{"id":2641923,"date":"2023-08-08T08:12:24","date_gmt":"2023-08-08T14:12:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/?p=2641923"},"modified":"2023-08-08T08:22:09","modified_gmt":"2023-08-08T14:22:09","slug":"will-peterson-vermont-long-trail-fkt-speed-record","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/outdoor-adventure\/hiking-and-backpacking\/will-peterson-vermont-long-trail-fkt-speed-record\/","title":{"rendered":"This Medical School Student Just Set a Speed Record on Vermont\u2019s Long Trail"},"content":{"rendered":"
Will Peterson was just 26 miles from the southern terminus of Vermont\u2019s 272-mile Long Trail<\/a> when the heavens opened up. It was July 27, and Peterson, a 24-year-old medical student from Maine, was attempting to break the fastest known time for an unsupported thru-hike on the route<\/a>. He had already trekked for more than three days, and now, he would have to complete the final leg in a downpour.<\/p>\n The rain quickly transformed the rocky trail into a muddy ankle-deep creek. But Peterson says the moisture was actually a godsend. His joints were sore and swollen from 245 miles of roots and rocks. With each step into soft mud, Peterson felt like he was stepping on pillows.<\/p>\n \u201cIt felt super, like being in a shower,\u201d Peterson says. \u201cMy feet got destroyed and blistered and all that stuff, but I was able to run hard the last 26 miles just because it felt so good.\u201d<\/p>\n Running the final leg helped Peterson complete the trek in four days, 11 hours, and 34 minutes, shattering the previous record<\/a> set by Jeff Garmire<\/a> in 2019 (5 days, 23 hours, 48 minutes) by more than a day and a half.<\/p>\n Peterson faced several obstacles during his trek. Less than two weeks before he departed, parts of Vermont<\/a> were pummeled by devastating storms and flooding<\/a>. Multiple portions of the Long Trail suffered damage, and the Green Mountain Club, which maintains and protects the trail, closed several sections to hikers. But the club created official reroutes for the damaged areas, and the deviations added 1.2 extra miles of total extra length. Before he departed, Peterson wrote on Instagram that if he were to break the record, he would happily adjust his time to accommodate the reroute. Using GPS calculations, Peterson estimates he lost about 17 minutes due to the extra distance.<\/p>\n Another challenge Peterson overcame was his own limited bandwidth. As a first-year medical student at The Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Peterson had to balance his training with long days of school and plenty of studying. Through the winter and spring, he averaged 8 to 12 hours per-week of cycling, ski touring, trail running, and even stair-stepping. He squeezed the workouts in between classes.<\/p>\n \u201cI\u2019ve always found that if you’re willing to budget your time right and be committed to multiple things at once, then it seems to work itself out,\u201d Peterson says.<\/p>\n Once the school year ended this spring, Peterson increased his training load for the Long Trail attempt. In June, he thru-hiked the Long Trail over 12 days to scout the terrain. After completing this arduous period,\u00a0Peterson rested and waited for a window of good weather. The sunshine appeared in late July.<\/p>\n