‘THE RACE FORMAT ENDED UP BROKEN. No teams finished the event. We were swimming with crocodiles, staring down their yellow eyes at night as we breast-stroked by with our backpacks on.’
— Jason Magness, GearJunkie Contributing Editor, racing as captain of Team YogaSlackers during the 2015 Adventure Racing World Championships.
The Adventure Racing World Championships wrapped up earlier this month in Corumba, a town in remote southwestern Brazil.
It was, by many measures, the most difficult, dangerous, and chaotic championship race in the history of the sport.
Thirty-two teams from around the globe had converged to trek, paddle, bike, and navigate a 700KM course through the flood plains, hills and swamps of the Pantanal, the world’s largest tropical wetland area.
On November 14th, as a tropical heat wave swelled over the region, the pack of international teams — 128 racers in all, support staff, medics, and media — were boated to the most remote start line in memory. An up-river paddle began the event; once off, teams would see no civilization until they reached the finish line back in Corumba a week later.
The World’s Ultimate Endurance Test

Maladies On The Course

Race Dissolves To Survival Challenge



Rules Broken, Rules Ignored


End In Sight
