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Craftsbury Marathon Re-cap

Women lined up for the start of the Classic Craftsbury Marathon Women’s wave.

Fifty-nine women and one hundred and fourteen men lined up for the Craftsbury Marathon Classic 25 or 50k on Saturday, Jan. 27, 2024. Among them were five MNC masters women and and six MNC masters men. The course would be a 13.5 km loop: two times round for the 25k and three times round for a shortened 50k. With the MNC wax trailer parked in the lot and coaches Rosemary, Adam and Kristen testing wax and dialing in the structure, we quickly klistered up everyone’s skis for good kick. Coach Rosemary then set up a bench trailside with the klister roller ready to give anyone who needed it a little more kick during the race! A little “wax security” goes a long way for a worry free race!   Congratulations to Chase Rosenberg, Pascal Cheng, Michael Dillon, Craig Peppin, Jim Adkisson, Andres Torrizo (age class winner), Sara Katz, Karen Alence, Jen Adkisson, Ellie Bouffard and Liz Hollenbach (age class winner) for kick and gliding the distance and having a great time doing it! In addition, we had two Devo skiers ski the 25k with Coaches Adam and Kristen. Congrats to Liam Vile and Oakley Crawford!

This is a Marathon weekend, and that meant a skate 30 km on Sunday. MNC had twelve men and four women compete in Sunday’s skate race. Congrats to Michael Gaughan, Sam Seely, Mike Millar, Owen Lenz, Brian Sprague, Chris Howell, Duncan Dubief (Jr), Chris Flannery, Gretta Kilburn (age class winner), Sheila Weaver and Coach Rosemary (age class winner).

Extra kudos go out to Sara Katz, Michael Dillon and Pascal Cheng who all raced BOTH days,  completing the “Brodhead Challenge”, skiing essentially almost 80 km  over the course of the two days and proving that they are incredibly fit and tough! Hats off to all three of you!

Women head up the teaching hill. 

The BKL Division start.

 

The MNC Trailside Klister Station!

 

Skiathlon volunteers needed!

We’re gearing up for the MNC Skiathlon on Sat. Feb. 10, 2024 at Sleepy Hollow and looking for volunteers!  For planning purposes, the adult racing is 10-11:30a, and the BKL racing is 12:45-2:45pm.  You can also register for racing at: https://www.skireg.com/mncskiathlon.
All proceeds from the race go to the MNC Scholarship Fund!  Thanks in advance for your generous time.
Here are some open slots:
Inside:

Registration 1x 8:30AM-11:30AM

Registration 2x 9:30AM-12:30PM

Outside:

Timing 4x 9:30-11:30am

Timing 3x 12:45pm -2:45pm

Course Set-Up 2x 7:30 AM

Photographer 1x 9:00am-12:00pm

Medical/FirstAid 1x 9:00am-12:00pm
Medical/FirstAid 1x 12:00pm-3:00pm

Interested in volunteering? Email race director Christine Massey:

Christine.Massey@uvm.edu

Memorial Service for Jarlath: Saturday 10:30AM

MNC friends, family, and community,

This coming Saturday, January 20th, the Ira Allen Chapel at UVM will hold a memorial service for Jarlath O’Neil-Dunne at 10:30AM

A reception will follow at the Silver Maple Ballroom, in the Davis Center, at 12:00PM

You can read more about Jarlath’s life, and his wide impact on the people and communities around him, on this page:

Remembering Jarlath O’Neil-Dunne

To celebrate Jarlath’s life and the impact he made on so many people’s lives, the family has established a fund in his memory. In lieu of flowers, the family encourages you to honor Jarlath with a gift to the Jarlath O’Neil-Dunne Memorial Fund, which will be used to carry on his legacy of service, research, and scholarship.

Remembering Jarlath

Remembering Jarlath

The MNC community lost a great friend and passionate skier on January 6 with the passing of Jarlath O’Neil-Dunne. Jarlath had driven up to Craftsbury in the morning with his buddy Steve Crafts, meeting up with Owen Lenz to ski together. On one of their trips around the loops, Jarlath collapsed, likely due to a cardiac event, at the Coaches Corner intersection. Several of his MNC teammates and others were soon on the scene, doing all they could to help. Despite the valiant efforts of his fellow skiers, Craftsbury Outdoor Center staff, Hardwick Rescue, and the doctors and nurses of Copley Hospital, Jarlath did not survive.

The sudden loss of our friend was all-the-more difficult to fathom because of his remarkable vitality. Jarlath stood out for his intellect, humor, and physical vigor. He was one of those people in whom the flame of life burned very bright. Jarlath and Julie shared many years together and devotion to raising their three children, Ailsa, Gus, and Maeve. He will also be greatly missed by his beloved family: mother Mairi, sister Iona Munjal, and brothers Aengus and St. John.

In his professional life, Jarlath directed the University of Vermont’s Spatial Analysis Laboratory in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources. Among many other projects, the innovative unit has played a key role in recent years assessing Vermont flood damage to aid in recovery efforts. A veteran of the United States Marines who served in Iraq, Jarlath was also an advocate, role model, and wise older brother as faculty advisor to the university’s student veterans’ organization.

Jarlath’s ever-enthusiastic Facebook posts offer a glimpse into the things he cared about, the places he found joy. There he is before sunrise at the UVM track, ready for another round of feats of strength and endurance with his “Boy Band” circle of workout pals; there he is with Maeve, both pretty in pink, as they head to the movies for “Barbie”; there he is “sharing my love of lycra with Gus on a 51-mile gravel ride”; there he is with Ailsa for a father-daughter Craftsbury Marathon last year; there he is goofing around at an annual reunion with his family and friends from the University of New Hampshire crew team; there he is playing “lead cowbell,” wearing a heavy-metal wig, and displaying impressive hip flexibility as a member of “Sciatica,” the band he and Steve Crafts convened each May to amuse runners in the Vermont City Marathon as they passed through the New North End.

And there he is in a 14-second video clip on January 22, 2023, powering the V1 up and away on a freshly groomed trail, thickly frosted firs in the woods, nothing but the sound of skis on snow. His caption: “Thank you, Vermont.” That image of him and his gratitude in that moment feels like an apt way to remember our teammate and friend Jarlath.

Submitted by: Thomas Weaver

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