Having done Goliathon twice so far I was once again looking forward to another great event, and once again the Goliathon team came through.
From the point when you started getting closer to Goliathon you knew where you were going, plenty of signs, so you knew where to go. Upon pulling up to park the volunteers were in full force and excited to greet you with a smile, and to have you there. Since I have done this race before I knew where to go for registration, but even if I didn’t signage, markers, lead you right where you needed to go.
Once signed in my son Derek and I met up with the rest of the team, Scruffy Mudders (3rd place in the team standings). For those with kids 10-14, they can do the race (at a flat fee of $55) so you can get out there with your kids. We warmed up a bit, chatted and got ready to take the course. At 9:45 we took to the course, after Goliathon Co-Founder Doug Horton gave us a quick rules recap, got us revved up and sent us out.
Goliathon V
12 tiered obstacles over about 4 miles (in order Water Carry, Slippery Wall Monkey, Skyclimb, Circus Maximus, PPK Ninja Killer, Leap of Faith, Rope Cross, Balancing Act, Half dome, Hangman, Scale the Walls, & Over the moon), each separated into 3 levels, G1 doable by everyone and you can have assistance, G2 a challenge that you can’t have any help on, and finally G3, extremely challenging with no assistance. The event is not timed, so your performance is based on how well you do on the obstacles. Each one you complete, you receive a colored wristband, G1 green 1 point, G2 brown 3 points, and G3 blue 5 points. Most points wins. Choose wisely as once you choose a level that is the only one you can do, also you only get one shot (with the exception of Scale the Walls and Over the Moon where you get 3 attempts), to complete.
With the race not being a timed event meant that you could take your time going in between obstacles, which meant that you could recover your grip, as that is the main thing that you will feel getting hit. The course was well marked and it was very easy to follow where you needed to go to get to the next obstacle. As we participated as part of a team we moved through the course together so it took a bit longer as we waited for others to finish, but gave you a chance to see how great the different obstacle levels were, as well as how involved the volunteers were. Making sure that if you completed an obstacle your number was marked down as well as if you failed, so that points could be verified.
Overall this is one of the best races around, aside from a great race, the proceeds go to providing clean drinking water to areas of the world that are in need. Aside from a few waits at obstacles, and with selling out 1,000 racers that can be expected, really can’t say anything negative about this race.
This scores 5 maple bacon donuts out of 5.
Rating: 5/5
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