Endurance athlete Lisa Tamati has knocked off the Death
Valley ultra-marathon in the Nevada desert for the second
time.
The 40-year-old New Plymouth jeweller crossed the finish line
in the gruelling 217km event -- considered the world's
toughest ultra-marathon -- last night, clocking 37 hours, 14
minutes -- one hour 10 minutes faster than a year ago.
Battling extreme heat reaching 57degC and smoke from bush
fires that closed one leg of the race for several hours,
Tamati was eighth woman home, beating her 10th placing last
year, the Taranaki Daily News reported.
"This event was one of the toughest races I have ever run. I
had to battle through extreme fatigue, hallucinations and
temperatures reaching 57 degrees," she said on her website
afterwards.
"There were times when I was sleep walking, almost standing
directly on a sleeping rattlesnake, vomiting, passing out and
collapsing on the road, and just wanting to lay down and
die."
Tamati started the race quickly, running 10km per hour,
however difficulties set in when the energy gels she was
taking began to poison her stomach. She repeatedly collapsed
and vomited over a 15-hour period.
The severe stomach problems threatened to end her race, but
one of her support crew solved the problem by using alkaline
water and a mixture of mountain salts.
The race crosses three mountain ranges, going from 85m below
sea level at Badwater to 2500m above sea level at the Mt
Whitney Portals.
Two New Zealand men have completed the race -- the late Max
Telford in 1982 and Kym McConnell four years ago.
Californian Jorge Pacheco was the first runner home in 23hr
20min 16sec, while Jamie Donaldson of Colorado was first
woman in 26hr 51min 33sec.
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