The Guardian (Charlottetown)

2019: A year to remember

Nancy Ripley, who has been honoured for her athletic achievemen­t in 2019, enjoys staying active and having fun while training with others

- JASON MALLOY jason.malloy @theguardia­n.pe.ca @SportsGuar­dian

Nancy Ripley has always been up for a new challenge.

The 66-year-old Stratford resident took up running, later got into cycling and swimming and combined the love for the three sports into triathlons, duathlons and ironmen competitio­ns.

“It’s a challenge, which is really good for me. I like to be physically active,” a humble Ripley said. “I don’t think about having to prove myself. I’m just doing it for me.”

She has a zest for staying active and having fun with others.

“I really would dread not being able to do anything. I love to garden. I love to walk, hike,” she said, and “I want to keep doing that.”

She estimates she has run about eight marathons, but it’s more about self-improvemen­t.

“I never go out saying I have to win this. I’m always pushing myself to do a little better than I did before.”

Born and raised in Scotland, Ripley moved to Canada in 1989 with her husband and three children. They originally settled in Manitoba but moved across the country to New Glasgow, P.E.I., two years later.

In 2002, she caught the running bug.

“I saw an advert to run a marathon in Dublin in aid of the diabetes associatio­n,” she recalled. “By this time, my children were a bit older, and I thought I need to do something for me.

“I walked every day, but I’d never run, so I delved right into it and did the marathon in Dublin. … That got me running.”

The family farmed in New Glasgow until 2004. Ripley and her husband divorced, and she moved to Stratford.

“I had to kind of find myself again, so I took up a little bit of running again,” Ripley said.

She soon bought a hybrid bike and enjoyed it for a couple of years. Kelley MacQueen suggested she try a road bike. She did and took part in a few duathlons.

“I was just out for the social (aspect) and to challenge myself,” she said.

Later, she learned Jamie Whynacht was putting on a swimming clinic with Triathlon P.E.I. and decided to give it a shot.

“Little by little, I just plugged away at it. I’m not fast, but I can survive,” she said.

Corena Hughes would soon connect with Ripley. They would meet at the pool and Hughes would bring the workouts.

“She always would stay in the water and finish the workout,” Hughes said. “She is the most determined woman you will ever meet.”

Ripley has been participat­ing in triathlons for about seven years.

After completing a half ironman in 2017, a friend asked if she wanted to do an ironman, consisting of a 3.86km swim, 180.25 kms on a bike and a 42.2-km run, in Lake Placid, N.Y. She slept on it for a night before deciding to give it a try. Unfortunat­ely, her friend had to withdraw, but Ripley pushed on.

“I kept on training and so Lake Placid in 2018 was my first ironman and I just loved it,” she said. “I loved the endurance.”

Ripley finished third out of 18 in her age group of 60-64. She hasn’t slowed down. “She’s relentless, really,” MacQueen said. “She trains. If she’s not biking, she’s running or at the pool swimming.”

In 2019, she ran the Boston Marathon in April, and completed the Subaru Ironman in Mount Tremblant, Que., in August in 15:42:22 to win her age group and qualify for the Ironman World Championsh­ips in Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, seven weeks later.

“It was quite the year,” she said.

The day of the world championsh­ips, her children, Sally, Andrew and Ross, were in Hawaii supporting their mother.

“It meant the world to me,” Ripley said.

 ?? JASON MALLOY • THE GUARDIAN ?? Nancy Ripley is an inspiratio­n to many people. The Stratford resident enjoys running, biking and swimming and has combined the different discipline­s in duathlons, triathlons and ironmen competitio­ns.
JASON MALLOY • THE GUARDIAN Nancy Ripley is an inspiratio­n to many people. The Stratford resident enjoys running, biking and swimming and has combined the different discipline­s in duathlons, triathlons and ironmen competitio­ns.
 ?? JASON MALLOY • THE GUARDIAN ?? Nancy Ripley, right, and Jayne Toombs approach the North River causeway during a bike trip to Cornwall.
JASON MALLOY • THE GUARDIAN Nancy Ripley, right, and Jayne Toombs approach the North River causeway during a bike trip to Cornwall.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Nancy Ripley crosses the finish line at the Ironman World Championsh­ips in Kona, Hawaii, in 2019.
CONTRIBUTE­D Nancy Ripley crosses the finish line at the Ironman World Championsh­ips in Kona, Hawaii, in 2019.

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