JUNGLE ULTRA / Stage Two

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • JUNGLE ULTRA RESULTS - www.beyondtheu...
    ‘Amazonia’ began at 5am, with runners woken by the sounds of the Jungle. Lining up on the startline they faced 32km of brutal downhill running, the temperature and humidity creeping up with each passing kilometre.
    They raced off from the start line and down the only road in the valley, with Gage Smith once again racing ahead in what has become a race start ritual, much to the delight of his fellow runners.
    They took in the miles rapidly down the CP1, before waving goodbye to the mountains and hello to the valley, and the expansive Jungle found within the Manu National Park. They passed waving children and modified Tuk Tuks in the frontier town of Patria, a place lost to time that wouldn’t be amiss in a spaghetti western.
    They soon hit the 4×4 track that lead them deeper into the jungle, dodging puddles and water carved ruts as they progressed up the course. It’s here that local runner Reuben, running in kit gifted by BTU runners over the years, loped into the lead. He overtook stage leader Stephane Pagani and bounced through his home turf with ease. He extends his lead in the local race!
    After a few kilometres the runners hit their first of many deep river crossings, a picturesque stream that hides thigh deep water and treacherous rocks. One wrong move could mean a slip under the water and some very soggy kit.
    They finally arrived into the ranger station as the mid day sun climbed high, burning exposed skin and ramping up the air temperature. Those complaining of the cold in the Cloud Forest will be wishing for it now.
    Stephane Pagani (4hrs 11mins) was first man across the line once again, taking the road sections in his stride and ever so slightly building his lead over second placed Ben Harrison (4hrs 15mins), who professed that his road running isn’t quite as good as his trail running. Lucky for Ben it’s all Jungle trails from here to the finish!
    Third place swapped around in this stage, with Mark Reilly (4hrs 29mins) overtaking Marshall Maine (4hrs 34mins). Mark took the stage in his stride, thundering through the river crossings with reckless abandon. Or perhaps enjoying the cool splashing of the water…
    The lead female was once again Lynsie Miller, the Scotswoman cruised across the rivers and bounded into camp in good spirits in just 4hrs 58mins. Following closely behind her was Ioana Barbu, who toughed out the hardest part of the course with a smile, finishing in 5hrs 6mins. Behind Ioana was Kate Smyth (5hrs 31mins) in third, coming into the camp alongside Augustus Royds, whom she’s ran with for most of the stage.
    Other notable mentions from the stage are Hugo Leefe, Bruce Wright and Robbie Hughes, who took on the route with a smile on their faces and dragged one another through the hardest sections. The trio, dubbed the ‘london lads’ by the medical team, have consistently put a smile on everyone’s faces. Monique ParkerGrantz (8hrs 38mins) was slowed by an animal encounter but made it across the line with a smile and a story to tell, and James Lodge put in a herculean effort to finish the race after taking a fall early on. Grit and determination got him across the line in 9hrs 48mins.
    This is Manu National Park, Peru. Set deep in the rainforest, the impenetrable nature of this jungle is the reason it remains untouched making this one of the toughest races in the world.
    As you journey from cloud forest to Amazon basin, you will fight your way through suffocating undergrowth, broken by river crossing after crossing.
    This is our hardest ultra marathon. Choked with mud and humidity, the thin air doubles the effort required to move testing all of your physical and mental resilience. This is a race like no other.
    This is the Jungle Ultra, follow us to adventure

Комментарии • 1

  • @CraigOulton-sj1uq
    @CraigOulton-sj1uq 3 месяца назад

    Excellent...Cannot wait for to watch day 3! Go runners !