Fast Forward
Lael Wilcox tests her speed limit on the unforgiving Arizona Trail
Lael Wilcox has a $20 flip phone. At 29 years old, she still doesn鈥檛 know how to drive a car. She doesn鈥檛 own an expensive action camera. What she does know is her bike. For the past seven years, Lael and her boyfriend, Nick Carman, have been semi-nomadic, spending roughly half the year exploring the planet by bike鈥攍ogging thousands of miles and visiting dozens of countries, from South Africa to Slovenia.

Last summer Lael, a former collegiate runner and preternaturally gifted athlete, confirmed what she has probably always known: she鈥檚 extremely fast and thrives in situations that push her mental and physical limits. After blowing away the competition on an 850-mile race in Israel, she decided on a whim to enter the Tour Divide, a self-supported 2,745-mile race from Canada to Mexico over rugged, remote terrain, which has been dubbed the toughest mountain-bike event in the world. But in case that wasn鈥檛 enough, she decided to ride from Anchorage, Alaska, to the start of the race in Banff, Alberta, a 2,100-mile journey.
The 鈥渨arm-up鈥 did her right. Despite getting sick and having difficulty breathing a mere 183 miles into the race鈥攁nd even having rolled her bike into an ER in Montana to address the problem鈥攕he went on to not only win the event but also shave a whopping two days off the previous women鈥檚 record.

That fall, Lael and Nick made their way to Flagstaff, Arizona, where they planned to spend the winter working. Buoyed by her success and looking for her next challenge, she set her sights on the Arizona Trail Race, an unsanctioned endurance event in the same vein as the Tour Divide. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not really a race,鈥 Lael says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 more a gentlemen鈥檚 agreement to show up and ride your hardest to the end.鈥 Spanning the entire length of the Arizona Trail鈥攖he newly created 800-mile wilderness trail that bisects the state from north to south鈥攖he race traverses everything from boreal forest to scorching desert. Her plan was to ride roughly 100 miles a day for eight days, sleeping about four hours a night. 鈥淚 know how hard it鈥檚 going to be,鈥 says Lael. 鈥淚f I can complete it with the focus I have, I鈥檒l probably break the record.鈥
At 5:24 a.m. on October 26th, at the Stateline Campground, a campsite that straddles the Utah颅鈥揂rizona state line, and just a few miles past the 鈥淲ave鈥濃攖he iconic swirls of multi-colored sandstone at Vermilion Cliffs National Monument鈥擫ael set off under bright, pre-dawn moonlight. She aimed to make it to the Colorado River where it cuts through the bottom of the Grand Canyon, some 80 miles to the south, before she lay down to sleep.
As the sun came up, the automatic updates from her satellite messenger device started popping up at steady intervals. That afternoon, at her resupply point at Jacob Lake, she stocked up on snacks for one of the race鈥檚 biggest hurdles: crossing the Colorado River. As with all national parks, it鈥檚 illegal to ride your bike on any trails in Grand Canyon National Park. When she reached the park鈥檚 North Kaibab trailhead, she broke her bike down, fastened it to her backpack鈥攁 process she鈥檇 practiced the night before鈥攁nd took off on foot down the steep trail.
Lael had estimated that, with a short nap in the middle, it would take her approximately 16 hours to complete the trek, but she was feeling strong and reached the far side of the park at 4 a.m. the next morning, several hours ahead of schedule. She was making great time.
Later that evening, nearly 200 miles into the race, she was confronted with the same labored breathing she'd experienced in Montana during the Tour Divide. As she wound up the fire road to the Snowbowl, a ski resort north of Flagstaff at 9,000 feet, she began wheezing. Even though she was a mere 10 miles from a warm bed in town, she laid out her bivy sack to sleep. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 make it into town,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was like the Divide. My legs felt great, like I could ride forever, but I couldn鈥檛 breathe.鈥 After sleeping more than eight hours, she got back on her bike. But her breathing remained labored and she simply couldn鈥檛 go on鈥攕he called it quits a half day after reaching Snowbowl.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a car or a house,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e got a bike. I have what I need.鈥
While abandoning the attempt was hard, Lael didn鈥檛 dwell on it long. 鈥淥ur lifestyle is on a bike, traveling, seeing things, doing things,” says Nick. 鈥淩acing is just a sport鈥攜ou just fast-forward through a trail.鈥 While Lael already has plans to race again鈥攊n June she plans to compete in the Trans Am Bike Race, the longest self-supported road race in the U.S.鈥攈er focus remains the same: traveling the world by bike. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 have a car or a house,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e got a bike. I have what I need.鈥 A few weeks after she felt better, she and Nick headed off on a bike-packing trip in Mexico with a few friends, partly to map out an off-pavement touring route that will connect San Diego to the southern tip of the Baja peninsula, but mostly to have fun.
