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USA extreme sports tour

June 24th, 2007 by Bobbie Grennier

Aussies set for US extreme sports tour
By Peter Mitchell

 
BMX star Ryan Guettler will lead a record contingent of 14 Australians when the world’s richest extreme sports tour begins in the US on Friday.

Up for grabs is $US3.5 million in prizemoney.

The 2007 five-city Dew Tour begins with the Panasonic Open in Baltimore and features the world’s best BMX, motocross and skateboard athletes.

Queensland’s Guettler is one of the favourites to claim the BMX Dirt and BMX Park titles, with Melbourne’s Steve McCann and America’s Scotty Cranmer among his greatest threats.

Another Queenslander, Chad Bartie, is Australia’s hope in the skateboard competition and will have his hands full against the American trio of Bucky Lasek, Ryan Sheckler and Jereme Rogers.

Blake Williams, from Baxter in Victoria, and Robbie Maddison, from Kiama in NSW, are Australia’s entrants in the freestyle motocross events.

The Dew Tour will also stop in Cleveland, Portland, Salt Lake City and Orlando over the next five months.

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Mud Runs

April 15th, 2007 by Bobbie Grennier

What happens when you combine a sports running event with a little bit of military boot camp? You get yourself a mud run!

by Bobbie Grennier 

Like extreme sports? Looking for a new sports event in your community? Why not organize one?

What happens when you combine a sports running event with a little bit of military boot camp? You get yourself a mud run!

Mud runs are to running events what off-road biking is to cycling. Mud runs are the new craze for thrill seeking runners looking for that extra challenge.

In mud runs, athletes push themselves to not only meet the endurance needed to run the distance, but they must be able to conquer hurdles, walls, man-made swamps that require the participants to get down their bellies and crawl through obstacles.

A visual crowd pleaser, all participants are guaranteed they’re going to get really dirty.

Mud runs can get a little dangerous too, with all the slip and slide action. So, if you’re going to host this type of event make sure your insurance premiums are paid up and that your participants sign a waiver.

Most mud runs include running on back-woods trails, running up and down hills, getting through water obstacles, perhaps crawling through a tunnel or two, having to scale at least one tall wall, a good size mud pit and an official t-shirt to mark the day.

Many mud runs will allow you participate as an individual or as a team. If you choose to go it as a team, you’ll be required to make sure every member of your team cross the finish line together. It’s a great event for doing a team building experience.

This event is perfect for athletes who want to break the traditional molds and try a little taste of extreme sports. Nothing says extreme like a giant mud pit filled with barriers that have to be conquered.

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Ultramarathoners complete 7,000-km desert trek for charity

February 26th, 2007 by Bobbie Grennier

Journey by Quebec, American and Taiwanese runners captured in documentary

Last Updated: Wednesday, February 21, 2007 | 2:48 PM ET

Finishing a marathon through a searing desert would be a supreme achievement for most runners, but for Ray Zahab, it meant he had only completed half his daily jog.

For 110 days, 38-year-old Zahab and two companions ran about two marathons (about 42.2 kilometres each) a day over more than 7,000 km of North Africa’s broiling Sahara Desert, in a journey for charity that’s been captured on film for a documentary.

Zahab, of Chelsea, Que., about 24 kilometres north of Ottawa, 44-year-old Charlie Engle of Greensboro, N.C., and 30-year-old Kevin Lin of Taiwan finally dipped their hands in the water of the Red Sea 200 km east of Cairo on Tuesday.

In an interview with CBC Newsworld on Wednesday morning, Zahab said his body had mixed feelings about his achievement.

“I’m sore everywhere. I’m achy, I’ve got blisters and I do have a lot of tendinitis in my ankle,” he said. “Other than that, I feel great. I’m really excited and stoked to be finished, and so I think that that takes away lots of the pain.”

One of the journey’s aims was to help establish clean water wells for desert villagers who the runners met along the way, through the charity the H2O Africa Foundation. 

The non-profit organization was launched along with plans for a documentary film called Running the Sahara, directed by James Moll, and produced and narrated by Matt Damon. The project was sponsored by Magellan and National Geographic 

Runs started at 4 a.m.

The ultramarathon runners began their journey by touching the Atlantic Ocean’s eastern edge in St. Louis, Senegal, on Nov. 2.

‘You just keep setting new parameters and bars in your head, and you just go for it.’— Ultramarathon runner Ray Zahab

Under the watchful lenses of the film crew, pushed through Mauritania, Mali and Libya, completing more than 100 km on some days despite desert temperatures that sometimes peaked at 38 degrees and plunged below freezing at night.

“We had heat, we had sandstorms — wicked sandstorms,” Zahab recalled. “You adapt, I guess.”

He said the trio began each day in the dark at 4 a.m., ran until noon, ate lunch, had a nap, then continued their journey until after nightfall, when they ate dinner and slept.

Sometimes, he said, he desperately missed his friends and family. At other times, he was elated by landscapes they passed, which included both natural ones rarely seen by humans and man-made wonders such as the famous Giza pyramids of Egypt.

In the last three days of the journey, Zahab said he and his companions so badly wanted to reach the end that they covered 300 km on just two hours of sleep.

“You just keep setting new parameters and bars in your head,” he said, “and you just go for it.”

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/ottawa/story/2007/02/21/ultramarathon.html#skip300×250

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3 Endure 4,000-Mile Run Across Sahara

February 21st, 2007 by Bobbie Grennier

3 Athletes Endure Sand and Heat to Make 4,000-Mile Run Across Sahara Desert in 111 Days 

By ANNA JOHNSON IN THE WESTERN DESERT, Egypt Feb 20, 2007 (AP)— Three ultra-endurance athletes have just done something most would consider insane: They ran the equivalent of two marathons a day for 111 days to become the first modern runners to cross the Sahara Desert’s grueling 4,000 miles.

“It will take time to sink in … but this is an absolutely once in a life time thing. They say ignorance is bliss, and now that I know how hard this is, I would never consider crossing the Sahara on foot again,” said American runner Charlie Engle, 44, hours after he and the others completed the run at Egypt’s Red Sea.

Engle said he, Canadian Ray Zahab, 38, and Kevin Lin, 30, of Taiwan, ran the final stretch of their journey that took them through the Giza pyramids and Cairo to the mouth of Suez Canal on four hours of sleep. Once they hit the Red Sea, they put their hands in the water to signify crossing the finish line.

“We touched the water in Senegal at the beginning, and we touched the water in the Red Sea at the end. They were the bookends of our journey,” Engle, of Greensboro, North Carolina, said on the telephone from a hotel room in Cairo.

In less than four months, they have run across the world’s largest desert, through six countries Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Niger, Libya and finally Egypt.

A film crew followed them, chronicling the desert journey for actor Matt Damon’s production company, LivePlanet. Damon plans to narrate the “Running the Sahara” documentary.

The trek is one of extremes. The relentless sun can push temperatures above 100 degrees Fahrenheit during the day, but at night it sometimes dips below freezing. Strong winds can abruptly send sand swooping in every direction, making it difficult to see and breathe.

Running through turbulent conditions is nothing new for these athletes who have traveled the world competing in adventure races. But they say nothing has tested their physical and mental limitations like the Sahara.

Throughout the run, the runners have been stricken with tendinitis, severe diarrhea, cramping and knee injuries all while running through the intense heat and wind often without a paved road in sight.

“This has been a life changing event,” Engle said.

The runners say they undertook the challenge to see if they could accomplish something that many have called impossible. They use GPS devices to track their route and teamed up with local experts and a host of sports professionals who also followed them, along with the documentary crew, in four-wheel drive vehicles.

Typically, the three began each day with a 4 a.m. wake-up call. About an hour later, they started running. Around noon, they took a lunch break at a makeshift camp, devouring pasta, tuna and vegetables. A short nap on thin mattresses in a yellow-domed tent usually followed before they headed out on the second leg of their day’s run.

Finally, around 9:30 p.m., they called it quits each day, returning to camp for a protein and carbohydrate-packed dinner before passing out for the night.

Despite the preparation and drive to finish, the runners said they often questioned mostly to themselves what they were doing. Zahab described stopping one recent day for a bathroom break only to discover the wind was blowing so harshly that he couldn’t keep the sand out of his clothes. “And I thought to myself, ‘What the hell am I doing?’” he said.

But Zahab kept going, as did the other two, never skipping a day. Most days the three ran a total of 44 to 50 miles sometimes a little more, sometimes a little less.

They were interviewed by The Associated Press on Saturday day 108 on the side of a road about 112 miles from Cairo in Egypt’s harsh Western Desert, part of the greater Sahara.

At several points in their trek, the athletes stopped near sparsely populated wells to talk with villagers and nomads about the difficulties they face finding water. That marked another goal of the run raising awareness for the clean water nonprofit group H2O Africa.

“We have seen firsthand the need for clean water, which we take for granted in North America. It’s such a foundation for any community,” Zahab said during day 108’s lunch break. The three plan to fund-raise for the group after they return home and finish recuperating.

“It started off as a huge motivator, especially as we passed through countries where the water wasn’t clean,” Engle said.

But as the trio’s bodies became more depleted, the focus was “the day-to-day battle to stay alive and keep moving,” he said.

http://abcnews.go.com/Sports/wireStory?id=2890913&page=3

 

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Extreme Sports In High Altitudes

February 9th, 2007 by Bobbie Grennier

Adjusting to the higher altitudes is different for everyone. The best way to find out how your body will react is to give yourself a personal experience.If you don’t have the personal experience in higher altitudes, then you should take extra precautions. If you do not encounter any problems then you can try a shorter, more intense adjustment process and see how you handle it. Make sure you have others with you who are experienced in your extreme sport … the one time you don’t want to go to extremes, is by yourself.

Here’s are the basic rules on adjusting to higher altitudes:

- Always start at lower altitudes walking steadily and slowly from lower altitudes to higher altitudes. Plan on the adjustment process taking a few days.

- Plan on working on your adjustment process for sleeping in altitude. While practicing and acclimating, keep your campsites within 1500 feet (500 meters) of each other when camping for the night, but during the day you can rest at higher altitudes.

- If you drive or fly directly to altitudes higher than 10,000 feet (3000 meters), give yourself 24 hours to rest before you start your adjustment process. Also, drink plenty of water everyday.

Here are some important facts to remember in dealing with higher altitudes:

- The effects of higher altitudes can be felt as low as 6000 feet (2000 meters) above sea level, and for some people that number can be even lower.

- Everyone’s body reacts differently in higher altitude conditions to the changes in air pressure and oxygen level.

- There is no definite relationship between your body’s overall physical fitness and your tolerance to high altitudes. As an extreme sports athlete, if you to push harder and over exert your body, you’re more likely to experience AMS (Acute Mountain Sickness).

About the Author: Bobbie Grennier is a freelance writer and master herbalist. She teaches herbalism at http://www.Herbal-College.com. She publishes http://www.Sport-Extremes.com blog. Visit her web sites http://www.Natural-Healers.com and http://www.Master-Herbalist.com for more herbalist healer information.

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Running life like a marathon?

January 6th, 2007 by Bobbie Grennier

Your skin is the biggest organ in your body. If you’re taking your body on life’s marathon, then your body needs skin care in the extreme. 

Whether you’re running across the Sahara or across the block, skin protection is necessary to fight damage caused by the sun and the elements.

Mago Skin Care designs its products to help build, maintain and protect the skin’s Positive Hydration Balance and eliminate dry and damaged skin susceptible to environmental abuse and premature aging.

So, in the competative sport of life, Mago Skin Care System works to give your skin winning protection.

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Charlie Engle, Extreme Sports Athlete

November 12th, 2006 by Bobbie Grennier

Charlie Engle, Extreme Athlete As a television producer currently living in North Carolina Charlie Engle has completed in over 200 road races and triathlons, including 50 marathons and ultramarathons.    

He has also completed three Eco Challenges and three Raid Gauloises events, along with the Southern Traverse and Discovery Channel World Championships. He is the only person to have completed the Eco Challenge, the Raid Gauloises and the Hawaii Ironman in the same year.

Charlie came in first in the Gobi March (China, 2003) and second in the Atacama Crossing (Chile, 2004). He has also summited five mountains over 20,000 feet including Mt. McKinley in Alaska in 2002. Charlie is a certified white water guide and a PADI diver.

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Ray Zahab, Extreme Sports Athlete

November 11th, 2006 by Bobbie Grennier

Ray Zahab, Extreme Athlete Hailing from Chelsea, Quebec, Ray Zahab is an extreme athlete and competitor as well as a functional strength coach and busy motivational speaker.  

Prior to his days as an extreme athlete, Ray was a professional equestrian riding at both the national and world levels. Ray also competed in professional mountain biking.

Ray has competed in numerous extreme races winning 1st Place Yukon Arctic Ultra 2004, 1st Place Sahara Race, Egypt 2005, 1st Place Libyan Challenge 2006, 1st Place Gobi March Team 2006, 1st Place Jungle Marathon Team (with Charlie!), 3rd Place Trans 333, Niger 2004 and 8th place solo Jungle Marathon 2004.

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Kevin Lin, Extreme Sports Athlete

November 10th, 2006 by Bobbie Grennier

Kevin Lin, Extreme Athlete Widely regarded as the top runner in Taiwanese history, 30 year old Kevin Lin is currently studying for his Masters Degree in Sports Psychology at Cheng-Chung University, one of the top universities in Taiwan. Recently Kevin was awarded the SPIRIT AWARD, the highest honor possible for a Taiwanese civilian.        

In 96 years, only 50 SPIRIT AWARDS have been presented. Of those, only 7 have gone to athletes and Kevin is the only runner. This honor has literally made Kevin Lin a hero to the Taiwanese people.

In addition to holding many Taiwanese records, Kevin also placed 3rd in the 2006 The Last Desert 250k across Antarctica, 2nd in the 2005 Egyptian Sahara Race 250k, 1st in the 2004 The Atacama Desert Crossing Chile 250k, 2nd in the 2004 The Jungle Marathon-Amazon Jungle Brazil 200k and 2nd in the Gobi March-Northern China Gobi Desert.

Kevin was recently named as the 4 Deserts Champion for having the best overall placing in the 4 largest desert races in the world. His record is unmatched.

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November 10th, 2006 by Charlie Engle

Charlie's quote for the day:



"Today is the day the run became a job!"



I spoke with Charlie this morning. He is still doing well, although struggling a bit. He and his teammates are simply tired, hot, and lacking sleep.

They knew the first couple of weeks would be tough so they aren't complaining at all, but they have released how they are feeling.

Their bodies will basically be "torn down" over a period of time before they adjust.

If they can just make it through these next several days, their bodies will have become more accustomed, along with their minds, and it will be much easier. (easy? - I don't think so.)



They're still treking through Mauritania and will soon enter a United Nations developement plan; a millennium village. They will get to view a finsihed product of what the hopes of this run will help accomplish throughout Africa.



As they ran early this morning through a small village, a few children began to run with them. Before they knew it, at least 15o children were running with them as they passed through the village. "A sight to behold!"



I asked about their food intake. They've been drinking at least 15 liters of fluids a day and eating cooked meals of pasta, rice, or couscous with a "beef stew" type topping. It's been more than acceptable, although they look forward to some of the "comfort foods" they brought with them each day.

It will take some time for their bodies to adjust to their new eating habits as well. They will have to take in over 8,000 calories a day to keep their bodies functioning properly. ( and so they don't lose too much weight. It is possible they could lose as much as 30 pounds or more by the end of this run. (not the ideal diet plan for most of us - LOL)



Keep checking in for the latest. I'm doing the best I can with what I have here.



From Lisa Trexler at "Team Charlie" headquarters

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Greetings from Mauritania!!

November 10th, 2006 by Ray Zahab

Hey Gang!



We are here now in Mauritania after running through a small part of Senagal!



We have so far run over 500 kms with daily runs in the 70 km range. The running has definitely been tough, but rewarding. It is super hot- sometimes reaching the high 40's. We have been shooting for around 50 kms in the morning- and then another 20 to 25 after lunch.



We have seen many cool things already- such as