Business of Endurance

The Art of Endurance: Insights from Adventure Racer Ian Adamson

August 11, 2023 Charlie Reading / Ian Adamson Season 5 Episode 4
The Art of Endurance: Insights from Adventure Racer Ian Adamson
Business of Endurance
More Info
Business of Endurance
The Art of Endurance: Insights from Adventure Racer Ian Adamson
Aug 11, 2023 Season 5 Episode 4
Charlie Reading / Ian Adamson

Prepare for an exhilarating journey as we traverse the captivating world of adventure racing, obstacle course racing, and ninja competitions with none other than Ian Adamson, a Guinness World Record holder and the reigning Ninja World Record holder. We'll immerse ourselves in the adrenaline-filled tales of global competitions, and the triumphant victories of Team Nike. From the formats of endurance events, the world's top races, to Ian's incredible story of transformation - this conversation promises to be nothing short of riveting.

Next, we'll venture into the breathtaking landscapes of New Zealand as we inspect one of the world's toughest adventure races, Godzone. Let's unravel its evolution and understand why this region has become a hotspot for such daring escapades. We'll also have an in-depth discussion about the critical role of sleep in endurance racing, taking cues from Ian's 2006 Adventure Race World Championship experience. The importance of safety guidelines, the necessity of an international governing body, and the onus on event producers for competitors' safety will also be addressed in this enlightening discussion.

Lastly, we'll demystify the complexities of fueling for endurance events. From the benefits of stored body fat, the limitations of carbohydrates, to the intriguing insights from Timothy Noakes' revolutionary book, 'The Big Fat Surprise' - we leave no stone unturned. And before we wrap up, we'll explore the health benefits of adventure racing, the importance of posture, and even touch upon the impact of daylight savings on mortality rates. Brace yourselves for an engaging, informative, and enlightening dialogue with Ian Adamson!

ianadamson.com
Facebook: @ian.a.adamson
Instagram: @ian.a.adamson

This episode was sponsored by The Trusted Team and 4th Discipline

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Prepare for an exhilarating journey as we traverse the captivating world of adventure racing, obstacle course racing, and ninja competitions with none other than Ian Adamson, a Guinness World Record holder and the reigning Ninja World Record holder. We'll immerse ourselves in the adrenaline-filled tales of global competitions, and the triumphant victories of Team Nike. From the formats of endurance events, the world's top races, to Ian's incredible story of transformation - this conversation promises to be nothing short of riveting.

Next, we'll venture into the breathtaking landscapes of New Zealand as we inspect one of the world's toughest adventure races, Godzone. Let's unravel its evolution and understand why this region has become a hotspot for such daring escapades. We'll also have an in-depth discussion about the critical role of sleep in endurance racing, taking cues from Ian's 2006 Adventure Race World Championship experience. The importance of safety guidelines, the necessity of an international governing body, and the onus on event producers for competitors' safety will also be addressed in this enlightening discussion.

Lastly, we'll demystify the complexities of fueling for endurance events. From the benefits of stored body fat, the limitations of carbohydrates, to the intriguing insights from Timothy Noakes' revolutionary book, 'The Big Fat Surprise' - we leave no stone unturned. And before we wrap up, we'll explore the health benefits of adventure racing, the importance of posture, and even touch upon the impact of daylight savings on mortality rates. Brace yourselves for an engaging, informative, and enlightening dialogue with Ian Adamson!

ianadamson.com
Facebook: @ian.a.adamson
Instagram: @ian.a.adamson

This episode was sponsored by The Trusted Team and 4th Discipline

Speaker 2:

I'm Charlie Venigan and I'm Claire Fudge and this is the TRIBE Athlon podcast.

Speaker 3:

Not one incident in the scientific literature for people dying from dehydration during athletic competitions never happened.

Speaker 1:

That was Ian Adamson, and this episode is the World of Adventure. Ian Adamson is a world-renowned endurance athlete, event director, producer and also a published author. He accumulated 10 world championship wins, 25 world championship podium finishes and gold, silver and bronze medals at the ESPN X Games. Ian is a six-time Guinness World Record holder, one of which was for Kaya King 262 miles in 24 hours and is a current Ninja World Record holder. Ian was a founding member of Team Nike, which won over 100 championship races and featured on the Eco Challenge, primal Quest and other TV show competitions. He has three decades working in medical, sports and outdoor product industries, is the president of World Obstacle and works as a legal forensic expert. Quite an amazing CV.

Speaker 1:

Claire and I got the chance to chat to Ian about the different formats of adventure racing a world of endurance sport I don't really know that much about. We also chatted him about the top adventure races around the world, some of which just sound incredible, and then also fueling for multi-day endurance events and how to deal with sleep when you're racing that long. So this is an incredible guy and an incredible interview with one which I know you're going to enjoy. So I hope you enjoy this interview with Ian Adamson. How would you like to grow your business whilst working less and enjoying your work life more?

Speaker 1:

Well, that's how we help people at the trusted team. We do that through workshops, which happen in person and online. We do that through regular online learning that you can just do from your desk at lunchtime, and we do it through in-person events that make fun, tax deductible things like golf days, dinners, wine tasting all of that fun stuff that help you build stronger relationships and enjoy work more. So if you want to know how we can help you grow your business and improve your work life balance, go to thetrustedteam to find out when our next free taster event or free webinar is, so that you can find out how we can help you grow your business and get your work life balance back. That's thetrustedteam. Come join us at one of our events.

Speaker 2:

Are you struggling to manage energy levels at work or during training, finding a hard to know how to fit in eating for health, sport and life? Do you want to separate fact from fiction? At Fourth Discipline, we work with leaders, professionals, athletes and people with medical conditions. We take you on a six-step science-led journey to manage energy, optimize performance, recover well and improve health. We offer enhancement clinics for businesses, supportive online workshops, one-to-one coaching and accountability. If you'd like to have a free call to find out how we can support you, then log on to fourthdisciplinecom and book your call today.

Speaker 1:

So, ian, welcome to the Tribe Athlon podcast. I feel like this is an episode where I'm going to be completely out of my depth. I know very little about your sport, but it feels like it doesn't feel a million miles off the world of endurance support that we know much better. So I feel like you need to come at this from very much a beginner's angle. But I'd like to kick these podcasts off with understanding the story behind the athlete. You have an incredible CV of achievements through a multitude of different sports, but how did you find your way into the world of endurance sport, and particularly then obstacle racing?

Speaker 3:

Oh gosh. Yes, well, that is a long story so I'll try and keep it brief. I was an athlete. I had the Olympic dream from a very, very young age. There was two things I really wanted to do as a kid. One was being an Olympian and the other one was getting in the Guinness Book of World Records, because I would pour over that and look at people swallowing goldfish and juggling cats and just stuff that were. Really I thought there was something there for me, whatever it was, and that started as long as I can remember. So probably when I was four or five, I was browsing books and watching the games and I had that kind of thing going. So I would try everything. I still do. I just love competing. I love sport in every manner, whether it's Cornhole in the United States or Cricket or Football, you name it, I just love it.

Speaker 3:

My grandfather was a National Federation President for Football. He was actually Scottish. He competed for Scotland as a young lad in about I'm going to say was about 1916 somewhere around then Immigrate to Australia, became head of the Australian Soccer Football Federation. So I kind of knew the world by association, but as a kid I had really knew nothing about it and my grandfather would have endless stories about marathoners and all these amazing athletes. So that was kind of the environment I grew up in. My dad was a very good cyclist. My brother and sister were talented athletes way more than me so I just played everything and that would be all. Through high school it was swimming and track and field and volleyball and football and rugby. Anything goes. By.

Speaker 3:

The time I got to university I was a little more focused because now I was thinking about maybe I could actually be good at something. Maybe by the end of university I was pretty deep in canoe and kayak. I'd stop playing. I'd been a soccer referee and coach and player at a moderate level, which was fun, but then sort of got into canoeing and then eventually made an Australian team. But along the way I was still doing other stuff. Cycling was my dad's cycle, so I started cycling competitively as a young age group.

Speaker 3:

I think I was 11 when I truly started competing and what that ended up creating was an athlete that you would typically see in a triathlon if they're good enough. And so I was good enough to compete in the early days in triathlon to about 1984 to complete, I don't know, top 10% I suppose, but not good enough to be truly competitive. And then I was also a kayaker and I was quite a good navigator because I was a sailor as well. I mean, you can see what's going on here. I had too many sports that is not conducive to being particularly good at anything, even the multi-sport stuff. Australians at the time were very, very good triathletes, maybe even today. So people like Brad Bevin back in the day and these guys were competing well world champions. They're competing at world level. I'm sorry I really didn't have a prayer of making a team in triathlon in canoe a bit better, but still not good enough to make a games.

Speaker 3:

And that led to actually adventurising of all things, which is kind of anything goes. So the more you're competent at, the better you tend to be. Challenge there, of course, is there was no money to speak of. That's not quite true. There was. Back in the 80s you could win cars and things.

Speaker 3:

By the time I immigrated to the US in 1991, as an engineer of all things. I was a biomedical engineer, I was working in a heart peacemaker company and I saw my opportunity to move to Boulder, colorado, with the big dogs in endurance competitions, especially multi-sports. So tons of triathletes here at that time and in San Diego. That then led to a professional career as an adventure athlete by coincidence, I suppose? No, it's not coincidence, it was more timing and there was a period when there was a sport called adventure racing which was pretty big Well, not pretty big, it was huge. There were global, there was World Cups, there were full-time professional athletes. I was one of them and you could win even back then six figure incomes for the top athletes were not uncommon. We were earning a lot more than triathletes at the time, in fact almost any other, in fact all endurance athletes. No one was earning more than us and that was driven by television. There was a TV show back in the day called the Eco Challenge, which was sort of global and that allowed advertising, sponsorship and professional athletes, and I was one of those that went away.

Speaker 3:

I'd met Bob around that time. My agent was a guy called Murphy Rine-Triber. He is actually a guy called Murphy Rine-Triber and he also managed Paul and Yubi Preyzo and Greg Welch and a whole bunch of us old school athletes, endurance athletes. So it was a pretty good company. Heather Fuhrer, I mean. It goes on and on and on. Many of them, like Paul Huddle and Rock Fry, are still in, I believe, still in triathlon, I think, in Europe, managing Iron man. This last I checked, so we were sort of colleagues under the same umbrella and that's where I met Bob. So Bob Babbit, terrific gentleman, one of my favorite guys on earth, bon Joly, great interview, and that then led full circle.

Speaker 3:

I went through all sorts of things. I tried to retire myself have by that. I tried to retire, unsuccessfully, as an adventurer. So I thought I would last about three years if I was lucky. So my exit strategy was all right. I don't think I'll last very long competing. Maybe I can help organize. So then I coincidentally got a job offer. Maybe not so coincidentally, it was actually Murphy Rine-Triber offered me a job working on one of the events that he was producing called the Outdoor Quest, and that was a wealthy event I think. They gave out $1.6 million in prize money over time. So it was pretty good. We're earning good money $200,000 in race steps, which is decent money.

Speaker 3:

But I switched from I'd unsuccessfully competed in it Well, came second three times how about that? And then went to the other side, which was event production. So I worked for Murphy and his team. I was originally the course and technical director for the event and then started working with the TV guys and over that, one thing led to another and I became an event producer and television producer for Endurance Shows and that gave me my exit strategy. Except I kept racing for another seven years. So I was doing both and then I finally did give it up. I retired in 2007. After my seventh World Championship win in adventure racing I thought, hey, good enough for that, sounds like good enough for me. Maybe not the best company in the world, but still no, that's a great guy, I like him a lot. So then I slid into the event production, did that full time for a while and television created an event called 24 Hours of Triathlon Actually eight hours and 24 Hours of Triathlon, which I believe is still going on. Did that, built it from zero to pretty good in about four years. Then gave it away to a charity. Then started working the shoe industry because I've been sponsored by Nike and Salomon over a period of about 15 years. Then started producing shoes at Newton Running Company. Did that for seven years.

Speaker 3:

A friend of my, joe DeSena I said long story told you. A friend of my, joe DeSena and I met racing eco challenge in the 90s. He had started Spartan Race, which became pretty big, now globally dominant, and we'd stayed in touch and I actually produced his first race in 2001, which was Expedition BVI, british Virgin Islands, sailed around on yachts and did fun things and went to nice places. So he kept calling me, stayed in touch and he said eventually he started Spartan Race and I kind of got back involved and by 2013, he had this idea to take Spartan racing to the Olympics. That was his idea and he said Ian, you're the guy. Actually he was a lady called Colleen, another friend of ours, who had worked on Expedition BVI, and so I was intrigued and said okay. So I consulted for a year to Spartan Race to see if it was possible to create a sport and go to the Games.

Speaker 3:

It is about the general. So I kind of reconnecting with all my colleagues. I was talking to the triathletes and people like Paul and Rock and Paula and they said, yeah, I mean it's always possible but it takes a while. And I was talking to Geiss, which Sportacord, which is kind of one of the regulatory bodies that assists sports becoming sports, and the general consensus was it's not impossible but probably takes about 50 years. If ever or to never is actually it's 50 years to never. I mean how many people actually create a sport and then make it successful so by a year, ian, I said to Joe look, you probably don't want to do this. Here's the reasons. You have a brand that's very successful. Be like Ironman, be the dominant brand. Have a successful, profitable commercial business. Let the sport emerge and evolve over time, because otherwise you're going to have to dismantle your business and become a non-profit run by the people, because it's by and for the athletes. So it becomes a democratic process as a non-profit and that's not going to help you as a business. So he said, okay, fine, we went and kind of dropped it at that point. But pretty quickly I was getting calls from other sports saying we hear you've been making noise about this obstacle thing and I said yes, and they said well, we're sort of interested in talking to you about what could happen and the triathlon colleague my triathlon colleagues had said it's not a bad idea and here's one possible way to do. It is you start working with other sports and you see this as quite common. Actually, if you look at athletics, aquatic cycling, canoe, they bring sports in that get on the on-fit program over time. So in canoe, as an example, you have stand-up paddling which has a foot in surf and a foot in canoe and the canoe version is racing. It's the same in cycling, you saw things like mountain biking come in 96 and BMX and these other things start to join in the existing federations. Same with athletics over time triowrunning, mountain running these things start to join the other international federations. So I was thinking at that point oh well, maybe there is a way to do this.

Speaker 3:

Past four or nine years to now and successfully created the organization, spent the most of the previous seven or eight years building the governance structure, because that's critical. That builds all the stuff that a sport needs to make it safe, fair, cheap and accessible, which is what the athletes want. They don't care about the international federations. Most triathletes really don't know what World Triathlon is. To be honest, the athletes in swimming aquatics, the swimming people for many of them, even Olympians are not really that familiar with what FINA is because it doesn't really bother them that much. It's like hey, I just want to compete, I want a good race.

Speaker 3:

You see this in many sports and that's the same in obstacle. People go you're not doing anything. What's going on? Why do you even need that? Well, it turns out you actually do. Many, many, many reasons. The athletes need to be represented by themselves, by and for the athletes. They like things to be safe, fair, cheap and accessible. That's actual sport. Just competition, rules for fairness and anti-doping and good structure, all the stuff that sports actually need. But athletes don't know that and they really don't care until they get hurt or it costs too much or stuff that they really care about which makes sense. Here we are, and that's how I got into obstacle. Now I'm the president of World Obscool, the Federal, international and International Sports Obscools, just like the other ones. We got approved by Geiss at the time, which means that the sports all of them, because it's unanimous approved World Obscool to Govern Ninja competitions obstacle course racing and adventure racing.

Speaker 1:

How do we define between those two? What is an adventure race versus an obstacle race versus a ninja race?

Speaker 3:

Well, good question. Let's look at it like FINA. We'll start at the structural side FINA World Aquatics. I think there's all the aquatics now. That's the International Federation that provides all of the sport stuff for the aquatic sports. Aquatic sports are swimming, diving, high diving, artistic swimming, water polo, open water swimming or marathon swimming, I think they call it now. They're the sports within aquatics and they are common in that they are aquatic-based sports. They're in water. Canoes are different. That's on water. You see the same thing. You've got lots of stuff there Great marathon, canoe, kayak slalom, wild water, ocean paddling, stand up and there are canoe sports. It's kind of like that In the obstacle world ninja competitions.

Speaker 3:

That is a ninja competition. That's our World Champs from 2019. Today, we build these Ninja Warrior style rigs that look just like the television show Ninja Warrior, which should be familiar to UK viewers, or most viewers in the world. Viewers in 160 countries, for that matter, are quite familiar with this. There's about a billion people watch it on television. That's the entertainment show. We work with the IP holders for the TV shows and we create an event that is a true, pure competition with actual competition rules, and it's an actual race that looks just like the television shows. That is a ninja competition. It's basically obstacles. A lot of them are hanging obstacles where I mean like hanging off something. It's a head-to-head race competition.

Speaker 3:

There's various competitions within the sport, but the one that we're focusing on at the moment is a race. The one behind me was quite big, considerably bigger than 100 meter course. You can see the crowd is quite big. That was about 100,000 people over a few days. Quite, a few people like to watch it. That's a ninja, obscure course. Racing is running based. It's running with obstacles, run obstacle, run obstacle.

Speaker 3:

Another UK, very familiar UK athletes because in the modern context it came out of England. It's a British sport at its roots. It actually dutch as well because there's another race in parallel competition called Survival Roam, which is quite similar, the one that what people do today looks a lot like Tough Guy. Tough Guy is a guy called Mr Mouse, quite famous in the OCR world, who in the 1980s created a competition. That is pretty much how it looks today in the mud run space, which is obstacles, and running with a lot of mud. The way we do it we don't have mud. We might have mud but it's incidental or it's an obstacle and we have to be clean. You can't obscure numbers and a few other things. We like to be clean. That creates cultures. In the UK obstacle course racing tends to be quite muddy. The weather helps if you want a muddy race Running through farmland and stuff, which is very common. You do tend to get quite muddy and that's partly to do with the environment. That's obstacle course racing running with obstacles.

Speaker 3:

In each sport, because they are sports, they're separate things, different distances and disciplines and just like athletics, in athletics you've got lots of disciplines 12 or something. Jumps, throws, brints, mouth on. There's all these different sport disciplines within athletics. Within obstacle course racing we have 100 meters looks very much like Ninja, except it's much faster as you run. You've got 400 meters, 800 meters, 3k, 5k, 10k, 15k, 21k, 42k, 24 hour. These are sport events of obstacle course racing. Then adventure racing is different again.

Speaker 3:

Adventure racing has been around internationally since about 1989. Started with the French race, before that in other ways, mostly in Australia and New Zealand in the 70s. But in the modern context it evolved out of an event called the Regal Watts 1989. French race put on in New Zealand. That then was the actual parent of most of the races you see today.

Speaker 3:

However, there was a strange and unusual phase when adventure racing was huge and they had sprint adventure races, which you don't really see today. Sprint adventure races were very, very big. They were quite short well like two to three hours, but very, quite short. They looked a little bit like a triathlon with obstacles, quite often more like an X-Terror, with obstacles, manufacturer obstacles, walls, crawls, nets, ropes, ninja grips.

Speaker 3:

They had all these things in these races and they were big. They would cut them off at 900 people and they'd fill national series and they were nationally televised in the US at least lots and lots of prize money. They were actually obstacle races, but with other stuff that you don't see today. That existed for about 10 years and that was typically mountain bike, canoe running, maybe orienteering and obstacles, and that was sprint adventure racing. A lot of people today don't even really know it existed, but it was the biggest thing actually in adventure racing. Today, adventure racing looks more like a long journey where you have a map and compass, you navigate your way through All sorts of stuff could be urban, suburban, typically wilderness and you just find your way around and find checkpoints like orienteering. That's the common adventure racing today.

Speaker 1:

In a world where I think triathlon is losing quite a few people to, whether it's ultramarathans, whether it's all Dax riding. There's more. We were interviewing one of the organizers of the Outlaw series of triathlons in the UK. You're saying all of his mates are going off and doing other things and that's why he's struggling to fill events more. Can you give us an example of an incredible marathon day? Sabers of adventure racing. That would be the iconic one that people might go to if they were looking to expand their horizons.

Speaker 3:

Sure God's Own in New Zealand.

Speaker 1:

I'm liking the sound of that already.

Speaker 2:

Tell us about that.

Speaker 3:

It's a contraction of a God's Own country, but it's actually still G-O-D-Z-O-N-E God's Own. It was created by Geico Warren Bates from England. He emigrated to New Zealand and he was a world champion adventure racer from probably maybe after the end of my career, so maybe in the year 2010, something like that. He created God's Own as an event that truly represented the culture and ethos of adventure racing. He did a very good job. It would be. I regard it, and I think many do regard it, as the best adventure race. It's beautiful. It's New Zealand. Where in New Zealand is it? Last year?

Speaker 1:

North Island, oh, okay, so it moves around it moves around.

Speaker 3:

This is an interesting history because the Rage O'Wars in 1989, when it first created what we know as expedition racing or adventure racing, it stayed in New Zealand. One of the RAF guides on the Rage O'Wars, a guy called Jeff Hunt, borrowed loosely I don't say borrowed, but he replicated almost exactly. Well, it was exact. He did an exact replica of the Rage O'Wars and kept it in New Zealand as the RAF started moving around. It went to New Zealand and then I'm going to say Madagascar and Costa Rica. It just went all over the place, all over the world for almost 30 years. He kept it and called it the Southern Traverse, because the original RAF was called the Grand Traverse or the Lagrange Ravacine. He kept it as the Southern Traverse in New Zealand, exactly the same rules and format. Then Mark Burnett, another British guy, everywhere he replicated it.

Speaker 3:

He got a license from the French company, from a guy called Giraffe Z, and he called it the Eco Challenge. He had a license for North America. He quickly reneged on that and changed the format a little bit to get around the IP and went from five people on a team with two supports so seven in the full team down to four, which was much more practical. That format stuck and Southern Traverse borrowed it as well. But Southern Traverse stuck with the five and then they added three and two. This whole thing stayed in New Zealand. Godzone is pretty much like a great grandchild of the Rage O'Wars, I think all of the what we call expedition racers they really are Godzone. That's the one. Do that. It's fantastic.

Speaker 2:

How long does that event last? If you were to go and do Godzone, do you have to qualify? Do you need to have a certain experience in certain areas? What does it look like if somebody wanted to go and do it? How does it work?

Speaker 3:

It acts like it's another good question. Adventuracing is a loose sport. It's sort of the nature of it. It's terrific, in many ways A little bit like Obstgracing, but more so. In Adventuracing there's no step for Madelwars. You can do whatever you want to do. There's been urban races and city races and then truly wilderness expeditions where you cross lots of countries.

Speaker 3:

I did races where you cross three countries, map and Compass, and they would be very long. Some of them would be a couple of weeks. Godzone is, anyone can do it. There's categories. There's basically two categories the people who have experience and they can do these things, meaning you're probably going to go for five to seven days probably. I think the winners typically have four to five days or maybe a bit longer, then the back of the pack. I don't know what the cutoffs are. It typically would be 10 days Typically. I don't know for sure in this event. If they go that long. There's costs, of course. If you have a race course open for 10 days, that's very expensive. Maybe it's a week. Let's just call it a week because that's usually about what people can take in time, considering a week of competition with weekends either end. That's about 10 days. That gives you ability to get organized through the competition. Wrap it up, it's about a week.

Speaker 1:

Is that made up of running kayaking? What would you do in that race In?

Speaker 3:

New Zealand. It would be more like row gaining Maybe not You're using map and compass, put it that way Land navigation. Then kayaking could be rafting as well Whitewater rafting we're definitely kayaking. They have very highly developed kayaks in New Zealand Over the past 40 years. They've developed these very, very fast boats specifically for event racing For those who will be in the race. You need to rent, borrow or steal those when you go to New Zealand.

Speaker 3:

Mountain biking Probably something with ropes. That's quite common. Maybe mountaineering Terrain is conducive to all these things, depending where you are. If you go to South Island, obviously there's glaciers and high mountains and things that true mountaineering. The weather can be varied and aggressive Depending on time of year. You might see anything from quite hot conditions in parts of the country to blizzards and strong winds and torrential rain Part of the beauty of the country. It's a lot like the West Coast of Norway. In many places there's fjords and steep terrain and mountains that go to the ocean. This is what makes New Zealand absolutely terrific, maybe one of the most the place for adventure is certainly, isn't it?

Speaker 3:

It is. It's one of the most beautiful countries on earth, if you like their beautiful wilderness and friendly people and good food. It's great.

Speaker 1:

It's like Scotland on steroids, but with slightly better weather.

Speaker 3:

Very much like Scotland. Before they cut the trees down.

Speaker 1:

Did you say that was a team of four that would do that particular race?

Speaker 3:

Yes, in that race it's a team of four with what is called a support crew or logistics crew I think it's unlimited there makes it quite hard to compete as a foreign athlete because you need to get a local support team. It's very difficult to waltz in there bringing your own team because vehicles, knowing where to drive and basic stuff like that. I've competed in New Zealand a few times, successfully, won a couple of times, which is, I think, the only team to ever do it like foreign team. It's very hard to win in New Zealand against Kiwis for many, many reasons. One, they're absolutely fantastic athletes at this. Then, two, there's all sorts of things. Like most countries, if you compete on someone else's turf, it's home field advantage. It's a big one in New Zealand. That does sound like because you get to compete against the best. I actually mean it. I think the best athletes are out of New Zealand consistently. It doesn't mean there aren't others that will win out of other countries. These days, kiwis tend to dominate.

Speaker 1:

It does sound like an amazing race, one for the bucket list for sure. It sounds like a really exciting race to do. You've got an incredible CV of a whole wide range of different world championships and world records and all sorts. Can you just pick out one that is your highlight of your competitive career that you can tell us about and why that was the highlight?

Speaker 3:

First thing that comes to mind 2006,. Adventure Race World Championships started and finished in Norway. I apologize, start and finish in Sweden and went through Norway. It was my last race when I retired. I knew I was going to retire. I just hoped it was on a high note, which it was. I'm not an athlete who I'm not someone who will just keep going back to something. I wanted to have a good race. We had a great team. It included a guy called Richard Usher. I think even today he has the fastest ever Ironman by Kiwi like seven hours, I can't remember 750 something and rock. He'd just come off setting the fastest ever Kiwi time for Ironman. He was quite fit. He was also an Olympian in skiing. I'll be right back goodbye.

Speaker 3:

We had an athlete who had just beaten Lance Armstrong at the Leadville 100 mountain bike race. He came from the finish line. His wife, susan DiMatte, dragged him from the finish line where he would normally stop, stand and shake everyone's hand as the winner, because he won it like nine times. So he was on our team. And then we had a world champion ex-teacher athlete, monique Morel. She won and she was one of his athletes that said, oh, it wasn't that good. I mean, everyone else was having an off day, but she still won. So everyone on the team was a world champion and Olympian, or Olympian and or Olympian. And we came together. We never raced together. We knew each other well because we had raced in bits and pieces. But we had this really talented team and Dave Wiens is the mountain biker Walk up guys a very, very good one and we. He got diverted by the bombscare in London. I don't know, oh, it was, it was actually a. I think it was an actual bomb in London, it's 2006. He almost didn't make the start line because he got diverted from going through London anyway, but we finally got to, got to the start. We were going to teach him how to do ropes. He'd never done ropes, so we had to do it on the fly during the competition Anyway. So we had great team. We're having a lot of fun.

Speaker 3:

We were crossing the Arctic Circle in August, right before my birthday. It was kind of late. I don't know if it was late or early, but they were not the northern lights. It was great. There was this beautiful curtains of green light all over the place, not quite dark, but not quite light. There'd been storms, so there was sort of rainbow going on, which was really bizarre, because there was enough light coming over the horizon to light up a rainbow. There were shooting stars, happened to be some sort of meteor shower, and then we were accompanied in archaics by orcas.

Speaker 3:

All this stuff was going on, and you get pretty loopy sometimes in these races but you don't quite sleep enough, and we were. We were pretty far in the lead at that point and so we was. There's all this stuff's going on. I'm looking around and kind of leaning and, hey guys, is this real? Are we seeing all this stuff? You seeing what I'm seeing? I'm not sure this is real or not. And they're saying, yeah, this is real, this is crazy stuff. It's like imagine the best possible scenario of something that you could. It's like a dream. It was an actual dream, like all this stuff's happening. I'm like, oh my gosh, this is crazy.

Speaker 3:

But I did think at that point oh yeah, we're getting a bit sleep deprived. We are actually hallucinating, which we were not, but I was concerned that we might. So we were a team that slept a lot. People don't know this. We would tell them hey, you know how to win sleep more. Even today, they do the opposite. They go oh, if we're not sleeping, no, if we're sleeping, people are passing us, which is not true, really, anyway. So my team, like most teams, were not. We're pretty resistant to the idea of taking big sleep, especially being in the lead, whereas I have the opposite opinion, which is well, it's backed up by data, but sleep more and we'll win.

Speaker 3:

So I said we had this discussion about how much to sleep. Being in the lead didn't want to get passed, so okay, well, it starts at like we need eight hours sleep. That's me and then Tim says 10 minutes. So the negotiation ends up at something like okay, we'll take 30, 30 minutes, that's plenty. But I know for well as a sports medicine guy that that is absolutely not enough. You need to get rest, then recovery, then repair, then you can race again, and that takes at least four hours. So I set my watch for, okay, I'll set it for 30 minutes, and I set it for six hours. And yeah, it was not quite dark and it was not quite light. So you're not quite sure. I think at that point it was light, so you're not quite sure if it's day or night.

Speaker 3:

So we found a little hard, found a little island, found a little heart, went to sleep, got up again a few hours later. My team was like, oh, we feel great, that was a great 30 minute nap. And off we went, not knowing that it had several hours. And then we, off we went and they kind of dawned on them as we're going along that oh, maybe we slept more than we thought. And then they were getting kind of motivated. It's like, oh, we're pissed off at you now.

Speaker 3:

So we got to the transition area, out of the kayaks into onto a land navigation section and we'd gone from first to eighth and they were pissed off and highly motivated. So, job done, well done. So off we went and within an hour we passed every other team and that's how fast you go when you sleep. And then after that the game was over because we had slept so much at that point and every other team hadn't, because they were trying to catch us and hadn't slept. We just had a whole day's. In my opinion, we were now a whole day ahead, which we actually were by the finish. So that's, that was a. That was a terrific race, beautiful, oh my gosh, it was gorgeous. Norway and Sweden are beautiful and Sweden are, like New Zealand, just delightful.

Speaker 1:

Well, I mean that would definitely that would you know? Those sorts of experience would sell it to most people, wouldn't? I mean that just sounds absolutely incredible. But but it's also interesting how well I know this is a big debate with ultra runners. You know, in multi day races, do you? How much do you sleep? And yet we've had a good friend of ours, kerry Sutton, came on here and said basically she was winning the spine race and then, as a result of not sleeping, she ended up having to get pulled off the cliff face, having made stupid decisions but she wouldn't have made had she wasn't so tired. So so, absolutely, that makes a makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 3:

Lack of sleep is dangerous and very, very unhealthy. You accumulate plaque in your brain which only gets cleaned out. It's kind of like aphelous sclerosis in your heart. It only gets cleaned out with sleep. But the science has finally caught up with it.

Speaker 3:

We will, we will look at Air Force studies to see what they were doing to operate, you know, stuff that can block the country, the world, carrying weaponry. That was incredibly deadly. How did they do it so they don't blow up the wrong thing or you know, or die or crash or whatever. And there the data out of the Air Force is quite good. So we followed that as a general rule, which was the general rule. If you don't get at least four hours of actual sleep in the 24 hour period, it gets incredibly dangerous and very, very unhealthy. In fact, if you keep yourself awake and they did this in horrible, nasty war clinical studies with with prisoners they die. If you don't sleep enough, you will die and it's quite quick and it takes like I think it's about a week for some people will die without actual sleep.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think you die quicker from a lack of sleep than you do from a lack of food, don't you?

Speaker 3:

Much quicker. Yeah, you can go for a very long time without food, but you will die. I think the world record for in the Guinness World Record of sleeping where they actually nap so they're not truly staying awake the whole time, is many, many, many days. But that's not, you know. It's like in a rocking chair, kind of eyes open but sort of napping. You can't actually stay awake. In fact, I had such bad long term problems from prolonged lack of sleep over about 20 years of racing that my memory had completely disintegrated. For short term I couldn't remember things I couldn't. Fortunately our brains are plastic and you can repair them. Took me about five years to repair my brain.

Speaker 3:

My wife was quite concerned and many of our spouses were concerned about the cognitive problems that were having from lack of sleep and we were highly motivated because we were chasing. I had a very solid seven figure career in racing, so financially was successful, but health wise it was damaging and that was one reason I decided to quit. I've had enough faces. I will die if I keep taking this. That's what I thought. I was probably right. Probably would have made a dumb mistake and died.

Speaker 3:

But the cognitive problems are real and that's like the RAM people doing RAM. The data does not support what the practice is, which is not sleeping, doesn't support it. We looked at doing RAM at one point but there's no money in it so we didn't. But we looked doing it as a team and ran the numbers on speed and sleep and these sort of things and it turns out that if you look at it on a data driven basis like a scientist, the way they do RAM today with lack of sleep, it's not the fastest way to do it. They think it is Same in adventuring today.

Speaker 3:

I'd say 99% of the teams are still not sleeping enough. It's hard to sleep because you're cognitively saying it's like in a triathlon oh, if I drop my water bottle, do I pick it up? And most people won't pick it up, but the outcome is probably bad because it could, let's say, 60 seconds to stop and pick up the bottle. What's the outcome if you don't, might not finish the race. Bad outcome, but it's hard to do. Like, how many people actually stop and pick up their bottle Like, oh, I stopped, I dropped my bottle, I just keep going? Then they get dehydrated and their performance drops and the race is over.

Speaker 2:

Do you think that there needs to be some sort of thinking about sleep? So I was just thinking about things like certain ultra races where you've got to take on, you've got to collect a certain amount of water, even if you decide you want to pull that away. Is there, are there any rules at the moment, or is there a responsibility somewhere that the federations are then telling athletes that they have to take a certain number of hours over a certain number of days, for example of sleep? Is that something you've thought about or has been thought about? Does it exist in terms of rules anywhere?

Speaker 3:

Advent racing is not regulated. It's a somewhat sad story actually. In 1997, there had been a few fatalities in advent racing and this was by the third time. It was in the ESPN X Games. So I competed in the X Games and successfully meddled each time, but there'd been fatalities. And the third one in 97 in Mexico during the competition, a near fatality and the girl ended up dying. She'd been a Norwegian kayak team world level competitor. We were invited teams, everyone was a truly competitive athlete, olympian, world champion, that kind of thing. This girl got heat stroke and then ended up dying. And by that point I'm thinking this is not okay. We've had quite a few fatalities. Any fatality is not okay. We need to do something about it.

Speaker 3:

So I had the idea, with a few other people, to create an international governing body to create exactly this safety guidelines at least to prevent deaths, make it safer that's what sport does right, safer and fairer and more accessible. So that was the idea in 97. I pursued that until I retired, so for 10 years. But then actually, frankly, the money went out of the sport and it kind of took a massive noves. So I became almost invisible for quite a long time when all the big shows disappeared and the money and the advertising and whatnot, and then there was really no reason to have governance. But then the idea came up again with Joe DeSena, and the old school thing is we were both adventurers and we love the sport. So you thought, hey, let's see if we can resurrect. Well, I thought, let's see if we can resurrect it and create some structure that is truly beneficial for the community. So have the community come in and stand up for themselves and be representative governance, which is what sport is by and for the athletes. We can help by providing some structure and safety.

Speaker 3:

I have very good safety guidelines, I thought, which still exists today, but those are not formalized. The community is divided in adventurizing. It's very, very, very small, but there's also strong commercial interests that truly want to control it and they've created these kind of crazy narratives that the sports are trying to take it over and wrestle it from the. It's all nonsense, but the idea of having safety guidelines, including sleep, is definitely on my agenda. But I'm one person with some ideas who loves the sport. But the sport is too divided right now for any sort of unity. We provide it. I give the community anything they want, because I've got a library of useful information that is quite good for things like how do you keep the sport safe?

Speaker 3:

Many, many things go into safety and the sleep one is important. Riding at night right On a Friday, saturday morning early in the morning is a good idea. To ride on a road when people have been drinking on a Friday night, not a good idea. It's a basic safety guideline. Don't let people ride on the road on a Saturday morning like early in the morning, midnight to early morning, because you could get taken out by a car distracted driver. Whether they're distracted from alcohol or texting doesn't matter and it's happened, it happens actually, it not has it. There are fatalities from that. So event producers doing that's a terrible idea but they're not really thinking like that. I think like that. One of my strange and unusual expertise is there's legal forensic work advising war firms on injury cases from kind of crazy stuff happening, and so I have acute awareness of risk and that's part of it. It's a good question, absolutely needs it, but it requires the community kind of accept the idea that it's a useful, beneficial thing to have some sort of governance that works with experience.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And I know you wanted to ask about the nutrition side of how that differs, so I'll let you take the nutrition question.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean, I guess it's, it's. It's huge, isn't it? Because I was. I was thinking, you know, from an ultra running perspective, does it look like that? But then you've talked about some of the ninja events being sprint events. You know this is, this is a huge different. You know types of nutrition that you're going to need for different things, but how, how do you feel that? I guess nutrition differs from doing something like an ultra running event or an Ironman sort of distance events, because these are, you know, some of these events are talking about a multi day. So what did what did you do when you were racing? How did that work? Did you have teams taking, you know, support crew taking the food for you? Were you carrying stuff and that includes, you know, fluids and things as well? How did how did that all work?

Speaker 3:

But yeah, like you pointed out, it depends on the distance and intensity of the competition. Like athletics, if you're Hussain Bolt doing 100 meters, completely different nutrition program for training and competition to a trial runner or an ultra runner. That is totally different. But Ironman is in an interesting space. People can do Ironman so fast. The pace they're doing is insane, the marathon times they're doing in an Ironman, a competitive Ironman time. So if you look at this crazy, crazy intensity that requires completely different nutrition from an ultra runner for pretty much anyone, in fact I would say anyone. The top ultra runners on earth are not doing Ironman intensity competitions because a very fast Ironman, say eight hours, so someone doing an eight hour Ironman, the intensity of that is like true fast marathon pace or road racing, cycling pace or just a 2.4 mile swim pace or going forward ofa K swim pace. They are very, very fast paces but ultra runners don't do that. Ultra runners are not running a 240 marathon pace in an ultra. They can't. Physiologically you can't do it. So get to 50K. Now we're talking about kind of event racing speeds. Get to 50K, which is the speed drops considerably from running a marathon to running a 50K and the distance is only 8K difference. That now. Now you start to talk about different nutrition requirements and the way we did it is so truly ultra distance, with multiple sports and event racing for the long stuff, not the sprints, but for the long stuff Pretty high fat, low carbohydrate for training and racing, and the reason is you cannot go off carbohydrate as a fuel source for long endurance successfully.

Speaker 3:

You see it in Ironman, actually see it in many triathlons and distance races. People have bought into the idea promoted by nutrition sport nutrition companies. They have to have and I saw a number once like 70 calories per hour carbohydrate to compete. Consider this if you're doing you get to Kona, you're doing the Ironman Kona, and to get there you're pretty quick. So you've got a pretty decent pace going for everything swim, bike and run.

Speaker 3:

When you're working, especially in the heat, as you're producing energy to move, your blood is diverted to your working muscles and because it's hot, do your skin to cool down. Do you think you can digest anything when you have no blood in your stomach and your gut? No, so how do you compete? How do the top athletes, the better athletes, the successful athletes, get through that event in probably, on average, 12 hours or more so 12 hours, which is a decent time. How do you do that for 12 hours if you can't really eat anything? Well, turns out, you have a lot of energy on your body. So the training effect is, to compete successfully is to access stored body fat, because we have a lot of it and, provided you a sub-threshold, if you train for it, you can get really good at it.

Speaker 3:

And this is where I competed and I know other athletes did the same thing. I know triathletes who did this Mark Arlen, paul, the newbie, fraser. Most of the good athletes would do this, not really telling anyone, but you just, you'd see, are they really eating that much? No, you know why. Because if you're doing your 240, if you're like Craig Alexander or whoever doing a 240 triathlon at the end of Iron man, do you think you're really going to eat anything? Yeah, no, why? Because you can't absorb it. A little bit, yeah, a little bit here and there. And that's how we did it for long endurance.

Speaker 3:

It gets even more important for long endurance because you just can't eat. I mean, people try At a very low level. When you're just kind of walking along, hiking along, yeah, heart rate's low, but if you're actually racing? No, because your heart rate's too high and you're diverting blood to other places that you can't digest. You see it, there are pools of vomit in areas in Iron Man's where people eat, they eat, they drink, they eat, they drink, they eat, they drink, not absorbing. Throw it up. Eat, they drink, they eat, they drink, they eat, they throw it up. You see it in their belly, right, you kind of got that Gatorade belly, why no? Absorbing? And they throw it up and do it again, and do it again. I see it in ultramarathons too.

Speaker 1:

With the fat adaption conversation and I'm interested to hear your thoughts on this, Clare, as well. My understanding is it is more recent research is that that works really well for some athletes, but some athletes not so much. So becoming fat adapted becomes really quite challenging for some people. Have you got any thoughts on that, Ian? I don't know how much I do, I still have five strong thoughts on that.

Speaker 3:

So share please. So part of this is I have my masters in sports medicine and a lot was to do with nutrition. I've worked, I've got a good I'd say. He's a friend of mine and colleague, timothy Noakes. He pushed, timothy Noakes, created the first carbohydrate fuel for athletes, called leptin, back in the 70s I think, and he pushed the idea of carbohydrate loading and fuel for athletes for decades.

Speaker 3:

But then at a conference was told by, I think, some Swedish and Norwegian scientists that he was wrong and, being a good scientist, he wrote a book about it, challenging beliefs or something like that. He, scratchy, said well, I don't believe it, but you know, I'm a scientist and I'm going to see what's going on here. The science is very, very old, by the way. This is not new at all. Science has been around for best part of a century and fully supported. There's another book about this too. It's called the Big Fat Surprise. Big Fat Surprise. It's all about. If you haven't read it, it's absolutely. It's a fantastic read, absolutely science based. Many, many, many good references, of which there are a huge weight of evidence about this. Let's go back to what a homo sapien does in a natural environment and how humans have evolved over, let's say, three million years, but actual homo sapiens for 100,000. In a natural environment in England, what carbohydrate can you eat without industrialized food or agriculture? Most of the time, what can you actually eat?

Speaker 3:

Like cereals like potatoes or no, that's agriculture. Oh, I see.

Speaker 2:

And potatoes have arrived from South America, we're talking about natural things like berries that are growing in the hetero, exactly.

Speaker 3:

So for most of humans' existence, 100,000 years or so and three million before, that is homo sapiens of some description. What would you actually eat in England? What can you find scavenging around?

Speaker 2:

It depends what time of year, but this time of year well, actually towards the end of the year you get blackberries and things like that that are in the hetero, that you could pick and eat and how long would they last for? Not very long.

Speaker 3:

So the rest of the year, so the rest of the year. Yeah, let's say you have a month to pick berries. What do you do for the other 11 months?

Speaker 2:

Survive on protein and fat from animal sources, exactly.

Speaker 3:

So how humans evolve. This is human biology, this is mammalian biology, this is our gut. To look at the length of a human digestive tract and what they can actually digest and what actually works Fat and protein. Very, very similar to a, not an ungulate, not a vegan animal like an ungulate meaning something with horse, so something like a cow or a goat or a horse or something, if we were. Let's take the vegan argument it does go back to competition, by the way, but the vegan argument is you will be healthier as a vegan, and I'd say for most humans that is true for a while, because they're cutting crap out of the diets and eating good stuff. But can you survive, as a vegan Turns out? You cannot, because you can't cut complete proteins out of your diet and survive. You can't cut fat out of your diet and survive. You know what you can cut out of your diet and survive or maybe even get healthier Mobs Carbohydrate.

Speaker 3:

It has zero nutrition. Carbohydrate, now what it comes in, often has nutrition, which is good, like berries, but the carbohydrate itself, which is actually glucose in your bloodstream, has zero nutritional value and is tolerated very well by humans because we lay it down as stored fat to survive for the other 11 months and we don't get it in the national environment. We tolerate it, but it's actually toxic. If you look at the role of carbohydrate in the human diet, it has a use for survival, to put on fat to survive, and it's tolerable, but most of the common things you find killing people, actually killing people atherosclerosis, diabetes, this kind of stuff. Where does that come from and how do you stop a diet? Someone with diabetes having diabetes don't eat carbohydrate. It's pretty simple. Anyway, it's a whole nother. It's kind of weird to think we've taken it.

Speaker 2:

It's a massive area, is it not? It is a massive area. Yeah, the debate on carbohydrate versus fat, I mean, I think the important thing just thinking about the listeners as well is that you Because we have carbohydrates and fats and proteins in our diet that you've got to be able to train to adapt yourself to be able to take on fats as a fuel and use your fats as a fuel as well. Yeah, so did you train yourself to do that? Did it take very long for you to be able to adapt to use fats as a fuel?

Speaker 3:

No, it's actually very quick. The reason is it is the default energy pathway. We're talking about energy pathways now. Is it the oxidative energy pathway or not? You're being the KREBS cycle. Which the KREBS cycle, by the way. People say, oh, it's got glucose in it, you must need to eat it. No, it's not true. You create the glucose from fat. This is the fat pathway, it's not the oxidative part. You want the right energy pathway and it is the default one.

Speaker 3:

That's what most humans in the national environment do for 11 months of the year is basically stored fat. So people get it wrong. You eat fat to burn fat. No, you burn it off your body. It's very uncomfortable to compete consuming fat in a dietary sense. It's not eating fat and burning it, it's burning it off your body. As to if people get it wrong, it's like oh, I'm going to eat some butter and use that for my fueling my race Bad idea, I mean, butter is delicious, but using it as a fuel while racing at any sort of intensity is a terrible idea because you probably can't digest it. What they don't understand is that you're burning your stored fat and you get really, really good at it. It's mobilization of free fatty acids. So mobilizing stored fat is really what it is.

Speaker 3:

There's lots of ways to do it. You do it all night, everyone does it all night, but they know it or not. They're doing it all night because they're fasting at night. And you can push that fasting more and more and more until it's habitual. And I would do this to this day. I've probably been doing it for 30 years.

Speaker 3:

When I was competing, I'd train for eight hours a day and I would get up in the morning and I would train and drink some water and I would train. So I'd be fasted already. I would have already fasted for eight hours. Then I'd go and train for another four to eight hours. So now I'm 12 to 16 hours in without eating Super comfortable In fact, to this day.

Speaker 3:

I do not like eating in the morning. Don't like it, it's uncomfortable. I'll have a cup of coffee or a cup of tea or something, but that's it. And then by mid-afternoon I'll start to get a little peckish and start to eat something. And I've stayed lean. I'm the same way. There was, when I was in university, very similar body composition to when I was in university, and that's dietary People go. I've heard this one from some of the nutrition companies Eat what you want. Or they say eat what you want, just work out and work out off your body. Well, good luck Again. The numbers are completely wrong, because it's super easy to eat 4,000 calories in food today. Super easy. How long do you have to run to burn that off?

Speaker 2:

A long time yeah.

Speaker 3:

About nine calories per mile. So 4,000, no, sorry, 100. About 100. So 40 miles. You've got to run 40 miles to burn that off. You can eat it easily, but how many people are going to go run 40 miles to burn it off again? That's nonsense. Not going to do that it's a crazy talk. I mean, if you're an Ironman training, sure of course you're doing that in most days. But, how many people actually do that, and is it good for you? No, terrible idea.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it is interesting, isn't it? Because I think I definitely eat more since training for Ironmans and throughout that time I've been losing weight because of the training. But equally, when I hear the level of training that you're doing and how long you're fasting throughout the day, I think that would feel very challenging to me at the moment. It's habit too.

Speaker 3:

So the default energy pathway is not through the carbohydrate cycle. It's not, which makes it uncomfortable to make any switch. Once you habituate to carbohydrate intake and burning carbohydrate you kind of get it's like. I think the most common thing people would know about would be the marathon bonk. At 20 miles they go oh, I only get 20 or 18 or 20 miles and then I have this severe bonk. That's because they ran out of stored glycogen and then not accessing fat and that. But for someone like me, I eat nothing, I go out and I just run the whole thing and I feel completely comfortable. I can do that for a marathon distance, anything, no cycling or whatever. I can do that quite comfortably and not eat, because I'm habituated to storing my stored fat as fuel, which is our default. And that's why, when you get to do it, go through the uncomfortable phase of re-adapting to the energy pathway. Not only is it easy, it's not just easy, it's like only thing you want to do.

Speaker 3:

Nutrition varies wildly because if you're the sprint athlete, let's say you're doing a one minute effort or a 10 second effort, fueling and nutrition and training completely different from the long endurance stuff. Let's say a sprint triathlon, different fueling mechanism. Because they're so short, you are over anaerobic threshold. If you're competitive, it's like a 5K effort, that kind of effort, or 10K from 100 meters, which is fully anaerobic, to 200, 400, 800, 1500, 3k, 5k the energy mechanisms change. So having those kind of efforts sprint triathlon is a good example because your efforts are very short. Doing a 5K run is absolutely not a marathon. If you're a really good athlete, you're probably at least 15% anaerobic. If you're really good Now, you are just glycogen.

Speaker 3:

And for the first minute or so you've blood sugar. That changes everything. The transition era changes it too. During that minute, or whatever it is in the transition, you should probably eat something as close to glucose as possible, because it goes straight into your bloodstream and that changes everything. If anyone was doing that for sure. You're going to have a different fueling program and you're going to have different training. It's just a different Same with your Ironman training. You're not running marathons. You might be doing bricks, which are quite long, but your shorter sessions, like pool sessions, are different. Again, you burn all your glycogen in your pool session and then you eat a ton of it because you want to replenish it so you can do it again. And if you don't, you're not going to do that overnight eating fat and protein. That day you have to eat carbohydrate and a lot of it Absolutely Brilliant.

Speaker 2:

That's what people get misused.

Speaker 3:

They say oh, he's that fat guy for some things yeah.

Speaker 1:

You know what?

Speaker 3:

We're going to do something shorter and more intense. You'd better have the carbs, because otherwise you will crash and you won't be able to train. Yeah, yeah, no that's brilliant.

Speaker 1:

That's really, really good advice, thank you. So one of the things that we do on this podcast is get the previous guest to ask the next guest a question without knowing who that is going to be. So our previous guests for Will and Rayah Usher, who run precision coaching, and their question, or Rayah's question, was what tech has had the greatest impact for you in your sport? Tech, what tech? As in technology, Technology.

Speaker 3:

Let's define what my sport is. Okay, so until 2007, it was event racing, and since then it went back to triathlon. It actually started as a triathlete around the same time as event racing. So you can pick technology from either in that case From almost anything these days.

Speaker 3:

Well, for the past 10 years it's been obstacle stuff and now mostly ninja stuff. In ninja. No tech to speak of, I would say smart watch. The reason is I can loosely follow time quite useful Time, heart rate, distance, elevations, things that are kind of useful for me as a I don't know, I'm going to say an enthusiastic recreational athlete. These days it's just kind of nice to go out and kind of know what I've been doing and that's just kind of conformational, but I like it. That has the biggest effect on me today because it's a motivator too. It's like, oh, have I done that today? And if my watch says oh, no, then I'll head out the door and helps me get out the door, which I want to do, but I get buried at my desk.

Speaker 1:

But it doesn't sound like you're massively motor driven by the technology, so Will's follow up question to that is what other piece of equipment or service would have the biggest impact on performance? My bad.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to talk about what I do today. The piece of equipment that would be most useful for me is a pull-up bar.

Speaker 1:

Oh, okay.

Speaker 3:

Yes, on a pull-up bar you can do many things, not just pull-ups. A pull-up bar, you can hang. This is the ninja stuff. In an obstacle sense, there's a lot of what we call hanging obstacles, ones where you swing off. On a bar. You can do many, many, many things. You can do dead hangs, you can do static hangs, you can do swinging hangs, you can do pull-ups. You can do all sorts of different moves like calisthenic moves and other things that help you grip and your movements through any obstacle. So, a very simple pull-up bar there's a good one out here. You can pull-up, mate, by the way, it's just a free-standing thing.

Speaker 1:

Oh, fantastic.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you can just put it in your back garden or something, or in your house maybe, so a pull-up bar very simple.

Speaker 2:

Brilliant Two simple things, which is really good.

Speaker 1:

One of the other questions that we love to ask on this podcast is book recommendations. Now, you've already given us a couple actually, tim Noakes is one and the big fat surprise but are there any other books that you find yourself recommending, in any area of life, that you found really helpful for you?

Speaker 3:

Sure, there's a book called why we Sleep. Oh that's a brilliant book. Yeah, you guys know it.

Speaker 1:

Yes, that is a very, very good book, but what did you take from that? Why do you pick that book?

Speaker 3:

It's important for health and longevity and not killing people. The Dr Matthew Walker, who's a smart guy. There was very little science and data around actual sleep why and how. Now that's become. It's a real thing now. One of the things that take home from his book was the data around daylight savings. Yeah, if you guys will remember this, the biggest data that's and it's compelling because it's big data. Now this is real numbers now with true statistics and actual probability.

Speaker 3:

That one hour time change causes a staggering number of deaths in all countries that have it every year. When the clock changes so that you get one hour less sleep, all cause mortality goes through the roof. All cause mortality means people dying from anything and everything Heart attack, car crashes, falling off a roof All cause mortality goes. It's a staggering change from one hour change because it takes a few weeks to readjust. For that one hour it's like jet lag, but for hundreds of millions of people. Now you can track the data. That was compelling for me.

Speaker 3:

I'm curious, I'm skeptical. So, as a science guy, I'm always curious but also skeptical. It's like the fat thing. I was very skeptical about it, but curious, just like Timothy Noakes. Then read the books, saw the data, checked the studies checked the studies checked all the stuff, I went, yeah, they're kind of right, not just kind of like really right by the way. So big fat surprise why we sleep. Water is another one waterlogged. That's a good one, timothy Noakes waterlogged. I was just going through this with my wife, who's got a podcast. She's going on about hydration. Hydration absolutely necessarily keeps us fit, healthy, happy, not dead. How many deaths from dehydration have there Are there in the scientific literature from athletic events.

Speaker 2:

Not as many as hyponatremia.

Speaker 3:

Ah, good answer. Any guesses to how many actual deaths?

Speaker 2:

I don't know Zero. Oh, let me go.

Speaker 3:

How many from hyponatremia in the United States Is a good one. In the United States, how many people die from hyponatremia each year? Well, hang on, let's look at it another way. How many people are hospitalized? How many people have it? How many people hospitalized and how many people die from hyponatremia?

Speaker 2:

No idea.

Speaker 3:

It's a hard one to guess, so it was sort of rhetorical. 50,000 people are hospitalized in the United States from hyponatremia. Every year Six percent die. Wow 3,000 deaths a year. Hyponatremia.

Speaker 2:

And yet nobody dies from dehydration.

Speaker 3:

Not one incident in the scientific literature of people dying from dehydration during athletic competitions never happened.

Speaker 1:

Wow yeah. I have heard about that book before, but never read it, and so I'm going to add it to my reading list because that Challenging beliefs.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, another one, timothy Noakes. Yes, challenging beliefs. This one's more about the fat and carbohydrate. It was the first book about it. Fat and carbohydrate, challenging beliefs. What you can dive into his stuff, it's fantastic. So I continue to wrap you endlessly with ideas that popped into my head about books. Save the time.

Speaker 1:

I love an ever-expanding reading list, but we could probably talk about books for another good, another hour as well. But, Ian, it's been absolutely fascinating getting you on the podcast. I've really enjoyed hearing about a side of endurance world and sport that is completely different to anything that I've done before but really does sound very exciting. So I'm definitely going to do some more exploring on this, particularly the adventure racing. I think it sounds fantastic. I just want to finish off with one question that just struck me as so with triathlon. We understand the health benefits for doing it, and whether you take it to the extreme, whether those continue, is a good question. But where do you see the health benefits? Somebody that's getting into a sport purely to be the healthiest they can be. Is there any science? I'm guessing from the conversation there's science around whether the obstacle racing is better for you than just sort of straightforward endurance. So what's the science around that?

Speaker 3:

I don't think there is science around obstacle racing and I don't think there's science around adventure racing for health benefits Anecdotally no, I'm not going to say anecdotally, I'm doing any sport if they're moving more. There is science around that. And standing actually is a lot more science around that, standing versus sitting. If you just get off your ass, get out of your chair, whether it's standing at your desk, and it looks like you're standing, yep, yep, exactly, yeah, so I ditched my chair. It was another Timothy Nook thing. It arrived out of work. I was working with him in South Africa, at Cape Town, at the University of Sports Science in the South African. We were talking about sitting and standing and increasingly, at these medical conferences and other things, you see people not sitting. The scientists just understand this was 15 years ago, maybe longer they would be. People would be standing around the sides of the seating. They weren't sitting in the chairs and I would scratch them ahead and start asking a few people and they said oh yeah, the data's in Because the science knows before. It's like climate change the scientists knew decades ago what was going on, but they're really conservative, but they just start doing what they know they believe to be true. This is a whole other discussion. What you believe to be true but what is actually true. And scientists have this unfortunate habit of being scientific about everything. We're not going to say that. We know they do in their heart and they believe. This is the same with the sitting and standing thing. 15 years ago the scientists and the medical people knew in their core, they knew it was true Sitting is catastrophically bad for humans.

Speaker 3:

One minute this is. It'll take one minute off your life for every hour you sit. For most humans in our world, in the industrialized world, it's 10 years off your life by sitting. You sit for breakfast. You sit in your car. You sit in the office. You sit in your car. Again, you sit at your dining table. You sit on the couch, you sit, you sit, you sit, you sit, you sit.

Speaker 3:

Homeosapiens, going back to the evolutionary thing don't do that. Don't, even in agricultural societies. No sitting, very rare. The evolutionary humans don't sit. They move or they rest or they chase something.

Speaker 3:

Not doing that, being an athlete, is a big part of the solution. Stand up at your desk and if you have one, and move a lot. Moving is not racing, but training at long endurance is actually perfect, because if you're not doing high intensity which you shouldn't be, because you should be doing long, slow, endurance stuff, that's super healthy. And you're moving all the time, that's great. Whether it's an obstacle race or an Ironman or jogging around the block, if you're moving, that's good.

Speaker 3:

That's all you need to know, which goes back to one very big thing which I'll leave everyone with the purpose of sport. Why? Why? Well, simple answer Make better humans. That's what sport does. Making better humans through sport. That's our actual motto at World Obscool. But it's true, it's like the on peak movement making better people. That's it. That's the purpose. That's lots and lots of things Mental, physical, emotional, cultural, societal. You develop communities, which is like blue zone living communities. That's what sport is. You have a community of athletes you do stuff with and it's fantastic because they're your friends and that helps you live longer and happier. That's sport.

Speaker 1:

Brilliant. Well, on that note, I think that is a fantastic way to round up it. Like you say, you become the average of the people you hang out with. Essentially, the more you can create that community around the sport, the better you will be and the better the world will be. Fantastic, Ian, it's been an absolute pleasure getting to understand a little bit more about the world of obstacle racing, ninja racing and the adventure racing Also. We've ended up going down some different avenues that I didn't expect to explore and quite as much depth, which has been really fascinating. Thank you very much. I've got no doubt that everyone has taken a huge amount from this.

Speaker 3:

Well, I hope everyone's skeptical about it. And, charlie Claire, thank you very much, it's been my pleasure. Happy to jump on again anytime. Talk about anything you want. Food, not food, gardening, sailing Very happy.

Speaker 1:

Good conversation around coffee is always good.

Speaker 3:

Coffee sounds good. Jump into my second cup.

Speaker 1:

If you want to find out more about Aion, the best place to head is to aionadamsoncom, or on Facebook is aionaadamson and Instagram also aionaadamson. If you like what we do at the Tribeathlon podcast, you've got to register for Tribe Talk. It's an email that comes out every two weeks packed full of everything to do with swim, bike and run, but also nutritional help, business coaching and a whole lot more. Whether that's books, videos, ted Talks, apps or technologies. It's packed full of ideas that can help improve your sport, your life and your business. So register for it at tribeathloncom and you'll be sure that every two weeks, your inbox is full of some amazing ideas and resources to improve your life. So what did you make of that interview with Aion?

Speaker 2:

I kind of knew a little bit about adventure racing, Didn't really know much about what the difference was between OCR and all the different levels of obstacle racing that there is. So when we were talking absolutely right, I was thinking right, how could I do this? What race am I going to do? But I think, as his stories got deeper in terms of one of them was to, and the Antarctic was it- Through the Arctic Circle, I think the Arctic.

Speaker 2:

Circle. I was just thinking. And then I was just thinking actually you need a real experienced team to start doing those things. But yeah, again some amazing stories. And yeah, from being an athlete winning things, being a triathlete and then going into doing these obstacle races, yeah, amazing. What did you think? I'm sure your mind was also thinking the same thing.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, absolutely so. I love the idea of this. This sounds like brilliant fun that God's own race straight onto my bucket list. I just think. And when he described that his last race, which was the one through Scandinavia that went through the Arctic Circle, I think, where you've got the northern lights and the kind of like, he's just like, oh wait, and the orcas, he had me at the northern lights and then he mentioned the orcas and I was like that's it.

Speaker 1:

That just sounds absolutely incredible. So, yeah, what a brilliant conversation to understand about a whole different world. So I mean, I expected us to be talking more about, yeah, basically like tough mothers and ninja stuff and I can see is kind of like like great fun, but those adventure races sound like an incredible thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's all it. Also, it almost seemed like kind of like the gym version or a smaller version that lots of people could, could join into. You know, in terms of things like the ninja, for example, two things that actually I don't even know where I'd start to get a team together, or what do I need to learn to actually get there and what equipment do I need, you know? So it was both like from each end of the scale, wasn't it?

Speaker 1:

It was, and I did try and get my team together out of my posse. And as soon as I mentioned kayaking, I think they all just sort of ran away in the opposite direction. But but like to do it.

Speaker 2:

I would absolutely do it. Whatever we need to learn, let's, let's, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Excellent, excellent. So that's two people. So I did look at God's own afterwards and God's own needs to be a team of four to be to qualify, to be in with a chance of actually winning something, which is not that we're going to have any chance of that but you have to have at least one female within that. But in 2024, it finishes in the Marlborough region, so it starts in Marlborough region, which is obviously like New Zealand's most famous wine.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was about to say it's nothing to do with wine. I was going to mention that when you said you'd quite like to do it.

Speaker 1:

Absolutely Definitely is. I've been to the Marlborough region and the wine there is absolutely incredible, and the idea of finishing and celebrating in the Marlborough region is just yeah awesome. I suspect I might need a little bit more time between now and to get organized and learn a few new sports.

Speaker 1:

Yes, yes, yes, like how to kind, but it did. It struck me that there was a lot of similarities between that and ultra running, but without being quite so hard. Like, ultra running is clearly really difficult if you have, if you can't run more than 30, 40 miles, you know, if your knees are not willing, whereas this strikes me as something that takes longer, but you still get those same awesome experiences of being out for the days on end experiencing kind of the sort of rugged parts of the world. I did think that that would be. Yeah, it's just an alternative to that, isn't it?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and I think we're seeing this diversification, aren't we away from sort of mainstream competitions like triathlon into, I mean, ultra running? Kind of exploded, didn't they, over lockdown, but but yeah, these, these ultra events that the as humans were kind of searching more and more to be able to experience different things. And you know, I was even thinking back to I forget the name of it actually, but it's ultra running essentially and then you are hang gliding off a hill and then you're running again.

Speaker 1:

So yes, I can't remember what it's called either, but again crazy is what it should be.

Speaker 2:

But really, really good fun. And I can see there's an element of how do you win? Well, you've got to run, and then you've got to find the highest hill to get the most distance when you're flying, to then be able to run again. So I think, yeah, we're seeing all these kind of permutations, aren't we, of different things, and I think, almost like we're moving, moving athletes around again. You know that maybe we're losing them from traditional, mainstream sport into kind of other areas.

Speaker 1:

I think? I think it's the long tail, isn't it? Essentially, instead of it being mass organized events, people are trying to do more and more niche, different sort of interesting, quirky variations on it, and it's kind of what a bit what we talked about with Bob Bavitt, wasn't it? And the blue ocean stuff of just doing you know weird combinations. You know whether it's speed goal for, whether it's bringing a horse into it, or whether it's a hand glider or a kayak, it's all just. Essentially it's endurance and adventure, isn't it?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, absolutely the other thing.

Speaker 1:

I thought was sorry. The other thing I thought was really interesting that he said about was the importance of sleeping and the amount of sleep. Yeah yeah, so that impact of getting his team to sleep longer than they realized and they lost all of their advantage, but then one by a whole day because of it. I thought that was really interesting.

Speaker 2:

I truly think that people forget how much sleep we actually need and you know, even on a day to day basis, in terms of learning about yourself as well, and how much you need and how much of a competitive advantage even in day to day life it's going to give you, whereas we're constantly, aren't we, in such busy lifestyles, cutting down on our sleep. So it's no wonder when you get to a competition, you think I can, I can do without. You know, I've got, I've got to kind of keep keep moving. So that, yeah, that was that was really interesting to hear about. And actually, well, we know the studies of long time effects of not sleeping enough or getting a good quality sleep and sleeping at the wrong times of day. And he kind of led on a little bit. He touched a little bit of the science of that, didn't he? In terms of long term health, he, you know he was talking about his own long term health and the effects of doing this endurance sport for such a, you know, many years of his life.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you're right and it's so. Actually, I've been listening to a few different things from Matthew Walker, the guy who wrote why we sleep, and he talks about the kind of short, medium and long term effects of the short term effects are that, for example, a nurse that has just finished a 24 hour shift is 168% more likely to have a crash on the way home than normally. So you can, you can affect you short term by just being overly tired and having a crash. It can affect you medium term in the it causes. You know it can massively increase your risk of things like diabetes, diabetes, cancer, heart disease, all of that kind of stuff, plus stress and anxiety. Really big impact on that. And then long term it's things like Alzheimer's.

Speaker 2:

You know it's, it's, it's that's the overall body stress or stress or effects that we get, isn't it that combination? Yeah, I think. I mean, I think sleep is is fascinating, and hopefully we'll have somebody else on on the on the podcast, to do with sleep as well.

Speaker 1:

We need to. We do need to line up that we need to find somebody for season five.

Speaker 2:

I think we've obviously had I have a couple in my, in my yeah, in my on my list to contact, so let's see if we can get someone on do that, do that brilliant Right.

Speaker 1:

Well, and that's another episode of brilliant episode, really different episode, and I really enjoyed it and I hope people caught lots of interesting takeaways from it. Another episode done, so good luck with your training and yours.

Speaker 1:

Thank you very much and for everyone else. Keep on training and remember this episode was brought to you by the trusted team and by fourth discipline, so if you want to find out more about how the trusted team can help you grow your business and improve your work life balance, go to the trusted dot team, and if you want to find out more about how fourth discipline can help take your performance in sport and life to the next level, go to fourth discipline dot com. If you enjoyed this podcast, please do review it and share it, because it helps other people find what we think is really valuable learning lessons from amazing athletes, and so please do that. You can also find the whole back catalog at tribathloncom, and you can also find out about the tribe Athlon app, which helps people find events, find people to train with and enjoy their events through their tribe. So check out tribathloncom.

World of Adventure With Ian Adamson
Obstacle and Adventure Racing Concept
Godzone
Sleep and Success in Adventure Racing
Governance and Safety in Advent Racing
Nutrition and Fueling for Endurance Events
Carbohydrate vs. Fat Debate in Athletics
Exploring Health Benefits of Sports
Exploring Adventure Racing and Sleep Importance
Brilliant Episode With Valuable Lessons