Dawn - Sometimes An Ultrarunner

Dawn - Sometimes An Ultrarunner

February 23, 2011

Mad, Bad, and Dangerous to Know

It was quite a coincidence to have a friend loan me the above-titled autobiography of Ranulph Fiennes, just before I was heading out on the night recce of the High Peak Marathon.  Mr. Fiennes has been quite a fixture in the HPM, (a night-time navigational challenge through the bogs and moors of the Peak District), although that seems to be the least of his accomplishments!

Ran, as his friends call him, was the first to journey around the world via the polar axis (through Antarctica and the Artic ice-caps).  He later was the first to cross Antarctica on foot, by pulling a sled behind him weighing up to 500 pounds.  He has also summitted Mt. Everest, climbed the north face of the Eiger, completed 7 marathons in 7 days on 7 continents, and participated in a few extreme adventure races. 

I quite enjoyed the book, I found his writing to be conversational, witty, and easy-to-read.   I also seem to be (quite unintentionally at first) educating myself in the history and lore of British sport, at least where long-distance running is somehow involved. 

At times I think of myself as an extreme athlete...or at least my more moderate friends and coworkers do!  However, after reading this book, I can safely say that there is a lot of extreme-ness left in the world that I have no desire to emulate.  For example, I don't want to pull a heavy sled over ice crevaces in antarctica, or get frostbite from falling into melting ice-slush in the Arctic.   I don't think the 10% chance of dying after summitting Mt. Everest sounds like very good survival odds, nor do I want to bivy in a flimsy tent in -50 F temps while wearing the same clothes for 1/3 of a year in a row.  But that's just me.  It is quite entertaining to read about, though, from the safety and warmth of my living room couch!

3 comments:

  1. Hmm... there certainly are levels of extreme-ness! I think that compared to the 'average person on the street' anything over and above a marathon run seems unfathomable..... then you come across people like Fiennes, Karnazes, Jurek et al and what we do seems so tame!!

    However, I am always proud that I manage to run the distances and hold down a full time job! Many of the most extreme athletes are full-time adventurers.... which would be fab..... but unlikely for me!!!

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  2. I was recently given 'Mad Dogs and Englishmen' by Ranulph Fiennes which is also truly excellent. However .. I think I would rather travel with him over the snow than over time (it's about his family history over the centuries). Of course I mean in a book - not for real.

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  3. It's all about pushing our own limits, in the end. Mr. Fiennes just has a higher limit than most of us! I'm sure all of his books would be good, although a family history would pretty low on my list. And it's much safer to travel with him via a book...his journeys in real life are pretty scary!

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