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Trail Running

Montura Trail Running Poster

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The Italian high end mountain clothing brand, Montura, had us shoot another store poster display for our hometown Montura store, AlpStation Bruneck.

Our friend Gabe Luethje was visiting at the time and was forced into going for a trail run in the Dolomites. As a result, he stars in the trail running poster with the Cristallo Group as a backdrop.

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Hiking Dolomite’s Alta Via 1

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The Dolomites Alta Via 1

The Dolomite’s Premier Hiking Trail

The Dolomites Alta Via 1 is quite simply, sublime. Hiking alongside a turquoise lake beneath towering Dolomite peaks, the trail heads south through some of the Dolomites most majestic terrain. 1000 meter tall walls, towers, crystal clear lakes, lush, wildflower covered green meadows and of course an unrivaled hut system offering Italian cuisine, comfortable beds and premier friendly atmosphere.

Backpacker Magazine wisely called the Alta Via 1, one of the world’s premier treks, and not to be missed for trekkers. But, it is not just for hikers. As the fast & light style begins to grow, many are discovering the potential for doing European trails with 6-8kg packs on their backs, and living it up along the way. For trail running, the potential grows even more as long distances may be covered quickly with little weight to slow one down. The Alta Via 1 is about 145 km in length and the time to hike it is typically between 5-12 days. As a side note, the record for the Alta Via 1 is by American Topher Gaylord in an astounding 19 hours 44 minutes, an account of which will be coming to DolomiteSport in the coming week.

We just returned from the Alta Via 1 after spending 5 days running it from north to south. Appropriately, while we were away, the Dolomites became added to the list of UNESCO world heritage sites, confirming the region’s beauty and importance in maintaining its culture and natural state.

Please please please… If you hike the Alta Via 1, we’d love a trip report of your own. The number one search that points to DolomiteSport is for the Alta Via 1, let’s get some more hiking info here for others to utilize.

The running tour we did is hosted by our partners at Holimites.com. The same trip will repeat in mid July and September, check in to their site for more info.

Photos tell the story best, please visit our Alta Via One Gallery to see the whole journey.

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Alta Via 1 | Follow us live

We will be running/fast packing Italy’s most famous trail, the Dolomites Alta Via 1, 21-25 June. Together with 3 friends, we’ll set out from Lago di Braies with hydration packs weighing 12lbs for 5 days.Utilizing the hut system, we can travel without weight as food, beds and drink are all available each night. We just have to get there.

Follow us live via Twitter as we travel amongst the Dolomites most famous peaks, spectacular terrain and WWI historical sites. The DolomiteSport live Twitter feed on the Alta Via 1 is: http://twitter.com/dolomitesport. Or, all the posts from the trip will be in one spot at #dav1

This run is the first of the offered Trail Running Tours through Holimites. If you are interested in taking part in the next tour this summer, visit the Holimites site for dates and availability. All of the fun that you will see here on the DolomiteSport site, …could still be you later this summer, or again next year.

Hiking the Alta Via 1 trail, Italian Dolomites

Hiking the Dolomites Alta Via 1

Photos and stories when we are back.

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Pfunderer Hohenweg

The Pfunderer Hohenweg

The Pfunderer Hohenweg

The Pfunderer Hohenweg

We have just returned from one of the most enjoyable tours we have ever done, the Pfunderer Hohenweg. For now this will have to be a brief summary as I will do a full tour write up in the coming days for both the Hiking and Trail Running Pages. The trail is approximately 75km in length with a lot of up and down, we’ll consult the Garmin devices to see just how much.

Let’s just say that the Hohenweg is a classic, but especially for mountain running which is the style in which we did it. We had it all; ridge traversing, wide open meadows, huge flower covered hillsides, countless peak bagging opportunities and lots and lots of late season snowy couloirs to trudge up.

We were shocked at the amount of snow still in the high country, and also at how many skiers are still out. In fact the only other people we saw on the tour were skiers and other mountain runners. Hut keepers told us we were likely the first to do the tour this season as the passes have so much snow. This announcement was usually followed by a reminder that we had running shoes and lycra on, not alpine boots and Schoeller. It did look like winter but it all went down not too far off a typical summer outing in the big mountains.

This trip was particularly satisfying for us as photographers as we shot how we did it in the early days, all on the fly and all just for fun. A perfect combo of life as an athlete and life as a photographer just spending time with our closest friend. Below is a quick glimpse of photos in order of capture, from our home in Bruneck to Sterzing.

And remember, to follow our live feeds from these runs or whatever other silliness we are up to, visit our Twitter page

Next week we’ll be running Italy’s most famous trail, the Alta Via 1.

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Day 1 above the Pfundertal

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Janine airing out the feet and having Andreas check scent

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Andreas Irsara and Janine, kilometer 26, day 1

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Day 1, gaining elevation to the hut

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Andreas and Janine, day 1, final kilometer to the hut

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Dan & Andreas, course 2, Edelraut Hut

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Janine and Andreas, day 2 departure

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Andreas and Janine

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Andreas and Janine arriving to the Bodner Alm, day 2

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Climbing the first of our big snow couloirs, day 2

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Janine and Andreas, easier ground at the Brixner Hut

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Andreas Irsara eating at the Brixner Hut

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Janine and Andreas, day 3 and another snowy pass to climb

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Andreas and Janine running in a not so summery landscape, the Wildersee/Lago Salvaggio

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Lower elevation encounters

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The final kilometer to the car

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Flavoring the fountain water

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Multi Day Running Tour | Inside my pack

Gear for Multi-Day Tours

One of the biggest benefits of the European mountains is of course the hut system. Perhaps no other sport benefits as much as trail running. In fact in some ways, thanks to the huts, a whole new sport has started with the massive popularity of trail running. Long, multi-day tours running in alpine terrain with less than 8 kg (18lbs) on your back (much less if you are not a photographer). And with a comfy bed to look forward to after a big, tasty, calorie rich meal in a beautiful setting.

For the mountain runner, the Alps and Dolomites have endless potential. Open a map, connect the huts via all the many trails – grab your gear and go.

This weekend kicks of the mountain running season for Janine, our great friend Andreas Irsara and myself. The first goal is what we look at from our bedroom window, the Zillertal Alpen’s Pfunderer Hohenweg, the mountain range separating Austria from Italy. We are not exactly sure how long it is, about 80km with a lot of up and down. And there is still snow. We’ll do it in three days, staying in two huts. A warm up for next weekend’s departure to run the Dolomite’s Alta Via 1.

So what to put inside my pack? My pack’s content and gear is pictured below.

Shoes: La Sportiva Wildcats

Pack: Deuter Pace 20

2 hand bottles

Minimal clothing: just keep moving. But rain gear for sure, and extra socks are mandatory for wet, snowy feet.

A few bars – the huts sell day food

Garmin GPS – we’ll post the trip to DolomiteSport, this is a super classic hiking tour as well with views to the Dolomites on one side, Austrian Alps the other.

iPhone – for Twittering…… follow our progress with pics at: http://www.twitter.com/dolomitesport

Headlamp

And of course my burden, the camera gear. For running tours we use the Canon 5d, a 16-35 2.8 and a 70-200 4.0 – which Andreas we’ll find in his pack tomorrow morning.

Ah yes, and a handful of Euros.

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Pack contents for a three day running tour

For a complete trip report, check back in next Tuesday. And as a reminder, follow us on Twitter at: http://www.twitter.com/dolomitesport

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Running Poles, a new trick

Nordic Walking Poles for running

Last year we had a photoshoot for a nordic walking product, for the job we had to get some Nordic Walking Poles from Leki. After the shoot, we weren’t sure what to do with the poles, we are not nordic walkers, we are mountain trail runners, but we we often use poles in the rocky terrain of the Dolomites and Alps. The Nordic Poles looked interesting to us so we tried them out for running and discovered that they are fantastic; super light and stiff. But the drawback was that for descending they have no ball grip on top or under, so we would fall right off the grip unless tightly holding on, or we would stab ourselves in the palm.

Janine had the idea to try running with the strap provided for Nordic Walking, it is much like a nordic ski pole strap, once on, it is really on, no easy on or off but your hand becomes part of the pole. We loved the system, it’s a new trick for us.

The beauty of the Leki system is that they have a small loop of perlon cord that slides and locks into place, so instead of removing your hand from the strap, you remove the strap, with your hand still in it, from the pole. With the nordic ski like loop and support, descending a rocky trail while running is a completely different experience, it feels like skiing. And for climbing, you have all the power without having to use your grip, the strap does the work for you so you can use your whole arm for support. When you don’t want to use them, simply unclick the cord from the pole with the easy button release, and the poles are free of your strap.

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Straps locked in

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Unlocked and off for carrying

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