There’s a lot of talk about health in this year’s presidential campaign, and most of it has a critical tone: Donald Trump would be the oldest president ever. Hillary Clinton has pneumonia. But Men’s Health magazine looks at the upside in a piece by Robert Bergland headlined “Is Gary Johnson the Fittest Presidential Candidate of All Time?”

Answer: “No contest.” Johnson, 63, a two-term governor of New Mexico who is charitably described as “running a distant third,” has climbed the highest mountain on each of the seven continents, including Mount Everest. He has completed 17 marathons, with a killer personal best time of 2 hours 47 minutes. He’s finished four Ironman World Championship triathlons, achieving an “impressive” time of 10 hours 39 minutes in 1999. (The all-time records for men are around eight hours.)

Six months after a 2005 paragliding accident left him with multiple broken bones, Johnson took a 1,500-mile bicycle trip across some notably hot and mountainous territory — Santa Fe, N.M., to California’s Napa Valley. Although he cut back his running regimen after getting frostbitten toes on Everest, he still tries to get 15 to 21 hours of athletic activity a week, reduced to six hours during election season. He doesn’t do sugar or alcohol — but he has used medical marijuana, for pain relief after the paragliding incident.

With polling numbers in the single digits, Johnson isn’t raising expectations that he will be bringing his impressive fitness résumé to the White House. But he has a plan if he loses, he told the magazine: He wants to bicycle the Continental Divide from Banff, Canada, to Antelope Wells, N.M. “I discovered a long time ago that being as fit as I could possibly be every day was something that made my life work,” he said. “So I’m as fit as I can be every day of my life.”