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Wednesday, February 18, 2009

TABLE OF CONTENTS


The coveted Badwater Buckle!!!

Please donate to my ultra running bag 'o' donations :0)


Some media/news reports about my passion & addiction for endurance running: (click links below)







*Badwater Ultramarathon Video*

Enjoy the tons of cool pictures and stories below:

(Just click on the English or Portuguese links to view)

Pony Express 100 (Part I) March 2007 English Portuguese
Antelope Island 50 Mile Buffalo Run 2007 English Portuguese
Squaw Peak 50 Mile Trail Challenge 2007 English Portuguese
Running With The Devil 50 Miler 2007 English Portuguese
Respect The Desert, Badwater Training English Portuguese
Badwater Meets Brazilian Athletes 2007 English Portuguese
Timp Run & Katcina Mosa 100K 2007 English Portuguese
Mid Mountain Marathon Trail Run 2007 English Portuguese
HooDoo 500 Mile Ultra Cycling Race 2007 English
12 hr Training Run & The Bear 100 2007 English Portuguese
Pony Express (Part II) Oct. 26-27 2007 English Portuguese
BRAZIL-135 Ultra Marathon Jan 2008 English Portuguese
Antelope Island 50 Miler & Moab 24 Hours (Back to back) Mar 2008 English Portuguese
24 Hours of Curitiba, Brazil May 2008 English Portuguese
Running With The Devil June 2008 English


135 MILE BADWATER ULTRA MARATHON 2008 - see the full documentary by my friend and support crew member, Rob Schopke @ www.TriRacer.com

Katcina Mosa 100km and The Bear 100 Miler- Aug & Sep 2008 English Portuguese

Brazil 135 & Arrowhead 135 in only 8 days!!! Jan/Feb 2009 English Portuguese

**Running the Caminho da Fe Expedition 340 miles in Brazil** Story by Gerard Martinez based on his interview with me...click here to read

Here's a tribute video to all those who ran in the BR135 2009 Ultra Marathon!!!


Me and my niece Kindra who has Sturge-Weber's Syndrome
2010 Brazil 135 video


2010 Brazil 135 Mile Ultra Video from Tony Portera on Vimeo.
In the news...
Runner's World Brasil - May 2009 edition Article about long distance running/endurance races inducing mental breakdowns and hallucinations! Sorry it's in Portuguese....but the point of the story (and there were 4 other stories in the same article too) is that very long distance running and adventure/endurance racing induces mental breakdowns! hahahahaha


I had spent the 2nd night of the Brazil 135 mile Ultramarathon in January of 2008 looking for hidden treasures while running....at one point I didn't even remember I was in an ultramarathon at all. I believe that it was brought on by the fact that on the plane from the U.S. to Brazil a week prior to the race I was reading Paulo Coelho's book "The Pilgrimage" where he tells of his journey pilgrimage on the Road To San Tiago of Compostela where along the way he is taught some magical (or rather spiritual lessons about life) and is tasked with searching for a sword...I never found my sword (I don't think, or did I?), but I finished the race in 45 hours 43 minutes, finishing 7th overall out of a field of 41 international athletes, and am a better person for it... I learned so much about myself on that solo run that I would never take the experience back no matter how painful and exhausting it was at the time!


Other's in the article tell about seeing elephants and a field of heads and smiling faces and hearing fairies speaking an unfamiliar language....etc and many other stories...lol

BR135 & Arrowhead 135 em apenas 8 dias!

(Um relato rapido da minha condicao da BR135 e Arrowhead 135 ultramaratonas que corri em 8 dias)

Acabei de voltar aos EUA do Brazil no final de Janeiro logo depois de correr a BR135 (em 56 horas conservativas) e ai tinha apenas 8 dias para voltar para correr a Arrowhead 135 no gelo em Minnesota com o Joao Sacks (de Curitiba) e com o Marcio Villar (Rio). Agora ja to de volta em Utah, finalmente! Foram as duas semanas mais dificeis da minha vida.

Aqui ta um video em homenagem a todos os atletas da BR135 2009!!!

A prova comecou na segunda-feira dia 2 de Fev e terminou dia 4 a noite. Eu, infelizmente tive que tomar a decisao dificil de parar e abandonar a prova depois de ter corrido 150km (triste mas eh a verdade). E o pior era o fato de que eu estava liderando a prova depois de 120km ate os 150km por mais de duas horas na frente do segundo e terceiro colocados, mas eu tava realmente com medo de me colocar em risco de vida.

Essa prova eh MUITO perigosa pois eh uma prova de sobrevivencia, nao de corrida, e com muito pouco apoio. Voce tem que ser auto-suficiente e tem apenas dois pontos de apoio durante os primeiros 120km...os ultimos 100km nao tem nada de apoio. Temperaturas chegaram a fazer -25C abaixo de zero durante a primeira noite e eu sofri muito pra nao congelar e poder ver a luz do dia novamente....a segunda noite chegou a fazer quase -40C graus abaixo!!!

E eu sabia que seria muito mais dificil e menos seguro se continuasse sozinho por uma segunda noite sem apoio e sem dormir. Entao foi ai que parei, apesar de estar liderando a prova, depois de 150km antes do por do sol do segundo dia. Chorei muito enquanto esperava resgate de snowmobile.

Passaram se duas horas quando vi finalmente o segundo e terceiro atletas me alcancando e dei meus "parabens" e falei que eu tava fora e que nao ia mais continuar na prova. Comecei a me congelar demais e nao tinha como ficar esperando mais, eu tinha que levantar e comecar a correr mais. Mas eu nao queria ir pra frente e ficar cada vez mais longe da rodovia que tinha passado, entao decidi voltar 5 a 6km procurar ajuda e carona e poder me esquentar novamente.

O Joao abandonou a prova depois de quase 30km e o Marcio, depois de um milagre, se ressucitou de um estado de hipotermia na primeira noite e continuou durante o segundo dia e noite para completar os 217km em 58 horas!!! (Parabens meu amigo). O Marcio tinha tentado correr essa prova em 2008 mas teve que abandonar no primeiro ponto de apoio (+ou- 70km) porque quase perdeu os pes devido ao frio e gelo que formou nos tenis dele (frostbite).

Muita gente abandonou a prova este ano, incluindo o recordista da prova que parou depois de 80km e ate o proprio diretor da prova, que corre todo ano, tbm teve que parar no segundo ponto de apoio (120km)!!!

O desafio todo foi filmado e documentado por tres grandes amigos da Rede Globo (Esporte Espectacular) e foi transmitida ao ar no dia 22 de Fevereiro :

Reportagem da Arrowhead que passou na Globo:
http://video.globo.com/Videos/Player/Esportes/0,,GIM970678-7824-ULTRAMARATONA+DESAFIO+PARA+POUCOS+NO+GELO,00.html

Algumas pessoas que tavam acompanhando a prova pelo site viu que mencionaram algo a respeito do meu pe. Eu tinha um pouco de dor no meu tornozelo direito da BR135 na semana anterior, mas nao era a razao que tive que abandonar a prova. Na verdade, eu tomei a decisao de parar porque pela primeira vez na minha vida, numa prova dessa, eu tava com medo de colocar minha vida em risco uma segunda noite sozinho e sem apoio da organizacao naquelas condicoes. Puxando um treno de 15kg de equipamentos, comida, agua e roupas na neve fofa (pois nevou quase 15cm na noite antes da prova) e depois de correr 217km em montanhas de Minas Gerais me provou que foi algo mais do que eu era capaz.

Eu nao tinha nocao dessa prova antes e nao tava mentalmente preparado pra aquilo. Entao corri com a cabeca e parei quando percebi que nao ia me fazer bem continuar.

Dos 59 que largaram, apenas 24 terminaram a prova em menos de 60 horas e 1 foi desqualificado.

26 de bike largaram, so 15 completaram.
27 a pe largaram, so 8 completaram.
6 de skis largaram, so um completou.

Aqui vai algumas fotos desses dois grandes desafios:



(Eu mostrando o ponto mais alto da prova, Pico do Gaviao)
(Na largada logo antes da prova comecar. Eu to abaixado de camiseta vermelha e chapeu.)




(La vamos noisssss....)



(ainda o primeiro dia....)
(Dia dois.....)



(Dia tres....A linha de chegada depois de 56 horas. Paraisopolis, MG, Brasil.)


Que emocao!!! Nao se pode pagar nem um milhao de dolares pra ganhar o que aquilo que voce recebe depois de completar uma prova dessa.....priceless! (sem preco)

(David Walker, de New Zealand, tbm um Finisher da BR135 2009. David teve a ajuda da minha esposa Sandra na equipe de apoio dele para ser interprete de Portugues/Ingles pra ele e sua familia que tava junto com ele o caminho inteiro. Lauren...you're dad's AWESOME!!! What a tough man.)
Agora so 8 dias pra recuperar e voltar aos EUA e chegar em Minnesota para correr a Arrowhead 135 Winter Ultra no gelo.

(Gil da RedeGlobo, Marcio Villar, eu...chegando em International Falls, Minnesota. O Marcio ja tava la fazia 2 semanas treinando e se adaptando ao frio.)

(Marcio Villar, Eu, Joao Sacks Prestes)

(Edson reporter da RedeGlobo, Tuninho produtor da RedeGlobo, Marcio Villar corredor, Gil da RedeGlobo, Joao Sacks corredor, Eu corredor, Gary Thurston...pai #1)

(Eu, Marcio, e Joao fazendo um treino rapido pra testar nossas roupas e trenos)

(Largada da trilha Arrowhead, 7:35am e ja tava -20 graus. Durante aquela primeira noite chegou a fazer -30 abaixo)


(Primeiro checkpoint....mais ou menos km 70. Aqui eu tava saindo do checkpoint em direcao ao segundo checkpoint no lago do Elefante aproximadamente km 115). Mais tarde durante o segundo dia, antes do por-do-sol, com mais ou menos 150km eu tomei a decisao de parar. Ano que vem eu voltarei...mas dessa vez nao creio que vou correr 217km na semana antes....rsrsrs.

Brazil 135 & Arrowhead 135 in 8 days!!!

I just got back from Brazil after finishing the grueling 135 mile ultra marathon there, and a week later ran 90 miles of the 135 mile winter ultra marathon in Minnesota called the Arrowhead 135.
Here's my experience I had with the two long distance races back to back.

(a quick update on my condition from the BR135 & Arrowhead Winter 135 mile Ultra Marathons) later

I just got back from Brazil the end of January after running the BR135 again (in a conservative 56 hours) and then had only 8 days to get back to run the Arrowhead 135 in Minnesota. The race started Monday Feb 2nd and finished Wednesday night the 4th. I'm back in Utah now after the longest and toughest week in my life!

Here's a tribute video to all the runners of the BR135 2009 race!!!


I unfortunately had to make the decision to drop out at mile 90 (sad but true). The hardest thing was the fact that I was leading the race from about mile 75 to mile 90 and by over two hours from the 2nd and 3rd runners, but I was seriously too affraid for my life and safety. This race is VERY VERY dangerous as it's a race with very little support, you must be self-supported and there's only two check points/aid stations both in the first half of the race...the second half, about the last 60 miles there's no support and temps reached -15F degree the first night and I struggled to get through it....the second night reached -34F (ouch) and I knew I would have a difficult (and unsafe) time if I continued on alone for the second night w/o sleep and having no more aid stations to stop in. So I stopped, despite being in the lead, at mile 90, just before the sun went down on the second day.

There were two of my brazilian friends who came to run it too. One dropped out after 18 miles the other miraculously recovered from hypothermia the first night and continued on to finish second to last in 58 hours!!! He had tried running this race the year before and almost lost his feet to frostbite but came back to try again and DID IT! (Way to go Marcio Villar)


The course record holder who has run this race several times also dropped out, at mile 52 during the first night into the race. Even the Race Director, who runs it every year abandoned the race at the second aid station!!!

The whole event was filmed and recored by a Brazilian TV News crew (Globo TV) and aired on February 22nd nationwide on Brazil's Esporte Espectacular tv program: (But in Portuguese, sorry)

Check out the Brazil Sports TV report about the Arrowhead Ultra here:Reportagem da Arrowhead:

http://video.globo.com/Videos/Player/Esportes/0,,GIM970678-7824-ULTRAMARATONA+DESAFIO+PARA+POUCOS+NO+GELO,00.html

Some of you may have been following along the Race site blog and they mentioned my foot. I did have some pain in my right ankle from the BR135 the prior week but that was not why I dropped out. The main reason was that for the first time in an ultra marathon I was affraid for my life had I continued on a second night w/o support and sleep in those conditions. Pulling a 30lb sled of equipment, clothing, food and water in the snow after 135 miles in the Brazilian mountains just a week before was proving too much, to say the least!

I underestimated this race and was NOT mentally prepared to be fully self-sufficient out there 2 days and two nights. So I played it safe and threw in the towel. I'm sure running the BR135 one week prior didn't help my chances either, as I was very much still recovering from that extreme challenge too.

Of 59 starters, 24 finished the Arrowhead in under 60 hours and 1 was disqualified.
26 bikers started, only 15 finished.
27 on foot, only 8 finished.
6 skiers, only 1 finished.


Here's some pictures of my two back-to-back Ultras:



(Me pointing out the highest climb of the course, Pico do Gaviao)
(At the starting line right before the race. I'm in the red shirt and sailor hat.)




(And we're off....)



(Day one still....)
(Day two.....)



(Day 3....The finishline after 56 hours. Paraisopolis, MG, Brazil.)


What a great feeling!!! You can't pay a million dollars to gain what you get from finishing such a race...priceless!

(David Walker, from New Zealand, also a BR135 2009 Finisher. David had the help of my wife Sandra on his support crew to translate Portuguese/English for him and his family who were with him the whole way. Lauren...you're dad's AWESOME!!! What a tough man.)
Now only 8 days to rest up and get back to the U.S. to Minnesota for the Arrowhead 135 Winter Ultra.

(Gil from GloboTV, Marcio Villar, me...just arriving in International Falls, Minnesota. Marcio had been there for almost 2 weeks alone to train in the cold.)

(Marcio Villar, Me, Joao Sacks Prestes)

(Edson GloboTV Reporter, Tuninho GloboTV Producer, Marcio Villar runner, Gil Camera man, Joao Sacks runner, Me runner, Gary Thurston...#1 dad and athlete supporter hahaha)

(Me, Marcio, and Joao going on a quick training run to test out our clothing and sleds)

(Beginning of the Arrowhead Trail, 7:35am and it's -5F. Later that night it dropped to -15F)


(First checkpoint....about 38 miles. Here I was just heading out on the trail again to run all night by myself to Elephant Lake approx mile 75). Later the second day, before sundown at mile 90 or so I made the decision to scratch from the race. Next year I'll be back, but this time I don't think I'll be running the BR135 a week before hand...hahahaha.