She Won a 100K Ultramarathon Through the Mountains — While Breastfeeding
- Stephanie Case, a 42-year-old human rights lawyer and ultrarunner, won the 100km Ultra-Trail Snowdonia while breastfeeding her six-month-old daughter in May 2025 in North Wales.
- Case returned to ultrarunning after a three-year break caused by infertility struggles, miscarriages, and IVF treatments, and was not aiming to win but to finish the race.
- The race was technically demanding and she received special permission to stop for feeding, highlighting the unique challenge of competing as a breastfeeding new mother.
- Case described her experience as quite unique but expressed hope that her success will help shift attitudes toward new mothers. She emphasized that there are not enough narratives highlighting new moms engaging in diverse activities and leading rich, multifaceted lives beyond traditional expectations.
- Her achievement sparked positive responses alongside misogynistic comments, and she plans to compete next in the 167km Hardrock 100 in Colorado in July 2025, demonstrating ongoing commitment to elite ultrarunning.
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She won a 100K ultramarathon through the mountains — while breastfeeding
Six months postpartum and still breastfeeding her infant daughter Pepper, Stephanie Case's only real aim was to finish the Ultra-Trail Snowdonia in North Wales' Eryri National Park and make sure her daughter was fed
·Birmingham, United States
Read Full ArticleThe next objectives are for the hospital to move forward to the second phase and initiate the accreditation process of the neonatal ICU and the health centres of the Integrated Care Management
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