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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Trans-America
runners near goal
Dave
Bronfenbrenner and Scott Sehon give the phrase "cross-country running" a
whole new meaning. The pair came through Sisters last week as they neared
the end of a journey that began on the New Jersey coast on February 24 and
will end in Florence, Oregon on August 2.
The two 25-year-old former
roommates and teammates on the Bucknell University (Pennsylvania) cross
country and track teams are running unassisted across the entire United
States.
The two arrived in Sisters
on the road from Redmond on Tuesday, July 15, took a day off Wednesday,
and headed up and over the McKenzie Pass on Thursday morning.
They were picked up and brought
back to Sisters to stay Thursday night before going back up Friday to
continue on toward McKenzie Bridge.
Sehon began talking about
this quest five years ago. He knew he needed a partner and felt certain
that Dave was the right man for the job.
"We had known each other for
seven years, including time as roommates, so we felt confident about our
ability to cooperate with one another," he said.
Both young men went to work
after graduating from Bucknell in 2000, but last year the time was right
to go for it in 2003. So they saved up money, submitted their resignations
and made the final arrangements.
Sehon wanted to make the trip
completely their own, so they decided they would not pay any money for
accommodations and not accept any physical assistance with the running
along the way.
"We wanted to be responsible
for ourselves," said Sehon. "If we got into sponsorships, support crews,
or making it into some kind of fund-raiser the purpose would have something
other than the pure idea of just doing it."
A friend helped design a website
(visit www.runtheusa.com)
that publicizes and monitors the journey.
"The website gave people a
chance to check the route and offer a place to stay, which has worked
out great," said Sehon.
In over 140 days on the road
the two have slept outside in their sleeping bags just 13 times. They
carry their wordly possessions, (a bivouac sack, two sleeping bags, a
tarp, camera, video camera, and running clothes) in a baby jogger, which
they take turns pushing over five- minute intervals.
The runners average just over
20 miles a day, usually starting in mid-morning and running until 1 p.m.
On five occasions they ran over 40 miles in order to get to the next arranged
place to stay. Their route crossed through states that had enough population
to make it possible to have places for lodging.
Tate and Amy Metcalf provided
lodging Tuesday and Wednesday nights in Sisters and Charlie and Deirdre
Kanzig hosted them Thursday night. While in town, Tate Metcalf arranged
for the two to get massages at Shibui and secured a round of golf for
them at Aspen Lakes on Wednesday.
On Tuesday night the pair
got to meet about 20 members of the Sisters High School cross country
team and they enjoyed a salmon dinner with the Givot family on Wednesday
night.
The runners have gotten ahead
of schedule so will take a week off once they get to Eugene. Families
and friends will be on hand on August 2 to celebrate the completion of
the journey.
Dave and Scott both agreed
that Oregon's natural beauty is the finest they have seen so far.
"The diversity in this state
is amazing, and we haven't even gotten to the western side yet," said
Bronfen brenner.
Upon completion of the trip,
Bronfenbrenner will head home to Pennsylvania briefly before returning
to the west coast to begin his master's degree at the University of California,
Berkeley. Both he and Sehon hope to run under 2:22 in a marathon in the
next few months to qualify for the 2004 Olympic Trials.
People frequently ask Sehon
for the meaning and purpose of the run for him.
"It's evolved over the five
years since I first thought of doing it and it is changing even as we
go along," he said. "I think that even after we're finished, the experience
will continue to define itself for me." |
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