(Keep Bigfoot healthy when you run one of the Destination Trail Bigfoot Elusive races.)
The BIGFOOT races were scheduled for mid-August, but had to be cancelled due to the pandemic. So Destination Trail, the sponsor, is offering a virtual Bigfoot race. Instead of calling it the BIGFOOT Virtual race, this year it is the BIGFOOT Elusive Race.
In previous years over 200 runners, their support crews and pacers, the Destination Trail staff, medical personnel, dozens of volunteers, and several family members meet up in the forest in Washington State between Mt. Rainier, Mt. St. Helens, and Mt. Adams. The runners are supported with aid, food, and sleep stations throughout the 200+ mile course.
There is a tense and excited atmosphere at dawn on the morning the race begins, with a volunteer dressed as a shaggy “Bigfoot” cheering the runners as they cross the Start Line. The runners have 100 hours to complete the race. The first three finishers for men and women get artistically handmade plaques, and everyone who finishes the race gets a belt buckle.
Due to COVID-19, Bigfoot is wearing her/ his face mask this year. When Dan and I noticed the face mask on Bigfoot, we both burst out laughing. Here is a picture of the belt buckles:
We are going to finish the BIGFOOT Elusive 200 and earn our belt buckle! We expect that they will be a collectors item since this year the race will be virtual and will be the only time the belt buckles will include the word “Elusive”. Actually the truth is—we wanted a Bigfoot belt buckle anyway.
Our goal is not to “win” the race. We just want to finish We think it would be very cool to win the prize for the slowest time (there really is a prize for last place finisher). After all, we are the only entrants who are in their 70’s! And our bodies don’t hold up well if we hike over five miles a day without some rest days.
For this reason we do a variety of activities. We not only walk/hike but also cycle, swim play ping pong, and do ballroom dancing. We are very fortunate because we both enjoy so many different activities, and it’s even more fun because we get to do them together.
My daughter, Candice, is the owner and Race Director for Destination Trail. She scoped out each area and created and designed every race that Destination Trail offers. Dan and I volunteered at the inaugural Tahoe 200 and at the inaugural Moab 240 races, but we have never attended a Bigfoot race.
Although we haven’t been to a Bigfoot race, these forests and mountains in central Washington have a very special meaning to us. In 2014 we took our grandsons, Ian and Adam, camping and hiking through most all of the Bigfoot race course!
Because of this camping experience with Adam and Ian, as we “run” the BIGFOOT Elusive 206.5 in our community and remote desert camping locations in Arizona, we will be able to see all the forests and mountains on the actual Bigfoot trail in our memories. And those memories will include Ian and Adam playing and hiking with us. Ian who was then only 10 years old and Adam who was seven. Now they are young men, but we will get to "see" them as boys again.
Here we are with Adam and Ian with Mt. Rainier in the background in 2014.
The following pictures are of the forests and mountains of the Bigfoot race.
Mt. St. Helens erupted on May 18, 1980. Due to the ash explosions and pyroclastic flows it was the deadliest and most economically destructive event in US history.
Mt. St. Helens and Spirit Lake:
Spirit Lake was completely displaced by the avalanche and heated to body temperature when Mt. St. Helens erupted. The blast-felled trees were swept into Spirit Lake as water displaced by the landslide receded.
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