The Standard (St. Catharines)

Planning a cross-Canada record 108 km per day, for 66 days

- DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY — Dave Proctor will soon dip his white cowboy hat into the Pacific Ocean and start his quest to run to the Atlantic in record time.

Proctor intends to break the speed record for running across Canada, which is currently 72 days and 10 hours set by Al Howie in 1991.

“My goal is 66 days,” Proctor told The Canadian Press.

“I’m going to break the trans-Canadian speed record by six days.”

Proctor starts at dawn next Wednesday in Victoria.

He’s an ultra-marathoner, running races longer than the standard 42.2-kilometre marathon. The 37-year-old from Okotoks, Alta., just south of Calgary, excels at mega-distances.

In May 2016, Proctor set a Guinness world record for the longest distance run on a stationary treadmill over a 24-hour period when he covered 260.4 kilometres at the Calgary Marathon Expo. Australia’s Luca Turrini broke the mark a year later with a distance of 261.18 kilometres.

Proctor is the Canadian record-holder in the 24-hour road race at 257.093 km, which he set in a sixth-place finish at the 2015 world championsh­ip in Italy.

In 2017, Proctor won the 160-kilometre Lost Soul Ultra in Lethbridge, Alta., in 19 hours and 27 minutes and claimed the 150k title at the Calgary Marathon in 12 hours and 18 minutes.

So he’s capable of an 108-kilometre day, which is about what Proctor said he must average to cover the 7,295-kilometre width of Canada by Aug. 31. But for 66 days in a row?

“It’s getting used to being uncomforta­ble,” he said. “That’s your new normal.”

A typical training week for Proctor includes three to four runs of 50 to 80 kilometres. He’s been tapering recently to charge his batteries for the long haul ahead. He’ll take off from Victoria’s Mile 0 Terry Fox monument, which honours Fox’s attempt to run across the country on a prosthetic leg in 1980 to raise money for cancer research.

The cancer that took Fox’s leg forced him to stop just east of Thunder Bay in Shuniah Township, and took the 22-year-old’s life the following year.

Howie was 46 years old when he legged it coast to coast, but he started in St. John’s, N.L., and ran west.

Howie raised $750,000 for children with special needs. He died in 2016 at age 70.

Proctor’s cause is rare diseases. His nine-year-old son Sam has relapsing encephalop­athy with cerebellar ataxia, or RECA.

Sam lacks balance and coordinati­on and struggles with fine and gross motor skills, his father said.

“Eating, going to the washroom, dressing himself in the morning, all these things take a lot more time than the average person,” Proctor said.

Proctor intends to raise over $1 million for the Rare Disease Foundation for research.

“If you live with a rare disease in Canada, you fall into a void where there’s not a lot of support,” Proctor explained.

“There’s over 8,000 known rare diseases and probably just as many unknown rare diseases. Rare is not so rare. There’s a lot of rare out there.

“I want the Rare Disease Foundation to be linked to a record that’s going to stand many, many, many decades. I believe that Al Howie back in 1991, he had a similar thought. That’s what records are for. You kindly make it difficult for the next person to do.”

Proctor’s cowboy hat — adorned with an orange feather symbolizin­g his cause — is a runner-friendly design by Smithbilt in Calgary.

He can store ice in the crown on hot days and has a waterproof version to wear.

“I’m going to be wearing it every single step across this country,” Proctor said.

He has more than a dozen physiother­apists lined up across the country to treat him in his recreation­al support vehicle.

Proctor’s support crew includes his wife Sharon and fellow-ultramarat­honer Wayne Gaudet, also of Okotoks.

In the ultra-marathon world, multiday races of 100 km per day are common. Where Proctor is pushing the endurance envelope is attempting to sustain that pace for more than two months, said Canadian Ultramarat­hon Associatio­n president Armand Leblanc.

“As long as you don’t get injuries, then it’s fine. It’s doable,” Leblanc said. “He’s been training hard. “The distance is there, the pace is there also, but to maintain that pace is going to be tough.”

 ?? KURTIS KRISTIANSO­N THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Dave Proctor, pictured, wants to break the speed record for running across Canada, currently 72 days, 10 hours, set by Al Howie in 1991.
KURTIS KRISTIANSO­N THE CANADIAN PRESS Dave Proctor, pictured, wants to break the speed record for running across Canada, currently 72 days, 10 hours, set by Al Howie in 1991.

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