{"id":2659086,"date":"2024-03-17T05:00:10","date_gmt":"2024-03-17T11:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/?p=2659086"},"modified":"2024-03-17T14:43:13","modified_gmt":"2024-03-17T20:43:13","slug":"the-ultra-trail-cape-town-100k-is-not-for-the-faint-of-heart","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.outsideonline.com\/culture\/love-humor\/the-ultra-trail-cape-town-100k-is-not-for-the-faint-of-heart\/","title":{"rendered":"The Ultra-Trail Cape Town 100K Is Not for the Faint of Heart"},"content":{"rendered":"
For a half-second, I thought the naked man crutching toward me on the trail was a hallucination. But the 44 kilometer mark was way too early in the race for me to have been hallucinating. As I moved to the right side of the double track to give him some room, I noticed a crucifix hanging from a silver chain around his neck, so, correction: not completely naked.<\/p>\n
I kept running, out of the woods and back onto the sand of the beach, following the race flags. A dozen or so beachgoers were spread out across the football field-length of sand, mostly in groups of two, no one covering themselves with much fabric, if any at all, and none of them paying attention to a sweaty man in a running vest shuffling across the sand with a pair of trekking poles.<\/p>\n
Here is an illustration of several eggplants at an ocean beach.<\/p>\n(All images: Brendan Leonard)<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n
The nude beach, while notable, was not the biggest surprise of the Ultra-Trail Cape Town 100K. The biggest surprise, by sheer volume, was how much I underestimated the race course.<\/p>\n
Mike and I had been drinking coffee at a bakery on October 5th, 2023 when I asked him, \u201cWhat do you have going on the rest of the year?\u201d and he said he was considering a race in South Africa around Thanksgiving, but was probably not going to go. But maybe if I wanted to go he would go, but probably not. I said I would ask Hilary what she thought, and when I did, she all but told me I had to go. So 36 days before the race, I signed up for the 100K, which promised over 16,300 feet of elevation gain in just over 62 miles of technical trails on and around Table Mountain, which sounds fun when you gloss over the numbers and adjectives.<\/p>\n<\/figure>\n
We flew from Montana to Cape Town, a 30-hour travel day, and Mike woke up with a cold the next morning. I still had four nights of sleep before my race, plenty of time to adjust to jet lag but also plenty of time to catch a cold from your friend sleeping in the adjacent hotel bed. Mike ran the 55K the day before my 100K race and was in bad shape the entire race. I somehow managed to not catch his cold, but slept poorly three nights in a row and finally took a Unisom the night before the 100K and logged almost nine consecutive hours of sleep only interrupted by the power going out and coming back on, which happens every night during load shedding<\/a>, which has been adopted by the South African government due to an ongoing energy crisis.<\/p>\n