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FINAL UPDATES - 2014 - 3 DAYS OUT

9/24/2014

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Picture
Half the course marking crew last weekend!
PictureRim Road #300 headed back towards Washington Park.
Here are some final updates for everyone's information.  As we are obviously very close to the race and many of our are packing or already traveling, here are the last thoughts and items you should know.  

Weather - It's going to rain.  Bring a jacket.  I strongly suggest a hat and gloves in your drop bag at Washington Park to take out with you to Hell's Gate and your trip to Buck Springs AS.  I don't care where you live right now, it's cold as heck up on the Rim when you are wet and it's 2am.  It may only get to 25-30 degrees but it's a very bitter 25-30 degrees. We had a number of runners reaching hypothermia for the late miles on the Cabin Loop last year.  A fresh set of dry clothes at Buck Springs or Pinchot would be a great idea.  

Drop Bags - You can leave them at the start from 5am Saturday until you take off.  We'll have them lined up in the parking lot to just drop off by the sign for that respective station.  No drop bags for Hell's Gate and make sure you can easily see your bib number and names on each bag.  We'll bring all drop bags back to the finish line as each station closes so you can pick it up there.  

Crew - There are a number of maps on this website that are useful for finding your way around the course with your runner.  http://www.mogollonmonster100.com/crew-driving-instructions.html  I don't suggest visiting Pinchot Cabin aid stations.  It's just a lot of driving along dirt roads but you're welcome to it if you want.  If you drive to any aid station as a crew please make sure you park safely along the road leaving ample space for emergency vehicles access if necessary.  If you are going to Washington Park aid station you likely won't be able to park all the way at the top of the station.  Please park on the right (east) side of the road again leaving plenty of space for fire trucks/ambulance. This is VERY IMPORTANT.  You cannot access Hell's Gate Aid station. Don't even try, you'll destroy your vehicle.

Camping - Many people camp out for this race all weekend.  This is possible anywhere within the Coconino National Forest (top of the Rim) and most anywhere on the lower part of the Rim which is Tonto National Forest.  Both these agencies we receive special use permits for use of the area with this race.  Due to several reasons the Tonto NF has closed down camping at Washington Park.  IF YOU CAMP THERE YOU CAN RISK OUR FUTURE ABILITY TO GET A PERMIT.  You can also get a ticket.  That's on you, but please do not camp along the river, they are beautiful and tempting spots but they are no longer available. Blame the leopard frog and lazy white trash people that throw diapers in the river.  We are only allowed for overnight use for the aid station, nothing along the river or "no camping" signs.  It's unfortunate and hopefully changes in the future.  All the other aid stations it's OK to camp, go for it.  



Course Marking - Nearly the entire course is marked with  yellow 3" plastic ribbons that say "MOG100."  Follow these and anything that is yellow.  There are some shorter sections that are 1" yellow ribbons without "MOG100" on them.  Those are ok too, we had someone steal some ribbon rolls and reflective tape...so had to improvise...yellow is good.  Red is bad.  

There is a lot of yellow high intensity 3M reflective tape out there on the trees, manzantia, on the ribbons themselves, on the trees which have "official" trail markers.  We put it out there to make it easy to follow in the grassy sections, open meadows, and in general the night sections.  During the day these are also nice confidence markers. Overall, the course has more markers on it than last year. Its still a challenging area to navigate at times.  Study the course map, pay attention and don't always trust the person in front of you.  Bring a map.  It's no coincidence the last two years winners meticulously studied the course maps on their own and carried it with them.  

I will not be able to answer any last minute emails or requests until packet pickup at THAT Brewery on Friday.  We'll be there from 4pm-7pm and a little after for those that can't get up sooner.  We'll also provide bibs/packets from 5am -5:45am on race day at the trailhead. We'd like to have your pacer's contact information (cell is fine) provided and an updated emergency contact number that we'll have you fill out when you check in.  

ALL RUNNERS have to check in with us on Saturday morning.  We'll have a small table set up, please make sure we have checked you off as present before we start.  You need to do this even if we saw you the night before.  

5:45am I'll have a few quick updates on the course, and then we'll get you all off.  There are three porta-potties at the trailhead as of Friday afternoon.  Camping is open at the trailhead and you can leave your car there all weekend.  We'll shuttle you back to the car after you crush those 106 miles.  

Anyone that sprints the last 100 meters through the finish line will forever be my hero. 

Don't finish with anything in the tank.  Leave it in Pine.  


Picture
Highline Trail...mile 52 ish...yes, that's a lot of grass
Picture
Yellow "MOG100" markers - Follow these and all yellow markers
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Registration Opens December 9th, 2013 @ 7:00 am AZT

12/1/2013

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Registration Opens December 9th, 2013 @ 7:00 am AZT

After your dreams are shattered on the 8th by not getting into either Western States or Hardrock we'll open up registration the next day to help heal the wounds.  Register at ultrasignup.com

For those asking the 2014 Mogollon Monster 100 is NOT a Western States 100 qualifier.  It IS a Hardrock 100 qualifier for the 2015 race.  It is also worth 4 UTMB points.  

We will be running the race on the final weekend of September again in 2014.  It will be September 27th, 2014 with a 6:00am start time.  

As a reminder, Race Management reserves the right to refuse any registration.  Please do not sign up for this race if you are not ready for it.  This is an advance degree race.  I say that every year and people still don't believe me until they've dropped and sitting in a chair saying, "Wow, you weren't kidding...."

Read some of these race reports before you sign up.  If it still sounds like your kind of race, then it probably is:  http://www.mogollonmonster100.com/2013-results--race-reports.html   (Triathalons & Ragnar Relays do NOT count as "experience.")  
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Course Marking this Weekend!!- 12 days and counting!!

9/16/2013

1 Comment

 
Counting down the days and we are now inside the two week mark!  

This weekend are finishing up on some shopping for the race and Saturday morning heading out for a long weekend of trail marking on this course.  We are welcoming anyone that wants to join us for either Saturday or Sunday (or both) and put in some miles out there marking the course from mile 1 to mile 106.  As the course has some out and back sections we actually only have to mark about 80 miles or so.  Piece of cake right?!  Some of it is even forest road so even easier!

Depending on who and how many people are able to join us is how we will break up the groups so we can send out people simultaneously and keep it to 15-25 mile segments.  I'll be staying that evening at Washington Park Saturday night and starting again on Sunday morning.  

Please email me at azadventures@getoutgetlost.com or message me on Facebook if you are interested in joining us.  If you want to camp out Saturday night you are also welcome to join us!  

I also have another update to our simplified map that now includes the trail name with their associated trail number.  Highline Trail for instance is #31 to the Forest Service and sometimes you see a "#31" marker on a tree but it doesn't say "Highline Trail."  So in an effort to make it as easy as possible, this now states both.  Again, big thank you to Zane Grey RD Joe Galope for creating and continuing to update this map.  You'll see him at Buck Springs AS all night so be sure to say hello and if you're of a mind to, thank you.

I also attached the updated 2013 Race Manual for the race.  In an effort to get this out to everyone versus next week I put it up now.  If you find there are things you'd like to know and add in please email me and I'll do my best to update right away and re-post.

Inside of two weeks and I'm so excited for next weekend!  I hope you are too and look forward to seeing all of you at THAT Brewery Friday next week!

-Jeremy & Noah 
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August Training Runs and FAQ Updates

8/6/2013

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Mogollon Monster Training Run - August 10th
August 10th Training Run!We're headed out for another training run on the Mogollon Monster 100 course on August 10th. This time we'll again depart from Washington Park Trailhead east on the Highline Trail. We'll continue past where the Hell's Gate Aid Station will be come race day and to the Myrtle Trail ascent to the top of the Rim. Once we navigate the steep Myrtle Trail we'll cover some easy forest road miles to what will be the Buck Springs Aid Station during the race.

We'll jump into the forest from there and take the U-Bar all the way to Pinchot Cabin Aid Station location. From there it's 8 miles back on the Fred Haught Trail and then back down to Washington Park, descending off the Rim one final time.

This is a difficult section of the course covering about 35 miles in all. There is water at Dane Spring about 15 miles in but no other aid provided. Or water opportunities unless someone is going to be up there and can drop water. This covers miles 51-86 of the actual course in the same order runners will go on race day. However, most runners will run this in the dark so knowing the terrain in advance will come in very useful.  

Let me know if you can make it. This is a really beautiful section of the course, challenging but really beautiful. 

I'll be at the Wendy's parking lot off Shea & the 87 at 4:15am if anyone wants to follow me up or carpool. Just let me know for sure so I know to wait for you.  This drive takes exactly 2 hours from my door on 13th Street and Northern in Phoenix to Washington Park Trailhead.  It's 100 miles on the dot.  It's about 90 minutes from Wendy's off the 87.  

For those stat geeks out there...here's some previous data on the route we'll be covering:  Here's the first five miles on the Highline from WP to Hell's Gate, a shared section with the Zane Grey 50M.  http://app.strava.com/segments/4996589

Here's the rest of it...

http://app.strava.com/activities/8819018This is for Hell's Gate, up Myrtle and the rest of the way around.  

FROM PAYSON
Take Hwy 87 North towards Pine, turn right at Fire Control Rd #199 (N Houston Mesa Rd.) for 8.5 miles. Following the signs to Washington Park, turn left on the Control Road to FS #32. Turn North on #32, through the community of Washington Park and follow signs to Washington Park Trailhead.

If you are planning on joining us please email me atazadventures@getoutgetlost.com so I have an idea of how many we have and who we may be waiting on at the start.  There is also a Facebook Event for this weekend you can RSVP there as well.  
https://www.facebook.com/events/301633813313472/

We will be starting at 6 AM Saturday, August 10th!


Cabin Loop 50K Fat Ass - Sunday August 25th
This year we're heading out of the Phoenix heat for any possible excuse we can come up with.  This will be a weekend of camping and running the Monster course!  I'm heading up likelyFriday night and grabbing a spot by the river off the Highline Trail and will be running a 50K loop covering much of the trails we're going to be using for the race itself.  We'll head up the Rim on the Arizona Trail, head east on the Rim Road to Houston Brothers Trail, then north into the forest on Houston Brothers a couple miles to the Barbershop Trail.  Barbershop is only used very briefly at mile 65 but is a beautiful trail that connects the Houston Brothers over to U-Bar through a variety of canyon's and mountain meadow's.  We'll head east on Barbershop to U-Bar and north to Pinchot Cabin.  From Pinchot Cabin it's all the way south about 9 miles to the Rim Road and the final descent back down the Rim to Washington Park for the full 31 miles.  Those wanting to do something slightly less can follow the Mogollon Monster section from 26-50 and simply continue on Houston Brothers to Pinchot and skip Barbershop/U-Bar for a 24 miler finishing at the same place at Washington Park.  So we will mark the course on Saturdayand those that want a supported fun run in preparation of the Monster or just for a long run on some great trails are more than welcome.  Feel free to join us on either day and if you want to camp as well, feel free!  


Here is a link to the data on the shorter 24 miler which has about 3200 in climbing- http://app.strava.com/activities/66872362 

Here's a link to the data for the full 50K:  http://app.strava.com/activities/17984373/segments  This one is a little off on the Barbershop trail but gives you an idea of the course.  

Send me a RSVP at azadventures@getoutgetlost.com if you plan on joining us either day please!  I'll set up a Facebook event as well soon for those that it's easier to go that route.  
Want to Volunteer?!We have had a great response from the local running community in wanting to help out and get up on the Rim race weekend and run an aid station, help out and be there to support the race.  We love hearing from you and it just makes it more exciting seeing the enthusiasm from everyone else.  To keep our aid station allocations organized we'd like to have everyone interested in signing up to volunteer in any capacity to fill out the location and time slot they can commit to on the link below:  

http://mog100.ivolunteer.com/mog100

You don't have to be an ultrarunner to volunteer so feel free to talk your friends and family into coming up for the weekend.  The weather should be great, we should have some great aid station food and of course, the excitement and inevitable inspiration of seeing these runners work their way across this very challenging course.  Many of the aid stations are used multiple times at very different times in the race so it will be interesting to see the same runners early on and then much later on in the race.  Make those connections that first time through and cheer them on when they come back through!

Thank you all and we look forward to seeing you this fall!


Did you know that the Arizona Trail runs over 800 miles from Mexico through the Grand Canyon and into Utah?  Along the way it cuts right through the Mogollon Monster 100 course.  Entrants will converge on the AZT at the Geronimo Aid Station and follow it on the Highline Trail to the Washington Park Aid Station and then up to the top of the Rim.  It continues north on the Fred Haught Trail before cutting west a few miles later on its way to Flagstaff.  You'll see the metal Arizona Trail maps posted throughout the race where the AZT intersects.  It's a challenging trail covering a great amount of diverse terrain.  www.aztrail.org

Random TIdbits & FAQ's

PictureYellow Good - Red Bad
Course Marking - Course marking has come up a few times via email and Facebook and random other comments after last years race.  Understandably for some and other comments that raise concern that some people won't find their way from point A to point B unless we pave the road and line the sidewalks with personal volunteers to make sure everyone makes it there safely.  So to combat some of both of these challenges I've had these ribbons made for the race for our course marking.  Last year we used standard orange surveying tape for the correct route and blue for the incorrect route.  This was fine until there were trees with surveying tape or some was flung up in the wind in the trees, removed or in general missing.  


So this is triple the width of standard surveyors tape and has our abbreviated name "MOG100" repeated for 1000 feet and I have a preposterous amount of each color tape.  I did yellow for what is going to be the correct route you should be following.  Red is going to now be the wrong way.  So if you see red, you're off trail and you should turn around until you see another yellow tape.  They will be marked adequately throughout single track and plastered for the intersections.  I purposely bought a ton of this and we're going to use it.  I also have some Department of Transportation quality reflective tape that is the same that the Tahoe Rim Trail 100 uses.  John Vaupel, Founder of Trailrunningclub.com, recently finished the TRT100 a couple weeks ago and came back with the information that he loved the reflective tape they used as his light picked them up 50+ feet away they were so powerful. So I contacted the RD and asked what they used and it showed up at my house a couple days later.  My neighbors probably think I'm getting robbed every night as I sit in my kitchen with my lights off flashing my headlamp over the test piece of the tape on the back wall of my yard.  This stuff is awesome and far more reliable than glow sticks.  We'll still use glow sticks but far fewer and just close to the aid stations.


I also picked up a number of sandwich board signs for the forest roads as confidence markers along the way and to make sure everyone makes the correct turns.  The Turkey Springs/West Webber intersection will NOT be an issue this year.  


We will be marking the course the weekend prior to the event if anyone is willing to help out.  


Zane Grey Video - Have you seen this yet?  This is hands down the best trail running video I have ever seen.  Ever.  Sure, Killian has some sweet video's but how realistic is it to see a runner flying up a 12,000 ft peak with no gear, no waters, and a helicopter videotaping him?  It's not exactly an accurate depiction of what I experience when I fly.  I mean, I carry gear.  

This video however is exactly what Zane Grey is all about and why I have come to absolutely love the race in all it's glory and pain.  They did an incredible job showing the area and why so many come back to this torturous area year after year.  http://www.zanegrey50.com/photos_____video.html


Withdrawing from the Race - I'm not sure why you would do this unless you are pregnant and having a baby the week of the race.  Outside of that I'm baffled but then I'm incredibly bias towards this race and I should probably understand that things pop up.  When they do please refer to the part of the website that states that no refunds will be provided after March 1st.  We are in our second year and purchasing all the start up equipment is not cheap as well as the supplies needed for the race now less than two months out.  So I cannot refund your registration fee.  

So you should just heal up, buck up, and show up.  It's just more economical that way. 

This Race is Hard -  I feel like its necessary to repeat this mantra because of the emails that I get sometimes from prospective entrants makes me wonder if "trail running" to some people is the side of the country road.  To be clear once again, this race is VERY HARD.  It is very remote in many areas.  You will encounter massive elk in breeding season.  Entire sections of the Mogollon Rim have been shut down this summer from too many black bear sightings.  They are all over the place up there, everyone and their mother gets to see one except the RD that goes up there every weekend....they are out there.  Free range cattle will scare the living shit out of you on the Highline at 3am leaving Hell's Gate AS.  Mountain lions are always out there somewhere and I pray that nobody ever encounters one during the race.  There are javelina, rattlesnakes and we haven't even gotten to the part about an oversized hairy man beast legendary in the area.  My point is, it's a wilderness area and its wild.  The terrain is relentlessly tough like you've likely never seen before.  

I know, I know, "sure, whatever."  No, I'm serious.  We had entrants from last year say it was a race for the "elite of the elite."  I'll agree that's a silly assessment given two of our 9 finishers were 1st time hundreds (albeit locals familiar with the course) but it was said by many time 100 mile finishers.  Accomplished in their own right and ultrarunners who thought they had run some "tough" courses.  Not this tough.  

This is Arizona and welcome to the Mogollon Rim country.  This area is as "Old West" as it gets.  The settlers of this area were not pansy's.  They couldn't be and our entrants can't be if they plan on finishing.  The terrain will beat you up, the heat will beat you up, the elevation will beat some of you up, and the never ending up's and down's and steep climbs will beat you all up.  

Yet you have to press on and you have to keep moving. 

So as much as I may talk myself into thinking, "this course isn't THAT hard" I'm constantly reminded every time someone joins me who isn't familiar with the trails and can't believe how hard they are.  

The one resounding thought that always comes out of everyone that goes up there, "This is incredibly beautiful country."  Because it really is.  It's stunning.  I find myself just staring off into the trees, over the 2,000 sheer cliff to the Highline Trail down below in the red rocks, off into the Mazatzal Mountains to the south.  The place is as beautiful a land can be and we get to run straight through it all.  

Tough it may be, but unbeatable it isn't.  Come prepared for a Monster, because its prepared for you.  

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New Year, New Monster

12/16/2012

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The Hardrock 100 lottery has now come and gone and those not fortunate to have been selected are likely searching around for a replacement race.  

Well, here we are.  

We're opening up registration on January 1st at 7am this year with the same size limits as before, about 150 runners. Last year we had 44 entrants, 37 starters so I doubt that will be an issue.  However, many, many runners flat out avoided the race in 2012 due to it being an inaugural race and have expressed serious interest in the 2013 running. Having said that, I doubt there will be any real rush to sign up on the 1st.  But with so many races filling right away (Vermont 100 took 2 months last year, filled in 48 hours this year...) and others in a lottery you just never know. 

If you didn't make it out last year take a gander at some of the race reports from our runners.  The most thorough being our final finisher, Deron Ruse's he wrote for Trailrunningclub.com.  You can read it here.  

2014 QUalifiers

The 2013 Mogollon Monster 100 will not be a Western States 100 qualifier.  We have to wait one more year to be "considered" to be a qualifier for the 2015 season.  True story.

Hardrock 100 is reviewing the race for a 2014 Hardrock Qualifier.  They typically do not let new races make the qualifying race but Run Rabbit Run 100 and Pine to Palm 100 both were given the distinction very early on (RRR before a runner had even left the starting line) so maybe they'll consider it.  We're confident the race's level of difficulty warrants consideration but will have to wait until their decision is made, which likely will be another year before potentially becoming a qualifier.  

We are still a 4 point UTMB race and expect to be so again in 2013 for the 2014 UTMB.  We were a 4 point race in 2012 for the 2013 race.  

Finding Bigfoot - The Mogollon Monster

We've been telling you this stuff is for real all this time...now it's on TV and everything so you can't deny it!

Here's the trailer for the episode of Finding Bigfoot on Animal Planet.  It's just a small notch below 60 Minutes type quality...

Ok, it's terrible BUT think about how scared you're going to be if you hear two rocks smacking together out there in the middle of the night??!!  (For those that haven't seen it yet according to the Apache's they brought on for the show the "hairy people" knock two rocks together to let each other know they are nearby.")  

Still though, all jokes aside, there are quite a few fairly believable stories that came out of this and from people that don't seem totally crazy.  I still remember the story and how serious it was told from the innkeeper at the B&B my wife and I stayed at last April in Payson.  At some point there are just too many stories from different people for it ALL to be crazy talk...

Right?
"This race is only for the elite of the elite" - Virginia Happy Trails Running Club quote from 2012

2013 Changes

I'm not changing a single foot of the 2012 course so it will remain the same.  Jamil Coury dominated in 22:24 and in all fairness to that effort and the 9 finishers, there is no reason to change it.  We'll of course make some improvement to that course, course markings and a few other areas.  But the course will remain at 106 miles, what was 23K+ in climbing and all the rocks will still be there.  It is going to be every bit as difficult as it was for the 37 starters this year even if it's not truly a race for "the elite of the elite" as some have put it.  It's hard as hell.  But you don't have to be elite to finish this.  Just stubborn as hell.  

We will however start on a Saturday versus a Friday.  And a more traditional start time of 6am.  We liked the Friday start time for many reasons but it restricted our availability to get certain volunteers up there and HAM radio operators.  A Saturday start takes away those challenges so we'll switch it over.  

Registration is again over at www.ultrasignup.com.

Saturday, September 28th, 2013.  6am. 

Hope to see you there!


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ULTRAmarathonRunning.com & the first MM100 running

11/25/2011

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ULTRAmarathonrunning.com

The Mogollon Monster 100 is now listed on several race calendars, including the largest list internationally,ULTRAmarathonRunning.com. 

http://www.ultramarathonrunning.com/races/mogollonmonster100.html

We're also in Trail Runner Magazine's December race calendar issue that should be in the mail in the coming weeks. Really great to see the interest in the race outside of the local communities excitement.

First Running of the Mogollon Monster 100

Two weeks from tomorrow a half dozen intrepid ultrarunners are joining me in a 106 mile journey across the Mogollon Monster 100 race course. Very limited support but the plan is to run the entire course, as you runners will experience it. Having run all sections at different times it is excited to see how all the course will flow, and wind it's way into what will become, The Mogollon Monster 100. We are doing it in December, only 11 days from the Winter Solstice so our daylight is going to be minimal. It's going to be much colder than the actual race date with expected lows on the Rim in the teens,hopefully without any snowfall. We expect a steady flow of updated information,pictures and maybe even some footage of the actual Mogollon Monster by the end of the whole ordeal. It's out there somewhere...

Registration

Registration is expected to open sometime in December or on January 1st,2012. We are just waiting on final,final approval on a specific part of the course from one of the two National Forests the course travels through. Once approval is officially granted we will have registration linked on ultrasignup.com.  Stay tuned, and keep checking back!
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100 Miles
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