RACE INFO

RACE INFO
Atacama Crossing Blogs 2014
4
PostsAtacama Crossing (2014) blog posts from Linh Huynh
10 October 2014 03:20 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
This time it was 76 km. It started with runners traversing a marsh and then through undulating sand dunes, and salt flats that have sharp, uneven salt formations that look like cauliflower and have torn apart a few pairs of shoes. A runner from Denmark had his shoes shredded apart by the salt and had to finish the remaining 40km of this stage in borrowed Crocs.
I had a long day that tested my resolve and about 6 hours into the stage during a particularly mind-numbing 10 km straight road in dry, dusty hell, I asked myself “What the @#$! am I doing this for??!!” The rest of the stage only got worse when we had to climb the largest sand dune I have ever seen in my life. The hours passed by very slowly, and Samantha, a Canadian doctor from Newfoundland, and I kept each other focused into the late hours. The last 20 km were spent walking in moonlight under a desert sky littered with stars. We crossed the line a 4:00 a.m., 20 hours after we began.
Enjoying a day off before the final stage.
Grand Slam is within my grasp! First Canadian woman to complete the series – and in one year to boot!
08 October 2014 02:23 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Only 1 monster stage tomorrow!
Temperatures reached the mid 40s these past few days.
A few people dropped out for various reasons: blisters, knees, heat exhaustion, nausea
Comments: Total (9) comments
Thieu Huynh
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:07 pm
Haile Selassie
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 04:20 am
Jason Huang
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 02:53 am
Sofie Planckaert
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 07:14 pm
Richard Malcolm
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 06:02 pm
Janice McCrimmon
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 04:18 pm
Shawna Lamarsh
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 02:46 pm
Georgia Gaden Jones
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 04:07 am
Georgia Gaden Jones
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 04:07 am
05 October 2014 04:25 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
After a tense 60 hours of transit and wondering if I would get my luggage, my bag finally arrived in the Calama airport minus the illegal goods: customs confiscated my pepperoni and almonds but thankfully left my dehydrated meals intact. I got back go the hotel at 10pm and had orientation at 9:00 the next morning and we all boarded busses at 2:45 to take us to the start line. I was really hoping to have a bit of a grace period but
Comments: Total (5) comments
Elizabeth Shin
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 02:47 pm
Sofie Planckaert
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 06:37 pm
Duncan Sharp
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 04:03 am
Richard Malcolm
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 09:31 pm
Vanessa Corby
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 06:04 am
01 October 2014 06:26 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
"Good things come in 3s" That's what people say - right??
Well, here I go again! Not sure how I ended up here. Jordan was in February, Gobi was in June. And since I had nothing else planned for October, I thought, why not?
People always ask how I do it. I don't have any answers. I'm reluctant to share my training schedule because, well, one person's training is another person's taper.
I'm looking forward to the laughs. I find that these races reach a level of absurdity that regular life never will. I don't mean the distance, the heat and the struggles. Those are givens. I'm referring to the fact that we will have nightly slumber parties with a dozen people crammed into a giant tent, or that we'll most likely share intimate details about our chafing / blistering, or that we will probably be stripping down to our undies in front of these strangers and don't even get me started about the toilet-talk. For a week, we are allowed to be filthy, to be uninhibited, to be fierce and mainly to be open to anything.
Newsletter
Online Store
Login
Comments: Total (3) comments
Georgia Gaden jones
Posted On: 12 Oct 2014 02:58 am
vanessa corby
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 03:03 pm
vanessa corby
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 03:03 pm