Henrik Bautista and Hameed Seyed look back on more than 20 years with BSBG!
BSBG Associates Henrik Bautista and Hameed Seyed are celebrating over 20 years of service with the company.
11 Sep 2024Experience Loading
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Words by BSBG Media Team, Thursday 03 May 2018
Marathon Des Sables is a 6-day ultra-marathon held in the Sahara Desert, where competitors run a 250-kilometre course comprising wadis, sand dunes, mountains and salt flats in Southern Morocco. In temperatures approaching 50°C, runners (at times, walkers) must carry with them a complete food supply, sleeping equipment and survival gear (including a flare and a venom pump).
Unsurprisingly, Marathon Des Sables has earned a reputation as being the toughest footrace on Earth, with some competitors experiencing severe dehydration and in extreme cases, hallucinations; due to exhaustion and the intense weather conditions. Stewart put himself through this ultimate challenge to raise awareness of Motor Neuron Disease, a rare condition which has had a profound impact on his family. Here are a selection of his thoughts, having overcome one of the toughest physical and mental challenges anyone can endure...
“My lowest and also most defining point of the race came on the long stage. At around the 20km point we hit some sand dunes, where the trail led us across the slopes. After 8km this was really tearing my foot up. I kept going to the next checkpoint, refilled with water and set off again. That's when I realised I was in bad shape - both with exhaustion and a growing agony in my foot. I met two other Brits who were setting a fast marching pace. I decided that if I didn't join them I probably wouldn’t finish the race, so I tagged along with them and slogged it out.
“When we reached Checkpoint 5 at 56km, the Sun was down, the temperature had dropped and my foot was in ribbons. I visited the medic tent, took my sock off and basically the skin on the sole of my foot had ruffled-up along the arch, leaving a blister the size of tennis ball. The medic slit the top of this mass and injected the lovely red stingy stuff as I bit down on my hand. The pain had subdued slightly but I was basically walking on raw flesh at this stage with 30km still to go in the dark of night, starting off with yet more dunes. Every step was excruciating, like walking on hot coals.
“We weren’t long out of the checkpoint, so at that point I had a decision to make. Your instinct tells you to just get out of there, throw the towel in and go home. But then you think of why you're there, how you got there, all the hard work and miles you've put in and the hopes of everyone following you at home. With that on your mind and a pace set in your legs, by some grace you blank out the pain and just keep moving. I had a similar turning point on a training event earlier in the year, where I knew if I quit at a tough stage of that race, there was no way I could compete in the Marathon Des Sables. It was probably that moment, months before the race, that defined whether I would complete the Marathon Des Sables or not.
“At the next couple of checkpoints I had to walk in circles until the others were good to go. The pain was just unbearable if I had to stop and try to start again. Gradually a glint of the finish line appeared on the horizon, a trick the organisers loved to play, giving you hope even though there were still miles to go. No-one was talking now; it was 4am and we were completely blown having been on the road for over 19 hours. The line was in front of us but wasn't getting any closer, we were tripping over rocks and stumbling into each other, eyes focused on the lights ahead. The path led down into some undergrowth and the lights vanished for about 15 minutes. When we came out, the line was just metres away. We couldn't run, instead we just bumbled across it, no celebrations, just straight to our tents and lights out. Waking up the next day everyone looked at each other in disbelief. We had made it through the most feared section of the world’s toughest foot-race, and a medal was within our grasp!
“Next was Marathon Day: the final stage and a medal waiting for me at the finish line. I’d never run a marathon before, let alone after five days of running other marathons, baked by the Sun, malnourished, sleeping rough and with a gaping wound on my foot. I’d also never started a marathon in a sandstorm, so it was all very new to me. Despite everyone lurching about like zombies at the start line, we shot out of the blocks at a mad pace, all keen to have a good final day. The top 200 runners were starting an hour and a half behind the main pack to ensure everyone finished quite close together.
"The first 10km was brilliant, a few small dunes and ducking in and out of dried-up riverbeds. I stayed quite far up in the pack and reached checkpoint 1 in about an hour and 20 mins. After that we came onto a long flat desert section, running head first into gale force winds which forced most of us into a walking pace. After checkpoint 3 it was more sand dunes, which frustratingly worsened my foot condition, and set me up for a slow, painful trek to the finish line. I was dropping places at this point, but on reflection I just wanted to appreciate this last day and soak it in. I’d spent the previous stages just trying to get through them, but I wanted to ‘enjoy’ this one as much as possible!
“The final finish line was literally a mirage on the horizon, a final cruel trick on your mind and one last big push to end the race. Crossing the line and getting your medal from Patrick Bauer was a surreal experience. I couldn’t quite believe I’d gotten away with it and achieved something that was unimaginable a few days ago, let alone a year ago when I first signed up. There was such a sense of disbelief that it was all finally over (although it wasn’t… I still had an 8km ‘Charity Fun Run’ over more sand dunes the next day so I could get the bus home).
“Overall, it was a brutal, gruelling race under seriously tough conditions. It wasn’t just the training and strength-of-mind that got me through, it was also the camaraderie with my tent mates and the strangers I met along the way that kept the spirits up and ultimately makes the Marathon Des Sables such a unique and legendary race. Would I do it again? Right now I can’t even look at a sand dune without having terrible flashbacks, but one day I might consider doing something similar. You can never re-live such an incredible experience, so I might just leave the Marathon Des Sables box ticked.”
BSBG Associates Henrik Bautista and Hameed Seyed are celebrating over 20 years of service with the company.
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