Listen to the podcast on: Spotify: spoti.fi/3XCm31n Apple Podcast: apple.co/3Dm6ClE Follow along: Instagram: / cameronrhanes Twitter: / cameronhanes Facebook: / camhanes Website: www.cameronhanes.com
Пікірлер: 51
@whiterabit38132 ай бұрын
Gotta love Cam warming up for a marathon with a 50k… badass
@nomadflbh2 ай бұрын
Seriously...when hearing about him and his job/hunting training lifestyle, I was stuck trying to imagine what it would be like to run 20+ miles in the morning before going to a full 8 hour shift after getting around 2 hours of sleep after have doing pretty much the same if not more the day before...🤔😤🤯😶🌫️😮💨🤦🏾♂️😅🫡🫀🏃🏾♂️🏋🏾♂️🚴🏾♂️
@loganmilesMX2 ай бұрын
I run in mud, rain and hills. I only have one pair of shoes because arrows cost so dang much... Thanks a lot cam for turning my fitness life around! Keep hammering old man!
@tholen12Ай бұрын
Need more of these kind of videos Cam. Love it.
@antoinegodin5670Ай бұрын
Doing my first half-marathon next month going for under 2h. Love the dedication you show in your videos.
@zachariahsessions19472 ай бұрын
Damn wish I had signed up for the eugene marthon, I was planning on it, and I would love to meet Cam. Today was my first ten mile run ever. Maybe next year, I'm only 19, so that'd be cool to run a marathon with Cam there
@JarPed2 ай бұрын
I am running the Eugene marathon as well! Would freaking love to meet ya! lets go!
@chrisfavorin11072 ай бұрын
Congratulations!
@tinahenson24162 ай бұрын
Congratulations, Cam.
@Chris.E.2 ай бұрын
I ran the Waikiki half marathon today. It was cloudy 🤷🏻 tough conditions. Great little video. Gimbal would make this pro level but regardless, thanks!
@MartinGreenTeamTank2 ай бұрын
incredibly inspiring 🙏🏻
@vegeta420z62 ай бұрын
I love shotgun creek, some nice hiking, ATV trails, and gotta love the public shooting "Ranges" out there.
@KennyB98712 ай бұрын
What a beast! 🙌👊
@ralphdavies66082 ай бұрын
I am going for a run myself and i see this just posted guess i got my starting companion for the run
@trophyhusbanddiaries28052 ай бұрын
Would love to see more ultra content
@mr.mueller7704Ай бұрын
Dude, your a legend.
@iflewoverthecukoosnest7016Ай бұрын
how does a dude of this size run so far so fast. hes the opposite to any ultra runner ive ever seen. bet hes got an abnormally large heart like armstrong has
@connorgray2896Ай бұрын
He isn’t that big man, only 12 stone. Obviously big compared to the pros but relative to normal people he isn’t.
@ZeeShaanJamal2 ай бұрын
LOVE it
@outtherefilm2 ай бұрын
Let’s go! 💪🏻
@jaysonpfaff55662 ай бұрын
Inspiring
@Midnightincubus2 ай бұрын
Hello sir. Please stop putting miles on my ram! Can’t wait to fly out and pick it up here soon! 🤞🏻 🍀. Great race.
@emmettd18942 ай бұрын
Let's gooo!
@stewyvalenzuela56982 ай бұрын
Badass!
@Tlazo88Ай бұрын
I signed up for a 100k in November but there’s the inaugural Las Vegas marathon that’s happening 6 days before the race . I’m hesitating signing up for the marathon. Not anymore . ENDURE
@goldenknightsfanaticАй бұрын
Steve Prefontaine: “Hey Cam, you up for a light 50k?”
@ryankudlacek43162 ай бұрын
Cam, congrats…what shoes are you wearing?
@derekheign34232 ай бұрын
What pack is that Cam is wearing?
@gavinfontenot9062 ай бұрын
True DAWG 🐕🐕🆙
@vegeta420z62 ай бұрын
Bizarre that they do that as laps around just the small trail there at the park. They coul/ should do one where they choose down some of the dirt bike trails and have you run a mix of ATV trails, and the gravel roads, they could have it finish on the Horse Rock trail.
@45artpm272 ай бұрын
🖤🛡️⚔️
@MellowBellow_Ай бұрын
What shoes are those Cam?
@chrispearce374Ай бұрын
What running belt is that ?
@LeandroMichalichen-bd4bc2 ай бұрын
Hello, Cameron Hanes. I'm a big fan here in Brazil. I've been following you for years and I really admire your work. My birthday is coming. Send me a gift please, I really need a backpack because I don't have money to buy it, could you send me your used Tenzing CF 13, and please autographed, and a quiver like the one used on your elk hunt with kip fulks with your carbon black. You are my inspiration, please having something you have used on your hunts would be an honor for me. 🙏
@glg16872 ай бұрын
Casually asking someone you've never met for an $800+ backpack is wild
@LeandroMichalichen-bd4bc2 ай бұрын
Crazy my friend and here in Brazil, where I have to save 1 year to be able to buy something like this, my hoyt bow took me 3 years to buy. I started with his two books to learn how to hunt and this is thanks to the inspiration that Cameron Hanes gives through his videos, as I am a big fan, perhaps the only one in Brazil, it would be an honor to receive any gift from him.
@duduvermeio2 ай бұрын
@@LeandroMichalichen-bd4bc Not the only one in Brasil, bro!
@LeandroMichalichen-bd4bc2 ай бұрын
Oh yes my friend. Good to see Brazilians here 🤝
@iamshamtheman2 ай бұрын
PLEASE FORWARD THIS TO CAM! Hey Cam, I am Sham! This is an extremely random request, but I feel like I'd be an amazing podcast guest and I'll explain why. A first-generation proud American who's born and raised in Corvallis (GO BEAVS!) to Muslim parents from a North African background. Overcame a traumatic childhood and battled addiction to accomplish some rather impressive feats such as getting a BA in Political Science from Oregon State University in 2.5 years and graduating at the age of 20 (accepted to law school thereafter, but forwent it for athletics), wrestling for the Beavers which is one of the top teams in the nation with only a year of experience (started at the age of 21 after a couple years of BJJ), was an amateur MMA champ, completed a 5-year IBEW union apprenticeship to become a licensed electrician and most recently a homeless/vagabond who's been across 40 states over the last 2.5 years living outside in the streets of some major cities. Which brings me to the heart of this conversation. A few years ago at the age of 35 I found myself going through mental health and addiction struggles stemming from unresolved issues of a broken background. Had no social life. The only thing I did was work and work out. After having a couple surgeries I found myself on the couch watching hours upon hours of people who explored abandoned buildings, urban camped and illegally rode freight trains. They called themselves vagabonds and I found myself intrigued because of the freedom. So in 2021 I packed everything I owned into a car and started roadtripping. Went across 40 states explored dozen of massive abandoned buildings including a former VA miltary medical campus that had a huge hospital with power still on at night alone and finding all sorts of interesting sleep spots along the way. My car broke down in Detroit on November 10 of 2021 and I've been homeless ever since. I've been homeless in the streets of Cleveland, Detroit, Las Vegas, Chicago, Seattle and Reno among other places. Seen it all from drugs to crime to migrants to violence and everything in between. I feel like my political background combined with my street smarts will give the fairest analysis possible regarding how this affects the state of our nation as well as some potentially controversial views especially in proposed solutions not to mention the migrant crisis. I've illegal ridden freight trains over 3,000 miles so far and seen scenery very few will ever see and survived outside in every scenario imaginable from -40 to 120 as well as slept in countless locations from forests to abandoned buildings to parking garages to behind buildings to bathrooms and everything in between. I've established quite a name for myself in this subculture amassing many connections all across the world which has allowed me access to a wide variety of life stories and perspectives. The journey shall continue soon enough and while I'm around I'd feel honored to be your podcast guest. Trust me it'll be one of the most mindblowing episodes possible. Please consider it, Cam. From Sham. Keep Hammering! (725) 270-0963 Social Media (KZfaq/Instagram/TikTok/Reddit): iamshamtheman Video Message: kzfaq.info/get/bejne/ot91l9VysqjFdZ8.htmlsi=YAHWt8wRIrA7efIX Article (Google "Sham Belt Magazine): beltmag.com/the-secrets-of-a-homeless-influencer/ Rachel's Story (Rape Survivor & Terminal Cancer Patient): photos.app.goo.gl/rB5ahrUyeUTMgN7R8
@data68002 ай бұрын
who knows his shoes? toebox looks wide..
@timvail2120Ай бұрын
speedland
@ThankyouJesus812 ай бұрын
I’m all for exercise, but this is killing yourself, a human bod is not able to sustain running 20 miles a day, your kneecaps are gonna fall apart like David Goggins slow the heck down this is ego driven madness
@kylelay68582 ай бұрын
He’s almost 60. You either rot away or work doing something you love. Keep hammering
@ThankyouJesus812 ай бұрын
@@kylelay6858 agreed. But this is to much and is ego driven.
@kylelay68582 ай бұрын
@@ThankyouJesus81 too much for who? To much for you maybe.
@rickjaramillo22882 ай бұрын
I look at it this way. Look at more mainstream sports. Athletes from the 50s and 60s had nowhere near the athleticism that athletes nowadays have. That's basically the evolution of the human body through the years. Now keep in mind ultra running is basically in the beginning of the sport. In another 30-40 years who's to say that running 20 Miles a day isn't going to be near the normal for people. These men and women doing it right now are basically like the babe Ruth of the sport
@ThankyouJesus812 ай бұрын
@@rickjaramillo2288 interesting, I think of it in reverse, that men back in the days were a lot more robust, because they had a lifetime of eaten Farm fresh food and never had artificial ingredients in their life or all this process. Their arteries were super clear. They were able to work out in the farms all day. Now, without heavy machinery, most men would die of a heart attack or stroke out there working like that. Idk. I was caught up in the run run run thing when Goggins first went mainstream. Ran a half marathon and was running 10 miles at a time three times a week. Then I started reading and researching theres a good chance you can just drop dead from a heart attack doing that stuff. It’s similar to staying up and doing cocaine for three days straight. Just not good for your heart to be working that hard for so long.