Brian

It creates this whole lexicon.

Brian

I think that's just kind of a social construct.

Brian

If we just allowed us to celebrate what we actually fucking did.

Brian

Like, it kind of ruffled me up a little bit.

Brian

And this morning I'm already fired up again thinking about this stupid DNF culture that we self impose on each other.

Josh

Borderlands.

Josh

Somehow we're still not learning Borderlands.

Josh

We still suck at running.

Josh

Welcome to the Borderlands Trail and Ultra Running podcast.

Josh

My name is Josh.

Josh

I'm your host.

Josh

I'm going to walk through the 3rd arrondissement of Paris on my way to edit today's podcast.

Josh

It's another episode of Bad Runner's Take with my dude, Wolf Runner.

Josh

I really love these conversations.

Josh

I really enjoy Brian, and I'm stoked to get to do this pretty much on a weekly basis at this point.

Josh

So we're just going to jump right in.

Josh

And these takes, you might think they're good, you might think they're bad, but I think it's important that we at least get them out loud.

Josh

We have some debate and talk about it.

Josh

So that's what we're gonna do today.

Josh

Hope you enjoy it.

Josh

Check out Devil's Gulch 100 in the show notes below.

Josh

Hope you run that race next July.

Josh

See you there.

Josh

It's a bad runner's take.

Josh

It's a bad runner's take.

Josh

It's a bad runner's take.

Josh

He's the kipchovy of running back.

Josh

All right, back with Wolf Runner on another bad runner's take.

Josh

Again, the concept here is I called a bad runner's take because, you know, in proper self deprecation, I say I'm a bad runner, but really the reality was a play on words here to say that these might be bad takes, but as is necessary in most climates, but especially climate right now, of you got to say this stuff out loud.

Josh

It's super important to say the stuff out loud.

Josh

And trail, it's nice because there's a lot of benefit of the doubt going around.

Josh

So we can get controversial here and talk about trail stuff or have opposing opinions or, you know, offer just some bad takes, but we won't know they're bad until we say them out loud because they also might be good.

Josh

And that's the risk that we're, we're willing to take before we go any further.

Josh

Welcome.

Josh

Glad you're here, Brian.

Brian

Absolutely.

Josh

How's your morning?

Josh

I don't know if people know this.

Josh

You get up at 5am to record.

Josh

For me, it's, it's 1 and I have a nice morning.

Josh

You haven't done much but roll out of bed yet, right?

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

4:30, you know, the alarm goes off, we.

Brian

We get the lights fired up.

Brian

It's getting colder in the morning out here, so that's, that's, that's good.

Josh

What is cold for Europe, for Arizona?

Brian

Well, this morning it was like 39 Fahrenheit.

Josh

Oh, that's legit.

Josh

That's legitimately cold.

Josh

I was expecting you to say like 60.

Brian

No, no.

Brian

Then you figure, you know, javelina was just a two weeks ago and it was 100.

Brian

So it's like.

Brian

Yeah, I mean, it doesn't.

Brian

We don't just gracefully go into cold temperature.

Brian

It's an ice.

Josh

Okay.

Brian

Yeah.

Josh

And.

Josh

Okay, so the.

Josh

So out there in the desert, you're gonna get those lows.

Josh

Low lows.

Josh

What's your high today?

Brian

It'll be like 63.

Josh

Damn, that's great.

Josh

That's kind of what it is in Paris, but it's.

Josh

It's cloudy.

Josh

But I mean, wildly runnable weather.

Josh

Not complaining.

Josh

Miss that sunshine, that hot sun.

Josh

I love those photos that you post of that hot sun.

Josh

Do you run like, along, like a waterway?

Josh

Where are you running?

Josh

When I see those photos, yeah, it's a canal.

Brian

So, yeah, it's a waterway.

Brian

It's crushed gravel.

Brian

Uninterrupted traffic lights don't have to deal with that.

Brian

And then I'm close enough to kind of the rural boundaries of the city, so once I get about three miles onto the canal, then I'm just out in the desert running along the waterway.

Josh

All right, and you're a lone wolf runner?

Brian

What's that?

Josh

You're a lone wolf runner?

Brian

Absolutely.

Brian

Yeah.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

You ever encounter.

Josh

Are you seeing big game out there?

Josh

Is it just snakes?

Josh

What are you encountering in the Phoenix desert or in that?

Brian

Yeah, no, just small stuff.

Brian

I mean, we get.

Brian

We get javelina into the city every now and then, so you'll see those guys running around.

Brian

Lots of coyotes.

Brian

You know, they're well fed out here with all the suburban moms that have chickens.

Brian

So they're pretty nice looking coyotes.

Brian

They're.

Brian

They usually don't bother you because they're so well fed.

Brian

So, yeah, that's the pack I run with, basically, are the coyotes out here.

Josh

They eat the chickens and teach little kids important lessons about the circle of life.

Brian

Yeah, yeah, exactly.

Josh

Okay.

Josh

You sent this to me, and I think it's a really great conversation, a really interesting conversation because I've lived it, so I'll intro it.

Josh

And you and you put some, put some flesh around what you were thinking.

Josh

But I mean you posed it as what do I think about in the middle of a.

Josh

Let's say it's easier, easiest to concept in a hundred miler, but fill in the blank on whatever distance.

Josh

This works down to the 10k if you're running a hundred miler, but that race also offers a hundred K, what do you think about when they offer you a mid race downgrade to a shorter distance so you can make the decision in the race and downgrade.

Josh

Am I, am I capturing the essence of the question?

Brian

Yeah, exactly.

Brian

Just kind of like the DNF culture that surrounds the ultra trail running world.

Brian

So I didn't know that this was a thing.

Brian

I didn't know that there were races that advertised this option.

Brian

Arabica has, you know, a zero, you know, drop down type of policy.

Brian

So yeah, you know, where I run and race, it's, it's not on my radar.

Brian

So it just got me thinking, you know, because as.

Brian

And this is more.

Brian

We're going to take both sides of the coin, right?

Brian

The amateur impact and the elite impact.

Brian

Because I think it's two radically different concepts and how I think about it, you know, but this, this DNF thing, right?

Brian

Like we're all, you know, amateur hobbyists who have full time jobs, right?

Brian

We've got spouses, we've got families, we've got kids that we're juggling and yet we're still pouring in every ounce of energy and free time into the sport.

Brian

You know, we're doing it for, you know, 15 weeks, training blocks and beyond, right?

Brian

We're stacking training blocks year over year.

Brian

And it's like you invest all of this, right, energy and effort and time, not, not even considering the money that you invest into the race.

Brian

And a lot of people are doing it for healthy reasons, mentally, physically, addiction, avoidance, everything, right?

Brian

And you go to this race and for one reason or another, 100 milers are freaking hard, right?

Brian

So yeah, you end up not being able to get it done.

Brian

What do you get?

Brian

You get a dnf, right?

Brian

A dnf.

Brian

It's a failure.

Brian

And it seems kind of asinine to me that running 50 miles is recorded on some, you know, arbitrary website like ultra signup as it did not finish.

Brian

And then you've got to go in and create, you know, it cascades this whole entire culture of like now you got to do your DNF post and you got to talk about how, you know, it's not about the finish, it's about the journey and that we're all better because of what we did.

Brian

And showing up at the start line is, you know, the battle and you know, it creates this whole lexicon.

Brian

I think that's just kind of a social construct.

Brian

If we just allowed us to celebrate what we actually fucking did.

Brian

Like it kind of ruffled me up a little bit.

Brian

And this morning I'm already fired up again thinking about this stupid DNF culture that we self impose on each other.

Josh

Yeah, man.

Josh

Okay, I'll say this.

Josh

I largely dislike your boy Scott Jurek's posts.

Josh

Okay.

Josh

That's my opening position.

Josh

I think he's talent for days and his ability to exegete the trail running culture.

Josh

So hear that as well.

Josh

Massively impressed.

Josh

But what he has made fun of really well and I use a sophisticated word like exegete because I think the way that he's memeing is exposing silliness within the culture and allows people to laugh.

Josh

So I'm saying all those things are important.

Josh

So I also want you to hear I like him.

Josh

He makes fun of the DNF post pretty well.

Josh

Like the, you know, we're all in this for these other reasons and I've lived in that world and I get it.

Josh

I mean on some levels you gotta make sense of it.

Josh

You gotta make sense of the world somehow.

Josh

You've gotta have some sort of like North Star guiding principle.

Josh

If I failed at something, how do I make this not a waste?

Josh

How do I need to look at this?

Josh

I get, I love all that.

Josh

I love thinking through that.

Josh

I love the headiness of that.

Josh

But you know, then, you know, you see.

Josh

So Corinne Malcolm posts her DNF tale and everybody.

Josh

So what does it say about the culture that they have to post their DNF thing?

Josh

You know what I mean?

Josh

It feels like surely it's authentic and I'm sure they've, they've learned these lessons that they put in there.

Josh

But does anybody just say well DNF'd or does anybody just not even talk about it?

Josh

You know, Jim's always going to bring up his story of why he didn't finish shit in Chamonix.

Josh

And so you get, you know, got Corinne, everybody not picking on Corrine.

Josh

Just she, she was the one that came to mind most recently.

Josh

Hayden does it these like Beast of the Trail, like these killers, amazing competitors.

Josh

And then they do their DNF post.

Josh

Why do you think they think they have to do it?

Brian

I don't think they have to do anything, no.

Brian

But I think Yeah, I mean, I think a lot of people who are intro running are philosophical, right?

Josh

Absolutely.

Brian

We spend a lot of time by ourselves and in our own heads.

Brian

And so it would make sense that we would want to archive that experience.

Brian

You know, I think we're communal, so we want to share it with others and, you know, hope to inspire others through that story or, you know, encourage others or help others.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So I don't, you don't have to know, but I think it's a good opportunity to connect with people when you do.

Brian

But again, like I'm getting, we're getting sidetracked because like the core of this is like the amateur runner, not the professionals.

Brian

The professionals will unpack a second here.

Brian

But like you and I, like, yeah, you know, the average Joe, like you sign up for 100 miler and you get to mile 75 and your day's over and you, you did not finish.

Brian

Like, where did this, where did it really come from?

Brian

Like, in no other sport, like I go have a bad round of golf, I shoot like 10 strokes worse than I wanted to.

Brian

I still have a score.

Brian

It's not, hey, did not finish.

Josh

I see.

Brian

I still have, I still have, I still have something accomplished.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

You know, within the sport.

Brian

Why are we allowing the sport to just be this like such a binary thing?

Brian

Like where it's like, you signed up for 100 miler, you ran 60, you are, did not.

Brian

You are a DNF.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like, does Ultra signup need a competing site that archives things a little bit differently and kind of competes for the narrative of how the sport works?

Josh

Okay, I'm tracking with you, but I don't know.

Josh

I'm not tracking insofar as I have some creativity to support you.

Josh

So help me.

Josh

What could be another metric if you made it 60 and 100 miles?

Josh

What's another way of thinking about that?

Brian

Yeah, whatever.

Brian

What shows up, whatever the next distance is that the race would have offered.

Brian

Like, I don't think there's, I mean there might be.

Brian

I mean, even if they don't offer it, like let's say it's a hundred mile or.

Brian

Right.

Brian

And they don't offer the 100k, but you've gone 61.2 miles or greater then at.

Brian

Or the race would just designate it beforehand.

Brian

At this aid station, once you, once you eclipse this aid station, you have successfully finished the hundred K.

Brian

If you drop somewhere later on, you'll be considered a dropped hundred mile runner who completed 100k.

Brian

If you drop at this aid station, you are a 50 mile, you know, complete or, you know, 50k, whatever.

Brian

Like we can get into the details there, but somehow, you know, set this up.

Brian

You know, it's not, it's not about, it's not about participation awards.

Brian

The guy's actually fucking running 60 miles.

Brian

So it's not some sort of like sentimental, like soppy Hallmark card that you're getting for completing 5k out of the 100k.

Brian

I'm not going down that path.

Brian

I'm not soft in that nature.

Brian

But like, it just kills me.

Brian

Like we talk about how uplifting this sport should be, and then you just get stamped with like a red DNF.

Josh

Mark, the scarlet letter.

Brian

Miles.

Josh

Yeah, I.

Josh

Okay, now I'm with you.

Josh

And I love this.

Josh

And here's where my mind immediately goes, is I think there is some utility to say, what did you start out to do that day and did you do it, but should you not?

Josh

So, I don't know, I see it as two columns, right?

Josh

But yeah, I mean, so my, my working example of this and my many DNFs at the, a hundred mile distance, eight of ten DNFs at the 100 mile distance I ran, let's see, one year I ran Zion five times.

Josh

Both of my finishes, red Zion, three DNFs there.

Josh

But one year I ran it and I came in, I don't remember my mask gonna be a little bit off.

Josh

I was two miles.

Josh

There's an aid station there in the virgin desert that there was just a sign like, hey, you're coming in here, you're doing the hundred miler.

Josh

The course route is such that if you want to downgrade to the 100k right now turn right 2 miles and if you want to do the 100 miler, turn left.

Josh

Well, I came into that aid station and I was, I was maxed.

Josh

And my, you know, number of problems, who knows if they were real, I probably made them up in my head.

Josh

I think at this point I'm pretty convinced that all my DNFs are purely in my head and I quit.

Josh

And someone's like, no, you keep going.

Josh

Just turn right, take two miles.

Josh

Take that, you can walk that in.

Josh

You can, you can walk those two miles in an hour, two hours if you want.

Josh

You got plenty of time.

Josh

I was like, that's not what I'm here for.

Josh

I'm here for the 100 mile or so.

Josh

I'm gonna quit.

Josh

I'm gonna quit now.

Josh

I'm not gonna quit in two miles and that and that.

Josh

And I have no regrets.

Josh

But to your point, I wonder if that.

Josh

How it would change things if we knew that there were two columns, Because Lord knows we run on oftentimes simply.

Josh

So it'll show up on Strava.

Josh

Would it change how we run races if we know it's going to show up on an Ultra signup?

Josh

Because everybody I talk to, before I do an interview on the podcast or anything, I go to their Ultra Signup page and check them out, I size them up, I learn about who they are.

Josh

So I gotta imagine the same way that Strava forces us to make bad decisions in our training.

Josh

A change in Ultra signup metrics would do the same, but in a really fun way.

Brian

Yeah, absolutely.

Brian

I mean, that's good.

Brian

I mean, runners are so, you know, manic and anal about their Strava runs that they'll jog in a parking lot for 0.2 miles to get to the nearest whole mile.

Brian

Right.

Brian

But we won't go two miles down the trail to get to the whole 100k finish.

Brian

No, just.

Brian

Just DNF here.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So, yeah.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

Maybe if somehow Strava linked into Ultra Sinup.

Brian

So it would show you that in that dnf you went 60 miles.

Brian

Because not every DNF's the same.

Brian

Right.

Brian

You're looking at some dudes Ultra signup and it says DNF and it says 80 miles.

Brian

You're like, well, that dude went 80 miles into his DNF journey.

Brian

The other guy pulled the plug at mile 31.

Brian

Like, you know, not.

Brian

Not all DNFs are created the same.

Josh

Gosh.

Josh

Good point.

Josh

For someone who's DNF the hundred so many times and tries to slay that beast.

Josh

And I hope to do it 20 more times to try.

Josh

Great point.

Josh

I would love to know that, to see that.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

At Bryce one year it was 36 miles, but every other one has been north of 50.

Josh

Bryce another year was mile 51, but Zion has been a DNF at 78, 60 and 50.

Josh

Right.

Josh

That is that.

Josh

I mean, 36 versus DNF at 78, that's just enjoyable.

Josh

Regardless of its utility.

Josh

That's enjoyable.

Josh

Data.

Josh

To be able to call up on my Ultra signup page itself, to not have to drill down.

Josh

That's.

Josh

That's a really great idea.

Brian

Right.

Josh

So I'm sending this podcast up to the owners of Ultra Signup.

Josh

David.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

I'm going to make Strava, you know.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

Get a partnership with Strava and just have the activity that the runner.

Brian

The runner's feed from Strava link into Ultra signup and.

Brian

Yeah, there you go.

Josh

That's fun.

Josh

Okay.

Josh

What do you.

Josh

Go ahead.

Brian

Yeah, yeah.

Brian

So the elites.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So that's.

Brian

I think that's a whole different concept because elites go into races with much different intentions than.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

Than most all of us do.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like maybe once I've gone into a 50k race where I said I'm going out at, you know, a suicide pace And I'm okay DNFing this one if it doesn't come together.

Brian

And I DNF'd it.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So, like, that was the time where I gave myself the freedom to do that.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Go out and race it like a 5k and see what happens.

Brian

Just out of curiosity.

Brian

Sake.

Brian

Right.

Brian

And that's basically the professional life of how they race.

Brian

Like every time you're running with that mindset.

Brian

So I get their dnf.

Brian

They have injury avoidance.

Brian

They've got a livelihood to make off of it.

Brian

It's not just the hobby.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

But at the same time, I have to wonder too, like, what, What's.

Brian

What kind of scar tissue does the DNF have on a elite runner?

Brian

Because we're starting to see some elite runners who are collecting DNS now to where almost, you know, they go a full calendar year with nothing but DNFs.

Josh

Wow.

Brian

And that's.

Brian

That's crazy that.

Josh

I mean, the psychology of that.

Josh

I mean, no doubt there's a, There's a.

Josh

Something in depth to explore in the psychology.

Josh

My mind immediately goes to as a fan, because they race so rarely.

Josh

I, I mean, I want to see them go all out.

Josh

I love that.

Josh

Go out like a 5k at 100 mile or whatever.

Josh

But I.

Josh

If they, if they burn up, burn out, I want them to quit.

Josh

I want them to dnf.

Josh

Because as hard as it is to wait so long between races and being a Jim Walmsley fan, I, you know, I.

Josh

I went to western states in 2019.

Josh

I wanted to see him get the win.

Josh

And it was the year that he got like 14 oh something.

Josh

1409, 1404.

Josh

Jared Hazen got 1423.

Josh

I loved that day.

Josh

If I had been at UTMB this year when Jim Walmsley DNFs, or previous years when he DNFs, I'd be really disappointed because.

Josh

But I'm only disappointed because I wanted to see him win that day.

Josh

The year that Jim hung in and got fourth going up that hill with the cattle and all that sort of stuff.

Josh

I mean, he knows his body, his and he's surrounded by people that are supportive and helpful.

Josh

I don't care about your 4th place finish.

Josh

Save what you got.

Josh

Don't hurt yourself.

Josh

Come back to the next race and win it.

Josh

That's what I'm here for, and that's what you get paid for.

Josh

Back to the discussion about Courtney.

Josh

We have this perception that because it's outdoor and outdoor sports, that everyone's just out doing work on their soul now.

Josh

I am, and I'm paying for it.

Josh

I have a day job, but these people out there are working.

Josh

So I want to see you out there winning.

Josh

And if you're not going to win dnf, just fold it.

Josh

Save everything you have.

Josh

Don't hurt yourself if you.

Josh

I get it.

Josh

Jim finished UTMB because he wanted to.

Josh

He needed to close the loop.

Josh

There's a psychology to that.

Josh

So I celebrate that he made the right choice.

Josh

That's not what I'm questioning, but I'm there to see my favorite person win.

Josh

If you're not going to win, just quit.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

It's just crazy.

Brian

You know, even like something like cycling, you watch the Tour de France and these, like, you know, these riders who, you know, are supposed to contend for the, you know, the victory and, you know, by early on in the Tour, they're kind of already out of it.

Brian

Right.

Brian

But, like, they're still gonna finish.

Brian

Like, they finish the stages.

Brian

They still.

Josh

That is really good.

Brian

They still finish the Tour.

Brian

Right.

Brian

They still get something out of it that, like.

Brian

Yeah, I just can't imagine.

Brian

Like, it's.

Brian

It's really underappreciated how hard it's got to be to be a professional ultra runner, specifically, like the 100 mile distance.

Brian

Like.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

You know, you go out and have a bad marathon, you're still finishing the marathon.

Brian

Maybe you're just five to ten minutes slower than, you know, than what you wanted as an elite runner.

Brian

Like, you still finished.

Brian

Like, it's wild.

Josh

Is.

Josh

Is there another sport where people just don't finish?

Brian

I don't know.

Josh

Maybe.

Brian

Right?

Brian

Like, maybe you want to go summit Everest or some other sort of, like, you know, his monumental peak, and you can't.

Brian

You just don't do it.

Brian

Because usually it's weather, you know, permitting, not so much physical, but I can't think of anything else that you build up for and then you go and attempt it and it's just some zero game.

Brian

It's all or nothing.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

Really, really interesting to think about it on that level.

Josh

I mean, if I am looking.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

You think about other Sport, nascar, whatever you finish, it's not even unless you get in a major accident.

Josh

It's not even in the consciousness.

Josh

When the Yankees were down three games to not to none in the series, they still had to go play again because there was still a fight and chance, you know, they could come back.

Josh

Red Sox did it to them in 104 or something like that.

Brian

Right.

Josh

Three games.

Josh

You still still show up.

Josh

And in that sport, maybe, yeah, you can come back.

Josh

And when you're down 3 0.

Josh

Yeah, but that in our sport, you can just quit.

Josh

So that's wild.

Josh

It makes sense because it's hard.

Josh

Yeah, but only I only want to give the excuse to amateurs that, yeah, it's hard.

Josh

Of course it is.

Josh

Maybe you didn't have time to travel, but if you're professional, that feels.

Josh

That's just a it.

Josh

Stop provoking, if nothing else.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So I don't know.

Brian

I think maybe we'll see the sport evolve.

Brian

That's what this conversation's about.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So, yeah.

Brian

Maybe people haven't even thought about, should the DNF be something that we revisit and revise within the sport at the amateur level.

Brian

It just seems like you started it off with, with your boy Scott Jurek.

Brian

Like, it just seems like I ran 72 miles and all I got was this DNF post.

Josh

Right.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

So, huh.

Josh

Well, did you hear about the Russian plane?

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

So Marley Dickinson, who had on the show wrote, wrote the article, got the tip that run buck.

Josh

I think that's how you say it was taking some runners in a, in a Russian plane.

Josh

A sanctioned Russian plane.

Josh

Meaning don't.

Josh

If you're an American or Canadian, you and or British, you do not get on a Russian plane.

Josh

But this company, like straight out of like Looney Tunes, took all of the Russian insignia and logos on the plane and they covered it with a sticker, trying to conceal, actively trying to conceal the fact that it was this Russian aircraft and Russian company.

Josh

And when Marley published the article, the plane was in the air carrying 15 people from South Africa to Antarctica to run a 24 hour race.

Josh

And these people are paying $10,000 apiece, something like that, for this race.

Josh

The same company, they're the ones who put on the seven marathons in seven days on seven continents.

Josh

And so I got marketed to for that.

Josh

I was like, wow, that's really interesting.

Josh

How do they even handle that logistically?

Josh

Well, the answer is, is that you, you use a Russian airliner and you put stickers over it and they're making a Lot of money per runner.

Josh

And they're putting their runners in a really dicey situation.

Josh

And that is, if you're an American, you're on that plane.

Josh

Our government's not happy with you.

Josh

Where does your mind go on this?

Josh

What?

Josh

It's a bizarre thing.

Josh

It's geopolitical in its nature, but.

Josh

But it's a running company.

Josh

Like, where do you go?

Brian

I just don't think it's going to be major news because it's just if this was utmb, then I would say that, yeah, this would be.

Josh

People be waiting for this.

Brian

This would be, you know, the Gary Robbins Whistler debacle 2.0.

Brian

This would be, you know, UTMB Russia gate.

Brian

So, I mean, I don't think this is going to really move anybody's.

Brian

Like, I don't think it was going to be really fired up about it.

Brian

Like, I think we'll all agree that basically, like, these people are schmucks.

Brian

Like, you know, this is clear violation.

Brian

Like, you know, I think hopefully the, the affluent people who can afford this, because I think it was something like 20 some thousand dollars per person or whatever the cost was.

Brian

Like, hopefully this affluent community, you know, realizes that this is no longer a company they can trust to travel safely.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Internationally.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Or just do things with, you know, morals and ethics that you would expect from a business that is handling something this sophisticated.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

And I just want to.

Josh

Because I kind of teed it up for you and you didn't swing at it.

Josh

So I just want to throw it out there.

Josh

$20,000 per person to run the seven marathon, seven continents, seven days, which is similar to Cocodona prices.

Josh

That's your joke, not mine.

Brian

Yes.

Brian

I was going to get to it in the second round, but yeah.

Josh

Okay.

Josh

I just didn't want that to be lost.

Josh

That's too good.

Josh

Yeah, go ahead.

Brian

I mean, yeah, I mean, just to keep harping on it, like, this is where like, you know, kind of like we pick and choose the moral soapbox we want to stand on and boycott or rally around and light.

Brian

Light the torches and get the pitchforks out and really demonize a group.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like UTMB got in trouble because they had Dacia as a sponsor, Right.

Brian

Who was in the, in the auto industry.

Brian

Here's a group that's taking a, what, 747 type.

Brian

I mean, this is a huge passenger, it's enormous commercial economy jet.

Brian

Right.

Brian

And they're filling it with 25 runners, right?

Brian

25 runners, right.

Brian

So like this, like, when you want to talk about, like, you know, carbon footprint.

Josh

Right.

Brian

Our sport does not have a carbon footprint allowance or conscious.

Brian

Because here are people who can afford to go to Antarctica.

Brian

Yeah, right.

Brian

There's, there's.

Brian

And there's also probably people who are upset and angry now that they're learning that we do ultras on Antarctica that should be protected land.

Brian

Nobody should touch foot on it.

Brian

So we're traveling to a sacred land by commercial airline with only like 25 passengers on a Russian branded plane.

Brian

It seems like it should be something that really lights the fire under the.

Josh

Activist, wakes up the activist.

Brian

Yeah, I don't think it will.

Josh

Yeah, yeah, I think you're probably right.

Josh

I do love this UTMB take.

Josh

And you brought up Gary Robbins.

Josh

Remind me of a conversation we also had offline.

Josh

So I'll tee it up and you'll be able to kind of build the house around it.

Josh

Did you hear an interview with.

Josh

Was it Jason Schlarb talking about his take on the Gary Robbins UTMB debacle?

Josh

I remember you telling me, and it was the first time I'd heard a take like this, and I found it to be refreshing.

Josh

Is that sufficient to tee it up?

Brian

Yeah, yeah, I know where you're going with it.

Brian

And again, I'm not gonna.

Brian

So I'm gonna be paraphrasing and certainly if I get anything wrong or misquoted, you know, just don't quote me on it.

Brian

But essentially the gist of it was, is that he was able to partition out basically, like, the issue that he, you know, he was upset about Gary Robbins, you know, and his personal impact, but also was able to simultaneously say that, hey, the Whistler UTMB event is the best and only opportunity right now to create a North American UTMB in Chamonix.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like, basically, like, we can't lift the start line of the elite field in the men's and women's UTMB race and place it on Hard Rock.

Brian

Okay.

Brian

We want the Hard Rock course to run competitively like UTMB does.

Brian

Like, that would be fascinating to see them attack a mountainous course like that with the depth of field, but that'll never happen.

Brian

So what his alternative was was, hey, this, this Whistler event does provide an opportunity where you can have the depth of field on a North American race course.

Brian

If I'm.

Brian

And I think that's.

Brian

That's the direction that he was going with that.

Josh

Yeah, yeah, that makes sense.

Josh

And I think on.

Josh

On the level of the.

Josh

What you were talking about with the plane flying from Russia to South Africa, South Africa to Antarctica, back and all of the, you know, 25 millionaires who were able to get to South Africa and how they got there and all this.

Josh

There should be some celebration around that.

Josh

In as much as it's true, let's assume it is for the conversation.

Josh

We should celebrate that if it's our great American runners and great Canadian runners that the transportation and therefore the, let's say, I think they might say the carbon footprint, the emissions, all that sort of stuff is significantly less.

Josh

And so we do have the chance almost.

Josh

Yeah, to, I think about the mountain, the big mountain, the beautiful area, UTMB's ability to facilitate it.

Josh

And then I also believe that Gary Robbins race is probably going to thrive, assuming UTMB's thrives too.

Josh

They can thrive at the same time.

Josh

They can thrive together.

Brian

Absolutely.

Brian

I mean, I think that's definitely something where somebody goes over, maybe they run the UTMB Whistler event and they fall in love with the area and then yeah, they want to go back, but they want to now experience it through Gary Robbins lens.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like, I just think bringing more people into the area will just lift, you know, the entire race community, not just that weekend.

Brian

Right.

Brian

But beyond as people want to explore more and see what they've got to offer over there.

Josh

Yeah, I mean, utmb.

Josh

I was talking to a buddy here, he used to be the head of sport for Singapore, but did significant.

Josh

He essentially facilitated bringing a UFC type sport to Myanmar and he's, he's looking to get this job at UTMB right now because UTMB needs to grow in order to, to satisfy their business plan.

Josh

They have to grow, they have to grow in Asia specifically and, but really everywhere.

Josh

Because the idea is that you need to be able to run UTMB races in order to run the UTMB race, the main event.

Josh

And if you live in certain parts of Asia and you're a great runner, you can't, you have to invest $10,000 to go get a couple of stones, a few stones and you're not going to do that three times.

Josh

So they're missing out on a massive amount of business from a business standpoint, massive amount of great runners who can't do that.

Josh

So here we are in America saying, hey, if UTMB is inevitable, if it's an inevitable thing, if the Ironman deal, it's like this is happening, this, it's going here.

Josh

I don't think the World Trail Majors is going to even touch what UTMB is trying to do.

Josh

If it's an inevitable force, then we need Whistler and we need all of them.

Josh

And we need Gary.

Josh

We need what Gary's doing, but we need it.

Josh

We need that.

Josh

I like Jason's take and I like your paraphrase of it.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

I mean, because I, you know, I get some type of fatigue towards utmb, Right.

Brian

It's, you know, every year, it's just, you know, it's Chamonix.

Brian

You always are going back to the same place with this, knowing that that's the only place that's gonna provide you with the depth of field.

Brian

And so, you know, yeah, it would be great.

Brian

Like I've always thought it would be.

Brian

Like, why can't we just lift that same starting line and drop it somewhere in the United States?

Brian

But again, we're handcuffed by, you know, the preservation and protection of the lands, which is kind of like.

Brian

I mean, I don't know, to me, it kind of like, think it kind of seems a little hypocritical.

Brian

Right?

Brian

Like with, with protecting lands and, you know, being environmentally conscious.

Brian

We'll outsource that, though, to Europe.

Brian

We're fine.

Brian

If Europe wants to have thousands run their trails, we'll go and participate in the abuse of the trails.

Brian

So we're not so concerned about the actual physical land.

Brian

Because as long as we get an okay to do it, as long as a government official or body tells us it's okay to go and abuse this land, we'll do it.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

At home.

Josh

Not in my backyard.

Brian

That.

Brian

Come on now.

Brian

Like, it would seem.

Brian

But like, I, I just, I tease that a little bit.

Brian

I pick at that because it's like, I mean, the trails at Mont Blanc, when I see them, they still look beautiful.

Brian

They still look managed.

Brian

They still look like they're authentic.

Josh

Yes.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

So why can't.

Brian

Why could it.

Brian

What's the case for us not being able to accommodate that here?

Brian

We're not capable of doing the same things that they do.

Josh

Let me drive it home.

Josh

The.

Josh

There was a runner who, because of the Dasha Dacia car company sponsoring UTMB back to that point, he said, I'm not running UTMB this year.

Josh

I am not going to go.

Josh

This was last year.

Josh

And to drive the point home, I don't even know, I don't remember who said it.

Josh

And that guy was not at utmb.

Josh

And guess what?

Josh

Now no one has any idea what that guy's been up to the last two years.

Josh

And there may be a whole bunch of people who have.

Josh

Throwing that out there.

Josh

And then they're not going.

Josh

And now we have no idea who they are.

Josh

So I Don't know.

Josh

I mean, I don't necessarily know the overall answer, but I do like this idea, regardless of why, of being able to have that to.

Josh

I want that in my backyard.

Josh

And if the closest we can get is to.

Josh

What did someone call it the other day?

Josh

America's top hat, Canada.

Josh

I'll go there.

Josh

That's awesome.

Brian

Right.

Brian

But ultimately I'd like it to be here, you know.

Josh

Yes.

Brian

But it seems like the conversation.

Brian

There's not much appetite in the trail space by, you know, most of the community and you know, the people who run the races to try or, you know, even advocate for larger race fields.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like to expand permits.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Or I don't know, maybe it's just a government agency thing where they just get an iron fist that's, you know, basically impenetrable.

Brian

But it seems like we kind of also agree that we shouldn't have more people running the western states trail, for example, or we shouldn't have more people running hard Rock.

Brian

Like it seems like we kind of fall in line with that and embrace the preservation, you know, standpoint.

Josh

Yeah, yeah.

Josh

I.

Josh

So Texas, I believe is 97% privately owned land, 3% public lands.

Josh

But it's not conducive to, you know, a competitor, it would seem like.

Josh

I would wonder if there was, you know, if, if there was a state that some of this wilderness.

Josh

There was larger wilderness areas that were privately owned.

Josh

Wyoming might come to mind.

Josh

I wonder if, I wonder if that could be a solution where someone caught the vision and they essentially had a Woodstock, you know, where that guy just had that land in New York and let everybody come to it.

Josh

It'd be amazing if the community could rally around a private land 100 miler.

Josh

You know, I think about like the outsiders or something like that, you know, like where they all have their car, their headlights are lighting it up.

Josh

It's like just this badass grassroots.

Josh

These are the best.

Josh

I don't know if private lands are a solution.

Josh

I don't know if people like private land that much.

Brian

Right.

Brian

That would be a cool image though, to see all these.

Josh

Oh, wouldn't that be great?

Brian

Yeah.

Josh

See Jim step out of the car with a car with like suicide doors and like come out and like they're literally just going to go for it.

Josh

Like a hundred mile or grassroots.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

Especially if they're, especially if they're gas powered carburetor engine, you know, really just get that nice smell waffling at the start, you know.

Brian

Yeah.

Josh

Take.

Josh

Take full advantage of it being private land.

Brian

Yeah.

Josh

But okay, so sometimes I'm out running and you know, on my better days when I'm on trail and I don't know the culture around unleashed dogs on trails and I, to be honest, I don't even know the rules.

Josh

Are they allowed to be off leash?

Josh

Are they supposed to be on leash?

Josh

I imagine some of these foothill trails that I love so much in Salt Lake, they've got to be on leash.

Josh

But it's probably my least favorite thing in the world to run up on a dog on a trail.

Josh

And when the owner then looks at you like, the dog like jumps on me while I'm running and the owner looks at me like, isn't this cute?

Josh

My dog?

Josh

Yeah, you know, that stuff, that stuff kills me.

Josh

You run into dogs out there?

Brian

Yeah, yeah.

Brian

I mean, dogs are, you know, hikers, best friends, you know, companions.

Josh

I love dogs, by the way.

Josh

I love them.

Josh

That's when I get jumped on while running.

Brian

Yeah, no, I agree.

Brian

I think I've heard this is a com.

Brian

This is definitely a topic.

Brian

I think all of us kind of vent privately because nobody, you know, nobody wants to kick a dog off down, right.

Brian

Like the dogs, they're always, you know, sympathetic.

Brian

Everybody's dog owners, but yeah, I mean, it's like, come on, man, have a little bit of etiquette, right?

Brian

Like, you know, get your dog leashed up.

Brian

Like.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

I've had people, I think, who have been injured, you know, by trying to avoid, you know, a dog trail.

Brian

Yeah, a dog that was on trail.

Brian

You know, you make a sudden move or you know, just something that was unplanned and yeah, you roll your ankle and you're just like, damn, dude, like this stupid.

Josh

What about E bikes?

Josh

They're kind of the same thing to me.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

Then we, yeah, that's what I was telling you was like, kind of like, you know, how if we were to have a head to head matchup, right.

Brian

Of like, if we could just remove one from the trail experience, it would be hard to pick.

Brian

Right.

Brian

The off leashed dog versus the, you know, general mountain biker.

Brian

The E bike, the E bike guy goes even a notch up, I think of the.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

Of the general mountain biker because he's heavy.

Brian

He's kind of an asshole.

Brian

Even going uphill, usually, usually if you're going uphill, you're passing the mountain bikers and it's kind of the one opportunity that you can exchange pleasantries with each other because they're going slow enough and they're not as, you know, focused on their trail.

Brian

But the E Bike guy.

Brian

No, he's still just blasting by you.

Josh

Yeah.

Josh

I feel like the.

Josh

I mean, I don't even know.

Josh

Like, it blows my mind.

Josh

I think being on the E bike would probably be a blast.

Josh

It's just like.

Josh

I don't know.

Josh

I mean, as a runner, like, just a number of times, they're so quietly just flying up right behind you, not quite knocking you over, but then yelling like, I'm in their way.

Josh

And I.

Josh

I mean, I am, technically, I am in their way, but.

Josh

Pretty crazy.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

The mountain biker, I think, is the thing that we encounter most over here.

Brian

A lot of trails are basically.

Brian

You know, there's a big mountain biking community.

Brian

They do a lot of trail work.

Brian

So, I mean, I think, you know, they.

Brian

They do kind of like, you know, buff out the trail so that they're, you know, they've got the berms in the right places and, you know, these little jumps, like they're maintaining the trail, but are they.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

Are they abusing it in a way that, you know, it's not as natural landscape anymore.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So it's like there's a case to be made that, yes, they're doing trail maintenance, but they're really doing trail alterations more so than anything.

Brian

So, you know, I can't stand that.

Brian

There's a certain.

Brian

There's.

Brian

There's certain areas over here where like.

Brian

Yeah, they're.

Brian

They're well known, like downhill sections and I mean, these guys are just ripping downhill, you know, but it's like part of the trail.

Brian

So it's like I'm coming up and I'm having to jot, you know, jump off trail just to avoid.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

This guy screaming down.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

It's never good.

Josh

I want.

Josh

And going in the winter, you know, I guess it's a little bit less.

Josh

I don't mind the.

Josh

I mean, I get running with the dog because of the big game.

Josh

I hate big game.

Josh

I hate running into and running anything.

Josh

I'm typically a, you know, fraidy cat out there, but I don't.

Josh

I don't.

Josh

Yeah, I don't love the dog jumping on me, especially in the cold, running in the snow.

Josh

Maybe it's a little bit less.

Josh

A little bit more solitude out there, but.

Josh

Yeah, I don't know if you got a dog and you run with them off leash.

Josh

I do absolutely love you and I.

Josh

And I do love your dog, but get off my lawn, you know?

Brian

Yeah.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

I think it's just, you know, I would imagine.

Brian

I would like to think that the right mindset when you're bringing your dog into a trail is to assume everyone you encounter is afraid of dogs.

Brian

You know, don't assume that everybody has a comfort level with dogs and, you know, should already know that your dog is, you know, basically part human and is going to greet you with just, you know, the sweetest, kindest heart.

Brian

Right.

Brian

Like sometimes you just get a little comfortable knowing your dog's behavior and assuming everybody else just engages with dogs with the same assumption.

Josh

Yeah, I mean, to prove I'm a dog person, like, we literally waited to do this family traveling around the world until our dog passed.

Josh

And that was an indefinite thing.

Josh

And when our dog passed, that kind of helped, was one of the many doors that opened for us.

Josh

I like dogs, so that's important because I'm sure most people aren't going to love the final minutes of this anyway.

Josh

Training, how's it going?

Josh

We'll, we'll wind down with training.

Josh

Are you out every morning still saw some big miles, Speedy miles.

Brian

Yeah, yeah, we're having to pivot like that's the life of a, of an ultra runner with a family and a wife and she bought a travel trailer a couple weeks ago and we're fully gutting that thing before a trip here in a couple weeks.

Brian

Right.

Brian

So it's basically, we've got a insane amount of work to do on the trailer and a short time to do it.

Brian

And so, yeah, running is going to have to pivot a little bit to make sure that I'm not all banged up and not wanting to get out there on my knees and do stuff.

Brian

But I mean, she's taken over most, most of the, you know, the decorating and everything.

Brian

But yeah, exactly.

Brian

Something always new to kind of derail the plans that we thought we had.

Brian

You know, we, we build out these nice, beautiful 15 week plans and life doesn't work that way.

Josh

Yeah, well, all right.

Josh

Going into, going into the colder months, less there's less events, I mean, there's certainly going to be some fun Southern hemisphere stuff is, you know, Tara Warra, I think, you know, that's February.

Josh

There's just not going to be a ton to talk about.

Josh

So if you listen to these episodes with Brian and I and you have any thoughts on stuff you want to hear us talk about, please let us know.

Josh

Leave a comment.

Josh

If you listen on Spotify or shoot us emails or direct messages on Instagram, that's where we're most active.

Brian

But yeah, yeah, if you're still tuned in.

Brian

Yeah, let us know if we need to unpack the election.

Brian

We can certainly take, you know, a nice little eight week break from Bad Runners take and get into the, you know, the political sphere.

Josh

Bad Runner's take on politics.

Josh

Exactly.

Josh

Right.

Josh

Winter edition of Ultra Runners.

Brian

It would we would be remiss to not mention the amount of DNF themed stories and posts that were made by our trail friends on the social medias yesterday.

Brian

So they were very dnf.

Brian

We could possibly, you know, have a topic there of, you know, comparing the different posts that you saw that were in the same spirit of the DNF post.

Josh

So, yeah, send them along.

Josh

Send along your favorites and we'll see.

Josh

We'll just see if there's anyone.

Brian

Yeah.

Brian

Little reaction video.

Josh

Yeah.

Brian

All right.

Josh

Let's do this again soon.