doing? This was ridiculous, it was over, my body would obviously start shutting down on me. I had never run for more than 7.5 hours before...I thought for sure that I had gotten in over my head and was about to pay a hefty price for it.

I tried to calm myself and managed to at least keep walking. It was alright I said, it's not like I had never cramped before, it's not like I thought this would be easy, just concentrate on getting some damn calories into your body, I thought.

As I hiked a few km of sand and rock I did just that. I rifled through my pack and put whatever I got my hands on into my mouth, some cliff shots, the rest of that snickers I could not eat earlier, a few Nuun tablets, some gels, a folding blade knife, a protein bar (the knife didn't taste so good), absolutely anything. Thankfully I was able to hold it all down and eventually I made it off the beach and back onto the trails at km 51 (this was now the furthest I had run in three years). Some quick math told me that my hiking was all but over. To make my 5pm cut off I had to really hammer it through the most technical and challenging sections of the entire route. As mentioned I had intended to bank time on the earlier parts of the trail in anticipation of this, but that plan was out the window. It was go time, this was the big test I knew I would face. I just put my head down, prayed my legs would hold up and started running for my life...my double would all but vanish if I missed the last water taxi of the day and I'd be crawling up under a tree with nothing but a space blanket for the night!

KM 52 – KM 53 took me fifteen minutes...fifteen minutes! I was giving it all I had left in the tank but this section of the trail was just littered with wood work like I had never seen before. It was like stumbling into an Ewok Village! Ladders and wood everywhere, hundreds and hundreds of feet of planks that were completely vertical, and they ended at a cable car crossing. The cable cars are a bit of fun, if you have the time to enjoy them, but hauling a few hundred pounds of twisted steel across a river, only to jump in and shoot to the middle of the line and have to haul yourself the rest of the way across, is physically draining and time consuming to say the least! You are then rewarded for your efforts with a set of ladder work that mimics the life threatening descent you had just accomplished on the opposite bank of the river. (Life threatening due to a freaking heart attack!) Anytime I crested a set of ladders I would inevitably have to hike for a few minutes before my heart rate would even consider allowing me to run again. I could not imagine doing this with the huge backpacks I had witnessed some of the hikers on the trail with. No wonder they have to rescue so many people out here each year, I bet half of them are faking any injury they can dream up just to avoid the ladders and cable cars.

“What's that, it's going to cost $1,000.00 for a boat rescue, deal! I mean, owww, my leg, I think it's broken!”

The very next KM was without a cable car, instead having a suspension bridge, but they decided to up the ante and put in an even larger section of wood work! It still took me a full ten minutes to cover this single kilometer. The trails between these devices of torture known as ladders are punctuated with deep pools of shoe swallowing mud and ankle grabbing tree roots. The game was on, and the next three hours were a fight for every inch of trail out there. I hit the final cable car on the trail, took one look at the water and said scew it, it was only knee deep, so I waded through instead! I was constantly doing the math in my head and eventually by the time I reached KM 67, I had it calculated that I had all but won the battle and was definitely going to make my necessary cut off, but I had destroyed myself in the process.

Sixty seven kilometers was previously the farthest I had ever run, during the 2004 Stormy ultramarathon. I stopped to shoot a video of the official step that pushed me into a completely new realm for distance running. The celebration was short lived however as I quickly reminded myself that I still had a full 63 KM of trail running to go, if I was going to make my entire proposed route.

With seven kilometers to go on the WCT I came across a friendly family of hikers. The daugther was close to my age and was out with her brother and parents on a nice family shared vacation. The girl asked,

“What time did you start?”

“4am.”

“From where?”

“The beginnning.”

“Beginning of what?”

“This trail.”

“WHICH SECTION OF TRAIL?”

“The entire West Coast Trail!”

Right in front of her family she blurted out,

“You're a f$%king nut case!”

“I've heard worse!”

The mother then went about her motherly duties,

“How are you? Do you have enough water? Do you have enough food? How are your feet? Are you OK?”

“Yeah, things are going pretty good so far.”

“You ARE a f$%ing nut case!”

For once, I was speachless.

The very next group of hikers I encounted were an active group of students from Vancouver who were up for a seven day version of the WCT. Our conversation was going very similar to the last, until they said,

“We just saw a cougar.”

“Excuse me?”

“Yeah, about half a km down the trail”

“Excuse me?”

“It should be gone, we scared it off.”

“Excuse me?”

I tried to act tough and experienced with stuff like this and hauled out my three inch folding blade knife.

“Not to worry, I've got this!” I proclaimed

Their response was, “Excuse me?”

So they had scared it off, simple as that, eight hikers would scare off a single cat, but what would a large feline do with one person RUNNING through the forest. Wouldn't I be playing specifically on its primal instincts! I held the three inch knife in my hand and screamed like a F$%king Nut Case, for the next ten minutes!

By the time I reached KM 70, with only five to go, I was utterly shattered. I had nearly killed myself to get to this point, but I had done it and that was all that mattered. I would make the crossing and at least give myself a shot at finishing my entire 130km route. I decided it was best to simply hike the final 5km to the water taxi and try to get my strength back.

With buy one kilometer to go, and while hiking, I managed to whack my knee on a fallen tree. It nearly took me down, but I tried to walk it off. Not 200 meters later my left arm crashed into a rock protrusion and swelled up instantly...and not 300 meters from there I hooked my right foot under a tree root and crashed down onto my handheld water bottles! I actually screamed out loud,

“C'MON! Have I not suffered enough for you today!!”

I decided upon a slow run down the final KM to the water and after 12 hours and 20 minutes of running I had managed to clear the West Coast Trail! My right knee was swollen, my left arm was swollen, I had a headache, my toes were blackened, I had chaffing on my arm pit, back, legs and 'other areas'...but there was only 55km of running to go, things felt like they were finally starting to look up for me!

GR

(It will be another day or two before I am able to finish up my run report and detail the Juan De Fuca section)

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Carlos And I At The Finish Of The 130km Run


IMGP0802, originally uploaded by garobbins.

Hey all, here is my slide show from this past weekend.
I have a 12min video that I am currently trying to upload to the internet as well...oh yeah and be sure to pick up tomorrows copy of 'The Province' (Wed August 8th)

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Mission Accomplished!!!

-23hr40m of running.
-130km of tough West Coast Trail completed.
-At least four toenails sacrificed.
-AND IT WAS ALL WORTH IT BABY!!!

I'm on top of the world right now. Even if in time, another runner or group of runners can exceed my time for these trails, they can never take away the fact that I was the very first person to have ever accomplished this...and solo at that.

I'm half drunk while I celebrate with a few friends, but figured I should put a quick update on here. My running report will follow in the days to come...

WOOOOOOOOOO HOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO,

GR

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The Hardest Part Is Done...

I got my permit to run!

And this will be fun, in the sun with a bun...ahh out of un's...

Worked ten hours yesterday in Squamish, drove an hour to the ferry, boarded a 1.5hr ferry ride to Vancouver Island, drove the three hours to the trail head and managed four hours of sleep. Got up early, brought a chair and a book with me and camped out in front of the Warden's Office until they opened at 9am. I was leaving nothing to chance!

Permit in hand and my support crew (Carlos Castillo) en route...the countdown is on...only 16hr's till my 4am start.

Bamfield is a nice, quite ocean front town. I'll enjoy the day relaxing and trying not to stress out about what I am attempting to accomplish tomorrow.

Wish me luck,
GR

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