There is something about turning 60 that sharpens your sense of time. The window for certain physical adventures does not close at 60, but it does get your attention. If you have been putting off a bucket-list race, now is exactly the right moment to stop waiting.
Anthony Copeland-Parker, the author behind Running With Cat, understands this better than most. In his fifties, he and his partner Catherine learned she had Early-Onset Alzheimer’s. Instead of retreating, they sold their home, retired from their jobs, and spent the next several years running marathons and half-marathons across the globe. From Antarctica to Madagascar to Bhutan, they finished every race hand in hand. That story is not just inspiring. It is a reminder that your best athletic chapters are still ahead of you if you choose to write them.
Here are ten marathons worth putting on your list before you hit that milestone birthday.
Few courses match this one for raw scenery. The route runs along the rugged California coastline, climbing and dropping through ocean wind with the Pacific always in view. It is a tough course, but the kind of tough that stays with you for life.
If you want a story to tell, this is it. Runners climb actual sections of the Great Wall of China, navigating thousands of steps in a race that is more about grit than pace. Anthony referenced the Great Wall in his own travels, and for good reason. There is no course on earth quite like it.
This is the one that separates the dreamers from the doers. Run on King George Island near the Antarctic Peninsula, this race attracts a small, committed field of runners from around the world. It is remote, it is cold, and it is completely unforgettable. It also happens to be one of the destinations Anthony and Catherine reached during their years as nomads.
This is the original course, or close to it. Starting in Marathon and finishing in the Panathenaic Stadium in Athens, this race connects you to the history of the distance itself. If you are going to run 26.2 miles, there is something powerful about doing it on the road that started it all.
Tokyo is a World Marathon Major, which means organization and crowd support are exceptional. But beyond the logistics, the city itself is a destination. The course moves through neighborhoods that feel both ancient and ultramodern, and the cheering from local spectators is unlike anything you will find at a domestic race.
Held in Tromso above the Arctic Circle, this race takes place in June when the sun does not set. Running at midnight in full daylight is genuinely surreal. The combination of fjord scenery and that eerie, golden all-night light makes this one of the most unusual marathons in the world.
Some runners need more than a finish line. They need a challenge that tests judgment, pacing, and resilience over hours of hard terrain. These races deliver that.
The research on masters athletes is consistent: people who stay physically active into their fifties and beyond tend to maintain more strength, cognitive sharpness, and emotional resilience than those who slow down. Running does not stop the clock, but it gives you a meaningful relationship with time.
For caregivers especially, physical training can be one of the few spaces that belong entirely to you. It is time when the weight of watching someone you Love struggle with illness can be set aside for an hour, a mile, a finish line. Anthony’s story illustrates this better than any study could. Running was not an escape from reality. It was a way of staying present in it.
Before you register, be honest with yourself about a few things:
Every runner who has crossed a major finish line will tell you the same thing. The medal is nice, but the medal is not why you did it. You did it because you wanted to know you could. You did it because the training changed you. You did it because somewhere along the route, at mile 18 or mile 22, you learned something about yourself that a comfortable life would never have taught you.
That is the spirit behind Running With Cat. Anthony and Catherine did not run the world because it was easy. They ran it because the alternative, giving in to fear and loss, was not something either of them was willing to accept.
If any of this resonates with you, Anthony’s memoirs ‘Running All Over the World’ and ‘One Footstep at a Time’ are both available now. They are the kind of books that make you want to lace up your shoes before you even finish the last page.
The post 10 Best Marathons to Run Before You Turn 60 first appeared on Running With Cat.