Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race with medals a new way to socially distance

Giving a new meaning to social distancing, the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race brings far-flung family and friends virtually near, alone together, on a magical virtual tour of Acadia to Katahdin and along the coast from Lubec to Ogunquit.

virtual race with medals

Sign up now and virtually visit special places in Maine. You don’t have to complete the entire course to be a winner, and you can backdate miles to April 16. (Image provided courtesy of Racery)

With Acadia National Park closed until at least June 1 and the cancellation yesterday of what would have been the 20th anniversary of the Friends of Acadia Earth Day Roadside Cleanup, the virtual race with medals helps connect those with a love of the park as they “scale” the 26 peaks of Acadia together, no matter where in the world they’re logging hiking or running miles.

And with many Maine state parks shuttered until at least April 30, and real-life races and festivals cancelled or postponed, the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race provides a way to experience a virtual Vacationland, show support for Maine organizations, shake off some of the coronavirus cabin-fever blues and stay up on some of the COVID-19 updates.

virtual race with medals

When the new issue of Friends of Acadia Journal lands in your mailbox, you’ll see our announcement about the virtual race.

Sponsored by this blog to help support Friends of Acadia, Millinocket Memorial Library, and a new Robin Emery Prize – named after a Maine Running Hall of Famer and virtual racer who goes by the name of @Fossil, to be awarded to a 5th through 12th-grade girl who runs the Down East Family YMCA’s Main Street Memorial Mile – the Amazin’ Virtual Race runs from now through Aug. 8.

Sign up today and you have the chance to earn a medallion made by the same company that makes the Boston Marathon and MDI Marathon medals, with your choice of Maine-themed ribbon. You can backdate miles to April 16.

The 206.8-mile virtual race course features 10 segments with pop-up Google Street View photos and special red pindrops embedded in the map. Start by climbing all 26 peaks of Acadia, then go near or on some or all of such real-life race routes as Crow Athletics’ Bridge the Gap Race and Millinocket Marathon, and along such scenic coastal hikes as Mowry Beach Preserve in Lubec and Marginal Way in Ogunquit.

There are even Stephen King-themed virtual stops along the route, and pop-ups with information about local businesses or race postponement news. Finish atop Katahdin, Maine’s highest mountain and the northern terminus of the Appalachian Trail.

virtual race with medals

Virtually climb Acadia’s 26 peaks, and you may get a 360-degree Google Street View on the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race route. Watch your race avatar move along the 10 segments of the virtual race, from Acadia to Katahdin, Lubec to Ogunquit. Register now. (Image courtesy of Racery)

Everyone is a winner in the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race with medals

virtual race with medals

If you can complete at least the first 56 miles of the virtual race, you’ll get this emailed postcard showing the 26 peaks of Acadia that you’ve “climbed.” Sign up now.(Image courtesy of Racery)

You don’t have to complete the course to be a winner, as everyone gets a digital race bib, a digital certificate at completion of the race, and emailed postcards upon finishing even just the first segment of the virtual race with medals, all 26 peaks of Acadia at 56 miles.

You’ll be automatically entered into giveaways of Maine-themed prizes, such as L.L. Bean gift cards, Friends of Acadia membership and Gift MDI certificate.

Since 2017, our virtual races with medals have helped raise more than $1,500 for charity, with more than 300 participants from around the world, ages 10 to 70+, logging a total of more than 158,000 miles, by running, hiking or walking anywhere in the world.

Virtual racers a cast of characters, with interests all over the map

Some are serious ultramarathoners, others are trying to improve their health and fitness after a long period of inactivity. Some are Friends of Acadia members, while others are supporters of Millinocket Memorial Library. And some are friends of Robin Emery, who has a deep connection not only to local racing clubs like Crow Athletics based on Mount Desert Island, Eden Athletics based in Ellsworth, and the Sub5 Track Club based in Brewer, but also to Acadia.

So far in the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race with medals, we have participants stretching from Florida to Oregon, Maine to Missouri.

Here’s some of the cast of characters, and part of their stories.

virtual race with medals

In real life, he’s Matt Delaney, director of the Millinocket Memorial Library. As @MillinocketMatt, he’s tearing up the virtual race course, and already jumped from Acadia to Bucksport, Ellsworth to Bangor, and is now virtually between Lubec and Cutler. (Image courtesy of Racery)

@MillinocketMatt – Named the state’s top librarian by the Maine Library Association in 2018, Matt Delaney has spearheaded the Millinocket Memorial Library centennial renovation campaign and such innovative programs as the Katahdin Gear Library, where people can borrow such outdoor gear as mountain bikes, kayaks, skis and snowshoes. An avid runner, this is the first time he’s joined the virtual race, which has helped raised funds for the library the last few years. “Wow, this is fun! I’m sorry I didn’t jump on this when you started, but I’m glad to be part of it now. What a blast to turn a super solitary pursuit into a social one!” he told us in an email.

acadia national park hiking

It’s been “many moons” since Robin Emery summitted Dorr Mountain, and we were glad to attain the peak with her. This image is on one of the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race medal ribbons, along with the phrase “I RUN (OR HIKE) WITH ROBIN!”

@Fossil – Called “Maine’s first lady of road racing,” Robin Emery has inspired runners like Olympic gold medalist Joan Benoit Samuelson and continues to run in real-life races all around Maine and in this virtual one. She’s had a book written about her, a Robin Emery Trophy named after her (given to the first female finisher in the Bangor Labor Day 5 Miler) and now, a Robin Emery Prize, being supported by proceeds from this virtual race, to be awarded to a 5th through 12th-grade girl who runs the Main Street Memorial Mile in Ellsworth. She also has deep connections to Acadia. (PLEASE NOTE: See sidebar about Amazon.com links)

@Luluphi – Not only is Lisa Horsch Clark director of development and donor relations for the Friends of Acadia, she’s also honorary coach of the virtual race’s #TeamFOA. Everyone who signs up for the virtual race and opts for the “I LOVE Friends of Acadia” medal is automatically part of #TeamFOA, as we’ll have a friendly competition between #TeamFOA, #TeamMML (for Millinocket Memorial Library, with @MillinocketMatt nominated to be honorary coach) and #TeamRobin (with @Fossil as honorary coach).

acadia virtual races

Show your love for Friends of Acadia or Millinocket Memorial Library, or show your pride in having run or hiked with Robin Emery, the Maine Running Hall of Famer who also goes by the virtual race name @Fossil and is known by some as the Sage of Acadia. If you opt for one of these medals in signing up for the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race, you will automatically become part of #TeamFOA, #TeamMML or #TeamRobin. Or you could add yourself to a team even if you didn’t opt for a medal, see instructions in the virtual race message board.

Virtual race with medals features new “Coastal Trails of Maine” highlights

coastal trails of maine

By the same authors who brought you “Hiking Acadia National Park.”

As authors of the upcoming “Coastal Trails of Maine, including Acadia National Park,” being published by Falcon Guides on July 1, we’ve also included some of our favorite seaside hikes in the virtual race route, from Lubec to Ogunquit. (PLEASE NOTE: See sidebar about Amazon.com links)

We hope to be able to do a real-life book tour at Sherman’s Maine Coast Bookshop, but in the meanwhile, below are a few images we’ve embedded in the virtual race map to pique your interest about the coastal trails of Maine.

As a public service, we’ve included links in red pindrops to some of the agencies that own or manage the coastal properties in the race map.

acadia virtual races with medals

This segment of the virtual race with medals features Wolfe’s Neck Woods State Park in Freeport, as well as the giant L.L. Bean Boot and the start of the L.L. Bean 4th of July 10k, along with a live link to how you could buy an Acadia National Park pass at the L.L. Bean flagship store. (Image courtesy of Racery)

virtual race with medals

While this photo of our first-ever green heron didn’t make the “Coastal Trails of Maine” book, at least we can embed it in the virtual race map, along with a live link to Downeast Coastal Conservancy, which owns Mowry Beach Preserve, one of the hikes featured in the new book. (Image courtesy of Racery)

virtual race with medals

We have a thing for low-tide walks, and not just to Acadia’s Bar Island. (Image courtesy of Racery)

 

It’s easy to join the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Racers – here’s how

What are virtual races, you ask? They let people from anywhere in the USA or the world sign up to run, hike, walk, snowshoe, cross-country ski or log other forms of miles, whether to raise funds for charity, earn a finisher’s medallion or just set a fitness goal. Races can include technology-driven virtual routes that allow participants to see their progress, get a Google photo of their virtual location and check out the competition online, such as in the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race. Or it can be as simple as allowing people to record their mileage via the honor system in order to get a medal in the mail. There are different themes for virtual races with medals, and even Disney runs them. Check out what a virtual racer experience can be like in this short video by Racery, a leading provider of virtual races for nonprofits and companies, which powers our races.

  1. Sign up with your name and e-mail at this registration page
  2. The race ends Aug. 8
  3. You can track your daily miles any way you like, and can backdate them to April 16
  4. Log your miles on the race page
  5. Racery will keep track of fun stats like your total mileage and miles per week

Thanks to Racery’s virtual race platform, which has powered our virtual challenges since 2016, beginning with the Acadia Centennial Trek. In addition to virtual races for charity fundraising like ours, Racery hosts many company virtual fitness challenges.

acadia virtual race

Here are some other Maine-themed medal options available when you sign up for the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race. Each features raised profile of the Bubbles and Katahdin, with the neon moose (left), the multiple moose (center), or the lobster ribbon. At least 5% of gross proceeds from the Amazin’ Maine Virtual Race go to support the Friends of Acadia, Millinocket Memorial Library and the Robin Emery Prize. Sign up now.

 

Dolores Kong & Dan Ring

About Dolores Kong & Dan Ring

Dolores Kong and Dan Ring are co-authors of the Falcon guides Hiking Acadia National Park and Best Easy Day Hikes Acadia National Park, and also blog at acadiaonmymind.com. They’ve backpacked the 270-plus miles of the Appalachian Trail in Maine, and are members of the Northeast 111 Club, having hiked all major peaks of the Northeast. Dolores is a former staff reporter at The Boston Globe. Dan is a journalist and former Statehouse bureau chief in Boston for the old Ottaway News Service and for The Republican, the daily newspaper for Springfield, Mass. They are married and live in New England.