Joe ‘Stringbean’ McConaughy, a well-known speed hiker, set a new record on the Appalachian Trail today. He hiked the 2,190-mile route in an unofficial fastest known time (FKT) of 45 days, 12 hours, 15 minutes.
McConaughy’s hike began the trail on July 17th at 6:31 a.m. EST, in Georgia (South to North). If verified by community-recognized officials who manage FKTs (and it likely will be), Stringbean’s hike beats both the self-supported and supported records.
His new unofficial record would beat the old record of 54 days set by Heather “Anish” Anderson by an astounding nine days.
Maybe more remarkably, it also means that, under his own power and without outside support, McConaughy beat renowned ultrarunner Karl Meltzer’s record set in 2016 of 45 days, 22 hours, and 38 minutes. His effort raises the bar on through-hiking speed to an almost unfathomable level.
He averaged about 50 miles per day without outside assistance. Epic.
Who Is Stringbean?
While his hike went on without the fanfare of Meltzer’s 2016 supported hike (in which ultra-runner Scott Jurek provided support), McConaughy is well known.
In 2014, he smashed the record on the Pacific Crest Trail, finishing the 2,660-mile journey in just 53 days, 6 hours and 37 minutes. He was 23 years old at the time.
He was also a Div. 1 collegiate runner. He competed in cross country and track and field for Boston College. He ran several events from the 800 meters to the 3,000 meters steeplechase.
Stringbean dedicated the PCT FKT to his cousin Colin McConaughy, who passed away on January 12, 2012, at the age of two after a short battle with Neuroblastoma.
Records Toppled
meltzerkarl finishing time prediction: 11:24pm Thursday night. Don’t let me down Stringbean, get that shit. My time to the Kennebec was 2 days, 15 hours, so he’s got it as long as nothing stupid happens. almost out of the junk, if not already.