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The Adventures of 'Marathon Don' Kern
By Scott Sullivan January/February 2002
Don Kern looks so normal it is scary. You'd mistake him for
a youth pastor, or, on a wild day, an accountant.
Guys like this aren't supposed to run marathons on seven
continents and two planets.
They don't own the only house in Martin with seven
gargoyles on its flat roof, gallop naked on the South Beltline,
or have pictures of their hind ends, romping down glaciers,
in Gentleman's Quarterly magazine.
What's scary is Kern really is kind of ... ordinary. But only
kind of.
In his heart, he is an adventurer. A back-packer in the
forefront of some quest to dive into life's cup and drink it
fully.
Like Walter Mitty, except that his secret life is real.THE ADVENTURE BEGINS
What would you expect from a boy raised in Barryton
(pronounced BEAR-a-ton by its residents, all 400), between
Mount Pleasant and Big Rapids, son of a college janitor?
Clean up after scholars, you never know what you'll find.
Kern, curious, wed a librarian, finished college, then took
the only job he saw teaching both his majors, math and
speech, for the Martin Schools.
He learned he was no disciple of wielding discipline. "The
district laid off six teachers the next year," says Kern. "I was
happy to be one of them."
Except he and his wife, Nancy, now had a baby (the first of
two) to support and a home in a farm hamlet between
Kalamazoo and Grand Rapids.
Always between things that, in comparison, seemed big.
Kern found work as the world's least-carnivorous collector
for a company then converting to computers. "I learned to
program in 1979 by doing it," he remembers. "I've made a
living as a computer guy ever since."
It gets even tamer: Kern's now a grandpa whose website,
cooladventures.net, offers thriller-dillers such as pictures of
his granddaughter, grandmother's 87th birthday and ...
what's this?
* "The Legend of Doctor Rick and the Pickle Juice (Detroit
Marathon)"?
* "South Pole Marathon"?
* "Last Chance to Run Through the Woods Without Getting
Your A** Shot Off"?
It gets stranger too. SLOWLY, SURELY
Seven years ago Kern, 38, joined his daughter jogging
around the dirt track at Martin High School. "I went eight laps
-- real slow," he says. "But I did it. Then I started to run some
more."
He went as far as eight miles during that first year, along the
old interurban railroad track, highway shoulders in the
exhaust wake of whooshing semis, and on washboard
roads lined with cornstalks and scented with Eau de
Chicken Farm.
Kern entered a road race, the now-defunct Scenic Emmett
Challenge near Battle Creek, and took more than an hour to
do the 10K. For him, that slow time was not a bad time.
"It was an accomplishment," he remembers. "I had fun."
What Kern lacked in speed, he made up in enjoyment. So
he went longer.
His next adventure, the Borgess 15K in Kalamazoo, found
him running last with an ambulance behind him and
volunteers scooping up cones, used to mark the course, as
he passed.
"I saw everything developing in front of me," Kern says.
When he read about the first Antarctica Marathon in 1995, he
called right away to sign up for the next one. "There was one
complication," says Kern. "I had never run a marathon
before."
Which hadn't stopped him from signing up to run four
already. He started training.
"I'd planned a 24-mile long run," he remembers. "But at 18 I
came on a pile of spilled potatoes. I jogged to friend's home
and we returned there in his pickup.
"So I didn't get 24 miles, but I did get 100 pounds of
potatoes," he continues. "Seemed like a pretty good trade to
me."
Kern still has a plaque from the '95 Chicago Marathon, his
first, which he finished in 5:07:56, good for 7,978th place.
Near it is a thermostat draped with so many finisher's
medals it may soon fall from the wall and leave Kern without
a temperature. Which, more than likely, he would enjoy.
He warmed up for Antarctica by running the Midnight Sun
Marathon in Tromso, Norway, north of the Arctic Circle.
"I showed up without having registered or made room
reservations," Kern says. "The Tromso newspaper did a
story because they thought that was strange, but that's
usual for me.
"I like to simply show up and see what happens. It's more
spontaneous that way.
"Antarctica was a blast," he says of his coolest adventure so
far. "We braved winds and waves to take the Zodiac, sort of
a glorified rubber raft, from the ship to the race site on King
George Island."
Was Kern chased by polar bears, jaws snapping inches
from his derriere? Not exactly.
But he was photographed, for a GQ magazine story about
the marathon, from an angle few competitors ever see.
>From there it was a slight stretch (OK, maybe more than
that) to running marathons on seven continents. Later that
month, on a whim and a four-day weekend, Kern did a
marathon in Caracas.
"Nancy probably thinks I'm nuts," he says, "like most people.
But my wife understands there are things that I have to do."
Kern "did" Asia when he ran the Tiberias Marathon in Israel.
There, he floated on the Dead Sea and skipped a Holy Land
tour in order to do a Hash Run involving crawling through
concrete pipe ways.
Hash Run? Better let him explain. A DIVERSION FROM REALITY
"The Hash House Harriers," says Kern, "is a drinking club
with a running problem. It was founded in Kuala Lumpur
and has chapters around the world."
A Hash involves sending out runners ("hares") to mark trails
(with chalk, toilet paper or other creative substances)
through the countryside -- mudholes, thorns, streams -- the
worse, the better.
Other runners ("hounds") start later and try to catch hares,
with "On On!" their call words. Afterwards, Hashers gather to
sing bawdy songs and drink beer.
The first "Last Chance to Run Through the Woods Without
Getting Your A** Blown Off" was born from such inspiration.
Now Kern hosts the Grand Rapids Hash House Harriers on
the last Saturday before every hunting season.
One precaution: In case of inclement weather, the Hashes
are held outdoors.
To give something back to the sport that has meant so
much to them, or to avenge themselves, Kern and a friend,
Sean Sweet, are promoting more warped events.
The Hair of the Frog microbrewery in Grand Rapids hosted
their first Frogger 5.5K on Friday the 13th last April.
The Gatecrasher 5K Sept. 2 involved runners shinnying
under or scaling gates to a not-yet-open park. "The idea,"
says Kern, "was to give our friends a diversion from reality."
At post-race festivities, Gatecrasher winners were awarded
medallions made out of locks and chains. ON ON!
In 1998 Kern finished marathons at Mount Kilimanjaro
(Africa) and in Adelaide, Australia. His "second planet"? The
Martian Marathon in Northville.
A gargoyle for each continent? Kern began picking up the
grotesquely-carved stone figures from roadside stands
while driving to and from more marathons.
The sculptures, thought in medieval times to scare away evil
spirits, glower benignly from a home he has been
remodeling for 24 years (that adventure continues too), and
upon a funky, klunky Dodge Aztek in his driveway.
"That car's like my alter ego," Kern says. "It gets me to
weekend marathons and I can sleep in the back. I save a
few bucks that way."
How can he afford this? "I probably can't," he says. "But I
have to."
Only a few of the 63 marathons Kern has finished (as of this
writing) have been in locales one might think exotic, unless
one views Bismarck, South Bend or Vandalia, OH as dream
vacations. No matter: revelations could lurk anywhere, in his
eyes.
Take Vandalia, which Kern -- a coming-out-of-the-closet
writer -- chronicles on his website as "My First (and Probably
Last) Marathon Win."
Seems in December 1999, Kern realized he "only" needed
to run seven winter marathons in order to reach 44 on his
44th birthday.
He drove nearly six hours through a snowstorm to Vandalia
to fit in one of them. The weather was so bad that only two
other people -- race director Denny Fryman and Michigan
Runner's Carter Sherline -- came to join him. Since the
course, 105 laps around the high school track, was buried,
it was decided to run 105 laps around the school parking
lot.
"The course was very repetitive, yet uninteresting," Kern
writes. "Across the street was a credit union with one of
those digital time and temperature displays. Every 20 laps
or so, the degree would change."
There were no course amenities, so he would stop at his
car and refuel from a can of Pringles. More entertainment
included a snowplow crew placing road cones to mark a
pothole.
"I finished in 5:49:52, quite possibly a world record for the
slowest winning marathon time in history," Kern
remembers.
He picked up his trophy, took a shower at his cheap motel
room, and headed home. WHY
Mild wildman or wild mildman? Kern is both.
Yes, he did run naked, with a few friends, on a not-yet-open
(to car traffic) stretch of the South Beltline last November. He
is planning a South Pole marathon, and has a doctor friend
writing an article for the New England Journal of Medicine
on the virtues of drinking pickle brine prior to marathons.
But Kern views his capers from a scholar's remove as well.
He likes beer but not drunkenness. Hash Hymnal songs
can become TOO bawdy.
He's a self-respecting computer guy, grandpa and Martinite,
after all.
So when a driver pulled up next to him, as he neared the
painful end of another marathon last year, and asked, "Why
are you running?" Kern had an epiphany.
"I thought, 'God, that's a really good question,'" he declares.
Baby steps in a small town. Energy spent and returned.
Friends everywhere.
Kern learns as he goes and plans to enjoy each step of the
way.
On on!
CAPTIONS:
GOING UP. Don Kern pauses to pose on his way up during
the Pike's Peak Marathon. Participants climb 13.1 miles to
the mountain's summit, then retrace their steps. PAUSE WITH A CAUSE. Don Kern takes a break during
2001 Big Sur Marathon, one of 63 such races he's run so
far.
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