The first two races built capacity. Iceland demands conviction.
In April 2026, Cody will run approximately 365 miles (587km) across Iceland — from the northern edge of the Westfjords to the black sand beaches of Vík — one mile for every day of the year that this project took. The route crosses mountain passes, exposed coastline, unpredictable weather, and long stretches without shelter.
It should be noted that this isn’t a race — there is no finish line tape. No crowd or medal. Just Cody's team waiting for him at the end of his year, self-imposed goal.
It’s a sustained effort across days — managing fatigue, terrain, logistics, nutrition, and mindset in real time.
The marathon proved he could finish.
The ultramarathon proved he could endure.
Iceland asks something else entirely:
Can you keep going when the outcome isn’t guaranteed?