IMRA Western Yards Backyard Ultra Last One Standing – Saturday 30th May 2026 Race Report
The weekend started with the setup of the GTC Gazebo on Friday evening in the glorious sunshine. This would be the home of 5 (fool)hardy GTC souls from noon on Saturday, until when, they did not know yet…..
This is because a Backyard Ultra (BYU) is an event where runners have to complete a 6.7k lap (or yard to use proper BYU lingo) in an hour and keep doing that on the hour, every hour, until they can’t. Those who reach the 24 hour mark get to say they have done 100 miles, which is where the idea came from. Participants usually use a run-walk strategy and aim to complete each lap in about 45-50 minutes, to give enough time for a break to fuel and hydrate, but avoid too much rest which might mean getting cold or stiff. Everyone has their own way of doing things though, and it is all about what works for each person. For Last One Standing events, everyone except the winner is considered a DNF, regardless of how many laps they do! Last weekend, the consolation prize for DNFing was an IMRA (Irish Mountain Running Association) branded pint glass and a can of Galway Bay Brewery Beer!
Kilcornan Walled Garden in Clarinbridge is possibly the best setting imaginable for such an event. Runners flocked from all corners of the county, country and globe to set up their base in this secluded part of the beautiful surrounding woods. These ranged from a simple camp chair to one-man tents to larger gazebos, for those of us lucky enough to be sharing the experience with club mates. It created a festival-like atmosphere that had everyone (runners, volunteers and supporters) buzzing before the event even started!
This is around the time I started to need the painkillers, caffeine gels and Nuasan CBD rub. I continued to lap 9 with GTC clubmate Patrick Dunne by my side. We kept each other going, talking about anything and everything, most of which is a blur….
Patrick finished on an incredible 10 laps, smashing his last year’s achievement by 2. Then I was on my own, in the dark, literally. Lap 11 was when the headtorches and high vis were mandatory, and the race took on a very different but also very unique vibe. The meadow and woods that had been so familiar for the last 10 hours were now strangely unfamiliar but familiar at the same time…
The rest of the field continued long into the night with 14 runners making it to 24 laps. The eventual winner, Colin Dockery, did 35 laps and now holds the course record.
While it was a gruelling day and the legs were sore for most of it, it was exceptional craic and extremely well organised by Galway Trail Running Club. The event is much more about community than competition and the majority of participants outdid their expectations. Those who didn’t will no doubt be back again in 2027 for “one more lap”, “one more year”.




