Grant Finishes Second at Iditarod
New Release (Inov-8) / 11.03.2013
To tackle an epic 350-mile race across the lonely frozen wilderness of Alaska requires an athlete to be extreme and committed.
inov-8 athlete Joe Grant proved he has both qualities in hardcore measures, overcoming exhaustion and pain to finish the Iditarod Trail Invitational in joint-second place.
Described by organisers as the world’s longest human powered winter ultra-marathon, Joe raced on foot across frozen rivers and swamplands, through forests and over mountains to complete the course in 6 days, 8 hours and 47 minutes.
He did so pulling a sled weighing 35lb/15kg and taking in just 13 hours of sleep throughout.
The 29-year-old, who is part of a new global inov-8 team of athletes set to push boundaries and stretch limits in 2013, said: “It was definitely the hardest thing I’ve ever done.
“It was relentless, every day it felt like I’d done 100 miles.
“I slept for just 13 hours in six days and none of that was what you would call really good sleep.”
Born in Oxford in the UK, raised in France and Spain, and now based in Colorado, US, Joe wore inov-8’s roclite™ 286 GTX boot to tame the snow and ice in a race that saw 19 competitors on foot and 29 others on bikes complete the 350-mile route between Knik and McGrath.
There were just seven checkpoints on the course where food and lodging was available. Between checkpoints racers had only each other.
Joe said: “Form the start it was hard.
“We left Knik at 2pm on the opening 57 miles to the first checkpoint at Yentna Station. I hoped to arrive there in the middle of the night at the latest. I eventually got there at 6.35am. I was wrecked, it felt like I’d done double the distance.
“The soft snow had made it tough going, and it was a relief to get inside and eat. I slept for about an hour and a half and left feeling surprisingly great.