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Look forward to an issue packed with features including a historical look at one of the world's greatest trail running prizes, The Western States 100 Buckle, a behind-the-scenes look at one of South Africa's most innovative trail running events companies, as well as an incredible trail running journey to an ancient Inca Trail city. We've also teamed up with two podcast producers, Talk Ultra and Trail Runner Nation, to bring you a great new regular feature called Trail Running In Stereo. Here you'll be able to download recent podcasts featuring informative interviews, reviews and more.

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Page 1: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine
Page 2: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

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Page 3: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

O�cial Partner of the world’s leading endurance race series

EXPEDITION FOODSHigh Energy Range: 800 calorie meals

The best energy-to-weight ratio on the marketFor all your endurance needs

Visit www.4deserts.com to �nd out more

www.expeditionfoods.com

Page 4: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

I was recently joined by a few influential members of the trail running community for a trot around my local trails, a day that

opened up some new insight for me into the world of running. Getting the opportunity to listen in on other peoples experiences, especially when it’s things that you don’t often hear about, is extremely uplifting and inspiring to say the least. It’s always a reminder of how different people interpret what trail running actually means to them, and what it is that makes them happiest. Interestingly, people often ask me, how can they become a better trail runner, or one South Africa’s top trail runners, and I guess my answer is always simple. Define what makes you the happiest when out on the trail and go in search of that every time you’re out there. Yes, you’ll need to train, yes you’ll need to be dedicated...but the sheer passion one can have for something is the real energy that will carry you over that finish line time and time again.

In this issue of Go Trail magazine we redefine ourselves a little bit by bringing you a host of insight into some incredible stories within our sport. These aren’t your run-of-the-mill articles...these are the stories behind some of the greatest events and people in the history of trail running. From one of the worlds most revered 100-Milers to a South African events company leading the way in promoting environmental sustainability, we’ve gone in search of a few “behind-the-scenes” perspectives. I’m sure you’ll agree that when you’ve finished reading the April/May issue you will have learned something new about the sport of trail running.

Keep on enjoying what it is that draws you back to the trail as it’s this connection that will continue to inspire you. For now though, grab a cup of coffee, sit back and enjoy the April/May issue of Go Trail.

Keep on running!

James | Editor

Editor ’s note.

On the cover > Magda Sokolowski enjoying her local trails in Pike National Forest, Colorado Image by: Michael Hudson

Editorial/Advertising Enquiries >[email protected] / James Hallet

Design Enquiries >[email protected] / Simphiwe Mathunjwa

April 2012/May 2012 | 4

Page 5: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

The Editor enjoying a trail series race along the sacred trails atop

Etafuleni (Zulu word meaning “mountain like table” due to it’s flat

appearance when viewed from a distance) in KwaZulu-Natal,

South Africa

Photo > Andrew Booth

April 2012/May 2012 | 5

Page 6: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

On the trail of the Chasqui Runners

Talking trail

The South American connection

Through the lens

Athlete’s profile

The fairer side of trail

Trail running in stereo

A single track mind

It’s all about the buckle

Through the eye of a compass needle

44>

10>

16>30>52>

58>

70>

76>

Features

Regulars

22>

62>

IN ThIS ISSuE

Page 7: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

A very wet start on stage 3 of the 2011 Salomon 4-Trails in Europe

Photo > Kelvin TrautmanPlease note that Go Trail magazine is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License. We encourage you to share our work however please contact the editor for special permissions if requested. All images within this publication remain under the full Copyright of

the photographers. In order to reproduce or reuse these images it is requested that you contact the photographer directly.

April 2012/May 2012 | 7

Page 8: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

We know how much trail running means to you, so we’ve created a multitude of

channels where you can get your latest trail running updates. Whether it be our latest interview with some of the top athletes in

the sport, to breaking news worldwide, we’ve got it covered.

Ph

oto

> Kelvin

Trautm

an

Page 9: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

April 2012/May 2012 | 9

S u b s c r i b e >

R i c h M e d i a >

S t a y I n f o r m e d >

S o c i a l i s e >

Page 10: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

Talking Trail

Page 11: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

When Plan doesn’t work

A

Photo> Klaus Fengler

Page 12: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

highly regarded as one of the top events organising companies in Europe, Plan B, based out of Munich in Germany, is not your a-typical trail running company.

Founded back in 2004 by husband and wife team Uta and Heinrich Albrecht, it was in the rapidly growing sport at that time, mountain biking, where this team really cut their teeth and showcased their dedication to producing

world class events.

Photo> Lars Schneider

April 2012/May 2012 | 12

Page 13: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

Photo> Klaus Fengler

not your a-typical trail running company

April 2012/May 2012 | 13

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Today, not only do they still spearhead iconic mountain bike races such as the Craft Bike Transalp and the Freeride Festival in Saalbach, but also manage their

fair share of classic and renowned European trail running events to boot. One such event, respectfully and often sheepishly referred to as “The Highway to Hell”, has become legendary amongst the global trail running community. The GORE-TEX® TRANS Alpine Run, an eight day beast through three countries and over more the 18 000m of vertical ascent and decent, is Plan B’s most well known trail running race. And as a true testament to their focus of remaining a leading event organizing outfit, this race is fully subscribed mere days after the entries open each year, an opportunity for the amateur trail runner to

mix with the sports professionals.

Photo> Lars Schneider

Other Trail Running Events From Plan B > SALOMON KEEP ON RUNNING ST. Wendel

> SALOMON ZUGSPITZ ULTRATRAIL

> SALOMON 4 TRAILS

>ECCO INDOOR TRAIL

Page 15: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

2012 Trailrunning Highlights

We are looking forward to a great Trailrunning year.

01. – 08. 09. 2012

22. – 24. 06. 2012

21. – 23. 09. 2012 05. – 07. 10. 2012

04. – 07. 07. 2012

Highlights Highlights Highlights

www.planb-event.com

www.zugspitz-ultratrail.com www.4-trails.comwww.transalpine-run.com www.womens-trail.comwww.keep-on-running.com

Anzeige-Trailrun 2012-3-Engl.indd 1 17.01.12 08:23April 2012/May 2012 | 15

Page 16: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

The South American Connection

The South American Connection

Words > Mauricio PagliacciPhotos > Club de Corredores

Page 17: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine
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The 11th Edition of El

Cruce Columbia, the

hardest of all editions

due to terrain and eleva-

tion, started on Puerto

Fuy (Chile) and ended

near San Martin de los Andes

(Neuquén, Patagonia Argentina) on

4th, 5th and 6th of February of this

current year.

El Cruce is a 3 stages-team race,

joining Chile with Argentina

through the imposing Cordillera

de los Andes, the largest mountain

range in South America. It is orga-

nized by Club de Corredores, one

of the biggest event organizers of

Argentina. Sebastián Tagle is the

race director and Owner of Club

de Corredores, he took the idea of

crossing the Andes near year 2002

and made the race grow up until

now, where people from all over

the world prepare their calendar

every year to be part of El Cruce.

Each stage has got an approximate

distance of 30 kilometers, and goes

through trails varying from mud,

rocks, logging roads and snow.

The first challenge of the race was

climbing the Mocho Choshuenco,

an incredible volcano located near

the small population of Puerto Fuy,

on the Chilean side of the Cordillera

de los Andes. The stunning views

from the summit of the volcano

amazed the 1500 trail runners.

Luckily a clear day received them

and could enjoy the incredible

landscape that offers the Cordillera.

The second stage was the longest,

all around the Pirihueico Lake, cov-

ering a distance of 40 kilometers.

April 2012/May 2012 | 18

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Perhaps it was not as hard as the

first one, but the great effort done

on the Volcano on the first day

made legs suffer even more. Finally,

the third stage was the shortest of

El Cruce. 21 km on a trail with no

elevation, joining Puerto Pirihueico

with Nonthué Lake and passing

through the Chilean and Argentin-

ean Customs. The stages started

and ended on a Camp coordi-

nated by the Organization. Runners

should only take their clothes and

food for the race, the rest was all

included on the registration cost

(tent for the team, dishes, mug,

breakfast, lunch and dinner). Three

camps (one on the previous day of

the start, and two after the stages)

where runners can get to know

each other and share experiences.

It’s great to see people from dif-

ferent parts of the world living

together three days surrounded by

mountains and an amazing land-

scape, is a unique experience.

From the beginning of the race

the winner couple of the last two

editions, Gustavo Reyes and Nelson

Ortega from Salomon-Optitech

Team, took the lead and imposed

a strong pace within three days of

competition. They are actually the

strongest couple of trail runners

in Argentina, also members of the

Argentinean trail running team

that raced the last Ultra Trail World

Championships in Connemara

(Ireland) on July 2011, and Gustavo

Reyes is member of the Salomon

International Team. They were fol-

lowed closely by Carioca Runners

composed of two tough athletes,

Iazaldir Feitoza and Jose Virginio de

Morais from Brazil. They struggled

until the end to get the leadership,

but the experience of Reyes and

Ortega was unbeatable.

“The runners continue to traverses the snow covered peaks with spectacular views all around”

Page 20: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

In third place arrived another

Argentinean team, Daniel Simbron

Running Team, conformed by

Juan Jose Dal Pastro and Sebastian

Balmaceda.

The women race was pretty

exciting until the third stage.

Cristina Carvalho and Rosalia

Camargo from Brazil had a great

fight with the Argentineans Virginia

Galvez and Sofia Cantilo on the

first two days of competition, but

finally Brazil took the first place for

a small difference. On mixed teams,

the winners were John Tidd and

Luciana Moretti from Lussich Team

representing Uruguay.

The Chile Argentina Mountain Race (ChAM)

Besides the main race, there was a

two-stage competition for those

who are recently into the sport

named CHAM Race, with a distance

of 60 kilometers and sharing

a camp with El Cruce runners.

80 teams were in the start, and

enjoyed the trails proposed by

the organization while waiting for

the main race athletes. This race

was led from the first stage by the

Optitech-GR Team of Lucio Perez

and Mauricio Pagliacci followed

by Zamigos Team of Gonzalo

Ochoa and Ivan Besoky, both from

Argentina.

To all Go Trail readers, hope you

can plan any race in Argentina or

South America. There are wonderful

trails here, and El Cruce is an

amazing experience to share with

friends and a great opportunity to

meet beautiful mountains with the

excuse of running!

I’m 20 years old and I live and run in Neuquén – Argentina. I’ve been

into trail running since I was 11 years, inspired by my parents and a group

of friends who started this sport when nobody knew it in our country. I love training on my local trails but I also like training and racing in our Cordillera de los Andes...about a 2 hour trip and I’m there! The sport is

getting bigger every year and I think this is the only way I can support

it, showing the stunning races and landscapes around the country to the world. For more info about trail

running in Argentina check out www.trailrunargentina.com.ar/

Who it Mauricio Pagliacci?

April 2012/May 2012 | 20

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Gustavo Reyes and Nelson Ortega, winners, climbing the Mocho Choshuenco Volcano.

April 2012/May 2012 | 21

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It's all about the

buckleA historic look at one of the worlds

greatest ultra-trail running events.

Words | John Trent

It’s All About The Buckle

Page 23: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

This silver buckle belongs to American ultra-running legend Dean Karnazes, the

one he was awarded from his last run at the Western States 100 in 2006.

Photo > Ditore Mayo Entertainment

Page 24: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

Each year, runners from throughout the world toe the starting line of

the Western States 100-Mile Endurance Run hoping to not only try to cover the rugged course of the world’s preeminent 100-mile trail race, but to then, if they are successful, to receive the spoils of that accomplishment in the form of one of the ultrarunning’s most prized possessions – a silver belt buckle.

Western States actually has two buckles. A silver buckle is awarded to runners who finish the race in less than 24 hours, and a bronze buckle is awarded to those who finish the race in 30 hours. In either case, the buckle has a rich history. It is part of what makes the Western States experience so special, according to race director Greg Soderlund.

“Our buckles have become so prized because the achievement of running

Western States is considered so memorable,” Soderlund said. “The special nature of Western States has so much to do with the race’s history. Western States was the first 100-mile trail race ever, and it remains the most prestigious event of its kind in the world. The buckle has become a symbol of a rare achievement, and it carries with it historical significance as well.”

The Western States buckle traces its origin to the Tevis Cup Ride, an endurance horse riding event that originally took horse and rider from Lake Tahoe, Calif., to the finish in Auburn, Calif., some 100 miles later. It was pioneered by a legend from the Sierra Nevada foothills, Wendell Robie, who on a dare in the early 1955 re-traced a 19th century route through the mountains near Squaw Valley, Calif. – the site of the 1960 Winter Olympic Games – to Auburn. Many thought such a ride would prove to be impossible.

Ultra-runner of the Year (UROY) winner Ellie Greenwood

receiving her winners trophy and buckle at the 2011 WS 100

Photo > Joe McCladdie

Page 25: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

“Our buckles have become so prized because the achievement of running Western States

is considered so memorable”

April 2012/May 2012 | 25

Ellie Greenwood climbing hard at

Escarpment on her way to victory in the women’s field at the 2011 WS100Photo > Joe McCladdie

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Robie, who never backed down to challenges, responded by saying, “By God, I’ll show you that it can be done.” Twenty-two hours and 45 minutes later, Robie and four companions and their horses danced into Auburn along with a ceremonial packet of mail they had brought with them from Lake Tahoe. Robie’s accomplishment of riding the 100 miles led to the creation of the Tevis Cup, where participants who rode the 100 miles in less than 24 hours were awarded a Tevis Cup buckle emblazoned with a Pony Express rider in gold.In 1974, Gordon “Gordy” Ainsleigh, who was

an equestrian and ride and tie competitor and also a talented runner with a number of the marathons run in the 2-hour, 45-minute range, decided to run, rather than ride, the entire 100 mile distance during that year’s Tevis Cup.“People thought I was crazy,” Ainsleigh recalled, noting that no one believed he could finish the course, which included nearly 19,000 feet of climbing and nearly another 23,000 feet of descent, reaching well above 8,000 feet in elevation at points, and through infernal California Gold Country canyons where temperatures could soar to more than 110 degrees, at other points, in less than 24 hours.

The attention to detail for the buckle was painstaking and the end product exquisite

April 2012/May 2012 | 26

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Ainsleigh, who had been inspired and encouraged to try the feat by Drucilla Barner, the first woman to win the Tevis Riding Cup, made history that August day. He became the first person to ever run the 100-mile Western States Trail between Squaw Valley and Auburn in less than 24 hours -- 23 hours and 42 minutes, to be exact.By 1977, the first official Western States 100-Mile Endurance Run had been established, with a silver belt buckle award for runners who completed the course in under 24 hours. The buckle was designed by Robie, and featured the Greek god Hermes, patron

of athletics and the protector of runners. The attention to detail for the buckle was painstaking and the end product exquisite: each was handcrafted by one of the finest silversmiths in the United States, Howard Stegman, of Comstock Silversmiths.

In 1978, a plaque award was instituted for runners who finished in under 30 hours and subsequently, a separate bronze buckle was created. The difference, in addition to silver being used for sub-24- and bronze being used for sub-30-hour finishers, could be seen in the wording on the two buckles.

April 2012/May 2012 | 27

South Africa’s Ryan Sandes will be heading to Squaw Valley, California this coming June to tackle the historic Western States 100 Mile Endurance Race, his second international 100-miler. He will be competing alongside

fellow Salomon International Team member, and previous winner of the Western States 100, Kilian Jornet.Photo > Kolesky/Nikon/Lexar

Page 28: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

Bronze buckles simply noted “100 Miles” on their inscription, while the silver buckles had the additional wording “100 Miles One Day” signifying that the recipient had covered the course in less than 24 hours.

In 1983, race organizers replaced Hermes and his Greek tunic and winged hat and shoes and caduceus with an American Indian runner in deerskin boots. The following year the American Indian gave way to a more modern male runner who was then replaced by male and female runners. Finally, by the late 1980s, the iconic Western States cougar made its appearance as the focal point on the silver and bronze buckles. To this day, Stegman and his family

handcraft each and every Western States cougar buckle, which are known the world over.

The Western States buckle has also helped contribute to ultramarathoning’s unique and colorful lexicon. Runners speak often of catching the dread disease “bucklemania” in pursuit of a Western States buckle. When they have successfully accomplished the task, they speak of having “buckled” at Western States. The buckles also take on a life of their own, as evidenced by the runners who come back year after year to earn another. Prior to the running of the 2012 edition of the race, there have been 62 runners who have successfully earned 10 or more Western States

buckles. These “1,000 Mile” buckles have led to the creation in recent years of a “2,000 Mile” buckle as four runners have now completed the race 20 or more times. Five-time champion Tim Twietmeyer of Auburn is the undisputed longevity buckle king of Western States, having finished the race 25 times. He earned a silver belt buckle all 25 times.

But perhaps the greatest testament to the value of the buckles occurred in 2011, when the Auburn Journal reported that Judy Suter, a resident of a small town near Auburn, following more than 25 years, finally found a runner who had left his buckle behind at the awards ceremony after finishing the

Page 29: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

race in 1985. Judy’s husband, Bob, was race director that year, and the buckle was put away in a box and stored in a drawer. Finally, through Facebook, Judy was able to contact Klaus Armstrong-Braun of Wales. Armstrong-Braun, 70, said he would be “delighted” to receive the buckle, which Judy sent to him in the mail in January 2011. “It’s hard to imagine another award from another race living on like that buckle,” Soderlund said. “But that’s what makes our buckle so special: 25 years later, it still carries with it the weight of our history, the weight of its own history and the incredible significance of a deeply personal accomplishment.”

“People thought I was crazy”

Gordon “Gordy” Ainsleigh

It was in 1977 that this man, Gordon “Gordy” Ainsleigh, pictured above keeping a watchful eye out for the competitors of the 2009 WS100, ran what would become the first ever 100-mile endurance foot race and set in motion a trend in ultra-trail

running that would become legendary the world over. Photo > Gareth Mackay/www.garethmackay.com

April 2012/May 2012 | 29

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Through The Lens

Page 31: April/May 2012 Issue Go Trail magazine

Words and Photos > Craig Kolesky

This was the second time going to the Salomon Skyrun to photograph the event. The first year I shot this I didn’t know what to expect, I had only heard of the event a few months before and was oblivious to the conditions the runners had to go through to get the finish line, I didn’t even own a proper pair of trails shoes before this event, yes that ’s true. I will never forget that first race briefing, the priceless expressions on

the competitors faces as event organizer Adrian Saffy went through the route in detail. Hell, I was scared and I wasn’t even there to run. The 2011 Skyrun was different for me, I kind of knew the route and had a rough idea of what I wanted to shoot. For 2 days I lived on a quad bike chasing down the leaders of the race tr ying to capture what they were going through. To me there is not only one winner for the race, crossing the finish line of the Salomon Skyrun makes everbody a winner.

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The SkyRun is not for sissies, you have to be 100% committed to get the race done. 19 year old Mathew De Haast is the youngest

“Skyrunner” to take on the challenging 100km race.

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April 2012/May 2012 | 33

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“Follow the fence line” are the word event organizer Adrian Saffy repeats all the time. But when crossing the fence line which one do

you follow.

April 2012/May 2012 | 35

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The start of the Salomon Skyrun starts in a small town called Lady Grey. The main street is shut down for the start and a lot of the

locals get up early to support the”Skyrunners”, this is the only tar road the runner will tread on in 100kms.

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A local herdsman saw and wheel barrow lying outside his tin house while these “Skyrunners” take it easy after checkpoint 2.

April 2012/May 2012 | 39

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A lot of runners do the race solo, but sometimes you can get company for as long as they can keep up with you or you with them.

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April 2012/May 2012 | 41

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As the sun sets this runner still has roughly 30km to go in the dark, the last part of the race is pretty intense and can make or break you.

April 2012/May 2012 | 43

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On The Trail OfThe Chasqui Runners

On The Trail Of The Chasqui Runners

On The Trail OfThe Chasqui Runners Words / Images >

Walter Rhein

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I was halfway up the 5,000 foot vertical climb when I realized I wasn’t

going to have enough water to get to the top. The sun was beating down, and I was in the middle of the Andes mountains, about 8 miles away from the famous ruins of Choquequirao. I took a quick drink from the plastic tube that stuck out from my hydration pack, and resolved to start rationing my fluids a little more carefully. My portero had different ideas.

Noticing my act, he gestured at the little tube, still dripping with water. “Can I have some?” He asked. I winced inwardly, but I couldn’t deny Jesus, that was appropriately enough his name, a drink. The guy was a physical marvel, despite the heat of the day, he’d drunk very little throughout the 12 or so miles we’d already covered. In fact, the only thing I remember him drinking at all was a glass of some kind of Peruvian fruit juice at a small kiosk around mile 7.

passed him the tube and was relieved when he took only a short drink before spinning on his heel and heading back up our path. I sighed and, shifting my pack for what seemed like the thousandth time that day, struggled to my feet to follow.

The genesis for this trip had been born about eight months earlier when I met Roberto Carcelen, a cross-country skier and Peru’s first winter Olympian. I’d come across his name on a random article online and I looked him up on Facebook of all places. Roberto trains for Olympic and World Cup cross-country skiing events by doing a 6 day trail run in Peru’s Andes mountains. Roberto’s concept is that jogging through the ruins of ancient fortresses helps allay the boredom of an Olympic athlete’s strenuous training schedule. Having never done 40 hours of training in a week, I couldn’t really relate, but the logic seemed sound.

I have a very strong connection to Peru. I lived there for 10 years, and in my last couple

The view from the central plaza of Choquequirao

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years I was the editor of LivinginPeru.com. LivinginPeru.com is Peru’s biggest English news source, and they’re still happy to take an article from me from time to time. I wrote Roberto for an interview, and when it was subsequently published in LiP, the story was followed up by El Comercio (Peru’s largest newspaper). Later, Roberto happily informed me that his mom had come across the article El Comercio, and the pride in his voice indicated that he felt extremely indebted to me. It was surely this indebtedness that provoked Roberto to call me up in June.

”Hey, what’s your fitness level?” he asked excitedly on the phone. I was actually in decent shape. I’d skied the American Birkebeiner back in February, and I tried to maintain a basic fitness by going out

for three or four easy jogs a week. However, from long experience, I know what the response is when an Olympian asks you your fitness level. “Lousy, why?” “We’re going to Choquequirao this summer, you should come along!”The utterance of the name piqued my interest. In the 10 years that I’d lived in Peru, I’d been to Machu Picchu about 15 times (since everyone who came to visit me wanted to go and see it). However, I’d never been to Choquequirao.

Choquequirao is a set of ruins that’s been getting a lot of attention lately since it’s known to be as spectacular as Machu Picchu, but it’s such a strenuous journey to get there that it’s almost devoid of any tourists. The nearest

“I have a very strong connection to Peru. I lived there for 10 years, and in my last couple years

I was the editor of LivinginPeru.coM”

April 2012/May 2012 | 47

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accessible road is 20 miles from the entrance to Choquequirao. Most tour companies split this trip up over two days and pack their clients in on the backs of donkeys. Roberto had us run it in one. But the difficulties are worth it because as awe inspiring as Machu Picchu is, there is some essential, selfish inner part of all of us that finds even greater enjoyment in experiencing such a place in utter solitude. That’s exactly what Choquequirao offers. Roberto didn’t need to say any more. “I’m in!” I said eagerly and hung up the phone. Back out on the Inca trail with 8 miles of vertical climbing with nothing left in my pack to eat or drink, the decision didn’t seem quite

so brilliant. Still, there was no choice but to soldier on, so I dropped myself into that zombie state that’s known to anyone who has ever run a marathon or skied the Birkie and simply resolved to continue putting one foot in front of the other until I arrived. Fortune was with me, however, as a couple miles up the trail I stumbled into a woman in a small hut who was selling miraculous things like jugs of water and snickers bars. Jesus was waiting for me there, smiling in joy since our survival seemed suddenly assured. Every now and then Roberto’s voice crackled two me over the small, two-way radio he’d given me. He and Martin Koukal, an Olympic medalist from the Czech Republic, had sprinted off that morning and I hadn’t harbored any illusions about being able to stay with them. Roberto informed me that the woman’s hut was known

as Santa Rosa and that there were only 16 switchbacks remaining until the campsite. I took this information with a grain of salt and, sure enough, eventually ended up counting about 20 switchbacks before I finally finished the hike (and that includes at least four more that I was just too tired to keep track of ).

Still, as exhausted as I was after the ordeal, I found myself euphoric to have arrived. There’s something special about jogging and camping in the Andes. They’re a distinct set of mountains with youthful chasms and abrupt cliffs that you simply don’t see in the Rockies. Plus, the prevalence of magnificent Inca ruins makes it feel like you’ve been transported within the framework of an Indiana Jones film.

I sat down to take in the view, and it wasn’t until an hour or so later that I even realized Choquequirao was visible off in the distance. “Hey! There it is!” Roberto just laughed at me. “What did you think of the first day?” He asked. “It was hard.” “Normally we split the first day into two legs,” he admitted, “but I thought you could handle it.” The knowledge of that 20 mile day being sliced mercilessly in half was appealing to me. “Thanks for the vote of confidence, but I think for most people, two days would be better.” “Yes, some people start swearing at me when they arrive at camp,” Roberto said with a chuckle.

“Choquequirao is a set of ruins that’s been getting a lot of attention lately since it’s known to be as spectacular as Machu Picchu, but it’s such a strenuous journey to get there

that it’s almost devoid of any tourists.”

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On the one hand, I could kind of understand that impulse. But there in the shadow of Choquequirao, with the whole world seemingly laid out at my feet, I simply wasn’t in the mood to curse out anyone.

The next day we quickly packed up our camp and made our way to the checkpoint that marked the entrance to the ruins. Until recently, Choquequirao has been free, but we were required to pay a fee of 37 Nuevo Soles (about $12). The attendant at the checkpoint urged us to make sure we took the time to look at the spectacular “wall of llamas” on the back side of the ruins. He waved good-bye, but when I turned to take his picture he dove behind his desk and cried out, “no no no no photos!” It occurred to me that maybe the guy wasn’t working for the Peruvian government and had just found it profitable to set up shop and charge an entry fee, but either way it didn’t bother me all that much. The price was a tenth of what I was willing to pay. My excitement grew as I made my way through the last entrance gate and finally found myself within the Choquequirao compound. Much as I expected, a great part of the sensation was due to the fact that there was absolutely nobody in sight. It’s wonderful to hear the sound of the Andean wind whistling through the ancient stone work, instead of the exclamations of tourists who have just discovered that their memory card is out of space, or they forgot to charge the batteries of their digital camera. I decided to spend my day taking photos, but Martin and Roberto continued their world cup training, and frequently came jogging past me, or could be seen cresting hills in the distance.

Like Machu Picchu, Choquequirao is a massive set of ruins that takes a couple full days to explore. Much of this is due to the strenuous terrain which takes a fair amount of time for an average person to cover, but the scope of the ruins should not be underestimated. It is literally a large ancient city, with huge

collections of structures remaining intact.I walked along the terraced entryway and traveled down the three or four hundred yard corridor that leads to the first of many junction points. From there I headed up to the main plaza at Choquequirao, and on to the cleared platform at the base of the ruins that overlooks the valley. Like most of the ruins in Peru, Choquequirao is filled with magnificent stonework, towering structures, and the remnants of spectacular fountains. Although water doesn’t flow through the irrigation channels of Choquequirao, the remnants are a testament to Incan ingenuity.

Roberto Carcelen and Martin Koukal sprint up the stairs to the ruins of Pisaq

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The third day of camping, a very difficult eight mile hike from Choquequirao

April 2012/May 2012 | 50

As I explored and took pictures I unexpectedly crossed paths with Martin. Martin was prone to sleeping in a little later than the rest of us and then come jogging by us later in the afternoon. At the end of the day, Martin had covered every pathway at Choquequirao including the lower ruins that I found I simply didn’t have the legs to get down to. True to the gatekeeper’s word, one of the best features of Choquequirao was the wall of llamas on the back side of the ruins. It requires about a two hour walk down towards the valley, and culminates in an observation point from which the whole wall can be seen.

All in all I spent about six hours traipsing through Choquequirao, stopping only briefly

to enjoy a quick lunch. The silence and the magnificence of the place make it feel less like a tourist attraction and more like a spiritual work of art. When I finally ran into Roberto again, he reflected with a touch of nostalgia that you used to be able to pitch your tent right in the central plaza of the ruins instead of in the designated campgrounds below it. Although waking up in the center of Choquequirao would be an unbelievable experience, I can also see the value in separating the tourists from the ruins.

It was with a touch of sadness that we packed up and left Choquequirao the next day. We spent the next four days traversing the Andes on our way to Machu Picchu, crossing the

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April 2012/May 2012 | 51

Walter Rhein is the author of “Beyond Birkie Fever,” a novel about how Cross-country skiing can be the gateway to a

life of travel and adventure. The book is available at Amazon.com (you can get to it by typing FreshAirAthlete.com), and at the

CyclovaXC retail bicycle and cross-country ski store in St. Croix Falls (125 North

Washington St., Suite A, St. Croix Falls WI, 54024 715 483-3278). It’s also available

with the publisher at Rhemalda.com. For questions or comments, Walter can be

reached at [email protected].

i

15,000 ft Yanama pass en route. Martin and Roberto always made better time than I did, but I was content to follow the old marathoner mantra of “run when you can, hike when you have to.” The journey was spectacular all the way to Aguas Calientes. We arrived just in time for the 100 year celebration of Machu Picchu, but for me at least, Choquequirao was definitely the crown jewel of the adventure.

In the ten years I’ve been going to Machu Picchu, I’ve noticed the journey has gotten more and more restrictive every time I’ve made the trip. In the early days, you could scramble over any section of the ruins that you so desired. Now, however, tourists are being funneled through a designated route

that helps with preservation but does limit your enjoyment of the place to some extent. The difficult road to Choquequirao is going to keep it a more authentic Andean experience for the foreseeable future, but in all honesty it’s only a matter of time before Choquequirao becomes as popular as Machu Picchu. Travel destinations like Choquequirao are getting more and more rare, and trail running destinations like this are virtually extinct. If you have a chance to go there, I’d suggest you do it now. It might be the last place you can listen to the Andean winds whispering through the stones just as the Incas did. Believe me, that’s not an experience you want to miss.

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Athlete Profile

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Q+A with Landie

In this exclusive interview we find our more about this unassuming young trail and what makes her tick as one of South Africa’s up-and-coming trail athletes to watch.

Go Trail (GT): When you first began trail running, what were the things that you most enjoyed about the sport, the things that made you want to get out there more and more, and are these still fundamentals to your running now?

As I mentioned, I am a nature-lover and explorer,

so after I did my first trail run, I was hungry to

discover and explore every possible trail. My

husband would always tease me when we were

driving, because I get so excited when I saw a

trail next to the road....I just want to get out of the

car and run it!

GT: Tell us about a typical day-in-the-life of Landie Visser when it comes to your training? Where do you like going, and what is your favorite terrains?

I have been extremely fortunate to live in two

of the most beautiful areas of our country, the

Garden Route and now Stellenbosch (Western

Cape), so I am completely overwhelmed by all

the trails. At our previous home in Glentana, I

would normally go out on a longish trail run in

the morning and go for a beach run in the af-

ternoon. I also like to cross-train, so 2-3 times a

week I would hit the lovely gravel roads from our

house on my mountain bike for 2-3 hours. At our

new place near Stellenbosch, we live right on

mountain bike and a hiking route, so the options

are endless!

H aving been born and raised on a farm just out side of Pretoria in

South Africa, it wasn’t at all difficult for Landie to be able to explore

the expanse of her outdoor surroundings. As a child she relished

the opportunity at discovering “secret places” and hiding spots away from her

brother, the rugged landscape becoming her ultimate playground.

As a school goer, Landie always excelled at sport and was involved in athletics,

cross country and hockey. It wasn’t until 2008 however that she really found

her passion for trail running. Having participated in a few Adventure Racing

events as well as having been awarded a handful of podium finishes at some

of the local Gauteng trail running events, she realized that her fearless and

competitive nature would come in handy. And so it did, as in 2010 and 2011

her racing (and winning) became second nature.

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Splashing through one of the 4 river crossings on the 2011

African Otter Trail Run Photo > Jacques Marais

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GT: You’ve had a few great results at some of South Africa’s top trail running events including your third place at the 2011 Otter African Trail Run. What do you enjoy about competitive trail run-ning, and more so, what is it that brings you back to compete even harder each time?

I have an awfully competitive nature, so I love

exploiting this characteristic when I am out on

the trails. I enjoy pushing my body to the lim-

its, especially when I feel I can go no further, in

which case I just switch off, ignore the pain and

push even harder!

GT: Who do look up to most in the sport? Is there anyone in particular you see as a role model and if so why?

Ann Trason (American Trail Runner). I believe

she is one of the greatest, true trail runners. She

looks likes she’s flying when she is running; she

was unbeatable on any long distance trail.

GT: As a woman in trail running, especially here in South Africa, do you feel that there is equality between men and women in the sport?

Interesting question, especially since there has

been quite a lot of talk on this topic of late. If

one looks at all the trail running productions on

SuperSport (local sports channel), it is obvious

that women do not receive as much coverage

and broadcasting time as men. This has been

specifically noted by my family who are always

so excited when they learn that I will be on TV.

However, they have phoned me numerous

times, disappointed that none of the women,

including myself as a podium finisher, featured

much.

GT: We know you help organize one of South Af-rica’s new short course trail running events. What’s it like being on the other side of the fence come race day?

It is a totally different experience, in a good

way. I love seeing the absolute bliss on people’s

faces on the trails, and the chirpy chatter post

race. It’s definitely a stressful experience but its

great giving something back to the sport of trail

running. Luckily I am out on the trail for most of

the race, so luckily I also get to experience some

of the serene nature.

GT: We believe you recently got married so con-gratulations. Do you let your husband win from time to time or is there no mercy shown when you’re out on the trail?

Thanks. My husband is an excellent trail runner –

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Landies top podium finishes;2010 > Mont Aux Sources Challenge 2nd Female

2010 > African X 2nd Female Team

2011 > Bayos Bend Trail Run (Texas, USA) 1st Female

2011 > Salomon Featherbed Trail Run 1st Female

2011 > Otter African Trail Run 3rd Female

2011 > Hermanus Berg and Bush 1st Female

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so he wins on the shorter trail runs. But as soon

as there is some distance involved, I like to let

that male ego suffer a bit!

GT: With the 2012 season firmly into the swing of things, what have you got lined up for the second half of the year?

I have recently signed with Salomon South

Africa, so will be doing the Salomon Featherbed

Trail Run, the Thule 4 Peaks and the Skyrun.

Other races lined up are the The Houtbay Chal-

lenge, Crazystore Magaliesberg Challenge and

the Otter African Trail Run.

GT: If you could choose one race to win here in South Africa as well one overseas, which would they be and why?

Locally I’d have to say the Otter African Trail Run

- in trail running, one has to win to the “grail of

trail”!!

Overseas definitely the Grand Raid de Pyrenees

Since I first learned about it and recently read

the article in Go Trail introducing the race as:

“Imagine running through a mountain range that

is older than the Alps, a place named after an

ancient, mystical Greek princess and home to

two of the longest non-stop trails in Europe”, it is

definitely on my bucket list!

GT: In one sentence, tell us what trail running means to you!

Trail running sets your mind and body free, it’s

electrifying!

Having some fun on a beach run in the Western Cape

Photo > Unknown

Ladnie crosses the finish line of the 2011 Otter African trail run in a brilliant time

Photo > Jacques Marais

April 2012/May 2012 | 57

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The Fairer Side Of Trail

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The Fairer Side

of Trailby Robyn Ferrar

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What do you think of when you read the word ‘meditation’? Perhaps the clichéd lotus position floats into your mind’s eye, and you can almost smell

the incense and hear the birdsong soundtrack? Or you may roll your eyes and move on to more productive thought processes - there was a time when I too would have scoffed at anything vaguely spiritual or metaphysical. Whether it appeals to you or not, anyone who is familiar with the practice of meditation will tell you the same thing. It’s hard! Doing it right is very hard indeed.

The idea is to practice emptying your mind of all its clutter, everything from what you’re going to make for dinner, right up to the debt collectors beating down your door with baseball bats. You have to anchor your attention in the present moment and do your utmost to allow nothing else in. Women are especially guilty of cluttering their minds; they

have even turned it into a skill and called it multi-tasking.

So what on earth has this got to do with trail running? Whenever I am asked what it is I love about the sport, it is one of the first things that come to mind. Trail running is my meditation. Often people, especially women,

will tell you that they run because it gives them time to think. For me however, running is the gag for that chatterbox in my head. I make a concerted effort to empty my mind and focus on the present moment. For a start I don’t want to miss out on the good stuff, like the sound of a waterfall or the subtle changes in the sunset, but being aware of what’s

The idea is to practice emptying your mind of all

its clutter, everything from what you’re going to

make for dinner, right up to the debt collectors

beating down your door with baseball bats.

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underfoot at any given time is also pretty handy.

So why is meditation, or perhaps more accurately – ‘mindfulness’, a good thing? Well apparently it has all sorts of benefits, and most are much closer to home than the spiritual. The mental, emotional and physical aspects of the self are all nourished by the practice, with all the usual suspects such as stress-relief, improved concentration etc. Being more scientifically inclined myself, I love the bit about how it is showing that it can actually reduce the size of the amygdala (fear centre of the brain), grow the prefrontal cortex (rational brain) and essentially re-programme those harmful neural pathways. But the one I always come back to is this: it allows you to not miss out on life, because all we ever truly have is what’s in the present moment.

Of course I don’t always get it right. My well-trod trails allow me to switch to auto-pilot so that my mind is free to sneak back to the future, or past. But that is exactly when things can and have gone pear-shaped for me. This is a sport where if you stop paying attention to the moment, you can get hurt. Almost every fall I have taken has been on very easy, well-known trails where I simply have not been paying attention. When you’re racing flat out down a mountain trail, over rocky and unpredictable terrain, the safest place to be is 100% present and focused. That’s meditation. Never do I feel more powerfully alive or more intimately connected to the natural world! And not only is it great fun, but it’s also far easier than sitting still in a room and trying to think of nothing. Well, it is for me anyway.

April 2012/May 2012 | 61

Who is Robyn Ferrar?

Born and bred in southern Africa, my love for the outdoors started as a child scampering over the granite rocks of the Rhodesian hills and exploring the bush of the Highveld. I discovered a natural running ability at school and excelled on the track and trail. After school I moved to the UK and discovered the excitement and beauty of fell running and adventure racing. Four years ago I finally returned to Africa and to the rapidly growing fledgling sport of trail running. I had been dreaming of settling near the mountains of the cape peninsula for many years, so finally I had come home.

Some achievements in the past year include wins in both the Helderberg and Jonkershoek Mountain Challenges; 2nd in the Otter African Trail Run and Stanley’s Mountain Run; and 3rd in Two Ocean’s Trail Run and Old Fisherman’s Challenge.

If you’d like to contact Robyn with suggestions on what topics she should cover, please feel free to do so via email: [email protected]

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Through the eye of a compass needle

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Words > Mark Collins

An in-depth story about the origins of one of South Africa’s most revered trail

running events companies, Magnetic South.

April 2012/May 2012 | 63

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S hortly afterwards Land Rover launched the G4 Challenge and the same company, D3, was contracted to manage the adventure

competitions & logistics. We were all lucky enough to be recruited to work on those events. This common grounding in these really special events moulded the way the four of us think upon eventing today. D3 was headed by an extraordinary man, Simon Day, whose creativity and trade mark “big thinking” had a huge influence on our ideas.

Typically in those four week events we would literally circumnavigate the globe. It was intense event experiences from another world. One day you were closing off Broadway in New York for a 4x4 obstacle course and a few days later you were totally alone, camped by a billabong in the Australian Outback waiting for teams to arrive. A day later you were marshalling a 4x4 course on the world’s biggest barge docked front of the Sydney Opera House, 24 hours after that you were racing down the streets in Vegas. From controlling high speed 60 vehicle convoys through the streets of Bangkok to Kayak races in underground rivers in Laos. From fire spewing live volcanoes in Chilli, to Kings Birthdays in the South Pacific. From overseeing water safety on an obstacle course on Copa Cabana beach, to racing at high speed across a Bolivian salt pan at 4000 meters. These

were just a few of the highlights of a wonderful and formative period of our lives.

Just as importantly to our thinking during this period was that we were all also actively participating in other events and working with other companies. John and I were adventure racing competitively. Belen and Christine were (separately) organising corporate events across Europe and Africa and North, South and Central America. These events brought us into contact with a wide range of participants and companies. We got to see the world’s best endurance athletes close up in extreme conditions as well as those for whom a corporate team building event was the furthest they had ventured from a couch. Learning to read the different participants and understand what would challenge or endanger partakers of diverse experience, competence and fitness and is an essential skill of an event organiser.

Back in South Africa our experience earned us the confidence of Land Rover and we were rewarded with the contracts for managing of all their adventure work. It was a great start for our fledgling company and Land Rover were exceptional clients. The growing business also afforded us the opportunity to attract some incredible people onto our team. It is the thing we do best; assemble world class crews. We employed

To begin with, allow me to go back a bit; John (my brother) and I met our wives Belen and Christine on the Camel Trophy events where we had all been participants at some stage and then later we were lucky enough to be recruited as staff members for subsequent events. Belen was the first woman participant to represent Spain in the 1995 Camel Trophy Mundo Maya while Christine represented Germany in ‘96 in the Borneo Edition. John and I were the South African Team in ‘98 Tierra del Fuego and we all worked together in the final Camel Trophy in Tonga & Samoa 2000.

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three full time staff. It was then that Chris Crewdson joined Magnetic South as event administrator. He has since become one of the most sought after event administrators in the country and we now have to share him with the Tour de Thuli.

Trail Running was at that stage a core part of our

lifestyle and although we dabbled in organising a few events we were far more interested in participating in runs than organising them. We have some of the best trail runs on the planet right on our doorsteps and for most of the year we have them all to ourselves. And so we ran and whilst we ran we talked. We wandered about how incredible it would be to organise runs on these same trails. John’s dream was to run the Otter Trail as a trail run.

2008 was a fantastic year for Magnetic South with the highlight being the staging of SA Selections for the Land Rover G4 Challenge in Lesotho. We were on a high. We were putting on events of a calibre similar to that of our mentor company. Sadly the year ended on a low. Responding responsibly to the financial

crises, the events owners suspended all event related marketing for 2009 and we had a full year planned. Their response to the recession was text book and the brand emerged with increased market share and stronger than ever and we are privileged to have been able to retain them as clients albeit on different projects. We also had to reinvent ourselves.

“ Ty p i c a l l y i n t h o s e f o u r w e e k e v e n t s w e w o u l d l i t e r a l l y

c i r c u m n a v i g a t e t h e g l o b e . ”

Christine Collins discuses flight plans with Race pilot. Otter 2011

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New Beginnings Reinventing is painful but ultimately what defines you.

The low point was having to let one of our key staff members go. The upside was that finally we had time to focus on our passions that had been kept on the back burner and The Otter Run came into picture. We have enjoyed a very good working relationship with South African National Parks since our inception and felt privileged that they were even willing to consider our proposal for a trail run on South Africa’s premium hiking trail. It was never a decision that they were going to take lightly and after robust internal debate they gave us permission to do trial event provided that the Environmental Impact Study was done.The first Otter Run presented by Hi Tec was a huge success and the repose from participants was incredible. One of the most rewarding things about putting on hard-core trail runs is getting to be with the type of people it lures in an environment you share a passion for. The Otter is a magnet for such people. Vitally for us and the sport, SANParks were very satisfied with the way the event was managed and extended our contract with them. We are very proud of the confidence they have in our organisation and trail running. The Otter Run is now attracting top trail runners from all over the world.

The Knysna Oyster Festival is a big event for the town and being an event company in Knysna we always knew we had to be a part of it. Our relationships

with Salomon & PETZL go back 15 years and together we set about adding a trail run to the festival calendar and the result was the uniquely Knysna Featherbed Trail Run which has grown to be the 3rd biggest event of the festival. One of our most successful and rewarding projects is the management of the Sabrina Love Ocean Challenge on behalf of the Sabrina Love Foundation. Together with event sponsor Stonehage and Discovery we have overseen the growth of the event from 250 participants to over 25000 raising ZAR700 000 for children with special needs in 2011. We also added a trail run to the program of 10 events this year.

Our deepest event passions lie in the more wildness orientated events and our initial endeavours with the staged Multi Sports angled Southern Storm showed us the potential for this project. Hardly a day does not go past without our office fielding an enquiry to the next Storm. Like all our projects we manage them with financial and environmental responsibility at the forefront and we embark on any new project with the utmost consideration. We have attracted the attention of a big sponsor so Multi Sporters should baton down the hatches for 2013. A Storm is approaching.

“ 2 0 0 8 w a s a f a n t a s t i c y e a r f o r M a g n e t i c S o u t h w i t h t h e h i g h l i g h t b e i n g t h e s t a g i n g o f S A S e l e c t i o n s f o r t h e L a n d R o v e r G 4 C h a l l e n g e i n

L e s o t h o . W e w e r e o n a h i g h . ”

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Registration. Competitors are issued with bi-directional electronic April 2012/May 2012 | 67

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An event team member puts the finishing touches to the floating finish chute for the Otter Run

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A growing awareness My last contract for D3 saw me on a scouting team in central Asia for the G4 Challenge. Our job in a nutshell was to find adventurous locations for the event. For someone who loves the wild and adventure that is possibly the best job description in the world. As it turned out though, the reality was somewhat disturbing for me and it brought home the scary realisation that the world is fast running out of wilderness.

I saw landscapes changing in the few months between scouting trips and observed man’s incredible thirst for progress was causing these changes. The nature of the changes unsettled me and left me feeling progress needs to be redefined.

I came back to South Africa urgently feeling that we need to do more to make a difference. I love the wild but love, as my daughter keep reminding me, is a verb. We have to do something to try to turn the tide on the destruction of our wilderness. John also returned from a recent business trip to Asia with similar sentiments. “A reality check,” he called it. Trail Running is probably one of the sports that one can practice in the wilderness areas that has the lowest impact on its surrounds, but we still need to be fastidious when it comes to considering our impact on the environments we run in and be very cognisance of the privilege

position we are in. Events in that take place in our natural environments need to be used as a podium for conservation. The responsibility of those of us who participate in sports in the wilderness is huge, particularly the organisers. We have to be beyond reproach in every regard and use our platform to promote the conservation. The wilderness is a core part of what draws us to these sports and we need to revere it. The old maximum “take nothing but photographs; leave nothing but footprints” just isn’t good enough any more. It’s too late for that, we need a higher benchmark. If we continue only to leave a place as we found it, we have had no influence. We are 7 billion and our current approach to progress unsustainable.

Trained TSIBA Eden Campus students man the GU Point on the Otter Run. As part of an on-going program Magnetic South trains TSIBA students in various event related fields which selected put into practice on the

event. Magnetic South pays the collage for the students time which goes towards the students tuition fees.

Mark Collins briefs the media on the Land Rover G4 Challenge SA Selections Lesotho

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Trail Running In Stereo

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David Horton is a modern day legend of ultra running. A professor of Exercise Science, he started running back in the 1977. He got the

bug and one thing led to another… before he knew it he was running ultras. Looking back now, he created and laid the foundations for modern day ultra running with other pioneers such as Gordy Aisnsleigh, creator of the iconic Western States.

Fiercely competitive, David has finished over 100 ultras and won something in the region of forty percent of them. In some ways, one may almost think that the running element of the film ‘Forest Gump’ was almost partly created on the life of David Horton. He loves to push himself to the extremes of physical endurance. As a co worker at Liberty University once said, “…you don’t have a lot of drive, you are driven!”

In 1991 he set a record on the Appalachian Trail covering 2160 miles in 52 days. He placed 3rd overall in the 1995 Trans American Foot Race covering 2906 miles from one side of America to the other in 64 days. He did go on to say that after this race he never quite got his speed back, the continual pounding on the road for repeated days had taken something out of him.

In 2001 he became along with Blake Woods one of the

few finishers of the infamous Barkley Marathon that covers 100 miles over five twenty mile loops in tough, gnarly, rutted and almost un-runnable terrain. It is renowned as one of the toughest races. In it’s history only a handful of people have arrived back at the finish within the 60-hour cut off time,

In 2006 he ran and set a record on the Pacific Crest Trail covering 2700 miles. This was documented in the JB Benna film ‘The Runner’. The route zigzags its way from Mexico to Canada and has the greatest elevation changes of any of Americas National Scenic Trails. It has varied terrain from scorching deserts to rain forests. David ran some 44 miles a day for 66 days.

In 2010 after feeling a ‘twinge’ within his knee he has now undergone knee surgery and is no longer able to run. Is he upset that he can no longer run? I am sure he is, but with his fighting spirit he won’t sit down and give in. In 2011 he entered the Tour Divide Mountain Bike Race covering 2745 miles starting in Banff going to Antelope Well. He already has projects lined up for 2012 and a return to the Tour Divide in future years.

Without doubt he is an icon in the ultra running world. Not always liked and somewhat controversial, he continues to push his own limits and the limits of those around him.

Pioneering the ultraWords > Ian Corless

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Our interview with David Horton, along with loads more, can

be found in Episode 4 of Talk Ultra. Click Here.

Created in the mind of Ian Corless and co-host, Ian Sharman. The first edition of Talk Ultra was released in January 2012 and is one of the Marathon Talk family of podcasts.

Our vision? To create a podcast with a magazine feel that covers world events with an emphasis on the United Kingdom, United States, South Africa and the Southern Hemisphere ultra running scene. Each show has varied content including news, results, races, a key interview, a ‘Meltzer Moment’ with ultra runner Karl Meltzer and ’15 minutes of fame’ where we allow our listeners the opportu-nity to be on the show.

For more information and to view some of their latest episodes, head to www.talkultra.com

About Talk ultra

April 2012/May 2012 | 73

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Likely you’re in one of two camps: either professing deep love akin to Immaculate Conception, or vile abhorrence to a degree to which you’ve previously never known. Either way, I’d like to blow your mind a bit and suggest that it all has way less to do with shoes (or lack thereof ) and instead, is entirely based upon a concept that has been around fundamentally forever. Accordingly, let’s get back to the basics on what this whole “minimalism” thing actually is.

Well… it’s just that, actually. Back to the basics, and nothing more.

Minimalism, by definition, is “a style or technique that is characterized by extreme spareness and simplicity.” Notice that doesn’t say anything about drop, weight, stack height or weird looking toe compartments.

It’s also not a new idea. Minimalists have been around for ages in all walks of life, including trail running. You know them. I know them. Whether or not you’ve considered the term, maybe you’re one yourself. On one hand, every circle has the guy who’s always prepared for anything and everything. He carries a 70 oz. bladder and two handhelds, a waterproof jacket, twice as much food as he could ever eat and a can of bear spray. And that’s just for a five-mile run in the city. Then you’ve got the guy who, despite the weather, is always dressed in nothing but a pair of shorts with his 3 oz .windbreaker tucked in his shorts, a few gels in his hand and will either drink all of his bottle at the exact perfect time or die of dehydration. Neither is wrong or right – they’re just two different types of runners who happen to irk each other incessantly.

Minimalism, as a concept, has been “trending” for many years now in everything from diet to modern medicine to anti-conservative clothing choices. Take food for example. 2000 years ago, people subsisted

primarily on plants straight from the ground to sustain health – ingredient list of one. Over the years, our basic staples have been processed, modified and even put into pills and potions, but unsurprisingly, these days all signs are pointing to getting back to the earth. Admitting that the technology had adverse reactions, and taking a few steps back – not in defeat, but as a learning from an experiment we’ve been conducting. Or how about modern medicine? Every day we hear another story of a drug made to treat symptoms, often quite effectively, having adverse effects on overall health in the long run. The call is to get back to the source of the problem. Similarly, the highly engineered shoe we’ve arrived at today has often been very effective at allowing runners to move faster and harder with less immediate pain. It’s changed our strides to seemingly allow us to run “better,” but at what cost to our longevity?

But it’s also nothing less.

Perhaps you’re still reading this, and perhaps you’re even agreeing that the aforementioned topics are all fine and well. But when it comes to minimalist shoes, you’re still staunchly opposed.. “Those shoes just don’t work,” you say. “I like light shoes and all, but this is as low as I can go; otherwise I start having problems.”

Guess what? You’re a minimalist then. If you’re wearing the absolute least amount of drop, cushion, tread, etc. that you need – nothing more, nothing less – then you’re upholding the very principle of which we’re discussing. Hate (secretly love) to break it to you.

Even self-defined minimalists need different tools for different jobs. Barefoot may be fine for the beach or the grass, but a Five Fingers-type shoe may be needed for protection during a short run on the road. A rock plate, outsole and durable upper may be desired for

MINIMALISM DEFINED Words > Katie DeSplinter

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trails and a little drop and cushion may be added for long runs on the hard pavement. For many, an entirely different shoe is required for a 10 mile versus a 100 mile run. In all cases, regardless of the relative size, weight, drop and design, both shoes are minimal.

So, why consider it?

Humans love progress. We’re addicted to it. It’s what drives us to constantly seek knowledge, to excel at our jobs and ultimately, to compete in our beloved sport. But every progression requires acknowledgement of when we may have gone too far. When we’ve over trained, when we’ve overstepped our boundaries, when we’ve taken a little too much. And sometimes any additional progress requires taking a look back at when things were working and determining what may have spurred a divergent route.

Humans also love immediacy. We want what we want and we want it now – and in this day and age, most of the time we can get it. But just as it took our bodies years and years of changing our stride and adapting to

the type of shoes we are wearing now, so will it take to adapt to wearing something entirely different, should we choose to do so. The benefits of switching to “less” of shoe will likely not be immediate and a gradual transition is an absolute necessity. Jumping headfirst rarely works with anything in life without drastic repercussions, and such is definitely the case here.

Unless the concept of minimalism is adopted wholly for what it is, the benefits will likely be few and far between. Maximists seeking minimal shoes often see it as a fad because they treat it as one. These shoes are the next thing they can acquire to improve their lives, but unfortunately, they don’t see them for what they really are. A tool. A highly specified tool that requires a much larger understanding and willingness to take a few steps back in order to eventually progress.

So, if you’re still open, take those steps. Define who you are and what you want in life – then take a look at your running. Lastly and only lastly, look down to your feet.

Interested in learning more of the specifics on minimalism as it pertains to your feet, and ultimately

what you put them in? Check out TrailRunnerNation’s exclusive interview with Dr. Mark Cucuzzella –

accomplished runner, race director, family physician, Associate Professor at West Virginia University

School of Medicine and owner of Two Rivers Treads, a Center for Natural Running and Walking. He’ll

break down all those buzz words: proprioception, cadence, pronation, drop and the likes, and give

you the knowledge to use them to your discretion in enjoying the trails efficiently and injury-free.

Katie DeSplinter is an accomplished ultramarathoner, writer and is very

good at making soup. She can be found on the trails of the San Gabriel

mountains outside of Los Angeles, CA and runs for New Balance.

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Single Track Mind

Single Track By Kevin Flanagan

Sporting injuries, like break-ups are a part of life. Never pleasant, painful, awkward (especially if you pull a

groin muscle) and they often take longer to get over than you initially thought. Picking up an injury when training for a big race is like having that girl or guy you fell head over heels for, turn around and drop you like a ton of lead.

After the bomb has dropped, a period of disbelief and total despair sweeps over you and instinctively you turn to dear friends for support – in my case the physio. This is followed by a short course of drugs (anti-inflammatory of course), a tub of ice cream (on the affected area) and dose of self pity. Naturally you look to blame someone or something for the misfortune, analyzing every

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Single Track By Kevin Flanagan Photo> Chris Fisher

moment over the past weeks that might have led to this catastrophic event unfolding, only to discover that you are the idiot that brought this pain upon yourself.

Did you over train and suffocate your body of the ability to recover and build on what is already there? Did you go too fast too soon, and ignore the plea to “take it slowly; it’s been a while since I have done

this”. You are no different from any other athlete, picking up injuries is part of a runner’s life, it’s how often and severe it happens that matters.

The latest break up with my body happened over a tightening hamstring which resulted in me binning my old shoes out of frustration and hitting the local sports store for some retail therapy.

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One new pair of extra bright shiny shoes later, I limped out of the store feeling a bit better about life, but none the fitter. Even though the statistics show that running shoes do next to nothing for injury prevention, a new pair that promises PB’s and more grip on the trails, is good for the mental state, the key to bouncing back.

For the time being however I am forced to turn my back on my running shoes, as they sit there obediently looking up at me with puppy-dog-eyes begging me to take them back and just give it one more chance. Thank goodness for the emotional support and constant nagging from my physio to stay well clear of all running shoes no matter how pretty they look. Instead I find myself attending yoga group therapy classes as I coax the hamstring out of its state of hyper tension and back onto the trail.

At the moment, looking up at the trails on Table Mountain is a bit like seeing that bombshell ex

unexpectedly in a night club. It’s a true cocktail of emotions from love, despair, anger, to downright hatred. Even worse is catching a glimpse of a fellow trail runner kicking up dust on fine piece of single track. It’s like watching that ex kiss some random person right in front of you. I just hope I don’t see my best friend running all over that trail anytime soon.

I am always in search of a quick fix and I thought about cutting my leg off and strapping a roller skate to my stump, but to be honest electric saws are way over priced and I have already dropped a small fortune on physio bills. As with most things in life, shortcuts are often too easy to be true and just like that kryptonite ex, you eventually get over the injury hit the trail and before you know it you’re back on form, having a great time with a new trail you have just discovered. Remember, always use protection...and stretch!

Injuries and Ex’s

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Remember, always use protection...and stretch!

April 2012/May 2012 | 79

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Born and bred in Cape Town, I spent my university career maximising the holidays travelling Africa quenching my thirst for adventure. After that, I took a quick gap year to Whistler-Canada for some more adventure and now find myself back in CT, working away at making millions. I am by no means a specialist at any sport, in fact one my inner personal debates, is that I try compete in too many sports & disciplines, so I end up not been able to focus enough on one discipline to get any good at it. However, the variation keeps me interested and prevents serious adventure FOMO (Fear of missing out), when I see other people taking on extraordinary adventures. My number one entry on my bucket list was trekking to base camp Everest in 2008 and seeing Everest with my own eyes - mind blowing!!!

Team Kelfords Facebook Page -http://www.facebook.com/groups/109748955710607/

Blog: www.off-the-hook.co.za

Personal bio

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Run wild across empty beaches and rugged headlands following the paths of sure-footed Ngunis as your trail. On the 3 day Jikeleza Jog from Mazeppa to Cintsa, participants will cover an average distance of 21 - 30km/day. Sufficient distance for racing teams to break a sweat and apply some tactics, it also offers a fair but some tactics, it also offers a fair but manageable challenge to social joggers looking to enter a multi-day event that will provide an unforgettable experience.

Price: R4400/per person

Includes:

4 Nights Accommodation & all meals Transfers to & from EL Airport / VehiclesDaily luggage transfersCategory & Lucky Draw PrizesQuality event garment for all entrants

5 - 9 May / 80 km / Teams: Pairswww.wildtrails.co.za

Contact: Sarah Drew 084 240 7277 / [email protected] / www.wildtrails.co.za