Cape Breton Post

Hikers, runners, climbers scramble toward ever-faster feats

- BY BRIAN MELLEY

Tim Freriks remembers being a kid and gazing up from the bottom of the Grand Canyon at the intimidati­ng, steep walls looming thousands of feet overhead. He dreaded the long hike back to civilizati­on and never imagined he would one day run up the trail snaking along those cliffs.

The distant memory came to mind this month after Freriks blazed from the North Rim to the South Rim at a blistering pace, crossing the 21-mile (34-kilometre) chasm to claim what is called the “fastest known time,” or FKT. There was no prize, only bragging rights to the unofficial record that has become a focus for athletes in all kinds of pursuits on trails, mountains and cliffs.

Endurance feats at what amounts to warp speed have captured the imaginatio­n of an increasing number of trail runners, climbers and mountainee­rs. Social and mainstream media now create attention for the once largely solitary figures and audiences for their accomplish­ments - and sponsorshi­p dollars sometimes follow.

Freriks’ “rim to rim” run in under 2 hours and 40 minutes was one of three notable marks recorded this month alone.

A French winemaker took fewer than three days to cover 221 miles (356 kilometres) up Mount Whitney and across the John Muir Trail through Sequoia, Kings Canyon and Yosemite National Parks. Two California rock climbers broke a speed record climbing the sheer granite wall of El Capitan in Yosemite in under 2 hours 20 minutes - a climb that typically takes experience­d climbers three days.

These increasing­ly popular quests have been driven in part by developmen­t of lighter gear, growth in long-distance trail running and the ability of people to follow athletes’ progress online, said Shawn Bearden, an avid trail runner and physiology professor at Idaho State University.

And some people are just bucking traditiona­l contests and racing when they want.

“The FKT stuff is a cool dynamic,” said Freriks, who slept under the stars on the rim of the canyon the night before his Oct. 1 run. “It’s competitiv­e, but the other side of the coin is it’s impromptu. You’re out there alone a lot of the time. There isn’t much publicity. It feels more pure.”

There’s a long history of adventurer­s setting out to conquer firsts. Sailors have long attempted ‘round the world journeys for record time. Swimmers have successful­ly tested the English Channel since 1875. But bagging Mount Everest “because it’s there,” as George Mallory famously said before his ill-fated 1924 quest, isn’t enough for some mountainee­rs now pushing the limits through thin air to reach the summit fastest.

“I think it’s a natural human tendency to keep pushing back the human boundaries of what’s perceived to be possible - like trying to set a world record,” said Peter Bakwin, a Colorado trail runner, who created a website to track fastest times.

Treks and climbs that once took months, weeks and days

are now being knocked off in weeks, days and mere hours.

As keeper of the unofficial record, Bakwin has also found himself as reluctant arbiter of whether a claim is legit. What was once self-reported on the honour system can now be backed with global positionin­g system data, digital photos and social media posts.

A woman’s claim to the fastest time on the Appalachia­n Trail last year was widely questioned by other hikers and remains in dispute.

Even well-accepted marks are often fleeting.

Bakwin was the first known to run the Muir Trail in under four days - a trek along the most dramatic and scenic sections of the

Sierra Nevada that takes a typical backpacker two to three weeks.

Although he was running around the clock to cover about 50 miles (80 kilometres) daily and sleeping short periods under a space blanket, Bakwin said he took time to smell the flowers. He remembered being tired and sore one night cresting a mountain pass under a full moon.

“It was magical,” he said. “It’s hard to explain the attraction of pushing your limits of endurance in nature. Some people get it and some people think it’s totally crazy.”

His best time from 2003 didn’t last a year and it’s been chipped away at ever since. No one broke the three-day barrier until Francois D’haene, one of the world’s

top trail runners, shattered the previous best time Oct. 17 by about 12 hours, finishing in less than 2 days and 20 hours.

“I feel like I’ve had a great adventure,” D’haene remarked afterward. “Been lost in the middle of nowhere in stunning landscapes.”

D’haene had support from his sponsor Salomon, including a team of pacers who took turns carrying food and water and running with him. He only rested six hours over three days.

Four days after D’haene reached the end of the trail, climbers Brad Gobright and Jim Reynolds on the other side of Yosemite Valley broke the speed record set on the Nose route of El Cap.

 ?? SUNNY MARGERUM/HOKA ONE ONE VIA AP ?? This Sunday, Oct. 1, 2017, photo provided by HOKA One One shows profession­al trail runner Tim Freriks running to break the single crossing record (rim-to-rim, or R2R) in the Grand Canyon, Arizona. Freriks blazed from the North Rim to the South Rim at a...
SUNNY MARGERUM/HOKA ONE ONE VIA AP This Sunday, Oct. 1, 2017, photo provided by HOKA One One shows profession­al trail runner Tim Freriks running to break the single crossing record (rim-to-rim, or R2R) in the Grand Canyon, Arizona. Freriks blazed from the North Rim to the South Rim at a...

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