🎙️ Golden Hour Adventures — Tales from the Trail Show Notes What's up, trail fam! This week on Tales from the Trail we're going deep on three things: Justin's sufferfest in the West Virginia hills, the internet's least self-aware brand activation of the year courtesy of Satisfy and Adidas, and the wildfire that is the Cam Hanes USADA situation. Buckle up. 🏔️ Justin's West Virginia 50K Justin finally checked the Mountain State off the list, and it did not go easy on him. We break down the race — the terrain, the suffer, the moments where things got dark, and how he dragged himself across the finish line. If you've ever wanted to know what 31 miles of West Virginia trails feels like on your legs, Justin is going to paint you a very vivid picture. 👀 The Satisfy x Adidas "The Ci..." Event in Arizona Satisfy and Adidas didn't just drop a shoe — they flew runners out to the Sonoran Desert and threw what they're calling a hardcore festival to launch the collab. The vibes were... a lot. We talk about what actually happened, why the running internet couldn't stop talking about it, and the age-old question: at what point does a brand activation stop being cool and start being a little embarrassing? 🔥 Sage Canaday Reports Cam Hanes to USADA This one is genuinely wild. Cam Hanes — 58-year-old bowhunter, podcaster, and 1.8 million Instagram followers — ran a 2:39:11 at the Eugene Marathon on April 26, winning his age group and the masters division at what is also the Oregon USATF Marathon Championship. A week later he started the Cocodona 250 in Arizona, took a fall, cut his forehead open, and DNF'd around mile 60. Then Sage Canaday dropped the bomb: he's filed a tip with the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency (USADA) and says he's been in direct contact with them. The substance at the center of it all is BPC-157, a non-approved peptide — and on its own, a first violation carries a default four-year ban. Hanes pushed back with the argument that he has no financial stake in his race results, so the rules shouldn't apply the same way. The counter to that? He has a footwear deal with Speedland, a clothing line under the Keep Hammering brand, and half of Aravaipa's Cocodona 250 launch content was built around him. A ban, if it comes, would also cost him his eligibility for Boston, Chicago, New York, and any USATF-affiliated race. We get into where we land on it — is Sage right to go to USADA, or is this a case of the running community eating its own? Subscribe, leave a review, and tag us when you're out there putting in your own golden hour miles.