by cynthia23 » Tue Jul 03, 2007 11:58 am
Ok, agree we are doing this topic to death (no pun intended) but here's my last (I swear, MagikWalt!) comment: Zip points out that he sometimes leaves at 5.a.m. SS/Guest is similar. Grandmaster P. even sometimes leaves at 7! That's true, and perfectly safe for you guys, but you are ultra athletes at a competitive level (the Pikes Peak race, the Death Valley ultramarathons, the Ironman events, etc.) They are literally among the most cardiovascularly fit people in the U.S.--one of a tiny, tiny, elite group of about a thousand people--tops. Grandmaster P, SS, and Zip can make it to the top of Skyline is just a few hours. Folks, don't try this at home. No matter how buff and fit you are, you aint' Zip, Guest, or Grandmaster. We are talking about people who literally run for one hundred and forty miles in triple digit temps. What they can do and what we can do are two whole different animals. I worry that the people reading this who don't personally know Zip or Guest or Grandmaster will not understand that. Admire their well-earned accomplishments, but don't try to emulate it. Just as normal people would not climb into a ring with Mike Tyson (well, the old, scary one) and expect to come out alive or without brain damage, you shouldn't expect to start Skyline at 5 in July and come out without getting sick, rescued, or dead. Don't do Skyline in the summer at all; if you still do, start by 2a.m. at the latest. At about 6. am, when you are sweaty and gasping and only halfway up, you will see a smiley streak whooshing past you. That was Zippety ....
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