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Documenting The Spirit

Kelowna couple conquers Costa Rican challenge
It was among the most
difficult physical and mental challenges either Dan or Toni Crockett had
ever taken on.
It was also the most
satisfying.
The 60-something
Kelowna couple returned home recently from Costa Rica where they
successfully completed the Trans Coastal Challenge Rain Forest Run, a
grueling six-day foot race along the Pacific coast of the Central American
nation.
Dan was entered in the
233 km expedition race with an elevation change of 9,000 metres, while
Toni competed in the 150 km adventure run with an elevation of 6,500
metres.
With daytime
temperatures in the 35 to 40 degree Celsius range, and all forms of
terrain to cover, Dan was required to run 30 to 50 km per day. Toni had to
cover between 20 and 30 km daily.
An experienced ultra
runner, Dan had never competed in an event nearly as challenging or with
so much variety.
"There was no easy
running at all," said Dan Crockett, 64, who has competed in no fewer than
20 ultra marathons.
"It was on trails, in
the mud, there were potholes, in cattle pastures, through the jungle, on
the beach and, of course, a lot of climbing. We had to barge through an
alligator-infested river. It was tough, it was hot, humid, steep, and
muddy…(the organizers) wanted it that way. It was incredible."
So difficult was the
expedition race that as many as 25 of the people dropped out, for reasons
ranging from heat exhaustion to blisters.
Dan came dangerously
close to seeing his race end of Day 4 when he ran out of water more than
90 minutes from the finish and was close to being overtaken by heat
exhaustion.
"There was 10,000 feet
of elevation on that day, and I was in trouble. The doctor was going to
pull me out of the race, but I put up a case that I had been in this
situation before. So he mixed me up a concoction and Toni had to keep
waking me up to drink it though the night. By morning I was getting
better. I just forced my mind and body to do it. My overall fitness really
got me through."
Dan regained his
strength over the last two days to finish sixth overall and fourth among
all male competitors. He was named the event's most competitive racer and
won the spirit of competition award.
As for Toni, 63, she
placed sixth overall and third among women in the adventure race.
Toni, a two-time
breast cancer survivor, once again drew the admiration of her husband for
her courage and fortitude.
"Toni was the real
hero," said Dan. "Given what she's been through, she had the perfect
mindset. A lot of people went out too hard, but Toni went at the right
pace and fought her way through everything. It was great that we were able
to experience this together. It was so much sweeter that way."
Dan also made sure the
experience was well-documented as he took 120 videos and more than 200
pictures while in Costa Rica.
The combination of the
country's natural beauty and its people made a lasting impression on the
Crocketts.
"We saw snakes, Sloths,
macaws, monkeys…the vegetation was unbelievable, it's such a beautiful
part of the world. The people were wonderful, too."
And on the subject of
their overall experience in Costa Rica ?
"It's the most
satisfying thing I've ever done in my life," said Dan. "The organizers
said they couldn't wipe the smiles off our faces. It was more of an
adventure and more difficult than we thought, but it really exceeded all
our expectations."
So taken was he by the
event and the people involved, Dan is considering traveling to Costa Rica
next year to serve as a volunteer assistant to the race director.
As for Dan and Toni's
next athletic challenge, the Kelowna couple is planning to run this summer
in the Knee Knacker, a 50 km ultra run along the North Shore.
whenderson@kelownacapnews.com
Kelowna couple strives
to live fit and healthy
When Dan and Toni
Crockett board a flight for San Jose, Costa Rica, next weekend, their
journey will represent as much a celebration of life as it will a mental
and physical challenge.
The Kelowna couple of
44 years will brave the heat and humidity of the tropics to compete in the
Trans Coastal Challenge Rainforest Run, a six-day ultra-marathon along the
diverse Pacific coast.
That Toni is able to
travel at all—let alone run in an ultra endurance event—is ample reason
for the Crocketts to celebrate.
It also explains a lot
about why this super-active, 60-plus duo takes nothing in life for
granted.
Toni is a two-time
breast cancer survivor.
She underwent her
first mastectomy in 1995, then a second one in 2008.
Through all of Toni’s
challenges, the surgeries, treatments, rehabilitation and reconstructive
surgeries, there have been a number of constants for the Crocketts—their
love of running, their desire to lead fit and healthy lives, and their
commitment to one another.
Toni, now 63, took up
running in her 50s, nearly three years after recovering from her first
bout with the disease.
And, through thick and
thin, she’s been relying on it ever since.
“Even when I had all
the setbacks from cancer and the surgeries, I just kept coming back to
running,” Toni said.
“It keeps me fit and
it keeps me motivated to stay fit. The hardest thing is coming back each
time because it’s so mentally and physically tough to build your way back
up again.
“Three or four times,
I’ve built myself up from square one. It’s been hard, but I feel like with
whatever is thrown at me, I can find a way to deal with it.”
Training for her first
multi-day ultra race has taught Toni a lot about her own capabilities.
After her most recent
battle with cancer, she wasn’t able to resume running until the spring of
2010.
Miraculously, in the
span of less than a year, Toni has worked her way up to as many as 70
kilometres a week in preparation for Costa Rica.
“(Running 70 km a
week) was never something I thought I would ever be doing, let alone at
63,” she said.
“It just shows you it
can be done if you really work at it and believe in yourself.
Anything’s possible. “
In addition to
running, Toni does yoga and strength training at the gym.
The Crocketts also
cross country ski together in the winter, and from spring to fall ride
thousands of kilometres on their road bikes.
In short, physical
activity dominates their lives.
“All we do is work and
train,” said Dan.
“We love it. We’re
active people. Kelowna is the perfect place for us.”
It was Toni’s first
battle with cancer that had a profound and lasting effect on Dan.
As Toni moved close to
a full recovery by 1997, he decided to make a dramatic shift in lifestyle.
“When Toni was sick it
was a really big change for me,” he said. “
I decided from there
on in it was all going to be about healthy living and eating. We both made
that healthy lifestyle choice, exercising and eating right. We have a
pretty strict regimen and we stick to it.
“Toni has had to have
a lot more dedication and commitment than me all these years to get
through what she has. She’s maintained her health and fitness through all
of it. She inspires me.”
Dan took that
inspiration to heart and has literally run with it.
He has competed in no
fewer than 20 ultra marathons of up to 100 miles in length.
Last year, Dan won the
Fat Dog ultra run at Manning Park, finishing the gruelling 126 km event in
19 hours, besting dozens of competitors two and three decades his junior.
In 2007, he celebrated
his 60th birthday by setting a new super veteran record at the Kneeknacker
North Shore Trail Run by more than 20 minutes.
He has run a three
hour 10 minute marathon, and can still break the 40-minute barrier at the
10 km distance.
And just to prove that
his athletic abilities extend across all types of running, Dan won the
silver medal in the 400 metres at the 2010 World Masters Indoor
Championships in Kamloops.
In addition to being
intrinsically competitive, running continues to give Dan an immense
feeling of satisfaction as he turns 64 this week.
“To me it’s the
challenge of it all that I enjoy…and it’s also the feeling of well-being I
get from it. I love being fit.
“When I know I can go
out and run a marathon anytime I want as a 64-year-old, that’s empowering.
It’s a real feeling of accomplishment. I also want people to know you’re
never too old to get out there and be physically active.”
It’s for all of the
reasons above that Dan wanted to take on his most formidable challenge
yet—the Coastal Challenge Rain Forest Run.
He was invited to join
the Canadian team in Costa Rica by captain and fellow adventure racer Jen
Segger.
Initially, Dan
intended to make the trip on his own. But after some thought he invited
Toni to come along—not as a competitor but as a tourist. Toni had other
ideas.
“It didn’t interest me
to just go down and sit around, if I was going to go on the trip I would
be running, too,” said Toni, who has run as far as 50 miles in an
organized ultra event.
“This isn’t something
I would have ever done on my own, but this is Dan’s passion and I wanted
to share it with him and be there with him.
“He’s running so well
right now and he’s so focused, this will be great for him. If it wasn’t
for him, I wouldn’t have a chance to do something like this, so it’s a
great opportunity.”
The six-day race along
the west coast of the Central American nation will take the Crocketts
through all varieties of terrain, from sandy beaches to muddy trials, from
river crossings to rocky climbs.
As one of 12 members
on the Canadian team, Dan is entered in the expedition race, a 250 km
event with a total elevation change of more than 9,000 metres. He will be
required to run between 30 and 60 km per day.
Toni will compete in
the adventure race, 160 km in length with a combined elevation of 6,500
metres. She will face the challenge of running between 15 and 35 km per
day for six days.
Each competitor is
allowed a 24-gallon Action packer for a week’s worth of supplies.
Among the essential
items in Dan’s pack will be snack bars, energy bars, a sleeping bag, a
flashlight, water bottles, running shorts, shoes, casual clothing, a
mosquito net, a safety whistle and a camera.
“Everything we’ll need
has to be in there,” Dan said.
“It’s been a real
challenge organizing things, deciding what you have room for and what you
need most. Once you start the race, everything you need has to be in that
pack.”
The race begins Jan.
30 at Puerto Quepos and will conclude Feb. 5 at Drake Bay near the
Panamanian border. And it will all happen in the heat and humidity of the
rain forest with temperatures ranging from 26 to 34 degrees Celsius.
“It’s going to be
quite a shock to the system, so we’ve been trying acclimatize by spending
a fair bit of time in the sauna before we go,” said Dan who has been
running 125 km a week in preparation.
“Getting used to that
part will be a challenge. With everything that’s involved in training for
this, a marathon a day for six days, it’s the biggest commitment I’ve ever
made.”
Like every race he
enters, Dan heads to Central America with high expectations.
Age will not stand up
as an alibi or excuse for Dan who is firmly focused on a top-10 finish.
“I’m going there to
compete and do my best. I’m not thinking at all about my age. I expect to
do well against a lot of the younger runners.”
In Toni’s case, the
only important result will be completing the six-day journey under the
allotted time.
Dan describes his
spouse as “not fast, just very tough and steady. She has a great
perspective…I feed off that.”
Still, there is some
apprehension and fear of the unknown for Toni.
At the same time,
there is the anticipation and thrill of a new adventure. Besides, Toni has
conquered her share of challenges in the past.
“The one fear I have
is getting lost, going off the trail, but that’s all part of it,” she
said.
“Mentally I know I can
do it, but I just don’t know about my body and how it’s going to hold up
and respond over that many days.
“But I’m sure going to
try. I believe more than ever that you can’t be afraid to step out, you
have go with your passion and live each day to the fullest.
“This is far from home
and it’s very intriguing. We’re doing something totally different, so
we’ll see what happens when we get there.”
Kelowna ultra runner
and close friend Shirlee Ross has known the Crocketts for many years and
continues to marvel at their fitness, vitality and zest for life.
Ross and Dan Crockett
work together as co-organizers of the Scorched Sole, an ultra run held
each summer in Kelowna.
That the Crocketts
would take on the daunting mental and physical test of a multi-day race in
a foreign country comes as no big surprise to Ross.
“You know, they just
have incredible strength of character,” said Ross.
“There’s no such thing
as them saying ‘No, we can’t do this.’
“I was able to be with
them through Toni’s ordeals, and she never complained, she was always
matter-of-fact about her situation.
“Dan is a
problem-solver at work and he believes anything is possible.
“It’s that kind of
attitude that’s prevailed throughout their lives. It’s a pleasure to know
them and inspires others to want to be better.
“It’s no shock at all
to me that they’re taking this on.”
So what seems an
unthinkable endeavour for most people—let alone two people approaching
their mid-60s—the Crocketts instead view as a once-in-a-lifetime
opportunity.
“What better way to
see a country like Costa Rica than on foot,” Dan said.
“The wildlife,
brilliant sunsets, the coast, all the scenery…this is our holiday. We
think it’s going to be an amazing experience for both of us, like nothing
we’ve ever done.”
Dan and Toni Crockett
will leave for Costa Rica next Sunday, Jan. 29 and are due to return to
Kelowna on Feb. 7.
whenderson@kelownacapnews.com
Brothers turn competition into family affair

Murray Mitchell/The Daily News
Brothers Ken Crockett, left, and Dan Crockett have
a healthy rivalry going at the 2010 World Masters Indoor Athletics
Championships at the Tournament Capital Centre. While not competing in
the same age category, Ken says bragging rights are on the line between
the siblings.
MARCH 6,2010
BY ROBERT KOOPMANS
DAILY NEWS STAFF REPORTE
For the Crocketts, sports are a family affair.
Sitting in a lounge at the Tournament Capital Centre, Ken Crockett, 57,
and Dan Crockett, 63, talk about how sports influenced their lives growing
up and how it continues to shape who they are today.
The brothers were competitors this week at the 2010 World Masters Indoor
Athletics Championships. Ken, who is from Kamloops, will have competed in
10 events by the end of competition on Saturday.
And they have a third brother, Steve, who also competed. Steve, the
youngest of the trio at 55, had to return to Keremeos to work, but ran
races in the early part of the competition.
Through Friday, medals had eluded the family trio, but Ken and Dan will
be on the hunt for hardware today, as they compete in the final-day relay
races.
The lack of medals doesn’t disappoint either man. The goal for the games
was always to compete and do their best.
Not that they aren’t competitive; in fact, it’s just the opposite. Both
men are high-end athletes who have placed well in all their events — just
not high enough to wear gold, silver or bronze.
Their lack of medals is more a compliment to the high quality of the
athletes here, they both agree. Ken, for example, finished second in his
200-metre heat to Bill Collins, one of the best-known and most successful
U.S. masters sprinters ever.
Ken said he has always wanted to compete against others his own age
instead of the younger athletes he typically competes against. He found
that head-to-head competition here.
“People our age are showing us a thing or two,” Ken said.
“You don’t come to these games and have a gift handed to you,” Dan
agreed.
The Crocketts have always played together. For years, the family — there
are seven siblings — have fielded a team of six in Kelowna’s Ski to Sea
multi-discipline relay race.
The event starts at the top of Big White with alpine skiing, continues
down the mountain with cross-country skiing, mountain and road biking and
running, and ends at the lake with canoeing.
The family also has competed together — and against each other — at
numerous other competitions as well.
At these games, Dan and Ken haven’t gone up against each other, but Ken
and Steve had a go in the long jump pit. Ken came out on top — by just a
bit — this time around.
None of the brothers minds losing to each other.
“We always have fun,” said Ken.
They also support each other, including technical coaching, between-event
pep talks, and track-side encouragement.
Dan said it was his brother's voice he heard booming from the stands as
he ran a 400-metre qualifying heat, despite the din of the crowd.
"I could hear Ken yelling, and it just reminds you of what you are
supposed to be doing," he said.
This has been the first masters competition for anyone from their family,
and Ken and Dan say they will likely enter future events, perhaps even at
the next world championships in Finland in 2012.
And who knows, they added — perhaps there will be more Crocketts on the
roster of competitors next time around.
“How about all the (seven) siblings,” Ken said to Dan. “That would be
something, hey?”
 
Jul 22 2007
Crockett does Knee
Knacker under 7 hours
By
Bobbi-Sue Menard
capital news contribut
For his 60th birthday, Dan Crockett decided to
take on the gnarliest 30-mile trail run in Canada. Last Sunday, Crockett shaved 20 minutes off his
age group record for a finishing time of six hours,
41 minutes in the 2007 edition of the Knee
Knackering North Shore Trail Run. Crockett feels he just completed his best race yet. The annual ultra marathon is considered one of the
top 25 runs in North America for difficulty.
"You have
to maintain focus the entire way," said Crockett.
"It is rooty, rocky and bumpy. There was snow on the trail this
year. It was real difficult from start to finish.
The Knee Knacker rises straight up Black Mountain at the start, and it is grueling. Every year there are competitors
who do not finish under the 10 hour
cut off. This year's event was held in sweltering,
humid 28 C coastal heat.
"I was drenched with sweat," said
Crockett.
"It was a different heat than we get here in the Okanagan." Crockett started running long distance races 10 years ago at the age of 50. He runs primarily long trail distances having now run 15 ultra marathons and 15 road marathons. His races have ranged anywhere from 5k to 100 miles.
"I find that I am better at the longer distances: 50K or longer seems better to me," explained Crockett.
Ultra-marathons require an entirely different strategy than traditional distance road marathons.
"This is different," said Crockett.
"You can't just show up and run. This takes planning, the clothes, the right equipment. If you do it right it all comes together." His strategy includes walking early in the race, drinking bottle after bottle of water, and eating power bars and gels, even peanut butter and banana sandwiches,
"You gotta be eating and drinking the whole time or you won't finish," said Crockett. Crockett loves the ultra-marathon.
"I don't like running roads. Regular marathons are my
nemesis. They hurt worse, there is no pleasure in them for
me, just the pleasure of finishing." Twice a week Crockett heads out to train for what he really enjoys.
"My pleasure for the
week is my trail run. It is my get away, my
stress release." In Crockett's 10-year racing career, he has run the Knee Knacker four times.
"I had not run
the race since 2000. When I hit 60, I thought I
should do it again. I saw the record for the
age group and thought I
could do better than that." This year was the race of Crockett's career.
"I usually don't run so smart. I was focused and disciplined and
that counts a whole lot." Crockett feels he ran a conservative race, and
finished feeling great and knowing he had the record in the bag. Crockett doesn't rule out running the Knee Knacker again,
"I still think I can run faster.
I think I have my best running
still ahead of me. I am still learning." Two other Kelowna athletes completed the Knee Knacker run last weekend. In other results: Margaret Scott finished seventh in the women's 50 to 59 age group in
9:04:24, while Shannon Wilford was 18th in the women's 40 to 49 division in 9:08:39.
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