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A Dog Named Cactus Is Dominating a Race Through the Desert

140.7 mile stage race made harder by heat.

Morocco, April 13, 2019: The most popular runner in one of the world’s most difficult races is, strictly speaking, not an official entrant. Or even human.

A dog nicknamed Cactus suddenly appeared on Monday during the Marathon des Sables, a 140.7-mile stage race made harder by the heat, wind, sand dunes, rocks, stony plateaus and dry valleys of the Sahara in southern Morocco, the rough equivalent of running 23.5 miles a day for six days.

Cactus skipped Sunday’s first stage, but ran nearly 15 miles on Monday, then completed the full 23 miles of Tuesday’s stage and the entire 47.4-mile stage on Wednesday, showing great resilience and a skittering ability to navigate the dunes.

While the nearly 800 human runners were given 31 hours to complete Wednesday’s ultralong stage, Cactus needed only about 11 hours 15 minutes, some of it in a sandstorm, which would have put him 76th in the stage results. Then he ran a couple of extra miles to cool down.

(A story by New York Times)

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Blind Runner Makes History by Finishing NYC Half Marathon with His Guide Dogs

Panek had already completed 20 marathons with human guides.

After undergoing months of training, a Blind Runner makes history by finishing NYC Half Marathon with the help of his dog trio.  Four runners i.e. Thomas Panek, who is blind, his three guide dogs helped him become the first visually impaired runner ever to complete the race without a human guide.

With the relay team of Waffle, Westley and Gus, three athletic Labrador retrievers, Panek was able to finish the half in just under two hours and 21 minutes. Gus, who has been his guide dog for years, ran the last 3.1 miles by Panek’s side and was officially retired upon receiving his finisher’s medal at the finish line.

“It’s a little emotional for me because he’s been there with me the whole time,” Panek spoke to media.

Panek is the president and CEO, a nonprofit that trains and matches guide dogs to visually impaired people all over the country. He was an avid runner all his life, and when he started losing his vision in his 20s, he knew he didn’t want to give up the sport. So through Guiding Eyes for the Blind, he started a program to train guide dogs specifically for running.

It never made sense to me to walk out the door and leave my guide dog behind when I love to run and they love to run,” he  “It was just a matter of bucking conventional wisdom and saying why not.”

Panek had already completed 20 marathons with human guides. But Sunday’s event makes him the first blind person ever to finish the NYC Half Marathon with assistance exclusively from guide dogs. Through his nonprofit, he hopes to make this dream possible for others, too. Guiding Eyes has trained more than 35 guide dogs, but only a few of them have been cut out for its Running Guides program, because, Panek said, guiding while running comes with such a unique set of challenges. The dogs have to be able to navigate curbs and terrain changes while tuning out the noise and distractions that happen in a city like New York, all at a running pace. It takes a special kind of dog, and then, a special bond between that dog and its person.

 

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