Badwater Live: Pacheco in the Lead
Get full access to Outside Learn, our online education hub featuring in-depth fitness, nutrition, and adventure courses and more than 2,000 instructional videos when you sign up for Outside+.
As night falls over Panamint Springs with crew headlights winking on the steep valley descent, tension has mounted among racers as they buckle down for the long night ahead. The lead runners have hit the 72 mile mark (the equivalent of three back-to-back marathons) but the “World's Toughest Foot Race” has just begun.
The 135-mile endurance race started early this morning in the salt pan of Badwater (elev. 282 below sea level) and will end tomorrow at Whitney Portals on Mt. Whitney (elev. 8360). Temperatures soared up to 119˚ F (hot enough to melt the rubber off racer's shoes), and remained that way for much of the day. The unique topography of the valley created convection currents that kept night temperatures hovering at 105˚ F. However, the relentless heat is only part of what makes the Badwater Ultramarathon so extreme. It is also the only race to begin in the lowest point of the Continental U.S. and end in the highest.
For up to the minute Badwater Ultramarathon runner results, click here.
–Shauna Sweeney
Photos Courtesy of Luis Escobar