2013 Ultraman FAQ

2013 ULTRAMAN 29TH ANNIVERSARY QUICK FACTS

 

WHAT: 

A 3-day, 320-mile (515-kilometer) individual ultra-endurance event which takes place on the Big Island of Hawaii. Entry is limited to 40 participants and is by invitation only. Founded in 1983, the event is held annually on the traditional Thanksgiving weekend.

WHEN:

FRIDAY, November 29     Stage I       Starting time 6:30 a.m.
SATURDAY, November 30   Stage II      Starting time 6:30 a.m.
SUNDAY, December 1    Stage III     Starting time 6:00 a.m. (note earlier start)

WHERE:

Stage I – 6.2-mile (10 km) ocean swim from Kailua Bay to Keauhou Bay, followed by a 90-mile (144.8 km) cross-country bike ride from Keauhou Bay around the southern tip of the island via Route 11 to finish at Namakani Paio Park in the Volcanoes National Park. Vertical climbs total 7,600 feet.
Stage II – 171.4-mi (275.8 km) bike ride, from Volcanoes National Park (Route 11) to Keaau, then turning east with a counter-clockwise loop through Kalapana, Kapoho and Pahoa, then on through the City of Hilo. From Hilo, the route continues and climbs north along the Hamakua Coast (Route 19) to Waimea, and over the Kohala Mountains via Route 250 to finish at Kamehameha Park in Kapa’au, just north of Hawi town. Vertical climbs total 8,600 feet.
Stage III – 52.4-mile (84.3 km) double-marathon run from Hawi to Kawaihae (Route 270), then on to Kailua-Kona (via Route 19) and finishing on the beach at the Old Airport State Park.
Time Limits: Each stage must be completed in 12 hours or less. The swim should be completed in 5-1/2 hours or less. Athletes not reaching the respective finish lines within the 12 hour limits will be disqualified.

 

WHO:

Limited to 40 athletes, participants are expected from Canada, Germany, Slovenia, Australia, Brazil, Argentina, Spain, England and the United States. Over 95% of the field will have participated in at least one previous ULTRAMAN.  Each must be accompanied by an individual support team of at least two persons over the entire course. Many of these team members volunteer from the Big Island community each year. The event attracts individuals who not only thrive on personal challenge and enjoy the thrill of victory, but who come to understand, as did the ancient Hawaiians, the importance of aloha (love), ohana (family), and kokua (help). Individual resources, mental, physical, and spiritual, are shared in an atmosphere where everyone who completes the course is a winner, and the pursuit of human excellence is the fundamental rule of the road.

 

CONTACT: ULTRAMAN WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS:  Jane Bockus, Race Director

PHONE:  808-322-2120  FAX: 808-322-4355

website: www.ultramanlive.com  E-mail: ultramanlive@yahoo.com