黑料吃瓜网

Image
(Photo: Getty)
Image
(Photo: Getty)

Published: 
from Trail Runner Magazine

Finding Love at 14,000 Feet

黑料吃瓜网rs Andrea Sansone and Andrew Hamilton trace their relationship back to a chance encounter on one of Colorado鈥檚 highest peaks. Now, the two are pushing each other to set speed records on the state鈥檚 famed fourteeners.

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

The sound of falling rocks caught Andrew Hamilton鈥檚 attention.

It was a sunny day in 2012, and Andrea Sansone鈥檚 foot had toppled a rock off of loose scree, just below the summit of South Maroon Peak, a Class 3 scramble that tops out at 14,163 ft. The mountain is part of Colorado鈥檚 Elk Range, and it is known for unpredictable terrain.

鈥淚 might have been a bit naive back then,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淚t was like my fourth peak ever. And I chose to do this really hard, technical climb.鈥

Hamilton and his hiking partner were just ahead on the summit.

鈥淚 told my hiking partner, 鈥榡eez, we should try to stay ahead of her!鈥欌 laughs Hamilton.

But Sansone caught up to Hamilton at the summit. After introductions, Hamilton invited Sansone to join him and his hiking partner on the difficult traverse that connects North and South Maroon Peaks (known, collectively, as the Maroon Bells), a wicked, high-alpine moonscape of scree with no bail-out options that requires technical experience.

Sansone was totally game. They enjoyed each other鈥檚 company so much, the two regrouped to do Pyramid Peak, a Class 4 fourteener near the Maroon Bells, the next day.

鈥淭hen we did Longs Peak. Then we did Mount Princeton,鈥 remembers Sansone. 鈥淲ithin the next couple of days, we did four peaks together. And that was really fun. And we just stayed in touch.鈥

This high-altitude meet-cute kicked off a partnership in life and alpine adventure that would propel both parties to a relationship with Colorado鈥檚 much sought-after Nolan鈥檚 14.

Nolan鈥檚 14 traverses the highest peaks in the Sawatch range. (Photo: Getty)

Sansone loves to go uphill. She鈥檚 previously set the mixed-gender FKT on California鈥檚 fourteeners (there are fifteen 14,000+ peaks in California), the female FKT on Colorado鈥檚 fourteeners, and holds the record for most ascents of Colorado鈥檚 Manitou Incline, racking up a day鈥檚 worth of rail-tie stair climbing for a total of 33.5 miles with a staggering 38,000 feet of climbing.

Hamilton had a background in adventure racing and was no stranger to long efforts in the mountains. He has held the records for several mountain traverses, ranging from the highly sought-after FKTs to the esoteric to all but those deeply steeped in the nuances of FKTs. He held the record for quickest completion of both Colorado and California鈥檚 fourteeners (mixed gender FKT, even snagging the winter record for the Colorado鈥檚 peaks). He鈥檚 set the record for climbing the highest 100 peaks in Colorado. The shortest FKT to his name took just over two days. The longest took over 84 days (all 56 Colorado fourteeners). He had several efforts on the Nolan鈥檚 line and earned the self-supported FKT, while Sansone supported, and got curious about pursuing the line herself.

Hamilton describes himself as methodical, a 鈥渟preadsheets and splits鈥 kind of guy. Sansone is more emotional and readily admits to crying during a lot of her tougher attempts.

But, the couple is committed both in life and adventure nonetheless.

鈥淪he likes to hear, 鈥榶ou鈥檙e amazing, I love you. You can do this.鈥欌 says Hamilton. 鈥淓ven when I really want to just show her a pace chart.鈥

Love On the Nolans Line

This much romanticized route was first devised over 20 years ago. In 1999, friends and ultrarunners Blake Wood and Fred Vance were looking to link up as many fourteeners as possible in a single, 100-mile push. They turned to mountaineer Jim Nolan, who had summited all 56 of Colorado鈥檚 14,000-foot peaks, and who had created a route that connected 14 fourteeners of the Sawatch range in a single line. From Mount Shavano in the south to Mount Massive in the north, the route was just under a 鈥渃entury鈥 and racked up over 44,000 feet of climbing. Wood and Vance named the route after its originator, and mandated that to be official, the route must be completed in under 60 hours.

Nolan鈥檚 14 is unique because it exists at the nexus of orienteering, ultrarunning, and mountaineering. There is no set route, and runners must create their own line to link up the peaks, often sending them off-trail in technical, high-altitude terrain. Most runners who complete Nolan鈥檚 rack up about 95 miles and almost 44,000 feet of climbing and descending. The route鈥檚 average elevation hovers just over 12,000 feet, and forgiving weather windows are few and far between. But Nolan鈥檚 onerousness is also its allure, a puzzle that draws runners into its challenge like moths to an enigmatic flame.

鈥淲hen Jared [Campbell] and I started seriously looking at Nolan鈥檚, in 2012, it was still an underground adventure that few people had ever attempted,鈥 says Matt Hart, writer and editor at UltraSignup. 鈥淥nly three people had ever finished it before us, including one of our ultrarunning heroes, Blake Wood, so we knew it was possible. But it was mysterious in the years before every route had been documented and shared via GPX files. It was still the great unknown which felt risky and made it irresistible. Nolan鈥檚 felt like an antidote to the overly catered and controlled racing scene. A return to true adventure running.鈥

and aren鈥檛 exhaustive, but show that fewer than 50 adventurers have completed the line. Wood and Vance failed to complete it on their first attempt, instead returning to finish the route in 2001. Notable alumni of the line include Alex Nichols, Gary Robbins, Jared Campbell, Luke Nelson, Meghan Hicks, Missy Gosney, Anna Frost, and Matt Hart.

Nolan鈥檚 felt like an antidote to the overly catered and controlled racing scene. A return to true adventure running.

For some, like Megan Hicks, managing editor at IrunFar and multi-time FKT holder on Nolans, 聽the fascination goes back years.

鈥淚n college I majored in geology, and we did a field trip to Colorado. I recall looking at the Sawatch Range, where the Nolan’s 14 route lies. I noticed how it’s tallest peaks lined up to create this spellbinding skyline,鈥 says Hicks. 鈥淚’d spend time with Anna Frost, who was getting to know the Nolan’s 14 route for an attempt on it someday, and the lineup of peaks was just as captivating. It made complete sense that someone had already linked up those mountains in one line.鈥

Sansone and Hamilton currently hold the mixed team FKT (during which Sansone also set the supported women鈥檚 FKT) before Sabrina Stanley tackled the route five days later. Shortly after, Meghan Hicks would reset the FKT, which was promptly lowered again by Stanley.

After multiple attempts on the route, Hick鈥檚 devotion to the link-up of peaks through the Colorado high country hasn鈥檛 wavered.

鈥淭here are a few routes, like the Nolan’s 14, that I could do over and over and every time it would feel new and different.聽 You can’t help who and what you fall in love with, and you often struggle when someone asks you to articulate your love,鈥 says Hicks.聽 鈥淭his is what Nolan’s 14 is to me.鈥

Colorado鈥檚 Sawatch range has plenty of scenic vistas. (Photo: Getty)

Whether it鈥檚 a multi-year relationship like Hicks鈥檚, or a quick tryst like Hart鈥檚, the route captures the imagination of anyone with an inclination towards the adventurous and mountain vertical. The specific demands of the route command attention and presence in a way that few things do these days, and Hicks has gravitated towards that pull.

RELATED:

鈥淭here’s also this really neat feeling you get when you move your body over complex terrain in an efficient way,鈥 says Hicks.聽 鈥淭here鈥檚 no trail to lead you, no bobbling on navigation, and no tripping or sliding around. It triggers this primal connection with nature that’s kind of addictive. I want to feel it but don’t often get to, and it comes about every now and again on the Nolan’s 14 line.鈥

Perhaps the demands of this route upon the runner 鈥 the requirement of staying within its grasp for many hours and multiple days鈥攃ultivates a certain intimacy, a falling in love, surrender as a rational response to an irrational desire.

鈥淥ver the 58-plus hours we were out there I grew to love the route. It鈥檚 a clean and aesthetic line that makes logical sense,鈥 says Hart. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 so damn hard.鈥

Falling in Love with Nolan鈥檚 14

In August of 2020, Sansone and Hamilton set out to tackle the Nolan鈥檚 line. An aborted attempt four weeks prior (derailed due to Sansone encountering a breathing issue on Mt. Missouri) left the couple hungry to traverse all 14 of Nolan鈥檚 summits.

鈥淚 wanted to go out there and show the community what I鈥檓 capable of,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淢y most favorite thing is being out there with Andrew, because he鈥檚 my life partner and I love him so much. And these mountains, Nolan鈥檚, is where we thrive together.鈥

Sansone and Hamilton during their hike. (Photo: Courtesy Andrea Sansone)

Sansone works part-time as a nurse at Children’s Hospital in Denver, which leaves time to train for longer adventures. While she likes to trail run, particularly around Golden鈥檚 North Table Mountain, she mostly identifies as a hiker. 鈥淢y strength is hiking, and hiking for a long time,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淎nd I鈥檝e gotten a lot better on the downs. Now I can jog them, but really I just let gravity take me down.鈥

Not only did Sansone and Hamilton complete Nolan鈥檚, they added on Mount of the Holy Cross, a variation of the route known as 鈥淗oly Nolan鈥檚鈥.

鈥淲e probably lost three hours on that attempt, just making ramen and stuff,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淚 knew immediately that I could do it faster.鈥 Sansone鈥檚 weekend attempt shaved almost three hours off Stanley鈥檚 time from 2020.

The Beating Heart of Nolans

This summer, Sansone set the women鈥檚 record for the most number of Colorado fourteeners climbed in an hour, ticking off 12 summits to beat the previous record of eight.

During the effort, Sansone found herself on the technical and exposed link-up between Columbia and Missouri. The granodiorite is tacky, but unforgiving, and is known to bite into soft hands and exposed knees. But Sansone found herself moving swiftly and gracefully through the rocky and exposed sections of the traverse. She felt like she was moving towards her best, most authentic self as she hopped across scree, and scrambled over ridgelines.

鈥淚 call that section the Heart of Nolans,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淚t鈥檚 right about in the middle, and it just has these iconic traverses that I deeply love.鈥

Traversing the heart of her much-beloved line stirred a dormant desire in Sansone.

鈥淭hat record is what really planted the seed to go back and try Nolan鈥檚,鈥 says Hamilton. 鈥淚 was looking at her splits, and thinking, she鈥檚 got to try this again.鈥

The Nolans Line pulled Sansone back into its orbit yet again. She projected the line all summer, working sections multiple times to get to know their ins and outs. What would happen if she took a more direct, steeper path here, or a more gradual descent there?

鈥淚 probably did Mount Massive five times,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淚 did it during the day, I did it at night. I did it tired, and then, I鈥檇 drive to Mount Elbert and do that. I wanted to know the route in and out, and I didn鈥檛 want to depend on anyone for the route-finding.鈥

In that time on the line, she fell even deeper in love with the brutal beauty of the glacier-sharpened peaks and felt more connected to their tender alluvial valleys. She could wax poetic about it, but she鈥檇 really rather just hike it.

Looking across a lake from the crest of the Nolan鈥檚 route. (Photo: Getty)

The Route

Sansone camped at the Mt. Shavano trailhead, eagerly awaiting to hear from one of her pacers, FKT holder Joey Campanelli. Sansone wasn鈥檛 sure how ready he鈥檇 be, or if he鈥檇 even make it. But if he did, he鈥檇 be doing most of the Nolan鈥檚 line off the couch.

The night before she would start the route, she received a text: 鈥淚 think I got you! I think a bunch of rest and caffeine, and I鈥檒l just have to suck it up!鈥. Campanelli was game.

Sansone hadn鈥檛 used pacers for her previous FKT鈥檚, relying on herself or Hamilton鈥檚 support and encouragement. For the first day of the FKT attempt, she felt great, easily beating her splits, before she crashed and burned on the summit of fourteener, Mount Columbia.

鈥淢y body just knows what to do,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淓ven when I鈥檓 feeling mentally destroyed, I can still move uphill pretty well.鈥

Night above tree line is frigid, and Sansone had neglected to pick up pants from her crew, running instead in shorts, which led to cramping and losing time on her splits.

鈥淚t was the hardest thing I鈥檝e done in my entire life,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淚 moaned. I cried. I wanted to give up.鈥 Hamilton, who was pacing her at the time, tried to cheer her up by singing songs. (When pressed for details, Hamilton said he鈥檇 rather not say. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too embarrassing.鈥)

(A view of the clouds from atop the peaks. Photo: Courtesy Andrea Sansone)

Sansone said the attempt became a death march right around Mt. Huron. For the first time, she felt sad, scared, and alone on the line.

鈥淚n those hardest moments, you can鈥檛 let your mind get the best of you,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淚 wanted this really bad, so I stayed in it and just took it peak by peak.鈥

The exhaustion inevitably led to a bit of frustration between Hamilton and Sansone.

鈥淣o one deserves that from me,鈥 Sansone wrote in her trip report. 鈥淓specially not Andrew. How can he be out there, consistently telling me how amazing I am? I am humbled by the confidence and faith in my success that they [the crew] were willing to carry me through my lowest of lows, the tears, the cussing, and the doubts.鈥

Hamilton held her and let her cry for a moment on the trail under a fortuitous full moon that hovered over the Collegiate Peaks. Hamilton encouraged her to imagine the impact she鈥檇 have on herself, and the community, if she just kept going.

And so, she did. Through shivers and tears, Sansone kept hiking.

When she realized she could beat the 46-hour benchmark, Sansone really started to push, encouraged by Hamilton and her pacers.

鈥淭he last three miles felt like a sprint,鈥 says Hamilton. 鈥淚n reality, we鈥檙e probably talking 12 minute miles. But it felt like a full-on sprint.鈥

The lights of the Leadville Fish hatchery glowed through the dim forest. She鈥檇 made it.

The Record

Sansone collapsed in a puddle of cramping muscles and tears at the Fish Hatchery trailhead. She鈥檇 gone under the 48-hour mark, a sort of for this long, mountain effort.

鈥淚t just felt so good to be done,鈥 says Sansone. 鈥淭he best part was my crew, growing in these friendships, and sharing such an intense and intimate space.鈥

Sansone hugged Hamilton and shared a sweet moment of accomplishment with her crew just as the September sun tinged in rose gold over the Collegiate Peaks.

We talked just hours after the attempt, both Sansone and Hamilton were giggly on adrenaline and 5-Hour energy. Sansone鈥檚 laughter kept turning into coughs as her lungs excised the dust she鈥檇 been breathing in for days as she hiked over the peaks.

You get the sense that these adventurers could finish each other’s sentences, but they don鈥檛: because beyond the intimate connection they share with the mountains, is a deep admiration and respect for each other. Even after 45+ hours together, they were hanging onto each others every word.