国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Ray Zahab
Ray Zahab during his expedition on Baffin Island, 2009

Ultra Ambassador

How does ultrarunner Ray Zahab鈥攚ho became famous for expeditions traversing the harshest terrain on earth鈥攗p the ante? By taking high school kids on his next series of trips.

Published: 
Ray Zahab

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

More than a decade ago, ultrarunner Ray Zahab started his transformation from a 170-lb, pack-a-day smoker into one of the world’s most famous ultrarunners. After discovering the 100-mile in the pages of Explore magazine, he decided to enter the 2004 race and won. Since then he has run across the Sahara Desert in temperatures as high as 130 degrees and trekked across Russia鈥檚 Lake Baikal in temps as low as negative 40 degrees. As he finished the Sahara and saw the Red Sea, an idea entered his head and took hold. In 2007, he started and began leading high-school youth ambassadors on ultrarunning expeditions to places like the Bolivia Salt Flats and the Brazilian Amazon. 国产吃瓜黑料 caught up with before his next trip with four youth ambassadors to Rajasthan, India.

国产吃瓜黑料: What is your training schedule like when you鈥檙e not globetrotting?
Zahab: It depends on what I鈥檓 doing during the year. I do three projects a year. Two of those projects are youth based, so it鈥檚 expeditions where young people go on the expeditions, they do the project themselves. Right now I鈥檓 looking toward my next expedition, which will take place in January of 2012. I鈥檓 starting the building phase during the summer, and I鈥檓 running probably 100 km (62 miles) per week.

Do you do any sort of cross training?
The only cross training that I would do鈥攊f you would consider it such鈥攊s core strength training and some plyometrics and a little bit of functional strength training. In the fall, as I鈥檓 building for my expedition, then I really start to hit the weights more. I鈥檓 not a very big guy and the expeditions that I do, like the January expedition once a year, is generally very grueling. This past year I ran across the Atacama Desert (800 miles), averaging about 60 km (37 miles) a day. The terrain was horrible, a lot of it was very difficult, so I lost a tremendous amount of weight. It just falls off of my body. So in order to maintain my strength over the course of the 20 days, I build muscle mass before I go.

So what kind of fluctuations do you see in your weight?
My normal weight is between 150 and 155 pounds. For running the Sahara in 2006 and 2007, I gained up to 162. By the end of that 111-day expedition I weighed 119 pounds. So it鈥檚 a pretty big fluctuation.

Are you worried about long-term effects on your body?
If you take into perspective that I started running when I was 35 years old, I鈥檝e had a very short running career鈥擨鈥檓 42 right now. In that span of time, I鈥檝e really been able to learn a tremendous amount about my body, and I think that the underlying theme of this crazy running journey is that we鈥檙e all capable of doing extraordinary things in our lives.

During the Atacama I ended up with a blister that became totally septic. I mean it was infected and I had to make a choice on whether I was going to continue running on this blister. I end up going and cutting my shoe in half 鈥榗ause it was so swollen. I really thought it was going to be the end of the expedition. I willed myself that if I can get through this day and see that I haven鈥檛 done any permanent damage, and it鈥檚 not torn up any worse, then I know I can finish, and I can run on the pain. The pain I can deal with, but making it (the injury) worse I would not have been able to deal with. I鈥檝e said this before, it鈥檚 90 percent mental, the other 10 percent is all in your head.

That鈥檚 an awful lot of pain and suffering to go through. Why do you do this?
The whole reason I do this, my passion, are the two youth projects. I wake up every day and truly I feel fulfilled. Working with Impossible2Possible, working with youth, delivering these experiential learning programs to schools, and the feedback that we get from the students, the lives changed of the youth ambassadors that come on these expeditions, the feedback that we get from teachers, it totally makes it all worth it.

At the end of each day鈥攐r in the middle of each day, depending on what time zone we鈥檙e in鈥攚e set up video conferencing software so our four youth ambassadors are able to share with thousands of students in classrooms all over the world an opportunity to conference in and ask our students questions live, like 鈥渨hat鈥檚 it like running a marathon a day?鈥 We partnered with the United Nations and we used this expedition to Bolivia, where the world鈥檚 largest salt flats are, to share the story of chemistry. So you see, the tie in is salt, and the story of changing biochemistry. The students, the five youth ambassadors in this case, started their run at 11,000 feet and make their way up to 15,000 feet. They ran an average of 35 a day, at that higher altitude, and every day they would share their stories, they would tell the students in classrooms the things they were learning about their bodies on a biochemical level every day.

What are the next expeditions you have planned?
We鈥檙e going to Rajasthan, in India, the Thar Desert (in November). It鈥檒l be an 8-day expedition, average of somewhere close to 40 K (25 miles) a day by the youth ambassadors, and we will visit anything associated to the quality of health care in a community, that鈥檚 what we鈥檙e going to tie the whole curriculum around. So again you鈥檒l have a live website that鈥檒l track the expedition. Every day, videos, photographs, video journals shot by the students will be put up, on site, so people will be able to really get a handle on what it鈥檚 like.

What are you feeling when you finish a trek?
I finish a trek and I can鈥檛 wait to get back to see my family and be with my family, but also there鈥檚 a sense of showing again that regular people can do neat things. Let鈥檚 not forget, I鈥檓 not a life-long runner. It鈥檚 like, once again, a regular person goes out and does something that in their life is extraordinary. Well, we can all go out and do the extraordinary.

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online