Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNews100 run the mountain

100 run the mountain

A training regime that involved running up and down the Glasshouse Mountains paid off for 25 year-old Mapleton baker Boaz Clark who won this year’s King of the Mountain race in a time of 26 minutes 30 seconds against a field of 100 entrants.

Last year was the first King of the Mountain race for the former elite mountain bike racer and he came in sixth place with a time of 29min30sec.

This year he hoped to make it to the podium but didn’t expect to win. At the half way at the top of the mountain Boaz said he was in second position behind Cooroy fitness instructor Ryan Crawford, 35, who he called “mountain man”. He passed him shortly after and held first spot to the end winning with a comfortable lead although not claiming the record which stands at 22min 43sec.

In second place this year was New Zealand architect Glen Stricot-Tarboton who has run the event’s sister race in NZ, the Kawerau King of the Mountain, 10 times and ran the Pomona race as a junior in 2013 and 2014. Third place went to Peachester chiropractor Brian Wilder, 47.

The first woman over the finish line was 32-year-old Beerwah mum Reesha Lewis who returned for her second go at the event.

In second place was Shorncliffe occupational therapist Ashild Krige, 39, with last year’s winner Meg Reeves, 35-year-old Brisbane medical student coming in third.

Crowds lined the street to watch the race which is the main event to a weekend of activities in the hinterland town and Noosa MP Sandy Bolton took time out from Estimates in Warwick to help MC the event.

 

Previous article
Next article
Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Step into the heart of small town Louisiana

Noosa Arts Theatre (NAT) is thrilled to present Steel Magnolias, a heartwarming and powerful drama set entirely within the walls of a small-town beauty...

Pirates on the move

More News

Pirates on the move

After a pre-season of hard work and preparation it is good to see the Noosa Pirates Rugby League Club well and truly on the...

Dawn ceremony marks rite of passage

More than 100 Year 9 students from Good Shepherd Lutheran College stood barefoot at the edge of the Noosa River Mouth at dawn last...

Clarinet meets guitar

Two outstanding musicians Sacha Gibbs-McPhee and Owen Thompson will follow the history of the guitar when they meet on stage at the...

Tragic loss of 18-year-old surf lifesaver Joe Tolano

The sudden and devastating death of 18-year-old surf lifesaver Joe Tolano has sent shockwaves through the Sunshine Coast and broader surf life saving communities,...

Swimmers on the rise

Two rising Sunshine Coast swimmers have been selected for a prestigious national training camp after strong performances at the Australian championships. Sunshine Coast Grammar School...

Community focused care arrives in Sunrise Beach

Sunrise Beach and the wider Sunshine Coast community will soon welcome a new era of healthcare with the opening of Sunrise Beach Surgery on...

Free repair days

Noosa residents will soon have the chance to give broken household items a second life through a new series of free community Repair Days. Hosted...

Go wild in Canada and Alaska

Snow-dusted peaks. Sapphire lakes. Iconic wildlife roaming the land and cruising the sea. Cities that hum in two languages. Canada and Alaska do not...

Iconic property sold for $15.3m

The property housing one of Noosa’s most iconic beachfront restaurants has changed hands for $15.3 million. The 460sqm commercial property at 75 Hastings Street –...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. QCWA TEWANTIN NOOSA Everyone is welcome to...