Meet the Cornwall, Ont. man trying to run the 900-km Bruce Trail unsupported and in record time

Cody Taylor is getting ready to do what he calls “the ugly shuffle.” Wearing a roughly 24-kilogram backpack carrying enough food and gear for 13 days, the runner leaves from Queenston, Ont., in Niagara on Friday. He’s seeking to break a record for the fastest unsupported run along the over-900-kilometre-long Bruce Trail. 

“It’s a matter of just keeping moving,” Taylor, who’s from Cornwall, Ont., told CBC Hamilton. “When you realize how much distance you covered, it’s pretty incredible.”

According to Fastest Known Time, a website on which athletes like Taylor publish GPS-tracked routes and times, the record he aims to beat sits at 14 days, five hours and 20 minutes. 

Taylor, who got into running extreme long distances a couple years ago, is hoping he can run the trail in 12 to 13 days. “I’m going to get up at 3 a.m., start by 3:30 a.m., and the only time I stop is to take care of my feet and filter water.”

Cody Taylor describes “the ugly shuffle” he’ll use to run the entire Bruce Trail

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Runner Cody Taylor is seeking to break a record for the fastest unsupported run along the over-900-kilometre-long Bruce Trail. He shares what he thinks it’ll be like.

For this to qualify as an unsupported run, Taylor must carry all his own food and gear, find water to drink and pace himself without another person’s help. He’ll camp along the trail at night. “It’s cool to be fast, but really cool to be self-sufficient.” 

The Bruce Trail, which tracks the Niagara Escarpment, runs northwest from Niagara to Hamilton, then turns toward Burlington and continues north through Halton, Caledon, and the Blue Mountains before reaching Owen Sound. From there, the mostly inland trail traces the bay shore as it snakes up the rugged Bruce Peninsula before terminating in Tobermory. 

Ultra runs are distances longer than 50 kilometres, Taylor said. He started doing routes in the 100-kilometre range last year, including in Niagara and the Gaspé Peninsula in Quebec.

“Canada is gorgeous, man,” he said, adding that when he learned about the Bruce, he thought running it unsupported sounded challenging but do-able. 

He has been training for this run for a couple months, working with a coach, Ray Zahab, and running shorter distances unsupported to prepare.

Current record holder excited to learn Taylor challenging record

According to the current record holder, Jamieson Hatt of Coldwater, Ont., preparation was key to his success. Hatt told CBC Hamilton he didn’t have much guidance when he set what was the first unsupported Bruce Trail record on Fastest Known Time in 2022. He said Taylor reached out to him and he was pleased to share tips.

 “Records were meant to be broken,” Hatt said. “I can see why not many people want to do this sort of thing but I think it’s really cool when someone reaches out and wants to.”

And he adds, “I could always try to break it back.”

Hatt said he travelled the entire Bruce with support before attempting his unsupported run. In the year before his attempt, he did four smaller unsupported runs. He got sick a few days into his first unsupported attempt at the Bruce and quit, but started again several days later and succeeded.

A selfie of a person in a cap and backpack posing in front of a sign marking the south Bruce Trail.
Jamieson Hatt set the record for an unsupported Bruce Trail run at just over 14 days in 2022. (Jamieson Hatt/Fastest Known Time)

The importance of bringing the right gear is something Hatt said he and Taylor discussed, since you must balance keeping your pack light while still having enough food and supplies.

Running unsupported is the toughest way to challenge a trail, Hatt said, adding that it’s key to listen to your body on a long journey. He noted he lost about 11 pounds when he set the record, and said it’s important not to go too fast at the start to avoid burning out. 

Hatt has set a number of records on Fastest Known Time, including one in Ontario’s La Cloche Mountains on Lake Huron’s North Shore. His partner, Chantal Demers, also does faster-known-time runs and he said they do annual trips together. One day, he said, he’d love to run with Taylor.

“Every time you do one of these unsupported attempts, you learn so much,” Hatt said, including about yourself. “It’s high-risk, high-reward.”

Looking forward, Taylor said he’s confident he can do the distance and said the biggest challenges he expects will be taking care of his feet to avoid injuries and finding water near farms so he avoids drinking from sources contaminated by pesticides. 

Taylor, who works as a fitness coach and owns a business with his wife, who’s a nutritionist, said he’s funding his own journey. He’s promoted his attempt at the record on social media and on the Fastest Known Time site, and said the publicity will help hold him accountable to his goal. 

“I better not frigging fail now,” he laughed. 

After the big run, Taylor said he’ll be done with expeditions for the rest of the year.

Instead of weekends away training, “I’m going to just hang out with my wife.”

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