RACES: Half-Marathon
Half-Marathon Registration Information
2024 General Registration opened at 12PM (noon, eastern time) on Friday, November 3rd.
8/12/2024 reg update: General registration reached capacity and closed at midday on August 12th.
Charity Bibs: Good news! A limited number of Charity Bibs are available. Click HERE to learn more!
This means that the only option to sign up for the Half, or to switch race distances from the Marathon or Relay to the Half, is through the Charity Bib program.
Half-Marathon Registration Fee Schedule:
$95 (March 1 — April 30)
$110 (May 1 — June 30)
$130 (July 1 — August 31)
$140 (September 1 — reg close)
General Registration deadline: September 10th
All participants must be signed up in advance. No new registrations will be accepted at the Pre-Race Expo. There is no day of race registration.
Important!
General Registration is limited and may close before the published deadline without notice. The race committee recommends signing up well in advance if you are training and planning to participate.
A limited number of Charity Bibs may be available after General Registration closes.
If you previously deferred your entry to this year, you must claim your deferred entry by May 1st.
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Start TIME & Location ➤Half
Start time— 8:30AM (eastern time)
Start location— 5 Manchester Road, Northeast Harbor - Maine
There is no early start time option for the Half-Marathon. If you are walking the Half-Marathon please self-seed yourself in the rear of the starting field so that faster runners are in front of you. We ask that you do this to help avoid collisions between participants in this congested area.
Also, please keep in mind that the fastest Marathoners will catch up to you and pass you on the course. The very first Marathoners will come up from behind you very quickly. You must yield to them. This means you must proceed single-file when faster runners are present. Do NOT jog/walk more than two abreast (i.e, side-by-side) after the marathon runners start to catch you. Failure to do so could result in a collision and serious injury.
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COURSE TIME LIMIT ➤Half
There is an 4-hour course limit. This means that you must be able to maintain an average pace of 18-minutes per mile.
The course and finish line will close at 2:30PM for all events.
Please note: There is no early start available; all Half-Marathon participants will start at 8:30AM.
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Course Description ➤Half
USATF Sanctioned & Certified: #ME23003JG
Our 13.1-mile foot race starts at the half-way mark of the full marathon course in the picturesque village Northeast Harbor.
The first miles of the course gently roll along the mouth of the only true fjord on the Atlantic Coast, lined with the pink granite that makes up most of the area, Somes Sound nearly bisects the entire Island. (These first miles are literally on the edge of this remarkable topographical marvel!)
The low point on the course, will come at about mile 3 along the eastern shore of Somes Sound. This is followed by a slight rise to mile 4, and then a sharp incline from 4 to 5, heading up to the cliffs of the interior end of the fjord. Running hills makes for powerful camaraderie. Mile 6 is a giveback downhill, and then the gradual ascent from mile 7 to 12 begins in Somesville, the quintessential New England village.
Approaching mile 13 will be the high point of the course, literally and figuratively, and affording great views. And it will be all downhill from there. The final 1.1 miles to the finish line in charming Southwest Harbor descends; yes, that last 2,000 meters will be all down. But what a sky-high feeling of accomplishment it will bring!
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Course Map & Profile ➤Half
Rules of the road ➤Half
The Marathon, Half-Marathon, and Team Relay are all run on the same course. The Marathon & Team Relay start in Bar Harbor, while the Half-Marathon starts in Northeast Harbor.
Portions of our course are open to local traffic. Please be respectful of our neighbors who are sharing their roads with us. Course marshals and public safety officials will be directing traffic at key intersections. Please be aware of vehicles around you. If wearing headphones, which we strongly discourage, please remove one ear bud and keep the volume down. (Noise cancelling headphones are strictly prohibited!)
The Half-Marathon course has been measured and certified according to official USATF standards at a distance of 13 miles 176 yards / 21.0975 km. [Certification #ME23003JG]
This Half-Marathon course measurement and certification has been measured on the LEFT side of the road, FACING oncoming traffic. Do NOT run far out in the traffic lane, or cross the center line, over to the right side of the road as you will not be running the entire certified distance, and you will risk being disqualified. It is very important to note that parts of the course will remain OPEN to local & volunteer automobile traffic.
The ONLY section of the Half-Marathon course closed to thru-traffic is along Somes Sound on Sargeant Drive. (Approx. miles 1 - 4.5.) On this section of the course that is closed to thru traffic, runners should use caution, but may take the shortest possible paved route, on either side of the road, to cover the accurate marathon distance. (Note: Even on the sections of the course closed to thru-traffic, there may been limited local traffic or course volunteers.)
It is the participant’s responsibility to know the course.
Disqualification: Anyone seen running or walking on the RIGHT side of the course, (except along Sargeant Drive –see above) will be doing so in an unsafe manner and in violation of the rules of the event. Since the course has been measured on the LEFT facing traffic any such violation may result in running less than the full distance and the participant risks immediate disqualification.
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Land Acknowledgement
The Mount Desert Island Half-Marathon runs on unceded territory of the Wabanaki Confederacy.
We recognize and honor the current Tribes who comprise the Wabanaki Confederacy—the Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, Maliseet, and Micmac peoples—as distinct, sovereign, legal and political entities with their own powers of self-governance and self-determination, who have stewarded this land throughout the generations. We respect the traditional values of these Tribes and affirm their inherent sovereignty in this territory. We support their efforts for land and water protection and restoration, and for cultural healing and recovery.
We pause in remembrance of the Tribes of the Wabanaki Confederacy whose lives and land were taken through genocidal strategies of colonial settlement of this land.
We pay respect to elders both past and present, and we commit to the ongoing work of decolonization in Maine and beyond.
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All settlers, including recent arrivants, have a responsibility to consider what it means to acknowledge the history and legacy of colonialism:
❖ What are some of the privileges settlers enjoy today because of colonialism?
❖ How can individuals develop relationships with peoples whose territory they are living on in the contemporary geopolitical landscape?
❖ What might you be doing that perpetuates settler colonial futurity rather than considering alternative ways forward?
❖ Do you have an understanding of the on-going violence and the trauma that is part of the structure of colonialism?
The resources below are a great starting point as you contemplate your position relative to the land you occupy, but we encourage you to dig deeper, as well—to seek out additional information and to build authentic connections within your own communities.
General Resources:
'I regret it': Hayden King on writing Ryerson University's territorial acknowledgement
In Her Own Words: Fiona Apple on New Album “Fetch the Bolt Cutters” & Acknowledging Indigenous Lands — Interview by Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!
Native Land Map — Enter an address and this interactive map can identify traditional indigenous territories, native languages spoken in that area, and the treaties that apply to that land.
Maine-Specific Resources:
Dawnland Signals (WERU archives)
Indigenous Voices (WERU archives)
Reimagining Indigenous-Settler Relations — Interview by Ron Beard of Talk of the Towns on WERU Community Radio.
USM Bertha Crosley Ball Center for Compassion Land Acknowledgement
Wabanaki Windows (WERU archives)
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CANCELLATION POLICY
The Mount Desert Island Marathon is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. Entry fees, including optional add-ons, and/or charity donations, are non-refundable. No exceptions. (A limited number of deferrals may be available, see FAQ page for more information.) This no-refund policy is clearly posted and must be agreed to by all entrants at the time of registration. This policy applies to all entrants and is in effect whether the entrant’s plans change, the entrant becomes injured, or if the entrant has an unexpected family emergency / business emergency / medical emergency / or if the entrant is unable to participate for any other reason not already listed above. Once the entrant has paid the entry fee they will not receive a refund if they cannot participate, or if the event is canceled because of weather, natural disaster, public health crisis, unforeseen circumstances, or for any other reason not already listed above. (Income generated from registration is almost entirely expended prior to race day.) Bib numbers, race materials, and/or other incentive items will not be mailed. The race committee reserves the right to accept or reject any entries.