The Tough TNF
For weeks, I was mourning the loss of the opportunity to join The North Face 100. In fact, as I’ve said, I ran the Robinson’s Buddy Wellness thinking of how much fun all the other runners were having at TNF in Batangas. Little did I know that I should’ve been glad I didn’t join (only because I’m not a mud-loving, rock climbing type of girl.)
Word is out that it was a tremendously tough course reserved for the more experienced runners. There were four river crossings, dilapidated bridges and snakes! They say it was more of an adventure race than a marathon. For the 100km, of the 90 teams (including relay) that joined, I heard that only 30-40 crossed the finishline. An HK runner who finished the Gobi Desert Ultra Marathon didn’t finish either.
But, despite the toughness of the course, there were runners that did finish and conquer the trails. All of them deserve a big congratulations and a warm cup of hot chocolate:
– The first runner for 100km crossed in at 13 hours male and 15 hours female.
– A Singaporean couple joined for the relay. The first was the man who arrived late in the afternoon. The woman should have been next, but it was too dark already and the course was dangerous. So, the man ran another 50km loop to accompany his partner.
– Jeremy Go, my unofficial editor in this blog, who I met only a few weeks back and came across as an unassuming guy (who I thought at that time was a newbie runner) finished the 100km beating the 30 hour cut off time by 10mins. While other runners had quit and gone to sleep, he trekked throughout the night without anyone to accompany him.
– My friend Annie won the 20km despite it being her 1st trail run. She split four times and ran through slippery, narrow trails yet came out unscathed. Congrats again Annie! I’m so proud of you.
How about you? What’s your story? Would you do this again?