Scott Jurek Breaks Appalachian Trail Supported Speed Record

Details about Scott Jurek’s supported Appalachian Trail speed record.

By on July 12, 2015 | Comments

[Editor’s Note: This article was written by iRunFar correspondent Bob Najar.]

Scott Jurek succeeded in his goal of breaking the speed record for a supported thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail. He completed the 2,178-mile trail stretching between Georgia and Maine in 46 days, 8 hours, and 8 minutes. The previous overall speed record holder, Jennifer Pharr-Davis, will still be the fastest female thru-hiker with a time of 46 days, 11 hours, 20 minutes, a record she set in 2011. Jurek finished today on top of Mount Katahdin at 2:03 p.m. Eastern Time with his wife, Jenny, who provided support for the extended endurance feat.

Scott Jurek kisses his wife, Jenny, after setting the Appalachian Trail Record. Photo: iRunFar

Scott Jurek kisses his wife, Jenny, after setting the Appalachian Trail Record. Photo: iRunFar

The 41-year-old professional ultrarunner from Boulder, Colorado is capping a long career including seven consecutive Western States 100 wins, two wins at the Badwater Ultramarathon, and three consecutive Spartathlon wins.

During his journey, Jurek experienced a knee injury on Day 7, stifling heat and humidity in the mid-Atlantic states, the rainiest June in Vermont in 130 years, and challenging footing and steep climbs and descents in New Hampshire and Maine. He also found overwhelming assistance and graciousness from many people along the way.

A proper celebration after 46 days out there! Photo: iRunFar

A proper celebration after 46 days out there! Photo: iRunFar

Many people were surprised that his speed-record attempt was done northbound–from Georgia to Maine–when Pharr-Davis and others had gone southbound. He told Andrew Thompson, the former men’s Appalachian Trail supported record holder and a pacer to Jurek in New Hampshire, that he wanted a “classic AT experience” with a finish on Katahdin. The first AT speed record was done northbound by David Horton in 1991.

A happy Scott Jurek celebrating. Photo: iRunFar

A happy Scott Jurek celebrating. Photo: iRunFar

Another interesting aspect of Jurek’s accomplishment is that he is vegan. Carrying and eating enough energy-dense vegan food for such an endurance feat can be challenging, but Jurek has proven since 1999 it can be done. He is the author of the New York Times bestseller Eat and Run, a book about healthful eating and endurance sports.

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Scott Jurek and his whole crew up at Mt. Katahdin. Photo: iRunFar

Despite never having been on the AT before, Jurek set a plan to average approximately 50 miles per day. From his start on May 27, to July 2nd when he arrived at the AMC Galehead Hut in New Hampshire’s White Mountains in the middle of the night, Jurek averaged 49.4 miles per day. He was slowed by the difficult terrain in his final days in New England, bettering the record by three hours and 12 minutes.

Guest Writer
Guest Writer is a contributor to iRunFar.com.