Post by tomd on Dec 10, 2017 17:19:05 GMT -5
From Wikipedia:
The current supported and overall FKT was established by Byron Lane back in 2000 when he ran it in 35 hours and 10 minutes.
On December 2, 2017, I ran Paumanok Path in 35:44:30. I ran according to the published rules for a self-supported run. I cached food and water along the route, but did not have any support crew. My friend Brandon and I intended to run the whole thing together, but he had to bow at mile 100.
Since the trail is so different from its 2000 incarnation, is any new run an overall FKT? This seems to be what Joe Denny believed when he thru-hiked the trail last summer, crowning himself as the first one to do so despite the fact that many did so before him, including Brandon and myself only a few years earlier, not to mention that Byron Lane did it publicly many years prior. I am not claiming to be the first person to continuously run the trail. No matter how many reroutes take place, that honor will always belong to Byron Lane. But -- to the best of my knowledge -- I am the second, and the first to do it in nearly two decades.
Despite the reroutes, I think that anyone wanting to claim the overall FKT for Paumanok needs to break 35:10. I believe that my 35:45 finish qualifies as the self-supported FKT, 35 minutes behind Lane’s time.
Based on the rules posted on this forum, it sounds like team efforts can qualify as self-supported. If there should be an “accompanied” asterisk on my run, I’m fine with that. The distinctions between the categories seem awfully fuzzy to me and I don’t really care. We knew we didn’t want a support crew, and also knew we didn’t want to carry all our food and gear from the start. So this is how we did it. But we took the endeavor seriously and were committed to running the trail as accurately as possible. We succeeded in that.
I hope it’s not another 17 years before the next runners take on this challenge! My advice to anyone interested in doing it would be to get to know the trail well beforehand. Spend some time out there volunteering or just clearing trail as you go. Navigating and dealing will lesser-used trails are the two of the more difficult aspects of this route.
The Paumanok Path is a 125-mile (201 km) hiking trail in New York on Long Island that goes from Rocky Point to Montauk Point State Park. It travels through four towns in Suffolk County: Brookhaven, Riverhead, Southampton and East Hampton. It is marked by white trail blazes. The trail derives its name from the Native American name for Long Island. The trail was inspired by Stephen Talkhouse, a 19th-century Montaukett Indian famed for his 25-30 mile roundtrip walks from Montauk to East Hampton, New York and Sag Harbor, New York. Landmarks on the trail are said to be resting places for him. Talkhouse is buried off the trail in Theodore Roosevelt County Park near Montauk. The trail is almost completely off-road, but there are a few short sections which are paved.
The current supported and overall FKT was established by Byron Lane back in 2000 when he ran it in 35 hours and 10 minutes.
On December 2, 2017, I ran Paumanok Path in 35:44:30. I ran according to the published rules for a self-supported run. I cached food and water along the route, but did not have any support crew. My friend Brandon and I intended to run the whole thing together, but he had to bow at mile 100.
Since the trail is so different from its 2000 incarnation, is any new run an overall FKT? This seems to be what Joe Denny believed when he thru-hiked the trail last summer, crowning himself as the first one to do so despite the fact that many did so before him, including Brandon and myself only a few years earlier, not to mention that Byron Lane did it publicly many years prior. I am not claiming to be the first person to continuously run the trail. No matter how many reroutes take place, that honor will always belong to Byron Lane. But -- to the best of my knowledge -- I am the second, and the first to do it in nearly two decades.
Despite the reroutes, I think that anyone wanting to claim the overall FKT for Paumanok needs to break 35:10. I believe that my 35:45 finish qualifies as the self-supported FKT, 35 minutes behind Lane’s time.
- I recorded the trip with my Garmin watch. The Garmin Connect track can be found here and puts the route at 125 miles. I don’t know how to get it to show the correct elapsed time instead of the non-paused time.
- The Strava activity clearly shows the elapsed time to be 35:44:30.
- Additionally, here’s the link to the SPOT beacon track, which we posted on social media for friends and family to follow along in real time. Unfortunately, the device failed to track the first 12 miles. The rest is there.
- I wrote a short report on the run and how it came about here.
- Several people witnessed us out there, plus Brandon ran the first almost 100 miles either with me or near me.
Based on the rules posted on this forum, it sounds like team efforts can qualify as self-supported. If there should be an “accompanied” asterisk on my run, I’m fine with that. The distinctions between the categories seem awfully fuzzy to me and I don’t really care. We knew we didn’t want a support crew, and also knew we didn’t want to carry all our food and gear from the start. So this is how we did it. But we took the endeavor seriously and were committed to running the trail as accurately as possible. We succeeded in that.
I hope it’s not another 17 years before the next runners take on this challenge! My advice to anyone interested in doing it would be to get to know the trail well beforehand. Spend some time out there volunteering or just clearing trail as you go. Navigating and dealing will lesser-used trails are the two of the more difficult aspects of this route.