Tag Archives: Marathon des Sables

Westporters Tackle Sahara’s “Toughest Footrace On Earth”

Alert and intrigued “06880” reader Jenny McGuinness writes:

My husband Luke McGuinness, and our neighbors Peter Boyd and Stephanie Tang, appear completely sane on the outside.

Like many, they lead busy lives as parents and professionals in Westport. But they moonlight as lunatics: Next month, the 3 will embark on a 6-day footrace across the Sahara desert in Morocco.

By choice.

The event is called the Marathon des Sables. The Discovery Channel called it “the Toughest Footrace on Earth.”

Participants will cover 156.5 miles over 6 days on foot — anywhere from 13.1 to 53 miles each day.

But that’s not all. Participants must carry all of their food and provisions for the week in a pack on their back.

Not quite the Sahara: Peter Boyd, Luke McGuinness and Stephanie Tang, take a break during  a 34-mile training run last weekend at Compo Beach …

The only things race organizers provide are water, and an open-sided tent each night.

The upside? Your pack is very heavy at the start. But it gets lighter every day.

What diabolical maniac planted the seed for this idea?

Pete Boyd.

… and then get back to work.

Mild-mannered and good-natured on the outside, but apparently made of utter darkness inside, Pete completed the race in 2003. Much like childbirth, one forgets the enormous amount of pain when enough time has passed.

He yearned to return to the Sahara. But who could he sucker into joining him?

He didn’t have to look far. Knowing that his neighbors Luke and Stephanie — like him — enjoy any garden variety, exceptionally torturous physical challenge, he asked.

“Don’t worry, guys, it’s not that bad,” Pete said. “It’s just sandy. Very sandy,”

They accepted.

Pete says there are 2 kinds of sand topography in sunny Morocco: the soft dune-running days, and the rocky sand days.

The latter is worse, because “you sprain your ankle hundreds of times all day, every day.”

A scene from the Marathon des Sables.

What else is hard about this beast of a race?

“The sandstorms,” Pete says simply.

The average daytime temperature in that part of Morocco in April is between 100 and 110 degrees — with a chance of camel.

???!!!

The Marathon des Sables includes a time cut-off: You have to finish each day ahead of an actual camel that race organizers send out to bring up the rear.

If the camel passes you, you’re out of the race.

Luke, Peter and Stephanie have been training hard for months. You may have seen them out on the roads at dawn, wearing backpacks, headlamps, and sick grins.

They are determined. They will be successful!

We sure can’t wait to hear about this epic adventure, and best of all, to have them back safely.

(Marathon Des Sables is April 12-22. Luke, Peter and Stephanie are running to benefit the High Atlas Foundation, a non-profit founded by former Peace Corps volunteers aimed at furthering sustainable agriculture, women’s empowerment, clean water, education, and cultural preservation in Morocco. To donate, click here.

(To follow the Westport trio in real time as they journey across the Sahara,  click here.)

Astonishingly, Luke, Peter and Stephanie are not the first Westporters to be challenged by the Marathon des Sables.

In 2014, I wrote about Jean Paul Desrosiers. The owner of Sherpa Fitness Center had just returned from his grueling adventure. Click here for that story.

Jean Paul Desrosiers’ Unfathomable Moroccan Marathons

This is getting ridiculous.

First, “06880” reported on David Friezo’s attempt to raise $500,000 for cancer victims by running a marathon at the North Pole.

Then it was Yaacov Mutnikas, who rowed across the Atlantic Ocean  — and set a world record in the process.

I hope you are sitting down for this next one — though Jean Paul Desrosiers certainly was not.

The owner of Westport’s Sherpa Fitness Center has just returned from Morocco. He competed in the Marathon des Sables — only “the toughest footrace on earth,” according to the Discovery Channel.

Jean Paul Desrosiers marathon des sables

How tough?

Desrosiers ran — no, raced — 156 miles in 5 days. That’s the equivalent of 6 marathons.

He did it across 10-story-high sand dunes, in temperature reaching 130 degrees.

While carrying all his food and a sleeping bag on his back.

I’m exhausted just typing that.

“I’ve always been an outdoor enthusiast,” the 39-year-old Weston resident says. “I like to push boundaries. I believe life happens on the edges of your comfort zone.”

That philosophy has made Sherpa Fitness — on the Post Road, across from Athletic Shoe Factory — a very popular gym (among a certain type of clientele, to be sure). Its tagline is “Move Your Boundaries.”

Jean Paul Desrosiers looks like a normal human being.  But he is not.

Jean Paul Desrosiers looks like a normal human being. But he is not.

It’s also the philosophy that saw Desrosiers through 6 years in the Marine Corps, starting at age 19, and propelled him later into college as an exercise science major, a career as a semi-pro cyclist, and helped him run 4 marathons and 1 ultramarathon.

But the Marathon des Sables is an ultra-uber-unbelievable marathon.

Desrosiers did the entire race on just 17,000 calories. Carrying all his gear, every ounce was important. He used dehydrated food — and then repackaged it in vacuum bags. Shaving a few grams here and there could end up saving a full pound. Running 156 miles over sand, rocks and gravel — there were no asphalt roads — every ounce counts.

Desrosiers did bring 100 salt tablets. They were key to keeping his electrolytes up.  Race organizers provided water — but not a lot. And it wasn’t even quenching. “Hot and dry,” Desrosiers calls it.

He began training in October. But when winter came, the Polar Vortex hit. Not exactly the best way to prepare for a desert that’s 110 in the shade.

So Desrosiers stuffed a backpack with 28 pounds of rock salt, and hit the treadmill. As he got stronger, he ran with the pack on roads.

When the race drew nearer, he turned the heat in a Sherpa room up to 90, added a space heater, and rode a stationary bike for 90 minutes. “It helped, but it wasn’t perfect,” he says.

He also ran on Sherwood Island. The snow helped him practice his footing on difficult terrain.

Jean Paul Desrosiers, pausing very briefly in Morocco.

Jean Paul Desrosiers, pausing very briefly in Morocco.

Once in Africa, reality hit quickly. There was brutal heat, dry air, strong wind, and the biggest dunes Desrosiers had ever seen. And, with 1100 runners in such soft sand, it took a long time to get through.

As difficult as the physical race was — and boy, does it sound daunting — the emotional part was equally tough.

“You can’t prepare fully for the reality of knowing you have to survive with just what you’ve got,” he notes.

Still, he adds, “If I’d never done anything before, I wouldn’t have believed I could do this. You can’t start 12th grade without having gone through 1st grade.”

Desrosiers trusted in his ability to adapt. The human body, he says, is “pretty dynamic.” But the overwhelmingness of new stimuli shattered even some hardened competitors. Day after day, many racers dropped out.

Day after day too, the pack got lighter — and Desorsiers lost weight. But the temperature did not drop. His feet blistered. Fatigue set in.

What kept him moving were emails from home. Each night, race organizers handed printouts to the racers. Knowing people in Westport were thinking of him “made more difference than any food or drink,” Desrosiers says.

He did not expect to win. But each day he finished in the top third. He was sick on Day 4 — the double marathon, or more than 50 miles — but the next day he clocked in at 5:20, good for the top 200.

A scene from the 2013 Marathon des Sables.

A scene from the 2013 Marathon des Sables.

Desrosiers completed the entire 156 miles at #303. “I was surprised,” he says, using the same tone I would to describe a movie that was better than I expected.

The end affected him, though. He’d expended enormous physical and emotional energy. He was exhausted, dehydrated, overheated and blistered. His back was marked, where his pack dug in.

Then Desrosiers crossed the finish line, and it was all over.

No one was there to congratulate him. He ended the race as he’d begun it: alone.

Desrosiers walked to his tent, dropped his gear off, and headed to the medical area to get his feet looked at. Then he returned to the finish line, to watch the others straggle in.

Jean Paul Desrosiers earned this -- the very hard way.

Jean Paul Desrosiers earned this — the very hard way.

When we talked earlier this week, he’d been home only a couple of days. Besides his girlfriend, he had not talked about the experience with anyone.

“You learn a lot about yourself when you’re uncomfortable,” Desrosiers says. “You persevere, you look forward, you’re happy you got through it.

“This is not a carnival. It’s hell.”

Back in Westport, he’s not sure what his next challenge is. Right now, he’s happy to focus on Sherpa.

But, he notes, “I’m fitter, I’m stronger, I’m lighter. Hopefully, I can inspire people to do things they didn’t think they could do.”

Even if they’re not things you or I would have believed were humanly possible.