Ben Moreau – Running in Bolivia
I’m always conscious of not trying to make my blogs all about me as A) I think it’s a bit boring for you lot reading and B) it’s a bit lazy. So instead of writing about me this time I’m going to give a largely mis-informed, inaccurate piece about distance running in Bolivia, with a lot of guesswork. Amelia and I just came back from our honeymoon there, this isn’t plucked out of a hat.
Bolivia is a country that has had its fair share of political turmoil – they once had 6 presidents in one day! It’s economically underdeveloped with many communities living at altitudes from 2,000m to 4,000m. Ring any bells? Quite similar to Kenya and Ethiopia?
Yet Bolivia as a whole is rubbish at running, relative to the aforementioned powerhouses, and in fact to most places. Their male marathon record is 2:17.49, set by Juan Camacho in 1984, and their female record holder is Sonia Calizaya, with a 2:45. I took some satisfaction in noticing I’d have every national record from 3,000m upwards! So why is it that a country with so many communities at altitude and a lifestyle that in many ways mirrors the rural ways of East Africa falls so short when it comes to distance running?
Well I certainly don’t have the answers. But I have a couple of ideas. One is that culturally running has just never caught on. No one wants to run and they don’t have the ‘heroes’ to bring some success that would spark an interest. Another, more likely reason, could just be genetics. The average Bolivian looks very different to the Kenyan and Ethiopian distance gods – much shorter and stockier in general.
These two factors on their own could satisfy most people, and could well be the answer. After all it makes sense that if they don’t have largely shared the genetic gifts of the East Africans, and no-one takes an interest in distance running, well, you won’t get thousands of kids out doing it! So I took a look at what races existed in La Paz, and not surprisingly there aren’t many. Running is not hugely popular in Bolivia – as we thought. However, the La Paz marathon was launched in 2013 with 2,500 runners and the male winner ran 2.33. Pretty ordinary, no? Well I just went to La Paz and I can tell you, I don’t think I could run 2:33 there. For a start it’s at 3,600m. Secondly, it is HILLY. The first nine miles of the course goes up about 300m in elevation and I think that in itself would kill me. Jeez, even our taxi could barely get up the hill when it took us to the airport. I thought that 2:33 was a pretty remarkable time to be honest. The hills must be worth nearly 10 minutes on their own, before you even factor in the huge elevation. So that comes the question, what could this guy run on the flat? I looked him up – his name is Eduardo Aruquipa and he is not a full-time athlete. He has a PB for the marathon of 2.26, and a half PB of 64.47. His half marathon was run at 2,600m, but his marathon was set in Caracas, at just 900m. To be fair I know nothing about Caracas and maybe it’s super hilly (I’m too lazy to try and find out), but considering he ran 2:33 on a super hilly course at 3,600m+ you’d expect something better than 2hr26m at 900m.
This phenomenon isn’t just unique to Eduardo – many Bolivian athletes seem not to perform much better at lower altitudes than they do at higher. WHAT IS THIS MADNESS? Well, having just read David Epstein’s amazing book – “The Sports Gene”, I think he explains this amazingly and it wasn’t something I was aware of. It is that different communities have adapted to altitude in varying ways. Andean natives have adapted to altitude by creating more haemoglobin (i.e. red blood cells), making their blood more viscous, and this doesn’t help much when down at sea level….
By contrast, the East Africans have been at altitude for a far shorter period of time and so their adaptation isn’t genetic, it’s physiological, similar to when most Europeans travel to altitude to train. So while the effects are similar in some ways – more red blood cells, oxygen carrying capacity etc, it’s much more transient and dependent on the environment, not our genes. In short, my red blood cell count wouldn’t be as high as a native Bolivian, and my adaptations (and the Kenyans/Ethiopians) would be more useful when back down at sea level.
So the effects of altitude aren’t actually that helpful to native Bolivians (relative to Kenyans, Ethiopians, and me), and this is because they’ve lived at altitude so long that they have genetically adapted to this environment, and this adaptation doesn’t assist them as much as you’d expect at sea level.
Combined with this of course, is that actually a lot of Bolivia is perhaps a bit too high at 3,000m+ and so the benefits of training this high up are less pronounced than between the sweet spot of 1,500-2,500m.
In summary:
- Bolivians don’t like running
- The altitude doesn’t help them as much as you’d expect, so it’s not such a hot-bed of talent as somewhere like Kenya
- 3,000m+ is too high anyway. Come down about 1,000m guys and you may get some better results. Bring your llamas, it’ll be ace.
If anyone reads this and I’ve got any of this wrong, please correct me. I claim no authority on the knowledge here…. I do know that I tried running at 4,000m on the admittedly incredible landscape of the Bolivian salt flats and while it was amazing, it was also VERY hard!!! Cool place to do a training camp though….