Dirty Dan takes the Pacific Coast FKT!
FKT Smashed: Dirty Dan's Pacific Coast Record
Dirty Dan is back to break down his record-setting Pacific Coast FKT. Two conversations in now — the pre-ride chat before he rolled out, and this one, recorded less than two days after he finished — and if anything, this episode is even better than the first.
Dan rode from the US-Canada border to the Mexico border in 6 days, 15 hours, and 53 minutes, demolishing the previous record of 9 days and 13 hours across a 2,650 km route. His daily average was roughly 400 km. His total stop time across the entire effort — sleep, food, motels, gas stations, all of it — was just one day and eight hours.
How It Unfolded
The start was anything but smooth. A last-minute wind forecast check revealed a southerly headwind locking in along Oregon right when he'd be there. He made the call the same afternoon to start a day early, scrambled to Bellingham with his brother, barely slept, and rolled away from the border at 5:30 AM into rain and a puncture within the first 30 kilometres.
Day one ended at midnight after 280 miles. He set up his bivy — and discovered his brand new sleeping pad had a slow leak. Night one was on the ground, broken sleep, 40-degree temperatures.
Oregon delivered the headwind he'd feared. Two days of grinding into a relentless southerly wind along exposed coastal sections, speed down, morale tested. His response: stop checking the average speed, keep pedaling, and fixate on the California border. One mile per hour is better than zero. When he finally crossed into California, the weather eased and largely stayed good to the finish.
By day five, he was flying. The body had adapted, the rhythm was locked in, and he rode the final stretch feeling genuinely great — which is exactly what you want after banking enough rest and food in the early days to still have something left.
The Spirit of the Thing
What made this ride worth following wasn't just the pace. Dan stayed open the entire way — stopping for photos with diner staff, chatting with strangers, engaging with everyone who was curious about what he was doing. Once he hit California, supporters started showing up roadside in groups, sometimes ten or more, with signs and cheering. He says it felt like it was happening almost every hour toward the end.
That energy is real. And it's a choice. There's a version of this effort where you put your head down and shut the world out. Dan chose the other version, and it clearly worked.
Practical Notes
Sleep was a constant negotiation between bivy and motels — faster vs. better quality. His advice: carry the full kit regardless. The freedom to sleep anywhere is worth the weight.
Fueling was his biggest area for improvement. The body takes a few days to fully adapt to the caloric demand, and he wasn't eating consistently enough early on. Go-tos: sour gummy worms and chocolate milk at every 7-Eleven stop, sit-down diner meals when timing allowed. He brushed his teeth up to three times a day, sometimes while riding. Small stuff, but it keeps you feeling human.
The bike was an unreleased Trek endurance road bike, 35mm tires, SRAM Force AXS, full Tailfin bag setup. Everything held up across 2,650 km.
What's Next
Dan flies to Prudhoe Bay, Alaska on July 17th to attempt the FKT from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego — roughly 11 times the distance of this ride. The current record is 75 days. He's already thinking about what it'll feel like to finally hit his groove two weeks in and have months of riding still ahead.
We'll be following along.
Connect: tuftcamps@gmail.com [tuftcamps@gmail.com] | Instagram & Strava: FKT Challenges
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