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Press Release - Antarctic Marathon - 2/15/13

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


         More Than 20 Runners To Reach 7 Marathons on 7 Continents Goal 
                        at the Antarctica Marathon

                      Other Notable Entrants Include 
          First Blind Participant and a 14-Year-Old Girl on a Mission 

BOSTON (Feb. 15, 2013) -- More than 20 runners are expected to reach their 
goal of completing marathons on all seven continents at the 14th Antarctica 
Marathon on March 7, announced Boston-based Marathon Tours & Travel, the 
event and expedition organizer. 

Also known as "The Last Marathon," the Antarctica Marathon is held annually 
on King George Island, located off the Antarctic Peninsula in Antarctica - 
the coldest, windiest and most remote continent on Earth. 

"There has been tremendous interest in running a marathon on all seven 
continents ever since the inaugural Antarctica Marathon in 1995," says Thom 
Gilligan, president of Marathon Tours & Travel and race director of the 
Antarctica Marathon and Half Marathon. "The goal of running a marathon on 
all seven continents is an extraordinary feat attempted by ordinary people 
in their pursuit of self-discovery or other notable goals."In 1998, 
Marathon Tours founded a Seven Continents Club to recognize those who have 
accomplished this feat. Since then, more than 367 globetrotting runners 
have achieved the goal, according to Gilligan. 

Despite its extreme nature, the Antarctica Marathon and Half Marathon has 
sold out 11 of its last 14 editions, usually years in advance, and is 
presently sold out through 2016. 

The 26.2- and 13.1-mile courses transverse gravel roads that connect and 
pass the scientific research bases of Uruguay, Chile, China and Russia. 
Race-day temperatures can range from 15 to 34 F with wind gusts that can 
easily reach 40 mph. Held at the tail end of the Antarctic summertime, 
heavy snow is rare but light flurries are common. 

Traveling to a marathon on what is often referred to as the "Last 
Continent," is a marathon in itself. Athletes will travel an average of 
6,500 miles each; first to Buenos Aires, Argentina, before departing to 
Ushuaia, Argentina, the southern-most city in the world. There they will 
board Akademik loffe, a Russian icebreaker ship for a two-day crossing of 
the Drake Passage, a body of water notorious for being one of the roughest 
seas in the world. The 14-day expedition also includes a number of landings 
on the continent, sea kayaking and wildlife viewing. 

Other notable entrants include: 
Hein Wagner (Kuilsriver, WC, South Africa) - Totally blind from birth, Hein 
has a passion for adventure, endurance sports and enabling others with 
disabilities. He will be the Antarctica Marathon's first-ever totally blind 
participant who will run with a guide. Hein, 40, is raising funds for 
Vision Trust, a non-profit he founded whose mission is to make the world a 
more accessible place for persons with disabilities and to promote the 
integration of disabled persons into the workplace, sports arenas and the 
arts. 

Winter Vinecki (Salem, OR) - Winter is a 14-year-old athletic dynamo on a 
mission. The ace student, a nationally ranked triathlete and aerial skiing 
Olympic hopeful, is on a mission to be the youngest person to finish 
marathons on all seven continents. She expects to finish her quest by the 
time she is 15. Winter is also on a mission to raise awareness and funds 
for prostate cancer research, a disease that claimed her father. She will 
be the youngest runner ever to tackle the Antarctica Marathon. 

Lynn McLernon, MD (Upper Tantallon, Nova Scotia, Canada) - Lynn is running 
the Antarctica Marathon to celebrate her five-year cancer free status. She 
was 39 years old when she found hard lumps in her armpit. As a doctor, she 
knew that she was feeling lymph nodes and learned that she had an 
aggressive cancer that had actually not only given her multiple breast 
cancers, but had eaten through her lymph nodes. Lynn's treatment included a 
double mastectomy, chemotherapy, radiation and herceptin, a relatively new 
medication. Lynn is running to raise funds and awareness for breast cancer 
research. If Lynn had been diagnosed a few years earlier, before herceptin 
was developed, she believes that she would not have survived. This will be 
Lynn's eighth marathon, but the first since her cancer diagnosis five years 
ago. 

The Antarctica Marathon and Half Marathon's official charity is Oceanites, 
Inc., a non-profit organization that researches the impact of tourism on 
Antarctica's environment. Participants raised over $100,000 on behalf of 
the organization during the past two years. Another large donation is 
expected in 2013. 

For more information on the Antarctica Marathon, please visit 
www.marathontours.com, write to  or call +1 
(617) 242-7845. 

About Marathon Tours & Travel 
Marathon Tours & Travel is the leading marathon tour operator in North 
America offering comprehensive travel packages to 28 marathons and half 
marathons on all seven continents, including the Antarctica Marathon and 
Safaricom Marathon in Kenya, the only marathon run entirely within a game 
park. For more information, please visit www.marathontours.com.

                                  ###

 

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