Namib Race Blogs 2024

Adam Park

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Namib Race (2024) blog posts from Adam Park

05 May 2024 10:05 pm (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time: Dublin, Edinburgh, Lisbon, London

Last 10 km, done. We were always going to finish the last stage if we made it past the long march. The route was mostly soft sand, and we did it in just over an hour.

Final results are in:

  • We came in 25th overall out of the 122 competitors who started
  • We won the team category (!)
  • Jeanne came 5th woman overall, and won her age category (!)

We are incredibly happy with the results, and it’s always good to come away with some hardware but that was only a small part of why we did it. A few thoughts on why I think these challenges are useful (for me, at least):

I’ve always thought it’s easy to be your “best self” when you’re comfortable – it’s easy to be generous when you have plenty, it’s easy to be kind when you’re in a good mood, it’s easy to help others when everything is going well for you. But what happens when they are not? When everyone’s working so hard, each dealing with their own set of challenges, that everybody is only looking out for “number 1”?

And what kind of a person will I be when I’m really struggling - when I’m stressed, exhausted, hungry, and in pain? Will that person still be focused, calm, collaborative, and resilient? Or selfish, panicked, uncaring, and unable to help himself, let alone others? Again, it’s easy to think you’ll always be a strong person when you’re in your comfort zone and feeling confident about life in the here and now.

I’m interested in these questions because that person is my ultimate backstop - the very last man standing that’s got my back. If he’s strong, then I can be confident in tackling the more difficult things in life; in committing to being a reliable teammate, a husband, a father; in leading and helping others; in doing the hard things but the right things, the worthwhile things.

But there’s no way to know what that person is like, until you meet him where he lives – at the end of your limit.

So, I go there to check in once in a while - this time, 250km over 7 days across the Namib desert. A hard but rewarding visit.

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A quick note on my condition post-race – I noticed that I had temporarily gone salt blind! I must be in need of salt replenishment after sweating gallons in the desert over the last week. Also, in the 10 hours after we crossed the finish line, I ate like there was a bottomless pit where my stomach should be – I had a burger; a pizza; fries; a Greek salad; two large plates of rice, roast veg, curry and pasta; an ice cream; a slice of cake; a bag of crisps; a beer; a litre of guava juice; and about 5 bottles of soda - and I still went to bed hungry, dreaming about breakfast… My feet are about double their normal size and covered in heat rash after being wrapped in socks, shoes, and sand gaiters in 50 degrees heat for a week. I feel very lean and light on my feet after losing a few kg and now that I’m not carrying around my food for the week. And that first shower and clean clothes after a week of running and camping in the same clothes was soul replenishing.

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Thank you to everyone who contributed to our fundraising for The Felix Project, sent words of encouragement, and followed us along over the last week! And the biggest thanks of all to Jeanne – the ultimate teammate

Comments: Total (1) comments

Mary Gadams

Posted On: 06 May 2024 03:41 am

Congratulations, Adam. It was amazing following you and Jeanne throughout the Namib Race. I can't say I would pass your test under duress. It is so difficult when the temperatures are high, and your energy level is low. Congratulations on winning the Official Team Division -- well deserved. We hope to meet Sebastian one day soon. All the best, Mary

03 May 2024 05:58 pm (GMT) Casablanca, Monrovia

This was it. I started the day with nothing to give. Nothing. Thinking about how to tackle 75km in that state was a mental hurdle too difficult to climb.
 
First hour - just bash through, get as much running in as possible before it gets hot, then you'll be close enough to CP1 to keep you going. Good plan. Still 65km to go... still too much to think about.
 
From CP1 and CP2, there was just a constant, heavy, hot headwind. I would pour water over myself and be bone dry in 3 minutes - but I had to keep to my 15 minute mental chunks - I was going to be out there for 14-15 hours today, going down to shorter chunks this early in the race was going to be rough. We didn't talk, we didn't think, we just charged through. CP2 done. Exhausted. 55km to go... I had nothing left.
 
Now came more wind, heat, getting into the hottest part of the day, and up a steep technical hill to CP3. Over the ridge, into a tiny little check point perched on the side of the hill. Quick rehydration stop, and down a very very steep technical section into another desert valley floor. There were a few unfortunate injuries on this section but we managed through fine. As always, technical terrain is good for us. Now we were right in the middle of the hottest part of the day, going through windy, dusty, white, desert. The course markers were really hard to spot, and it was easy to go off-course. Once you go off-course, it was really hard to even see where you came from so there were moments where we were lost, and had to have our whits about us to fan out, find a marker, and get back on course - slightly scary considering it's 50 degree, you have a litre of water left, and you don't see any way out for miles around... going half an hour in the wrong direction could mean disaster.
 
Made it to CP4 - just over half way i.e., we just did a marathon, and we still had another to go, and I already had nothing to give. But now we were over the hottest part of the day - it's getting cooler with every passing minute, getting easier.
 
CP5 - the big check point where many people stop to make dinner or even sleep before doing the last 25km push. This is where we made the power move and only stopped for some water, a quick rest, and kept moving. This is where the big time differences are made in the long march. We powered through.
 
From CP5 to CP8 (Camp) was a blurr - 25km past sunset and in the dark with nothing but a headtorch, running on less than nothing. Even with the last few kilometres left, I didn't feel like I had made it - I had to concentrate until the last step to get across the line.
 
14 hours 48 minutes. 
 
Tough, tough, day. I haven't quite processed the day in my head yet - I'm not quite sure how it happened. On all accounts, it shouldn't have. I was running on something else. But I will remember that I can take at least 14 hours 48 minutes of non-stop punishment in the desert from when I feel like I have nothing else to give. And that I was able to be a good teammate, and that I was able to keep calm while doing it. That will probably be handy in getting me through most things back home. 
 
As for my condition right now, a few blisters, heat rash in my feet and legs, dead toenail, pain in the back from the pack, right hip and left knee gone, and likely 2-3kg lighter than when I started a few days ago. Everything hurts but nothing is broken.
 
Now for rest at camp, and onto the finish line tomorrow! Nothing will stop us now.

Comments: Total (7) comments

Marco Grobbelaar

Posted On: 04 May 2024 12:09 pm

Truly inspirational, Adam and Jeanne! It must have felt like heaven being able to take your pack off and call it a day after crossing this finish line. Calloused minds you two have, that's for sure. Hats off!

Justin Byam Shaw

Posted On: 04 May 2024 11:09 am

Was never in doubt that Adam has The Right Stuff but I felt exhausted just reading this. 3.4kgs food, including packaging, for that endurance run is astonishing.

michael millership

Posted On: 04 May 2024 08:17 am

What an extraordinary example of mental and physical endurance and sheer guts. . And as noted elsewhere a gripping read too. I am in awe for you both. I cannot imagine this will be your last adventure, and I wonder what you will do next. Apsley Cherry- Garrard's "The Worst Journey in the World" might give you some ideas.. See you in London. Thank goodness I can say that. I was worried. All the best, Michael

Aurelia T

Posted On: 03 May 2024 07:35 pm

Absolutely incredible Adam (and J of course!). We're so so proud of you both. What an adventure!!! Sebastian has THE ultimate team behind him in life, I tell you! ;-)

Suze van der Horst

Posted On: 03 May 2024 07:32 pm

Adam! What an unbelievable achievement!!! Enjoy your last stretch to the finish! We are super super proud of you both! What a power couple! Love from rainy London! Merijn & Suze

Charlotte Slabbert

Posted On: 03 May 2024 05:53 pm

Utterly gripping read Adam!! Not many people in this world who can start a day with nothing left to give and give 75km in literal hell on earth. Both excited and nervous to see what you two do next having unlocked this totally new level of superpower!!! :) Heads up and finish strong, we are behind you all the way!

Aleks Stefanovski

Posted On: 03 May 2024 05:21 pm

Well done, Adam and Jeanne! Now we’re just waiting for the posts and photos from the finish line :)

01 May 2024 08:58 pm (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time: Dublin, Edinburgh, Lisbon, London

Today was apparently 57 degrees Celsius! I thought to myself “I didn’t sign up for this” but who am I kidding, I literally signed on the dotted line for a run in the desert…
 
We started the day with some excitement getting out of the valley from camp. Some steep and narrow section with scrambling - perfect. This is our terrain. We could see people trying to rush up, getting exhausted quickly, slipping. When you’re climbing, you have to move efficiently, precisely, and steadily if you want to go long. We made great progress here and got in another half an hour or so of running in on the way down. 
 
Then the rest of the day was really a blur. 6.5 hours or so of baking in the sun. I felt every single one of the 57 degrees. Absolutely devastating. I felt sick from the second hour and it was just a matter of hanging on for the next 4.5hrs. I had to take it 10 minutes at a time today (vs. 15 minutes yesterday) - each time I used my precious water to soak my buff because I had to cool myself, it would be bone dry in 5 minutes. Going to 15 minutes was too much. It also meant progress felt slower… 
 
Jeanne was flying again - she tried to set a fast pace off the start so we could make as much progress as possible before we hit peak temperature but I could not keep up. What a machine! So much respect for my wife. She’s in pretty good shape in the camp right now as well, while all I can think about is getting through this bit of update so I can go lie down in a ditch somewhere. Even in the shade at camp, it feels like someone is blowing a giant hair dryer at you.
 
Camp life is also part of the race - I don’t feel like eating anything, drinking anything, or moving. But I must force down food, water, electrolytes, recovery shake, meds, etc - there’s no room for “going by feel” here, since what I feel like doing right now is nothing. Must stick to the horrible meal plan…
 
One more stage to go - the long march. The last four days were just to get here, to sufficiently weaken you with 4 marathons in the heat before they hit you with a double marathon… This is the real start of the race.
 
Let’s go!
 

Comments: Total (5) comments

Josh w

Posted On: 03 May 2024 11:27 am

Congrats on getting through stage 5 & given it was a double day I’ll overlook the lack of a blog yet! Keep it up, amazing stuff both of you

Michael Millership

Posted On: 03 May 2024 03:06 am

Hi Adam What an achievement from you both. I look forward to hearing about it you are back. Do you dream of Kensington Gardens? Or perhaps a camel? Michael

Stephanie Tillman

Posted On: 02 May 2024 12:21 pm

Wow! I see your Jay Z reference! So I started to follow your journey. All the best. If you see Manika Gamble from USA please give her my regards. And your wife. I'm an IG follower and I'm so inspired by all of you. Endure. You will make it.

Merijn Meulemans

Posted On: 02 May 2024 09:07 am

Go Adam!! Keep it up :) So much respect for you guys!

Merijn Meulemans

Posted On: 02 May 2024 09:07 am

Go Adam!! Keep it up :) So much respect for you guys!

30 April 2024 07:31 pm (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time: Dublin, Edinburgh, Lisbon, London

I don't have a thermometer on me my but I've been hearing it got upto 50 degree celcius today... We ran the first hour in the relative cool of the morning, but it took something from me today. I wanted to run the first two hours but the second hour just didn't come and I went into march mode a little earlier than I would have liked. From then on, it was a battle against heat, bordom (nothing but sand and rocks for hours), pain, and the demon in my head. 
 
The day basically felt like running for 6.5 hours in an oven with a pretty bad hangover. Water is a precious commodity when you've got ~10km between check points in 45 degree heat and you're certainly dehydrated - but I had to use some to cool myself down. I broke it down into 15 minute chunks, gave myself the treat of pouring some of the water to soak my hat and buff around my neck. I had to stay disciplined about the 15 minutes - i found myself checking the watch every 10 minutes, then 5 minutes, then 2 minutes... that is not a good place to be when you are running for 6.5 hours... but discipline keeps you to your plan, to your mini 15 minute target, and helps you not lose your cool. Whatever it takes to battle the demon in your head that keeps telling you to stop, that there's just too much more to go.
 
Despite all that, we kept a pretty good march rhythm and pace. We did have to stop to refill water at the check points given the heat but we didn't dilly dally, and our pace was consistent. Even if it hurts, you can't deny math - if you want to make it there in decent time and minimize exposure in the heat, you have to move fast. And when you're haing by a thread, you focus on rhythm, consistency, relentlessness, until you drop dead or you finish the line.
 
Enough whining.
 
Jeanne was incredible today - I don't think she even felt it. She was just gliding through it all, she had strength in her voice throughout, helped keep us on pace. She definitely could have run more but that's the thing about being in a team - you work together and lend each other strength, and go further together.
 
I think the German team absolutely nailed it today. They took us in the first 5 minutes, and then we never saw them again. But again, I don't think they stuck together. Overall, I think they won the day, but it will have taken something from them. There are no free minutes in this race. We still have 3 more marathons to go, including the double marathon stage. Anything could happen. The only thing to do is to stay in the game.
 
Day 3 done. 4,5,6,7 to go.

Comments: Total (2) comments

Marco Grobbelaar

Posted On: 04 May 2024 12:00 pm

Intense stuff, Adam! I can not even imagine that heat reflecting off the baking sand. Well done.

Harvey Beverly Chen family

Posted On: 01 May 2024 08:16 pm

I could feel the heat, extremely hot, unbearable !!! You made it, proud of you!!!

29 April 2024 05:46 pm (GMT-12:00) International Date Line West

Day 2 - the dunes
 
Today was meaningfully tougher than stage 1. The heat was another level - the evening and morning were really nice and warm, which meant that it was going to get very hot… I heard it hit 43 degrees Celsius today… we were out there for over 7 hours…
 
There was no roads today - the best we had was a packed sand trail, which is still sand. We started off with a great ‘desert shuffle’ pace, found our rhythm, and the first hour or so went by really fast - a gift.
 
We made a plan to carry some extra water in the morning so we don’t have to stop to refill at check point 1 - always makes a massive difference in putting some distance between us and whoever is around us. The German team was hot on our tail today - they took us within the first stage, but then we left them at CP1; then they caught up, then we caught them at the dunes (tougher steeper terrain usually works to our advantage given our relatively light weight); then they took us again, and we caught them at CP3. They finished a few minutes ahead of us but only as a 2 - they are a team of 3, and I don’t think the third came in fast enough to make their team average faster than ours. After stage 1, we were winning in the team category… which may be a dangerous thing this early on - we have a tendency of getting competitive and we still have a long way to go… we remind ourselves its only day 2 of 6 (technically 7 but the last day takes care of itself so I don’t worry about that day)
 
I felt pretty horrible coming in to the last checkpoint - stomach didn’t feel great, headache, couldn’t take any food or water down. Danger. I had to quickly figure out what was wrong - Was the elastic on my shorts too tight? I loosened it up a little but no change. Was I sugar low? Had a couple of chocolate / peanut butter cups, no better. Water? No. Finally, I decided to use some of my precious water to pour it over my head and neck to cool myself down - bingo - instant relief. I was overheating. Once I filled up my water bottles at CP3, I used it to soak my buff around my neck every 30 minutes and that kept me going. It’s amazing how your body responds to a fix when it’s at its edge…
 
You can probably tell my writing is getting a little chaotic - I feel like I have a hangover right now…
 
Another strong day in the bag, coming in at around 7 hours. I feel awful but I will slowly recover over the course of the evening. One toenail is half dead, it will probably be completely dead by tomorrow evening but that’s OK, I still have 9 left. Pain was expected; can’t complain about what was always part of the deal.
 
Trying not to think about tomorrow (or the 3 stages afterwards including the long march) until I feel a little better. 
 
Onwards

Comments: Total (0) comments

28 April 2024 04:31 pm (GMT-12:00) International Date Line West

Day 1 
 
The race really starts when you wake up at 6am - 2 hours before the start line. You have to sun cream up, get your gear on, pack up, make and force down the rather dense porridge, fill up your water, etc all in the dark with a head torch on while trying not to get everything caked in sand.
 
We could feel the usual nervous energy around the camp - big laughs, some folks jumping around, some rushing to pack up win case they were late for the start. Then, going off way too hard off the start. Adrenaline can be a good thing in a race but not at the start of a 250km race - the trick is to ignore it, temper yourself, and control your pace with your head, not by feel. 
 
The first half of the day was a gift - nice and cool, reasonably packed surface across the salt flats and the beach. We knew this was a rare section so we took advantage of it and pushed it a little. It was really quite enjoyable (but steady and controlled).
 
We also didn't need to drink too much because the morning was cool - we drank a lot before the start line and managed to not go under the 1.5l minimum so didn't stop at all to refill in the first two check points - this was a strategy we tested when we did this in Georgia 3 years ago and it really saved us a ton of time and helped us put some distance between anyone near us who wasn't expecting it.
 
By CP3, it was getting very hot and fully in the dunes so the last section was rough. We were running low on energy, probably a little dehydrated, and I could hear the drums from camp almost 10km away - sound travels far in the desert and for over an hour, it sounded like the finish line was just around every corner... it was a mental workout as much as it was a physical one. Good sneak preview of the pain to come.
 
We finished in a decent place - Jeanne and I ofcourse started and finished together, and I think Jeanne came in 5th or 6th woman - which is impressive. I also think we might be top team but it could be close - there's a german team of three, two of whom were a bit ahead of us but teams of three must average all three times to calculate thier team time, and they left thier third quite far behind... let's see if we were far enough ahead of the third to beat the team.
 
So Day 1 in about 6 hours 10 minutes or so, still in OK shape but still worked quite hard. Tomorrow is all dunes, which is going to be tough - exposure in the heat could be for a very long time... but for now, we try to focus on recovery - food, hydration, foot care, gear care. Then maybe some strategizing before bed.
 
Mentally, end of day 2 is the worst - we will be absolutely exhausted and sore by tomorrow. Probably a few big blisters. Then we will still have 160-170kms to go including the long march on day 5... I always know that mental hurdle is coming but it doesn't make it any easier. But the tough get going when the going gets tough... or whatever I need to tell myself to keep going!
 
Finally, I realize, once again, how tough Jeanne is. She is probably in a better shape than me at the end of Day 1, but hopefully I add some value with more experience in pacing and strategy in the heat and dunes... or by keeping up!
 
All in all, hard warm up; much tougher days ahead.

Comments: Total (3) comments

Charlotte Slabbert

Posted On: 30 Apr 2024 06:37 am

A&J - this really brings the scale of the endeavour you’ve taken on to life! Forever impressed and utterly in awe of you both - and immensely grateful you two have each other to push the boundaries of the possible together! When the body is weak, the mind is STRONG :) Thinking of you both and sending you all of our positive energy for the next step!

Aleks Stefanovski

Posted On: 29 Apr 2024 08:51 pm

Well done, Adam and Jeanne - this is seriously impressive! I can’t imagine what it must be like to hear the sounds from the finish line when you’re exhausted and still have an hour or so to push - congrats on the resilience to keep going! We are thinking of you as you conquer the 40+ kilometres of dunes ?

Marco Grobbelaar

Posted On: 29 Apr 2024 12:57 pm

Sneak Attack! Lol! Adam, you and Jeanne are absolute legends and I am so chuffed that you two are doing another race together! I am following you guys closely and wished so much I could have joined, but maybe another race next time. =) Feels like just yesterday that we did Georgia together. Well done on your times for Day 1. The salt flats sounds amazing and the photos published until now looks awesome! Keep on keeping on, stay mentally strong and don't be too hard on yourselves. Most important is to make memories, meet new likeminded people and enjoy the social vibe at camp. Please say hi to Inia Raumati for me (we did Lapland together, crazy bugger!).

27 April 2024 02:37 pm (GMT) Greenwich Mean Time: Dublin, Edinburgh, Lisbon, London

 

 

We had a minor delay in getting to the starting camp due to a missed connection in Johannesburg but it turned out to be a rather pleasant layover – we managed to get our last workout in at a nice local gym, visited one of Jeanne’s favourite restaurants from when she used to work here, and managed to get through a few last minute emails and calls. Of course, we spent a decent amount of that time re-packing our bags, weighing and portioning out our freeze-dried food for each meal for the week, and pouring over our excel sheet with calorie-to-weight ratio of each item of food to minimize our pack weight while having just about enough calories to get us through.

 

My food for the week comes in at 3.4kg including packaging, and 16,600 kcal – which is plenty above the 14,000 kcal minimum but comes in at ~2,770 kcal per day – this will certainly put us in meaningful calorie deficit. My daily food ration roughly breaks down into 1,000 kcal in ‘run food’ i.e., bars, biltong, nuts and electrolytes, and the remaining ~1,700 kcal in meals and snacks e.g., porridge for breakfast (~500 kcal), freeze dried spag bol for dinner (~800 kcal), a recovery shake for when we get into camp each day (~170 kcal), and 2x peanut Reese’s butter cup for dessert (156 kcal), etc.

 

I haven't weighed in yet but I think my overall pack is coming in at ~8.5 kg without water – which is the lightest pack I’ve packed in the last 3 times I’ve done this format of racing across a desert (Sahara in 2009, Atacama in 2015, and Georgia in 2021) but it’s also the least number of calories. Let’s see how it goes – it’s always a trade off between speed / exposure  / weight / calories / comfort, taking into account temperature (potentially getting close to 40 degrees), terrain, your goals, and, most importantly – you. There’s no way to have it all; you must take a calculated risk and pick a strategy that suits you – this is why I love this format of racing. You need a strong strategy, a thorough plan, obsessive preparation, disciplined execution, and adaptability when something inevitably goes wrong – it’s a format for the strategist and the all-rounder. Talent alone is insufficient.

 

Also, this year, we are officially entering as a team of two, which means we must start and finish each day together – so teamwork will be an important part the strategy!

 

We camp in the desert tonight under the stars and line up early tomorrow morning for the start.

 

Here we go…

Comments: Total (2) comments

Aleks Stefanovski

Posted On: 29 Apr 2024 08:46 pm

Impressive reading about your meal planning, Adam - and it’s mind-boggling how big of a calorie deficit you are building up this week! The food at the place where you’re going next better be good - and plentiful :) Look forward to hearing about the race and how the strategy is unfolding over these next few days!

Angela Chen

Posted On: 27 Apr 2024 11:26 pm

Rooting for you two. Excellent strategizing, looking forward to day 1.