Rules
Preface
No organizing body regulates, promotes, or records this record.
It is up to the individual challenger and his support crew to hold up
to the ideals of the Marshall Mountain Madness Ultramarathon(M 3
) as they have been passed down through heritage and tradition.
It is a natural tendency of competitors to try to trim the effort
required to break a record. As a record becomes more finetuned,
there
is inevitable disagreement between challengers as to when it is
acceptable to cut corners. No one has written down the rules of
the game for this informal record. This piece has been written in
an effort
to explain some of the idiosyncrasies of this record to the public and
to reduce any confusion between future challengers about what it takes
to set a new record.
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Objective
To climb all of the Adirondack
46 High Peaks in the least amount of time.
Rules
1. The Route
There is no set route
except that all of the Adirondack High Peaks
must be summited .
Each of the 46 peaks must be scaled in a
fashion suitable to the mountaineering ethic. However, there is
no set of trails or order of mountains required.
2. Provisions
Provisions may be given
at any point during the challenge.
3. Vehicles:
Once on a route, one cannot use any
form of mechanical or biological devices for propulsion.
Once one has reached a road at the end of a route,
overland travel in a vehicle to the starting point of another mountain
group is acceptable. A vehicle can be any mechanical device such
as cars, trucks, ATV's, bicycles, helicopters, etc.,
and/or any animals such as horses, mules, people, etc. One
must finish the route back to the road before vehicles can be
used. Being plucked off the mountain by a helicopter is not
acceptable nor
is using a bicycle or horse on the trail. This is a record set by
the skills and power of the individual mountaineer not through
the use of mechanical or biological aid. In the case of
Whiteface,
which has a road to the top, one must use an established trail.
Climbing Whiteface by car is not acceptable.
4. The Clock:
The c
lock starts at the base of the first peak climbed and stops at the
summit of the last peak.
The clock never stops until all mountains have been
climbed in accordance to the rules including the ascent
of the first mountain but not the descent of the last mountain.
In addition, the approach to the base of the first mountain is
off the clock.
5. Do as Much or More as the Last
Record Holder:
At a
minimum, to set a new record, one must do as much or more as, the
current record holder, in less time.
The Marshall Mountain Maddness
Ultramarathon has evolved over the years to meet the expectations of
the Adirondacks
mountaineering community. This evolution has occurred by one
record at a time. For example, if the record was established when
42 peaks were recognized as High Peaks, it is up to the challenger to
up the ante to 46 peaks, if that is the convention of that time.
This is true for all of the rules. Essentially, no additional or
more restrictive rules can be established except by the person that
makes the next record by following the existing rules and their new
rules. One must do at least as
much as the
last record holder to be considered the new record holder. In addition, one must do the challenge in less time. One cannot break the
record by adding more requirements and
take longer to do the course. If one does add more to the effort
with
a longer time span, then they can claim a different record for a
different
game that goes by a different name.
For example, one could climb all of the Adirondacks High Peaks without
support or without motorized vehicles. It is up to the
Adirondacks mountaineering community to decide if such a distinction is
worth noting as a new type of record. In the end, for this
record, if one does
as much and more, in less time, they have set the new standard by which
all future challengers must adhere.
6. Notification
Notify the current record holder of intentions to
challenge the record before the attempt.
A challeger, out of respect, should make an effort to give the current
record holder a couresty call before an attempt. In doing this,
the
attempt is tied to the history of the event. It also makes for an
easier acceptance of a new record.
7. The Honor System:
The Marshall Mountain
Madness Ultramarathon rules are informal and essentially voluntary.
In fact, in the attempt all is essentially
informal and voluntary. The 46 peaks must be climbed; however,
there is no one set course, there are no officials to record the times,
no competitors alongside to provide a gauge of reference. There
is only you, the 46 inanimate peaks, the currently recognized record,
and your word of honor that you have actually done what you report to
have done.
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