FKT Challenges

svein tuft

FKT Challenges There’s something about going out the door with a simple idea: pick a route, push yourself, and see what you’re capable of. FKT Challenges is built around that. This isn’t about big events, travel budgets, or perfectly structured race calendars. It’s for people with jobs, families, responsibilities—people who still feel that pull to go hard, to test themselves, and to see what’s possible on a given day. The idea is simple. Find a route in your local area. It could be a 30 km loop, a 100 km gravel ride, a mountain pass, or something you’ve always looked at and thought, “I wonder how fast I could do that.” Create it. Share it. Ride it. Post your route in the FKT Challenges Strava club. Share it with the community. Put a time down. That becomes the mark. From there, it’s open. Someone else can take a shot at it. Maybe they beat it, maybe they don’t. Maybe you go back and try again. That’s the whole point. It’s not about who’s the fastest in the world. It’s about creating your own challenges, in your own backyard, and showing up for them. What matters is the effort. This is about making endurance accessible again. No barriers to entry. No need to travel across the world. No need to wait for a start line. You choose the day. You choose the route. You go. And you share it. Because the real power in this is the community that builds around it. Cheering each other on. Following along. Watching someone take on something that’s big for them—whether that’s their first 100 km ride or an all-day effort deep into the mountains. There’s no elitism here. Some of the stories you’ll hear are from riders at the very top level, chasing big lines and big efforts. Others are from people just getting started, stepping into something new, and finding out what they’re capable of. Both matter equally. This podcast is about those stories. It’s about the quiet local loop that turned into something bigger than expected. It’s about the long days that don’t go to plan. It’s about the wins, the failures, the lessons, and the moments that stick with you long after the ride is over. From the biggest routes in the world to the small ones close to home—there’s value in all of it. Because at the end of the day, this isn’t really about time. It’s about showing up, doing something hard, and sharing that experience with others. That’s FKT Challenges.

Выпуски

  1. Dirty Dan takes the Pacific Coast FKT!

    13 мая

    Dirty Dan takes the Pacific Coast FKT!

    FKT Smashed: Dirty Dan's Pacific Coast Record Dirty Dan is back to break down his record-setting Pacific Coast FKT. Two conversations in now — the pre-ride chat before he rolled out, and this one, recorded less than two days after he finished — and if anything, this episode is even better than the first. Dan rode from the US-Canada border to the Mexico border in 6 days, 15 hours, and 53 minutes, demolishing the previous record of 9 days and 13 hours across a 2,650 km route. His daily average was roughly 400 km. His total stop time across the entire effort — sleep, food, motels, gas stations, all of it — was just one day and eight hours. How It Unfolded The start was anything but smooth. A last-minute wind forecast check revealed a southerly headwind locking in along Oregon right when he'd be there. He made the call the same afternoon to start a day early, scrambled to Bellingham with his brother, barely slept, and rolled away from the border at 5:30 AM into rain and a puncture within the first 30 kilometres. Day one ended at midnight after 280 miles. He set up his bivy — and discovered his brand new sleeping pad had a slow leak. Night one was on the ground, broken sleep, 40-degree temperatures. Oregon delivered the headwind he'd feared. Two days of grinding into a relentless southerly wind along exposed coastal sections, speed down, morale tested. His response: stop checking the average speed, keep pedaling, and fixate on the California border. One mile per hour is better than zero. When he finally crossed into California, the weather eased and largely stayed good to the finish. By day five, he was flying. The body had adapted, the rhythm was locked in, and he rode the final stretch feeling genuinely great — which is exactly what you want after banking enough rest and food in the early days to still have something left. The Spirit of the Thing What made this ride worth following wasn't just the pace. Dan stayed open the entire way — stopping for photos with diner staff, chatting with strangers, engaging with everyone who was curious about what he was doing. Once he hit California, supporters started showing up roadside in groups, sometimes ten or more, with signs and cheering. He says it felt like it was happening almost every hour toward the end. That energy is real. And it's a choice. There's a version of this effort where you put your head down and shut the world out. Dan chose the other version, and it clearly worked. Practical Notes Sleep was a constant negotiation between bivy and motels — faster vs. better quality. His advice: carry the full kit regardless. The freedom to sleep anywhere is worth the weight. Fueling was his biggest area for improvement. The body takes a few days to fully adapt to the caloric demand, and he wasn't eating consistently enough early on. Go-tos: sour gummy worms and chocolate milk at every 7-Eleven stop, sit-down diner meals when timing allowed. He brushed his teeth up to three times a day, sometimes while riding. Small stuff, but it keeps you feeling human. The bike was an unreleased Trek endurance road bike, 35mm tires, SRAM Force AXS, full Tailfin bag setup. Everything held up across 2,650 km. What's Next Dan flies to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska on July 17th to attempt the FKT from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego — roughly 11 times the distance of this ride. The current record is 75 days. He's already thinking about what it'll feel like to finally hit his groove two weeks in and have months of riding still ahead. We'll be following along. Connect: tuftcamps@gmail.com | Instagram & Strava: FKT Challenges

    1 ч. 39 мин.
  2. Dirty Dan Takes on the US Pacific Coast FKT May 2nd This is his pre ride interview

    2 мая

    Dirty Dan Takes on the US Pacific Coast FKT May 2nd This is his pre ride interview

    Dirty Dan — Daniel Connell of Dirty Dan Bikes — is about to take on a Pacific Coast FKT, riding from the Canadian border toward Mexico on a route of roughly 2,667 km with over 24,000 metres of climbing. This is a pre-ride conversation, recorded just days before he rolls out. Dan’s story is a unique one. He didn’t come into cycling through racing or structure—he started with a $100 bike, a loose plan, and a desire to see the world. That mindset led to years of big, self-supported rides, including multiple Tour Divide efforts and countless adventures that were never about speed. But somewhere along the way, that curiosity evolved. In this episode, we talk about that shift—from slow travel to fast efforts—and what it looks like to take the spirit of bikepacking and apply it to an FKT attempt. We get into his setup, training approach, sleep strategy, nutrition, and the realities of taking on a route like the Pacific Coast at speed. More than anything, this is a conversation about mindset. About the energy before something big. About putting yourself up against a challenge. And about what you’re really chasing when you decide to go fast. Dan will be tracking his ride live, and you can follow along via Trackleaders (link in the show notes). We’ll be catching up with him again after the ride to hear how it all played out. If you’ve taken on your own FKT challenge—or are thinking about it—I’d love to hear from you. 📩 tuftcamps@gmail.com 📸 Instagram: @svein.tuft 🌍 tuftcamps.com Follow Dan here on trackleaders https://trackleaders.com/pacificfkt26f.php Thanks!

    46 мин.
  3. Mat and Ali of Trip Longer and the GNBR

    28 апр.

    Mat and Ali of Trip Longer and the GNBR

    🎙️ Episode Notes – FKT Challenges Ali & Mat (Trip Longer) – The Great Northern Bikepacking Route In this episode, I sit down with Ali and Mat from Trip Longer—two riders who’ve built their lives around long-distance bike travel, spending over a decade exploring the world by bike. In 2024, they took on one of the biggest bikepacking routes out there: the Great Northern Bikepacking Route. Stretching from the Pacific to the Atlantic, it’s a massive, mostly off-road line across Canada that throws everything at you—mountain terrain, prairie wind, unpredictable weather, long remote stretches, and the mental grind that comes with months on the bike. They didn’t set out chasing a record, but over the course of roughly 140 days, they completed what’s likely the fastest crossing of the route by a pair. Still, this conversation isn’t about speed. It’s about the experience. We get into what it actually feels like to commit to something this big—how the ride unfolds over time, the highs that make it all worth it, and the lows that almost end it. We talk about the reality of doing something like this as a couple, the moments where everything clicks, and the ones where things fall apart. There’s also a deeper layer here—the role of community, the kindness of strangers along the way, and how sharing the journey in real time changes the experience itself. This is one of those stories that goes way beyond the route. It’s about resilience, simplicity, and what you learn when you strip things back and just keep moving forward, day after day. Whether you’re into big bikepacking routes or just trying to carve out your own version of adventure, there’s a lot in here. --- 🔹 What we cover - The Great Northern Bikepacking Route: what it is and why it’s unique - Why Ali & Mat chose this route and what it demanded - The reality of multi-month bikepacking - Highs, lows, and near breaking points - Riding as a couple—managing energy, stress, and expectations - The role of community and trail magic - What doesn’t make it onto social media - Lessons learned from 140 days on the bike - What this kind of journey teaches you about yourself --- 🔹 Follow along - Instagram: @trip.longer Please reach out if you'd like to jump on a pod with your FKT story tuftcamps@gmail.com Instagram @svein.tuft

    1 ч. 47 мин.

Об этом подкасте

FKT Challenges There’s something about going out the door with a simple idea: pick a route, push yourself, and see what you’re capable of. FKT Challenges is built around that. This isn’t about big events, travel budgets, or perfectly structured race calendars. It’s for people with jobs, families, responsibilities—people who still feel that pull to go hard, to test themselves, and to see what’s possible on a given day. The idea is simple. Find a route in your local area. It could be a 30 km loop, a 100 km gravel ride, a mountain pass, or something you’ve always looked at and thought, “I wonder how fast I could do that.” Create it. Share it. Ride it. Post your route in the FKT Challenges Strava club. Share it with the community. Put a time down. That becomes the mark. From there, it’s open. Someone else can take a shot at it. Maybe they beat it, maybe they don’t. Maybe you go back and try again. That’s the whole point. It’s not about who’s the fastest in the world. It’s about creating your own challenges, in your own backyard, and showing up for them. What matters is the effort. This is about making endurance accessible again. No barriers to entry. No need to travel across the world. No need to wait for a start line. You choose the day. You choose the route. You go. And you share it. Because the real power in this is the community that builds around it. Cheering each other on. Following along. Watching someone take on something that’s big for them—whether that’s their first 100 km ride or an all-day effort deep into the mountains. There’s no elitism here. Some of the stories you’ll hear are from riders at the very top level, chasing big lines and big efforts. Others are from people just getting started, stepping into something new, and finding out what they’re capable of. Both matter equally. This podcast is about those stories. It’s about the quiet local loop that turned into something bigger than expected. It’s about the long days that don’t go to plan. It’s about the wins, the failures, the lessons, and the moments that stick with you long after the ride is over. From the biggest routes in the world to the small ones close to home—there’s value in all of it. Because at the end of the day, this isn’t really about time. It’s about showing up, doing something hard, and sharing that experience with others. That’s FKT Challenges.

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