Tag: ultra trail

  • Type 2 Fun, All Week: DansxAhon at the PTL (2019)

    Type 2 Fun, All Week: DansxAhon at the PTL (2019)

    DansxAhon at the PTL: A Week in the Alps, 2019

    On August 28, 2019, three Filipinos stood at the start line of La Petite Trotte à Léon (PTL) in Chamonix, France — one of the most extreme events under the UTMB week. Unlike UTMB, CCC, or TDS, the PTL is not about speed. It is about survival. Teams of two or three are given a massive route, hundreds of kilometers through the high Alps, with over 25,000 meters of elevation gain. There are no course markings, only a GPX file handed out shortly before the start. Crews and life bases are minimal. The rest of the week, runners are on their own.

    For 2019, Maria Josephine “Majo” Liao, Aldean Philip Lim, and Benjamin Ramirez — running as DansxAhon Adventure Team — took on the challenge. To our knowledge, no other Filipino team has finished PTL before or since.

    Jami, Majo, and Aldean before the PTL start.

    Between Races, Into the PTL

    The timing was brutal from the start. The boys had just finished Swiss Epic, a stage mountain bike race, and only had a single day of rest before PTL. On the morning of August 26, they lined up in Chamonix, a little tired, but excited.

    As if PTL was not hard enough. These boys rode the Swiss alps a few days before.

    “It was not a typical trail race. The GPX and map was only released weeks before. Though we were able to take important points and info about it leading to the event week, we weren’t able to study the full details of the terrain because of traveling and the boys were racing. But it was all good. We were just excited — and that’s more important,” recalls Majo.

    The start was fun. Spirits were high. Then the climbs began.

    Last minute instructions with the GPS tracker.

    The Grind of the Alps

    By the end of the first 20 hours, the team had already realized what they were up against. They stopped at a refuge for 3–4 hours to rest, thinking it would help them recover. They were hopeful that the next days will better but PTL was a different beast. They recalculated their goal times and managed their expectations so that they can reach each checkpoints on or before the cutoff time.

    Each day meant 20–22 hours of hiking, climbing 4,000–5,000 meters, and only a few hours of sleep. In total, they were able to sleep 10 hours in the entire week.

    From Majo’s IG stories.

    The terrain was unlike anything in the Philippines. Steep ridges with massive exposure, sections where helmets were mandatory, downhills so sharp that the team resorted to crawling.

    “Aldean has a fear of heights,” says Majo, laughing. “So our strategy was to put him in between — me in front, Jami behind. Sometimes we were helping each other go up  big rocks or practically dragging ourselves down. Medyo vertically challenged tayo e, so you adjust and adapt as much as you can.”

    Powered by Ahon trail socks and gaiters.

    There were boulder fields, off-track sections, and glaciers crossed at 2:00 AM in the dark. One slip could mean a fall into a crevasse. Another time, the team split while searching for the route and Jami’s tracker pinged as dangerously close to a cliff — so close that the organizers called him to warn he was heading toward a drop.

    They witnessed avalanches. They met Ibex that refused to let them pass. They drank from horse troughs when water ran out. They slept under tables in crowded refugios.

    From Majo’s IG stories.

    The route was extremely technical — something that simply doesn’t exist in the Philippines.  Majo adds, laughing, “i thought ready na kami, but it was beyond anything we had trained for. What helped us was our years of outdoor experience. That kept us steady even when things got crazy. And of course we just enjoyed the whole experience. You really need to have the right mental and emotional fortitude to do these kinds of adventure – its a type 2 fun on the next level. Team dynamics were very important.”

    The People You Meet

    As in many ultras, the shared suffering built unexpected friendships. The team connected with Janet Ng’s Hong Kong team, singing Bohemian Rhapsody while climbing and keeping each other sane through the endless uphill and downhill.

    Holding the Line

    There were moments when the DansxAhon team thought they would miss the cutoffs. But they kept pushing. Step by step, ridge after ridge, mountains after mountains through day until night.

    Finally, on Sunday, September 1, 2019, after 147 hours, 45 minutes, 47 seconds, they returned to Chamonix. With more than four hours to spare, they crossed the finish line.

    PTL Finishers.

    Forever etched in Philippine adventure/trail running history.

    One for the Books

    “It was difficult but super fun,” says Majo. “Still one of the best adventures of our lives.”

    For the DansxAhon Adventure Team, PTL was more than just a trail event. It was survival, grit, and teamwork — the essence of what it means to take on mountains far bigger than yourself.

    And for the Philippines, it remains a rare moment: a Filipino team etched into the PTL finisher’s list.

    The Support

    Read next

    • PTL 2019: When Grit Meets Gear (Ahon Blog) — [live on Wednesday]

    A Filipino’s Journey to UTMB (WPS archive)

    Stay close

    • Follow Ahon on IG and FB for stories from the mountains

  • TNF100 2008: The First Philippine Ultra Trail Race

    📍 Nasugbu, Batangas – July 26–27, 2008

    Before trail running became a scene in the Philippines, it was already happening — quietly, muddy, and under heavy rain. The 2008 edition of The North Face 100 was one of the earliest long-distance trail events in the country. And for the few who showed up that weekend, it wasn’t just a race. It was a turning point.

    TNF100 logo. the start of philippine trail running.

    ✍️ The Backstory

    By 2008, Ronald Declarador was already hiking mountains. He had started road running around 2005–2006, with early races like the Runnex 10K at UP Diliman (₱150 reg fee, singlet included). But trail running? That was still a mystery. When he heard about TNF100, something clicked: “I already hike. I already run. Why not try something that combines both?”

    He signed up for the 100K with friends — Carlos Paredes, a fellow outdoorsman-runner, and Marc (last name forgotten, but remembered for long road runs and jeepney rides home). The farthest they had run in training was 33km on road. Zero trail exposure.

    🏞️ Race Format & Setting

    • Location: Mount Batulao and Mount Talamitam
    • Format: Two loops of 50K each for the full 100K
    • Start/Finish: Evercrest, Nasugbu
    • Date: July 26–27, 2008
    • Weather: Wet, foggy, and unforgettable
    philippine trail running history
    Less than 100 starters for 100k. No 50k category. Photo from Bald Runner.

    The route passed steep ridgelines, forest trails, and open fields. It was mountaineering-grade in places — ropes on Batulao climbs, river crossings near Talamitam, and long, isolated sections with little signage.

    Many runners got their first taste of real trail conditions here: non-stop mud, chilled air, flooded paths, and minimal aid.

    👟 The Gear of the Time

    Back then, there was no clear idea of what “trail gear” meant. Ronald showed up in:

    • TNF Arnuva shoes (yes, hiking shoes)
    • Black Adidas running attire
    • Nathan bladder vest (with shallow front pockets — “tech” at the time)
    nathan vest - advanced tech in the 2000s
    This was advanced tech at that time.

    Aid stations were stocked with saba, suman, and kamote. Race kits came in brown office envelopes. Trail tech? Wala pa.

    For a glimpse of how today’s trail gear evolved, see Ahon’s “Race-Ready Shirt” breakdown (soon) — a modern take on how far we’ve come since TNF100 2008.

    🧠 The Mind Game

    Ronald recalls the mental spiral near the halfway mark: After finishing the first 50K loop just before nightfall, the cold fog set in. They saw athletes like Leo Oracion and Retzel Orquiza not continuing.

    “If those guys stopped… why should we keep going?”
    He was already feeling sick. The thought of running the second loop in total darkness — with barely any experience — pushed him and Carlos to stop.

    No regrets, though. Relief outweighed disappointment. That DNF lit a fire.

    ahon co-founder trail running at the 2008 TNF100 philippines.
    Going up Mt. Batulao. Race bib made of tarpaulin.

    🔁 Full Circle

    Looking back, TNF100 2008 wasn’t about finishing. It was about starting something — for many runners, for the community, and for a trail movement that hadn’t yet found its name.

    Today, Ronald writes about gear, trail culture, and the roots of Philippine trail running. You can read the humorous, detailed, and more personal version of this story on his personal blog here.

    And if you’ve ever felt unprepared for a race, know that he once did too — at a time when trail running had no maps, no vlogs, and no blueprint.