Easy as Pi
Here's a little known fact that literally no one cares about: Josh and I ran our first run on 3/14/2015. It was a memorable experience. Winter had been especially unruly that year. Feet of snow lay at the PEAS farm trailhead, in Missoula, and had baked all day in the unusually warm late winter sun. At the time, Josh was not much of a runner and I chose an easy break in trail run for us to do. While the route was truly an easy introductory run, it stands out as one of my least favorite runs of all time (and that's not just because of the company). Josh may look and act like a neatherthal but the guy has a big brain (probably because of neanderthal cranium). Since it was Pi day, Josh decided to lecture me in the theory of 4π radiotherapy using a linear acclerator to deliver beam radiation to patients or something. Anyway, what I'm saying is that I had to run really fast to keep him from talking. Between the 2 feet of slush, slipping feet, brutal pace, and stimulating conversation, the run was anything but a walk in the park. However, to make up for it this March we're making it a bit easier.
This month the challenge is pretty simple. On 3/14, you must run 3.14 miles (ride 9.42 miles). The more slices of Pi that you run/ride, the more entries you get in the drawing. So, if you run 6.28 miles (ride 18.84 miles) you'll get 2 entries, etc. etc and so on. So, make it as easy or as difficult as you'd like, but remember to bring some headphones just in case you need them. Once you've done the activity sign up for the challenge and don't forget to tag @Josh Pierce and @Ryan Mellem in your activity. We will pick one winner at random for the monthly prize. As always: Have fun, be safe, and anything worth doing is worth overdoing.
Josh and Ryan
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6936196/