Simplicity trumps convenience

Why even trying to run UTMB (some 175km with a total of 10km of vert) without a pack on your shoulders and poles in your hands.
A why or two why I have chosen to run with a belt (aka waist pack) and handhelds only.
Well, style does matter, right? But so does simplicity.
Back in April 2025, Anton Krupicka wrote a nice peace about “Snow Shovels & Singlespeeds”, that is highly recommended.
In the end he argues that for some of us (e.g., his dad or his friend Joe) simplicity trumps convenience. Why riding a singlespeed bike without suspension over rugged terrain, when gears and (full) suspension are available? Why shovel snow by hand when motorized vehicles with a snowplow could do the job?
Coming back to running, I will try to elaborate on the fact why running with a belt and handhelds fells (i) free to me and (ii) simplifies things a lot. And what it has to do with singlespeed bikes too.
On my daily runs (usually early morning; welcome to the #5amclub!) I usually carry a handheld and have my phone, a survival blanket and a gel or two in a little belt or pockets in my shorts.
When I go longer, I do not want to change much. I add a handhelt or a flask to my belt and in the end the load carried in the belt (system) does increase due to more gels, a windbreaker and/or some spare cloths.
Why not loading a running vest as many of us do?
A crash with my old singlespeed bike from the 1970s back in 2016 left me with a badly broken collarbone (into three pieces!) that required a big plate to fix all back in place.
After removing that plate a year later, a big scar across that deformed collarbone ever since bothers me when carrying a backpack and especially when running with a relatively light vest. Therefore, besides feeling free without a pack, it actually allows me to run pain free and without any worry about that scar tissue becoming irritated. Over the years I managed to run a lot of races without a pack (and finish strong or even atop the podium on some, including 100 milers).
Yet, running UTMB with a massive mandatory gear list that included an additional cold weather kit this year (that was so so necessary!) was a challenge in its own.
Luckily, companies started to address the bounce issues in belts in the recent years. Matt Trappe wrote a timely piece about the fact that some brands moved their attention away from packs towards belts.
In the end, thanks to a great customer service at Ultraspire (no, I am not sponsored by this brand and I paid the full price as well as duties and taxes to get it from the US to Austria), I got my hands on a “mountain racer waist pack”
That belt is - as the name states – a waist pack and it loads a ton of gear. Testing it extensively between Lavaredo 120k (where I used a belt system consisting of a Raide Research belt and a Satisfy running belt) and the actual start of UTMB, I made my choice to stick to my approach and get the loop done with a waist pack only and a pair of handhelds.
No need to thick about when to use poles and when to stow them away. If you have none, you do not have to think about them. Simple, not necessarily easy. The rest is history. The weather was intense the first night and my run wasn’t perfect; but I am proud of having completed that awesome loop around Mont Blanc and in doing so, being at least one of a very few that did so without a vest on my shoulders (and my scar tissue) and without poles.


Simplicity trumps convenience.
And as Toni wrote: “How I do something feels far more important than any end-goal objective.”
