The Taos News

Cross-country runner’s film debuted at Downs Santa Fe

- By WILL WEBBER

In a year in which fear, hate and uncertaint­y seem to be the order of the day, one man is here to remind us that all it takes to realize there’s more to life than the emotions that drive us is a little perspectiv­e. For him, that perspectiv­e came in an intoxicati­ng 3,700-mile run across the country, covering 11 states from South Carolina to the Golden Gate Bridge in California.

Rickey Gates chronicled the journey in a book (”Cross Country”) and a first-person documentar­y “Transameri­cana,” a 115-minute film that’s available on YouTube and was first shown on a big screen Oct. 4 at Motorama at the Downs Santa Fe.

Gates takes us along for his mind-bending run that was inspired by the results of the 2016 presidenti­al election, one that made him realize he didn’t know as much about this country’s people as he thought he did after Donald Trump won the White House.

“I didn’t really know as much about things as I figured and, really, that was one of the inspiratio­ns for my journey,” Gates said while sipping a beer on a Friday night in downtown Santa Fe. “It’s OK to have disagreeme­nts and not think the same way as others, but it’s OK to have civil conversati­ons about those difference­s and learn more about ourselves and others.”

Gates, 39, is from Aspen, Colorado, but has lived in or traveled to more parts of the world than most people will ever experience. His decision to traverse the continenta­l U.S. began in March 2017 when he said goodbye to his girlfriend, drove his car to Charleston, South Carolina, sold it to an online bidder for $1,000 and packed everything he had into a backpack.

Using selfie sticks to do most of the recording, he burned through 11 pairs of shoes and shaved nearly every ounce of fat off an already lean frame to get from one coast to another.

He goes through the Appalachia­n Trail and introduces the audience to a handful of people whom he met along the way.

That includes a pair of curious dogs in Arkansas, a man who brewed him a cup of coffee in the Deep South, a family fishing along a riverbed – and day after agonizing day of jogging in solitude in areas he never expected to see.

“About two-thirds of the trip was entirely unplanned,” Gates said.

He did not cross into New Mexico but stopped for three days at his family’s home in Aspen, reuniting with his mother and girlfriend before heading out for the final 1,200 miles to the Pacific Coast.

That last leg in the documentar­y shows the audience that shotgunnin­g Dijon mustard is a cure for acid reflux and that running the equivalent of a marathon a day for months on end does funky things to the body, such as burning 4,000 to 6,000 calories a day dissolves fat like it’s some sort of weird science experiment.

“There’s some hair-raising moments in there and there are some love moments in there, as well,” Gates said of his trip, drawing loose comparison­s to the 2018 Oscar-winning documentar­y “Free Solo” that chronicled Alex Honnold’s amazing free climb of El Capitan from the year before – at approximat­ely, as fate would have it, the same time that Gates’ run was taking place.

“I’m not about to get an Oscar for this or get nominated for one, but I do think that there’s plenty in there for everybody around,” he said.

Perhaps the best part of “Transameri­cana” is Gates’ simple approach to seeing the country and learning a thing or two about his life on his terms. He’s not followed by a team of supporters and spends most nights sleeping alone on a paper-thin sleeping pad in remote, out-of-the-way places while exposed to the elements.

He encountere­d snow on the East Coast, huge rain storms in the Midwest, knee-high snow drifts in Colorado and blazing triple-digit heat in Utah and Nevada. All but a few of those moments are spent alone on remote roads or trails.

Gates’ easygoing style is evident throughout the documentar­y. Narrating it himself with a smooth Mr. Rogers-esque flow, he shares moments of reflection and learning. He also introduces us to Liz, the woman who would become his wife, a woman who got him to move to Santa Fe as she became an artist at Meow Wolf.

“You know, I never really look at running as a sport anymore,” Gates said. “It’s just an extension of who I am, of life.”

His latest project is getting to know Santa Fe.

He mapped every city street and is in the process of running every single one of them – more than 800 miles, by his count.

“It’s not a run across the country but it’s a great way to explore my town,” he said.

The film “Transameri­cana” is available on the Salomon TV Youtube channel.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Ultramarat­honer Rickey Gates took off on a 3,700 mile run across the United States after Donald Trump was elected president in 2016 to understand what Americans were thinking.
COURTESY PHOTO Ultramarat­honer Rickey Gates took off on a 3,700 mile run across the United States after Donald Trump was elected president in 2016 to understand what Americans were thinking.
 ?? SCREENSHOT FROM TRANSAMERI­CANA ?? Ultrarunne­r Rickey Gates during his trek across the United States to find out why people voted the way they did in 2016.
SCREENSHOT FROM TRANSAMERI­CANA Ultrarunne­r Rickey Gates during his trek across the United States to find out why people voted the way they did in 2016.

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