Brian Metzler | April 14, 2026 | Comments: 2

For Harley Malek, spending the better part of two days walking around a farm with her mom, camping out with her sister, and eating pizza and quesadillas made by her dad was a great way to spend a weekend with her family. 

On April 2-4, the 12-year-old North Carolina girl participated in The Country Mile 48 Hour, a South Carolina event that attracts fast ultrarunners, first time-trail runners, hikers, and a wide range of older and younger participants who are encouraged to run or walk as far as they want whenever they want on a 4.167-mile loop course around Beechwood Farms, a mostly flat properly known for growing strawberries, sweet corn, squash and tomatoes throughout the spring and summer.

Harley, mostly walking with her mom, Alicia Malek, completed 25 laps, which means she covered 104.1 miles to take top overall honors in the under-19 division and place 28th overall out of 277 participants. While they jogged a little bit, they were mostly walking and talking. 

12-year-old Harley Malek celebrates finishing 104 miles
Harley Malek, 12, rings the bell after finishing 100 miles in The Country Mile 48-Hour event in South Carolina with her mom, Alicia Malek.

“It was fun, but it was hard at the same time,” said Harley Malek, who earned a silver belt buckle for her effort. “Next year I might want to try to do more, because it was fun to be out there to see what I could do. Maybe I won’t set a goal, and I’ll bring some of my friends, and we can just walk and talk and see how many miles we can do. It would be cool to show them what it’s all about.”

Harley’s younger sister, Sydney, 11, completed 10 laps for 41.67 miles to finish second overall in that age group, while Carter Reed, 16, was the boys under-19 winner with 15 laps for 62.5 miles. In all, there were a dozen kids between the ages of 8 and 17 who participated in the event.

As trail running has grown, there has been an increase in young participants accomplishing some big results. Last year, Nate Whiting, a 16-year-old from New Jersey, completed the 200-mile Three Days at the Fair event. For the past two years, 12-year-old Péma Franchi of Ecuador has competed well with adults on the international mountain running circuit, including top finishes in the Mammoth Trailfest. And in February, Marta Bontognali, 12, of Switzerland, completed the Black Canyon 50K in Arizona, in 5 hours, 39 minutes.

Alicia Malek is an experienced trail ultrarunner and insists the The Country Mile 48 Hour was a very low-key outing for the girls focused on easy exercise, fun, camping, and the community of the trail running scene and not an intense or competitive ultrarunning effort. Harley (jiu jitsu) and Sydney (gymnastics) are active in other sports and they enjoy camping and hiking on family outings.

“With this event, it’s not really about speed, it’s more about determination,” said Alicia Malek who finished sixth overall with 29 laps and 120.84 miles. “The main lesson that I want my girls to learn from my racing and now theirs, is that if they are determined to achieve a goal and work hard at it, they can do anything. I want them to take away the idea that life is about hard work and never giving up, not luck or talent.” 

The family is looking forward to a fun summer of adventures and is tentatively planning to participate in the Sadlers Creek Stumble—a South Carolina event with a 32-hour division and 26.2-mile, 13.1-mile, and 10K races—as well as returning to The Country Mile next spring. 

“It’s fun to watch kids do things that other kids are not doing,” says the girls’ father, Brian Malek, who served as the family cook and crew chief. “They’re not on tablets, they’re not sitting there playing video games. They’re out walking and getting exercise and talking with their mother. Some people say, ‘Oh, kids shouldn’t do this.’ And I look at it and say, ‘She spent 40 plus hours walking and talking with her mother. How can that be bad?’” 

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Author

  • Why I run

    I run to feel free and get loose from the rigidity of everyday life. Trail running has long been part of the foundation of my physical, mental and emotional health and has helped me remain grounded amid the many challenges and ebbs and flows of life. Running on trails through nature — whether it's a 30-minute easy jog or a 30-hour ultra-distance race — invigorates me like nothing else. That's why I run trails.

    My favorite trail to run

    I have hundreds of favorite trails, but the one I have been running with the most consistency is Mesa Trail in Boulder. It's flowy and fun, but challenging enough to require effort and numerous offshoots that can lead to bigger, more difficult adventures.

    What I hope to convey with my writing

    From the moment I took the role as the founding editor of Trail Runner magazine, my goal has been to share the joy, inspiration and life-changing vibe that I have so often experienced while trail running. It has introduced me to new people, taken me to amazing places around the world and has given me cues on how to approach other aspects of my life. Anyone can experience those things, no matter if they immerse in it once a week or as a way of life. That's what I hope to share with my writing.

    More about Brian

    I relish my experiences running the CCC 100K, several Boston, New York and Chicago marathons, and completing Leadman and four Ironman triathlons, but I'm more about long adventure runs and running up to high mountain peaks with friends than I am about pinning on a bib and racing. I've worked hard to build a career in the publishing industry by telling stories and sharing experiences about the things I like to do most: trail running, mountain biking, cycling, triathlon, mountaineering and all forms of skiing. In addition to being the founding editor of Trail Runner and Adventure Sports magazine, I've also worked and written for Running Times, Runner's World, Competitor, Outside, Men's Journal, Red Bulletin and authored several books, including "Kicksology: The Hype, Science, Culture and Cool of Running Shoes," and "Trail Running Illustrated: The Art of Running Free," (with co-author and friend Doug Mayer). Find more about me, my running and my work at BrianMetzler.com.

2 comments
  • Ed ‘Running Jester’ Ettinghausen

    Great article. So impressed seeing young people committing themselves to challenging, yet wholesome & healthy activities.
    Ever UPward & ONward…

  • Jess Henderson

    Go Harley (and Mom!) – you are so inspiring! I will be thinking about you when I attempt my first ultra race in a couple of months!
    -Jess from Bainbridge Island, WA

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