I Tried to Keep Up With an Ancient Running Tribe (I Got Exposed)
In this video, we travel deep into the Copper Canyon of Mexico to investigate an ancient running tribe - the Tarahumara (Rarámuri) people. A community often described as some of the greatest endurance runners in the world. Unlike modern runners, they don’t rely on GPS watches, carbon-plated shoes, training plans, or recovery technology. They run in handmade sandals, guided by tradition and necessity. Despite rejecting modern running tech, their endurance and ability to cover huge distances continues to fascinate elite athletes and sports scientists. I wanted to understand how they do it - and what modern runners might be getting wrong. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hardestgeez... Twitter: https://twitter.com/hardestgeezer?lan... Hardest Adventures: https://www.hardestadventures.com/ Drone footage courtesy of: https://www.instagram.com/horizontecu... #running #endurance #tarahumara

I Ran 27 Miles in Sandals with the World's Top Runners | Superskilled with Eva zu Beck

The BRUTAL Reality of Trying to Run a 2:35 Marathon

Mount Everest is Everything Wrong With Society

Spoiled Teens Sent to Extreme "Brat Camp" in Utah Desert | Season 1 Episode 1 | Brat Camp

I Ran an Ultra Marathon (with no experience)

The Philippine Sea Is Full of Gold - and It's Killing People

The Incredible Story Of The Tarahumara And The 100 Mile Race In California | Our History

Why Does Nobody Travel to South America's Strangest Countries?

Can an Office Worker Survive Living with a Jungle Tribe?

Asking Strangers To Transform Their BROKEN House.. For FREE

The Rarámuri: The Indigenous Runners Of Mexico’s Wild Canyons | SLICE | FULL DOCUMENTARY

Born to Run? How Raramuri Runners Dominate Ultra-Marathons in Sandals | NBC Left Field

24 Hours In Venezuela's Worst Rated Hotel

I Cheated in a Parkrun (By Hiring an Olympian)

I Was Given Access to China’s Forbidden Mountain Sites

We Lived Off the Land on Remote Vanuatu Islands

$0 vs $10,000 Gym Memberships in Japan

Running Shoes vs Evolution: What Does Science Say?

I Went to the Least Visited Countries in the World

