Sunday, February 26, 2017

On the eve of my 20-week training plan for the inaugural Alaskaman Extreme Triathlon, I can't help but think what I have experienced since living in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho. I live in an awesome, hugely active community. From early April to mid October, I could race every weekend and not travel more than an hour. Whether it is a 5K run, half or full marathon, cycling event, triathlon, open water swim or whatever, this community embraces an active lifestyle. I know it has changed the way I approach my triathlon season. I have completed more than 125 triathlons in my life, including 11 full Ironman events and a dozen half ironman events. My decision to do Alaskaman was to go back to what that distance was all about -- what are we made of when all we have are the elements itself. I look forward to the challenge of seeing what I am capable of doing. I look forward to experiencing Alaska in its most raw, difficult form. I look forward to being one of the first to complete the first ever. Let the journey begin... with a dive into the cold water (and yes, that is me diving into the water at the start of a triathlon last year).

Sunday, February 19, 2017

For reference: Alaskaman Extreme triathlon is an ironman-distance triathlon. It is a 2.7-mile swim in Resurrection Bay in Seward, AK, 112-mile along the Seward Highway and a 27-mile run (with the last 7 miles to the top of Mt Aleskya). Ultraman Triathlon is a 3-day extreme triathlon. Day 1: 6.2-mile swim and 90-mile bike. Day 2: 170-mile bike. Day 3: 52.4-mile run.
We are off on our quest: from Alaskaman to Ultraman. This starts my quest to be one of the first finishers in the augural Alaskaman Extreme Triathlon in July 2017 and one of the final Ultraman Canada finishers in Aug 2018. Over the next 17 months I plan on documenting my journey and hope you would follow along. So here we go...