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The 50th Bloomsday race saw 43,670 registrants, with 38,335 finishers, marking a full recovery in participation since the pandemic. This year had the highest number of finishers since 2017 and registrants since 2016.
May 3—Shoes pounded the pavement, hearts beat fast and runners sweated through the afternoon heat during the 50th Bloomsday in the Lilac City.
Bethany Lueck, the Lilac Bloomsday Association spokesperson, said of the 43,670 people who registered for Bloomsday, about 38,335 Bloomies crossed the finish line. Of the total registrants, approximately 2,200 of them completed the 12-kilometer course virtually.
The race marked the first year that Bloomsday numbers fully recovered from the major decline in the pandemic. There were more finishers than any year since 2017 and more who registered since 2016.
Lueck said there were no major injuries to report during this year's run. Spokane police Officer Tricia Leming said there were no incidents of consequence to report.
While no one suffered any major injuries, there were several reports of heat stroke due to the unseasonably warm temperatures.
"I think it is one of the warmest on record," Lueck said. "I think the warmest was the first one, because they had a 1 p.m. start time."
Miranda Cote, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service, said the high for the 50th Bloomsday was 78 degrees around 4 p.m. During the peak of the race, between noon and 2 p.m., temperatures reached between 73 and 75 degrees . At 9 a.m., during the start of the race, Cote said the temperature was 62 degrees .
"Rain or shine, we do it," said Stacia Ray, a 40-year-old Bloomie who's competed in Bloomsday almost every year since she was 18. "And it's always fun."
Lueck said they had to delay the start of the wheelchair leg at 8:45 a.m. because someone left their bike on Doomsday Hill and they had to clear the course. Another short delay occurred in the red group because of "sheer massive numbers."
"I think today was just the perfect way to encapsulate the magic of Bloomsday and what Bloomsday represents for our community," Lueck said. "That culture of moving your body and getting outside and being with the people that you love is what this is all about."
A total of 43,670 people registered for the 50th Bloomsday race.
The race experienced unseasonably warm temperatures, leading to several reports of heat stroke.
This year had more finishers than any year since 2017.
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