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Farmer, in his Arctic garb, has averaged two marathons a day and raised more than $100,000 for the Red Cross
Farmer, in his Arctic garb, has averaged two marathons a day and raised more than $100,000 for the Red Cross (Clark Carter)

Run Down

Australian Pat Farmer is on track to finish a ten-month pole-to-pole jog鈥攚ithout taking a single day off

Published: 
Farmer, in his Arctic garb, has averaged two marathons a day and raised more than $100,000 for the Red Cross
(Photo: Clark Carter)

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Editor's Note: Pat Farmer finished his run from the North Pole to the South Pole on January 19, 2012.

Farmer on a training run in Syndey

Farmer on a training run in Syndey Farmer on a training run in Syndey

IT'S THE LONGEST distance you can run in a single听direction鈥攕tart at the North Pole, stop at the South鈥攕o the last thing you need is painfully infected toes. is wincing along with that affliction when I reach him by phone, in northwestern Peru, about two-thirds of the way to his destination, having covered roughly 10,000 miles of the 13,000 he鈥檒l log.

The 49-year-old Farmer, a longtime ultrarunner and former member of Australia鈥檚 parliament, is covering more than 50 miles a day, running through all sorts of agony. His lower lip is split from the constant wind. He鈥檚 suffered blisters, shin splints, nerve twinges. His toes became infected in the dank jungles of Colombia, where he got separated from his support team and couldn鈥檛 change socks. He sleeps between four and six hours per night, eats on the run, and, as I find out, talks on the run, too.

鈥淧eru hasn鈥檛 been too kind to us,鈥 he tells me, his voice crackling down the line as he hoofs it through the desert 125 miles north of Lima and 20 miles into the day鈥檚 run. 鈥淭here鈥檚 the desert and headwinds, of course, and then we got robbed.鈥 On two听occasions, he says, bandits pilfered gear from the RVs. 鈥淚鈥檒l be glad when we get to Chile.鈥

What makes Farmer鈥檚 run so remarkable isn鈥檛 just the huge听distance he鈥檚 covering鈥攐ther听endurance athletes have gone farther (see 鈥Globe-Trotting鈥). But in an age when all the great firsts have been done, the new measure of adventure excellence is often the level of听protracted agony. And no one has perfected the art of the suffer-fest quite like Farmer. To reach the South Pole by February, he鈥檚 running two marathons per day鈥攖hrough jungles, over ice, up mountains. And he鈥檚 not taking a single day off.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a shitload,鈥 says , author of , who has raced more than 100 ultramarathons and climbed the Seven Summits. 鈥淚 have no idea how he鈥檚 doing it. Any time you top 50 miles a day, you鈥檙e in a whole different class. Your body never has time to recover.鈥

Farmer, a onetime car mechanic, started running long distances in 1984 while working as a landscaper. He made a name for himself in the ultra world in 1993 by finishing second in the Trans-American footrace, a 2,912-miler across the U.S.; in 1995, he placed fourth after running for 50 days on a stress fracture.

His wife, Lisa, died of heart disease in 1998, leaving him to raise their two kids, but that didn鈥檛 slow him down. In 1999, he ran a circle around Australia鈥攍iterally鈥攃overing 9,111 miles over six months. Buoyed by the听celebrity that generated, he successfully campaigned for office in 2001 and served nine years in Australia鈥檚 House of Representatives. In 2010, his kids away at boarding school, he decided to leave office and announced his plan to run from the North Pole to the South Pole to raise $100听million for the International Red Cross. Farmer has a couple dozen corporate sponsors, but the trip is also a labor of love: he sold his house to help cover expenses, which will total $3 million.

The mission started on April 6, when a helicopter dropped Farmer and three team members at the North Pole. During the first month, they shuffled more than ran, covering barely 13 miles a day in snowshoes while man-hauling 220 pounds of gear each in combination kayak-sledges. At Ward Hunt Island, Canada, Farmer ditched his sledge and snowshoes and met up with his full support team: two RVs and a crew of five, including a nurse, a logistics coordinator and fitness trainer, and a cameraman. Since then he鈥檚 been doing half-centuries every day, from Radisson, Quebec; through Vermont, New York, Washington, D.C., Georgia, and Texas; and into Mexico and South America. (He took this circuitous route so he could hit key Red Cross offices along the way.) He鈥檚 raised only $100,000 so far, and media coverage in the U.S. was tepid.

Is he disappointed about being so far behind his fundraising goal? 鈥淎bsolutely,鈥 Farmer says, but he鈥檚 also optimistic about the exposure he鈥檚 bringing to the Red Cross in places like Colombia, where, he says, 鈥渢his is the first time they鈥檝e gotten coverage not in response to a cyclone or mudslide.鈥

Before he got to Colombia, though, there were some obstacles to overcome. On a freeway in eastern Mexico, one of his support RVs was clipped by a passing semi, which flipped. Farmer, who was running nearby, dived safely into the roadside weeds. 鈥淭here鈥檚 got to be an angel looking after me, or I鈥檇 be dead now,鈥 he says. In the Colombian jungle, the RVs were delayed, and Farmer, who ran ahead, was forced to sleep by the side of the trail. His feet remained damp and dirty for days, which led to the infected toes. You can watch a graphic video at of a Red Cross crew doing impromptu surgery.

Through it all, Farmer hasn鈥檛 taken a day off, ingesting 8,000 to 10,000 calories per day in olive oil, porridge, canned tuna, chocolate, chicken, and eggs. The continual punishment may put the ultrarunner into unmapped physiological territory. What happens to a cardiovascular system鈥攏ot to mention a set of knees鈥攁bused like this without any opportunity for recovery? 鈥淭he short answer is that no one really knows,鈥 says Mayo Clinic physiologist Michael Joyner, who specializes in endurance sports. 鈥淚n general, the data shows that people who exercise throughout life have better joints as they age. However, this is so far out of typical range that it鈥檚 really impossible to say.鈥

For his part, Farmer maintains that there鈥檚 nothing special about him. 鈥淧eople think I鈥檓 some kind of superman,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut I hurt all night. And in the morning I鈥檓 like a cripple until I get going and loosened up. Anybody can do what I鈥檓 doing, but you鈥檝e got to want it with all your heart.鈥

In late December, Farmer plans to catch an airlift from Punta Arenas, Chile, to Antarctica鈥檚 Ronne Ice Shelf. From there, accompanied by a three-man team, he鈥檒l snowshoe 466 miles to the South Pole. 鈥淭ouch wood,鈥 Farmer tells me, 鈥渨e will finish this thing.鈥 Then he hangs up. After all, he鈥檚 got another marathon to go before the day is over.

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