The Bryant family has been working Frosty Moss exchange areas for years and has won awards for their imaginative themes. (Peninsula Adventure Sports)

The Bryant family has been working Frosty Moss exchange areas for years and has won awards for their imaginative themes. (Peninsula Adventure Sports)

RUNNING: Volunteers make Frosty Moss Relay

PORT ANGELES — Saturday will bring the return of the Frosty Moss Relay, a team endurance race from the Sol Duc Valley to Blyn that also manages to be fun and whimsical with teams competing in costumes and even dressing up their support vehicles in themes.

The event, put on by Peninsula Adventure Sports, couldn’t happen without an army of volunteers and local businesses supporting the race, manning 14 exchange zones over 80 miles between Cooper Ranch Road west of Lake Crescent and Blyn.

“The exchange zones are the backbone of the event. This is where one relay team member hands off to another, and a lot of the fun happens,” race director Lorrie Mittmann said. “The exchange is where the teams waiting for their runner really get a chance to get to know each other. Teams of similar speed end up socializing their way across the county.”

ADVERTISEMENT
0 seconds of 0 secondsVolume 0%
Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
00:00
00:00
00:00
 

These groups include: YMCA Youth in Government, Port Angeles High School Key Club (Kiwanis), Back Country Horsemen, Crescent Bay Lions, Sea Scouts, Field Hall, Sequim High School Cross Country, Peninsula Trails Coalition, Port Scandalous Roller Derby, 7 Cedars Casino, Moss Boutique, the North Olympic Healthcare Network and the Sequim-Dungeness Chamber of Commerce.

The race also receives help from Clallam County Amateur Radio Emergency Services, Clallam Fire District 2 and the Clallam County Community Emergency Response Teams, as well as lodging tax grants from Clallam County, the cities of Port Angeles and Sequim and Olympic Peninsula Visitors Bureau.

“I also have volunteers that help with racers check-in, bicycle sweep of the entire 80 miles, course-marking volunteers ahead of the race, and something I call ‘halo brigade’ — they bike out after dark from the finish line and find any runners who are out there in the dark by themselves and see if they want company. If they do, they bike to the finish line with them,” Mittmann said.

“Race day is grueling, but the volunteers make it fun along the way. I love being part of a community that supports each other,” said race volunteer coordinator Michell Gentry.

In addition to being hubs of fun, the exchange zones are where the progress and safety of the event is monitored. Volunteers from Clallam County ARES are on hand to help with communications, and there are bicycle sweeps following the last runner in. The race EMT works his or her way along the course from one exchange to another, and the race staff are also working their way from exchange to exchange throughout the 16-hour race.

There also are a pair of families who provide volunteer help. The Bryant family comes out most every year, winning the best exchange zone contest in 2020 with its “Woodland Fairies” theme and in 2023 with “Man Cave” theme and in 2024 with its “Sasquatch” theme.

Another family volunteering this year is “LDS Young Men and Young Women” led by Brittany Hales.

Other theme winners over the years include the Back Country Horsemen in 2019 and 2021 and the Sequim High School cross-country team in 2022.

Sign-ups are full for the Frosty Moss. Peninsula Adventure Sports also puts on other endurance events around the Olympic Peninsula, including the Olympic Adventure Trail run in April, the Great Olympic Adventure Trail Run in September, the Big Hurt in September, the Salt Creek 24 in October and the Gravel Unravel in June and July.

________

Sports Editor Pierre LaBossiere can be contacted at 360-417-3525 or sports@peninsuladailynews.com.

More in Sports

Port Angeles Roughriders
PREP SOFTBALL: Roughriders win behind clutch hitting, pitching in 7th inning

The Port Angeles softball team is crushing teams it should… Continue reading

Forks Spartans
PREP SPORTS: Forks boys soccer earns win over Tenino on PKs

The Forks soccer team, twice down by a goal, scored… Continue reading

WIAA
PREP SPORTS: WIAA sanctions girls flag football; does not pass transgender policy

For the first time since 1999, the Washington Interscholastic Activities… Continue reading

The first leg of this year’s Northwest Cup was held this past weekend at the Dry Hill race course. Nearly 500 racers from all across the Pacific Northwest competed. Here, Brandon Hintz of Seabeck flies down the bottom of the course. The NW Cup returns to Dry Hill May 16-18. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
DOWNHILL BMX: NW Cup returns to Dry Creek with nearly 500 competitors

Nearly 500 riders from all around the Pacific Northwest… Continue reading

Eli Allen, Quilcene baseball.
ATHLETE OF THE WEEK: Eli Allen, Sequim baseball

Eli Allen has been a huge part of the Quilcene baseball team’s… Continue reading

Sequim’s Chrissy Brown (106) runs the Railroad Bridge Run 5K last year in Sequim with her 8-year-old son. More than 450 people are expected to participate in this year’s sixth annual race. (Run the Peninsula)
RUN THE PENINSULA: Railroad Bridge Run returns Saturday

The second race in the Run the Peninsula series takes… Continue reading

Forks' Gage Willenbrink leaps in the high jump at the Forks Lions Club Track and Field Invite on Saturday. Willenbrink finished third in the high jump with a height of 5 feet, 6 inches. (Lonnie Archibald/for Peninsula Daily News)
TRACK ROUNDUP: Forks, Crescent girls rack up wins at Lions Club Invite

PA’s Pierce, Sequim’s Hulstedt win at Li’l Norway meet

Port Angeles
PREP BASEBALL: Port Angeles can’t catch up to powerhouse Gig Harbor

Quilcene’s Allen strikes out 15 in five innings