Runners, earn your bragging rights during the Atacama Crossing

Race through the desert.

Some runs are for fun. Others are to prove you can do it. The Atacama Crossing falls into the latter category. If you want to run 250 kilometers (about 155 miles) through the driest place on Earth, this race is for you. There’s also spectacular scenery of Chilean sand dunes, salt lakes, and volcanoes — a landscape that’s been compared to Mars. But no guarantee you’ll fully enjoy this grueling experience.

What makes this race so hard? Obviously, the distance. But also an altitude averaging 8,000 feet throughout the race. And did we mention how dry it is?

The race starts at an elevation of 10,500 feet in Chile’s beautiful Rainbow Valley, named for its colorful rocks. The route has ups and downs as it drops to lower elevations, sometimes following narrow valleys that ancient Inca traders used. Runners will traverse a slot canyon and spend a night camping beside a flamingo-filled lake. The race ends in the touristy town of San Pedro de Atacama.

A person standing on a dirt ridge overlooking Chile's Atacama Desert.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

Atacama Crossing is one of the annual 4 Deserts Ultramarathon Series. The other three races are the Gobi March in Mongolia, the Namib Race in Namibia, and The Last Desert in Antarctica. Runners can enter just one or sign up for all four. Talk about bragging rights!

Runner Ash Mokhtari has run the Atacama Crossing eight times! In an interview for the Marathon Handbook, he talked about how he prepares for the race. He starts training six months ahead of time. Since he lives in Canada — not an ideal prepping ground for a hot, dry race — he spends 30 minutes in the sauna after training runs.

A dirt road and buildings in San Pedro de Atacama in Chile.
San Pedro’s main tourist street. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

“Ideally if you don’t live in a hot place, you want to spend two weeks in the desert to allow your body to acclimatize to the heat,” Mokhtari said. “The Atacama is a high altitude desert so the body needs three weeks to acclimatize to the altitude as well.” He acknowledged that this isn’t possible for most people unless they’re retired or pro ultra runners. He recommends cross-training and practicing running with a backpack.

A sandy valley in Chile's Atacama Desert, where Atacama Crossing is held.
Photo by Teresa Bergen

The Atacama Desert’s uneven, shoe-chewing terrain “will bring even the most seasoned ultra runner to an eventual walking pace,” Mokhtari said. “At places the salt flats alternate between hard-packed salt sheets, razor sharp crystals growing out of the ground or frozen-cauliflower heads that might crumble into a hole with your foot in it.”

The next Atacama Crossing goes from March 30 to April 5, 2025. Competitors need to arrive by March 28 — or sooner if they can, to acclimatize. Plan to stay afterward to relax and enjoy the Atacama Desert at a more leisurely pace. For a real treat, you can book a luxury stay at Explora Atacama, which offers multiple saunas, pools, and Jacuzzis to ease your sore legs.

A hot tub on a wood platform next to lounge chairs surrounded by pampas grass.
Stay and relax after the race. / Photo by Teresa Bergen

Disclaimer: While this article was not sponsored, Explora Atacama hosted the writer during her visit to Chile. As always, Outdoors Wire operates independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

Watch runners test their might during the 2024 American River 50-Mile

They’re off to the races!

Located about half an hour outside of California’s capital city of Sacramento, the town of Folsom is known for many things. If you’re a Johnny Cash fan, you probably recognize this city as the site of the musician’s famous Folsom State Prison shows. But for runners, Folsom may be better known as the home of the American River 50-Mile Endurance Run.

Self-described as “the second largest 50 miler in the United States,” the race starts in Folsom and challenges participants to reach the nearby city of Auburn. The 2024 American River 50-Mile winners all managed to complete this grueling course in under seven hours. First-place winner Jayson Hefner from Fairfield, California, completed the race with a time of 6:46:08. Check out more stats from the race here, and see some incredible photos and videos from the event below!

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Naval officer Paul Johnson is running across the US to support veterans

Run for a good cause.

Ultrarunner and naval officer Paul Johnson is on an extraordinary cross-country run from Los Angeles to New York. His purpose? To raise a million dollars for Team Red, White & Blue. This nonprofit enriches the lives of US veterans by connecting them to their community through physical and social activity.

Fewer than 400 people have run this cross-country route. Paul’s original goal was to complete the 3,000-mile journey in 40 days. This meant averaging 75 miles per day and shaving two days off the former record. When Paul took a break on day 24 to talk to Outdoors Wire, he was a little behind on the record setting, but way ahead on the community support and cross-country outpouring of love. Here’s what he had to say. 

https://www.instagram.com/p/C5HxU3mRq9k

Outdoors Wire: How’s it going so far?

Johnson: You know, I thought I would really enjoy eating a lot of food. I don’t. So many calories. Day 16 was the hump. It was pretty rough up to day 16. Day 10 was one of the toughest, almost not being able to run at all. My foot, you know, we’re working on it. And since day 16, I’ve practically been running pain-free. Obviously, the legs are sore and tired. But we’re cruising now, so we’re starting to feel really good about it.

Outdoors Wire: What has surprised you on this run?

Johnson: The amount of support that we’ve received from people. Being in practically what feels like the middle of nowhere, and a random car comes ripping around the corner. Somebody hops out and starts yelling if they can run with us. Families that drove four hours to come give us chocolate chip cookies and then run the furthest they’ve ever run in their life with us. It’s just been insane. I’m looking right now at a stack of cards from a kindergarten class that all wrote me like motivational do-a-good-job cards that are hanging on the inside of the van. So, just to be able to see that level of support has been absolutely insane.

Outdoors Wire: How does running help mental health struggles for you and other veterans? Or for people in general?

Johnson: There’s a, at least for me, a very huge connection between mental and physical health. And I think a lot of people can relate to that. Especially within the military. One of the ways that we deal with stress is working out. There’s a lot of other not-as-great ways. But working out is one of the positive ones. And everybody has their own different way of doing it. A lot of people like lifting weights. You know, it’s kind of tough to go swimming because you need special facilities for that. But running and walking are a constant that you can do pretty much anywhere.

And I definitely find that if I’m not running as much, I struggle more myself with mental health. Running, I describe it to other people as my meditation. Especially for anxiety and depression. The running kind of gives it all a break. It’s a very positive release for me.

And so that’s the encouragement here. We want people to try and do something more physically active. Whether it’s running, walking, playing golf, pickleball, go for a hike. Whatever it is, by increasing that level of physical activity, you’re going to drastically improve your mental health.

Outdoors Wire: What sort of mental health problems do you think running is most helpful for?

Johnson: Definitely not for my sleep, I’ll tell you that. (laughs) No impact on the sleep issues I’ve had. It definitely has helped a lot with anxiety. Getting started and going out for a run is one of the hardest things, always. Just trying to get myself over that hump is very difficult. I just don’t want to do it. But as soon as I can finally force myself out that door, and I get 10, 20, 30 steps in, I’m so glad I did it. So, for me, that’s where I see the huge effect.

Having those anxiety symptoms with the tight chest and everything else, I just feel that I’m able to relax a bit once I start running.

Outdoors Wire: Tell us why Team Red, White & Blue is important to you.

Johnson: Because they’re the best, obviously. They are the nation’s largest community support group for veterans. And it’s not just veterans. There’s active-duty members like myself. There’s civilians. There are veterans. It’s a 200,000-person community and charity that’s focused on exactly what we’re out here to do, which is improve the mental and physical wellbeing of individuals. 

Specifically, they do a lot of different things from providing training, programming, and community events with different physical goals. Monthly challenges to get you up and moving and trying something new. And really trying to get you involved to interact with and work out with other people. 

That’s one of the things that a lot of veterans struggle with, when you leave such tight community as the military. People that you’ve lived with 24/7, now you’re no longer with those people. You’re kind of on your own. It’s a huge shock to the system and a very tough adjustment that a lot of people struggle with. And to me, that’s really why RWB is so important, is bridging that gap between physical and mental health and getting people involved.

Outdoors Wire: What do you most want people to know about veterans?

Johnson: They’re dope. Everybody has their own experience in the military. Some people have done combat tours. Some people have been shot at. Some people have been blown up. I’ve never been shot at, I’ve never been blown up. Yet, myself and a lot of my peers still struggle with a lot of similar mental health issues, just due to the level of stress that we’re constantly under, even when you’re in other roles.

I think a lot of people, even other service members, discredit the effects of mental health for a lot of people. Especially for the veterans. And they don’t really teach you a lot of good ways to necessarily deal with everything and how to transition. So, I think it’s important just to understand that everyone’s had different experiences. And just because maybe they didn’t do a combat tour doesn’t mean they’re not struggling with something.

Outdoors Wire: Anything else you want to share with readers about this ambitious cross-country run and what it means to you?

Johnson: We’re out here to raise awareness for mental health and fundraise 1 million dollars for Team Red, White & Blue. The record’s kind of out of the question at this point, and that’s totally fine. We’re here for the important part, which is that awareness and fundraising. So if you’re anywhere near where we’re going to be coming, come on out, say hi. Come run. Cheer us on as we go by. We love every form of support. And as always, get the word out, share with all your friends, family, coworkers, whatever. And help us reach that million-dollar goal.

Ultrarunner documents experience running world’s most mysterious marathon

Uncover the mystery.

In 1977, James Earl Ray and six other convicts escaped over the wall of Tennessee’s Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary. For about two days, Martin Luther King Jr.’s assassin fled bloodhounds, battling steep and densely overgrown slopes. When the convicts were caught, Ray had only managed to put eight miles between himself and the prison in 55 hours.

The prison break of one of the U.S.’s most notorious criminals wouldn’t sound inspiring to most people. But Gary Cantrell, better known as Lazarus Lake (or just Laz), has a taste for extremes. The endurance race designer and director lives in Bell Buckle, Tennessee. His most famous race is the Barkley Marathons, held annually since 1986 in Frozen Head State Park, just a few miles from the aforementioned penitentiary. Legend has it that Ray’s pathetic mileage inspired Laz, who figured he could have made it at least 100 miles in the same amount of time. Laz designed a race where runners would complete a 20-mile loop over extremely tough terrain five times in 60 hours. One of the Barkley’s mottos would become: “Meaningless suffering without a point.”

Runners can’t just decide to enter the Barkley. Ever since the race’s inception, it’s been shrouded in mystery and bizarre traditions. Dutch ultrarunner Michiel Panhuysen first heard of the Barkley around 2010 and was instantly intrigued. Part of the appeal was the strange application process, which included writing a cover letter about why you wanted to participate.

“The application procedure is kept secret and the exact time and date of the race start are not announced beforehand,” Panhuysen writes at the beginning of his new book, “In The Spell of The Barkley.” “Participants also run for miles off-trail through the forest, and they frequently get lost. In 2010, only one participant finished the race! Only one!” Some years, that number is zero.

A gray book cover with black and yellow illustrations of runners in a California forest. Overlayed white text reads "In the Spell of the Barkley."
Image courtesy of Bloomsbury Sport

Panhuysen’s book details his growing fascination with the Barkley, his multiple times running the race (never getting beyond the second loop), and the characters involved. He recounts his own history of extreme sports and ultrarunning. In an interesting and simple-to-follow account, he tries to explain the sport’s appeal to the 99.99% of people who think running 100 miles straight sounds completely nuts, not to mention impossible.

In addition to chronicling the Barkley, Panhuysen takes readers on other ultraruns around Europe. He explains odd details like sleep strategies during an ultramarathon and the fact that runners must simply accept the fact of hallucinations and learn to deal with them. He also charts how his own ultrarunning grew into a compulsion, leading him out of a 27-year relationship. 

“Everything revolved around ultra races. Before a race, I would be preparing for it for weeks. I changed my work, sleep rhythm, eating and drinking habits to accommodate the race.” After an ultra, it took him weeks to recover — just in time for the cycle to start again.

Author Michiel Panhuysen standing outside against a rock background.
Author Michiel Panhuysen. / Photo courtesy of Bloomsbury Sport

The races sound so incredibly miserable — a broken finger here, a terrifying middle-of-the-night descent down a dark rock face there, hunger, cold, exhaustion. Readers will want to know why ultrarunning becomes so important to participants in the sport. Ultrarunners are devoted to the idea of mind over matter. The book reminded me of people with anorexia who are proud to thwart the needs of the body and survive without food. Ultrarunners do that and more — going without sleep, shelter, and rest.

Ultrarunning taught Panhuysen how to react to all this lack. “Extreme running might have cost me dear, but I got something important back in return: an indestructible positive attitude with which I can process bad things in my life in a simple way.” This book probably won’t turn you into an ultrarunner, but it’s a fascinating peek into an extreme sport.

Writer received a free copy of the book for review.