Washie’s ‘crazy ones’ on their way
2010/07/24
“YOU
got to be flippin’ crazy to do this race,” veteran Washie 100 ultra
runner David “Butch” Duffey grinned maniacally yesterday afternoon,
minutes before walking off to the starting line to try and finish race
number 20.
About to join Derek
“mad Murdoch” Parker, who has 20 finishes under his takkies, and
21-time trailblazer Eric Wright as only the third person to nail down
3200km between Port Alfred and East London, Duffey said the epic all
nighter was a “monster that you just have to respect”.
“If you don’t, it will cut you down,” he wisely warned.
Part
of a “lunatic fringe” of 32 male and 10 female ultra athletes brave –
or crazy – enough to try the 160km moonlight meander last night, Duffey
said once the bug bit it was hard to kick the habit.
“I love this race … I enter every time to finish.”
Although not running this year, Mad Murdoch’s polar bear hallucinations on the road are the stuff of legend.
“If
you see polar bears in the Chalumna Cuttings, you are not in Antarctica
– you are running the Washie,” veteran organiser Clyde Mountford
quipped.
He
warned “seconds” that tail the extreme athletes through the night to be
extra vigilant and maintain visual contact with their charges from Bira
until sunset.
“This
is Africa I don’t want to make a big noise about past incidents…keep
your runners in sight, there are a lot of sharks out there.”
Said Democratic Republic of Congo born Christian Kyony: “A friend of
mine told me about the Comrades Marathon and I have now run five of
them…the same lunatic told me about the Washie and I am now here I am
running my first 100-miler.”
The race had become a family reunion as 10 of his family had come from Limpopo, Pietersberg and Johannesburg to second him.
Defending
champ Mogale Piloso said the 16-strong navy team had set their sights
on finishing three 100 milers in three months.
Selborne
College schoolteacher Julie Patrick – and her all girl back- up team –
said ywere doing “100 miles for 100 smiles” to raise funds for Carel du
Toit hearing impaired centre.
Organiser
Sandy Mountford said 12 people had entered a newly introduced 50 mile
run – which would begin 80km outside East London at 5am this morning.
At
the time of going to press at the 40km mark at Fish River, Piloso was
leading the race in pleasant cool conditions, in a time of 3:39.20sec,
from 28-year-old novice Johannes Bekker, who was 17 minutes behind and
Manuel Alves, 49, of Gauteng in third position. - By DAVID MACGREGOR
Port Alfred Bureau
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