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Runners brave rain and mud at Juneau’s Spring Tide Scramble

Published 9:30 pm Friday, May 30, 2025

Participants carefully walk through a particularly sticky patch of Gastineau Channel mud at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
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Participants carefully walk through a particularly sticky patch of Gastineau Channel mud at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)

Participants carefully walk through a particularly sticky patch of Gastineau Channel mud at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Participants carefully walk through a particularly sticky patch of Gastineau Channel mud at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
People walking through Gastineau Channel at minus tide during the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Runners at the starting line of the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Participants run through the low point of Gastineau Channel during the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Runners make their way through sand and seaweed to the other side of Gastineau Channel at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Finn Taintor, 8, and Luke Taintor, 37, return from the Gastineau Channel crossing at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Susan Crandall, 58, approaches the finish line at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Melissa Anderson, 49, hands her race bib to a volunteer after crossing the finish line at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Participants make their way through a wooded section of trail before hitting the wetlands at the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)
Runners check in before the 2025 Spring Tide Scramble at Fish Creek Bridge on Saturday, May 31, 2025. (Ellie Ruel / Juneau Empire)

Nearly 100 runners took advantage of the extreme low tide at Saturday’s Spring Tide Scramble organized by the Juneau Trail and Road Runners. Participants pushed through sporadic bursts of rain while wading through mud, algae and swarms of mosquitoes to cross Gastineau Channel at the minus-1.4-feet tide point.

The four-mile and seven-mile routes both started at the Fish Creek Bridge parking lot and ventured into the Mendenhall wetlands to the end of the Airport Dike Trail across the channel. The seven-mile run included a run through the Fish Creek Trail, entering the wetlands at Ninemile Creek Road.

Jason Norat, 29, the top seven-mile finisher, hung out with his young Labrador, Franklin, after the race. He said it was cool to see planes over the wetlands during the race and to cross the channel on foot.

“I doubt there’s a race out there like that,” he said. “It’s definitely very Juneau.”

Lindsey McCulloch, 28, was the first female participant and first overall to finish the four-mile race, with a time of 39:08. She was followed by Benjamin Hetherington, 24, the top male participant, with a time of 39:22.

There were also a few under-18 participants in the four-mile race, with Oliver Albrecht, 12, placing third overall closely followed by Finn Taintor, 8, in fourth. The top female under-18 participant, Eleanor Peterson, 14, placed 33rd overall. Peterson was followed by Isla Taintor, 7, the second under-18 female participant, in 40th overall.

For the seven-mile race, the top male finisher and top overall was Norat with a 1:03:26 time. The top female finisher, and sixth overall finisher, was Therese Pokorney, 26, at 1:17:59.

JTRR Co-Race Director Becky Bohrer said this race is the beginning of the organization’s busy summer season. JTRR has been hosting races periodically since February, but the frequency of events will increase in the coming months.

“It’s just kind of a quirky, unusual race that tons of people enjoy, and we had a really great turnout,” Bohrer said.

• Ellie Ruel can be contacted at editor@juneauempire.com.