Blisters don’t get SA’s Mackay down as she tackles fourth leg of desert marathon
Ahead of embarking on the 250km race across the Saharan desert, Johannesburg resident Moerieda Mackay had said her biggest challenge would be managing her feet, and on the third leg yesterday, she battled blisters.
It’s onto the fourth, long stage of the challenging Marathon Des Sables (MDS) for the 1 198 competitors, including South Africa’s Moerieda Mackay, who completed the third leg on Tuesday despite getting “nasty blisters”, reports The Citizen.
The fourth stage is not dubbed “the long one” for nothing as competitors will have to complete a distance of 86.2km across the hot, Saharan desert in Morocco in less than 35 hours.
Today : fourth stage !
86.2 km of amazing landscapes 😁#MDS2017 pic.twitter.com/V67f9Mj1iD— MARATHON DES SABLES (@marathonDsables) April 12, 2017
The fourth stage began on Wednesday afternoon, Johannesburg time.
The fourth stage has begun !
Good luck everybody #MDS2017 pic.twitter.com/xoX79drsEY— MARATHON DES SABLES (@marathonDsables) April 12, 2017
Mackay sent word to The Citizen from the race on Tuesday that she was “fine”, “having the time of my life” and “really enjoying the whole MDS experience”, although she said she “got some nasty blisters” which she received treatment for in the medical tent.
As though she had predicted that she would get blisters during the marathon, in an interview with The Citizen prior to embarking on her challenge, Mackay had said her biggest challenge would be managing her feet.
“Blisters, blisters, blisters – I know I am going to get them! My feet have been so sensitive during the last few months during traning,” said Mackay, adding that she had even watched videos on blister management and seen a podiatrist for advice on how to take care of her feet.
Ahead of the race she said she had not recovered from her ankle injury during a training camp in October last year where she had lost her balance, fell and torn her ankle ligaments. She also partially tore her tendon.
“I don’t have any pain but mobility is not 100% yet. I will have to keep a close eye on my ankle,” she had exclaimed, however on Tuesday she hadn’t mentioned any pain from her ankle, just that it was hot and the course was tough. Temperatures in the desert are said to reach 48.8°C.
Mackay had explained before the race that the course was the equivalent of running six marathons in six days “in the most inhospitable conditions”.

– Caxton News Service
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