US Long Course Championships 2004
David
Frei, Yvonne Deyo, and I traveled to French Lick Indiana for the US Adventure
Racing National Championships on November 5. Although we later qualified on our
own merits at Raid The Rock, we are competing as the Gateway Adventure Team,
taking the slot that David earned while racing with Jason Coleman and the Sonas
at Berryman.
The
trip gets off to an auspicious start when I get tied up at work Thursday
afternoon forcing David and Yvonne to head off without me. I arrive later that
evening, missing the race meeting. Fortunately, they were able to check in all
my gear, so no harm done. We spend the night in the opulent French Lick Spa
which is also the race headquarters, start, finish, and primary transition area.
The
next morning, we wake at 4AM to setup our transition area. We can't help but
feel a little small as we lay out a lame blanket on the grass amidst the tents
and canopies of the big sponsored teams. Fortunately, there is no rain in the
forecast, so the disadvantage is only psychological. At 5AM we are given the
race maps, instructions, and checkpoint coordinates. We spend the next two hours
plotting points and deciding what gear to bring on each leg.
Just
before 7AM we assemble with the 47 other teams in front of the hotel for the
start. Standing in the frigid air in a crowd of competitors, each of us holding
a 7-foot carbon fiber paddle by our side, one feels like part of the Gallic
horde at Alesia preparing the assault on Ceasar's ramparts as day breaks. We
obviously hope for better success, or at least fewer casualties. At just after
7, the horn sounds and we all squeeze through the start gate and begin our run
to the boats.
I'm
carrying Yvonne's paddle as well as my own because she's being towed by
David. Since she has both hands free, we have Yvonne carrying the punch card.
This works for about 200 meters at which point she drops it (in her defense,
Yvonne always uses a punch card case, so she's not used to carrying one free).
I turn around to get the card while Yvonne and David stop short and clothesline
the team behind us with the tow. By the time we've sorted it out we're in
last place. At least we can look forward to improving our position.
I
take over punch card duties and by the end of the 2-mile run, we've moved back
into the top half of the field. The checkpoint at the end of the run is inside
the ostentatious New Baden Hotel. This massive structure was the largest
free-standing dome in the world until the Houston Astros decided playing
baseball indoors was a good idea. The scale is so overwhelming that running
inside it is somewhat disorienting. Adding to the surrealism is the fact that
when we get to the center of the dome to punch, we appear to be standing in some
sort of bicycle museum. It's all pretty weird.
We
grab a boat and put into the river where we will spend the next few hours. After
just a few minutes of paddling, we hit a submerged branch and roll the boat. If
you've never been dumped into near freezing water, don't feel too bad, there
are better things to do with your time. The banks are too steep to climb out, so
we scramble up onto a log to right the canoe. We're back on our way without
loosing too much time, but we've lost a dozen positions and, as we soon find
out, that has some serious consequences downstream.
Along
the river are six logjams. None are big enough to be particularly dangerous, but
they do form choke points where only one or two teams can get through at a time.
At the first, we patiently wait in line for our turn to hop onto the logs and
then drag the boat over. At the second and third, we try portaging around, but
don't really get through any faster (getting the canoe up and down the steep
banks is a slow and difficult process.) At the fourth, David devises a new
tactic that works quite well. Yvonne and I hop out and take the packs. With the
boat lightened, David is able to paddle right up onto the logjam and pull the
boat over (passing the teams waiting in line along the bank). Yvonne and I run
along the bank and get back in further downstream. This method is a bit less
effective at the fifth jam because the bank is so steep that getting back in is
difficult. The sixth jam is quite large so the organizers have mandated a
portage. By this point the teams are spread out enough that we don't lose any
time waiting.
The
ambient temperature rises throughout the paddle, but the steep banks trap the
colder air over the water. Most of the time we are in the shade, so our clothes
remain wet. By the takeout we are all fighting hypothermia. Fortunately, the
next leg is a run, and that is always the quickest way to warm up. Still, the
time spent packing up the paddles and PFD's (which the race organizers will
bring to the next paddle section) is misery as I can't stop shaking.
We
start the run in around 30th place. The navigation is pretty easy,
but even at nationals, any navigation slows
down the back half of the field. I don't know why adventure racers don't
take navigation training more seriously. Of course, they probably wonder why we
don't take paddling more seriously.
We
have two maps for this section. With both David and I both navigating we blow
through the run at full speed (well, full speed for a race of this distance)
with no errors. At several checkpoints we see teams coming back the other way,
having overrun the control. The run ends with a fairly long slog down a
rock-strewn reentrant. This is where having all three members good at the same
thing really pays off. We zoom past a bunch of teams who are delayed by one or
more members not skilled at uneven terrain. Even though the run is only an hour
long, we get back to the French Lick Spa in the top 20.
At
the transition, we shed any clothes that are still wet and change into our
cycling shoes. It's almost noon and the weather has taken a big turn for the
better. Blue skies and warm autumn air buoy our moods as we set out on the
bikes. On the roads, I ride lead and navigate with David pushing Yvonne on
hills. On trails, David takes over the lead duties. The navigation is still easy
and we get to the end of the 90-minute leg in 15th place, having made
no mistakes.
We're
now faced with the second paddling leg. After the disastrous trip down the
river, we are determined to redeem ourselves. This time, we are on a large lake
that requires some non-trivial navigation. I'm in the front of the boat as
usual, so I get the maps. Much of the lake is filled with rotting trees. While
it's easy to paddle around the ones still standing, the stumps below the
surface are harder to spot. There are several tense moments when we feel a solid
bump on the bottom of the boat and wonder if we are going for another swim. The
paddle takes 2 hours and, although we don't pass any teams, we consolidate our
position and finish up feeling pretty good about our effort.
Sunset
is still a few hours off, but the temperature is dropping again. As we put our
packs back on and remount our bikes I am once again shivering badly. Yvonne and
David are both concerned, but I assure them that I'll be OK once we get
moving. The climb up away from the lake helps and after about half an hour I'm
feeling fine again.
About
this time we turn off roads onto trails. Unlike the trails we rode on the way to
the lake (which were steep in places but generally fast), these trails are muddy
and technical in spots. We have no trouble riding them, but the going is slow
and by the end we are all running out of food. The sun sets just before we get
back on roads. David's disappointed that the trail network was so simple.
True, there weren't too many places to go wrong, but a few teams sure blew it.
By the end of the trails we're up to eleventh even though we rode
conservatively.
David
has to ride lead now because I don't have a light on my helmet to read the map
by. Yvonne is drafting off David and I'm sitting on the back of the train.
After a few miles I find myself drifting off Yvonne's wheel. Hmmm, that's
weird, focus. I push a bit and get back on. Then it happens again. And again,
but this time I can't get back on. I call up ahead and they slow down a bit. I
stay with them for a while, but the next time the road tips upward, I'm off
again. I can't believe it. I'm bonking. On the bike. On the road. This
isn't supposed to happen. My sole purpose on this team is to punch big holes
in the air for David and Yvonne to slip through. My only salvation is that we
only have another 20 minutes to get back to French Lick.
Other
than a serious blow to the ego, my collapse has not had much affect on our
standing. We're still in eleventh and are told that fifth place is less than
half an hour in front of us. I'm usually the one snapping at the others to
hustle in the transition, but this time I tell them that we're going to have
to hang out for a bit while I get my blood sugar back up. After 20 minutes, 7
ounces of Hammer Gel, 2 Ensures, and some Fig Newtons, we're back on the road.
David
still does the bulk of the work on the front riding out to the orienteering
section. We pass one other team (finally in the top 10!) and by the time we get
to the end of the riding, I'm feeling OK.
The
orienteering section is laid out as a Farsta. This format is named for a Swedish
town where it was supposedly invented (the Norwegians have a competing claim).
The Scandinavians can squabble about the origins while the rest of the world
simply enjoys it as a great way to run a race. Basically, you do two (or more)
laps of a course. The course has forks and whichever fork you take on the first
lap, you go the other way on the second. Therefore, everybody covers the same
legs, but in a different order depending on which fork you get on which lap. It
gives all the excitement of mass start racing, without letting people blindly
follow around the course.
This
format is particularly good for us since we hope to pass some teams and don't
want them latching onto us as we go by. David carries the maps and I take the
punch card (which also tells us which forks to take). Although we have a few
small bobbles, we move well and make no big mistakes on the first lap. As I'm
about to punch the final control, I look at the number on the card: 8g. Hmmm, I
could have sworn we were going to 8h (the other fork). I ask David,
�Which control are we at?�
�8h.�
�We should be at 8g.�
�You said 8h.�
�I know, but we should be at 8g.�
�That's really bad.�
�How bad?�
�Like the exact wrong way bad.�
I
go over to look at the map. Sure enough, of all the forks to screw up, this one
is clearly the worst. We will have to go almost all the way back to 7 and then
do the leg to 8g. At this point I would excuse any reaction from uncontrollable
sobbing to homicidal rage, but my teammates offer neither. Instead, we turn
around and head back the way we came. Nobody talks for a long time.
The
error costs us about 15 minutes, which, in the context of 4 hours of technical
night orienteering, is not that terrible, especially considering that we are
still the fastest team through the section by a good margin. It does hurt just a
bit to spoil some really clean night navigation on David's part with such a
dumb mistake. If it bothered him, he didn't let on and by the middle of the
second loop he's got bigger problems: he can't keep anything down. Near the
end of the loop I offer to take the map so he can empty his stomach in peace.
Not much comes up, but with nothing going down it's only a matter of time
before he's toast.
The
orienteering section moves us all the way up to third, but the fourth place team
is only a few minutes behind us. They come into the transition while we are
still sorting out our gear for the trip back and get back out ahead of us. The
final leg is called a triad. We can take one bike and one (non-motorized)
scooter. We have to stay together, but we can swap equipment as much as we want.
Our original plan was to have David and I trading the bike while Yvonne rode the
scooter. Now we decide that David had better be on the scooter most of the way
and we'll just go as fast as we can with Yvonne towing me from the bike. It
works pretty well and David does hand me the scooter for a few short rests. We
get close enough to the team ahead that we start thinking it just might be
possible to nip them at the line. They clearly have more in the tank, though,
and lay down a brutal pace for a few miles that we simply can't match. With
two miles to go they are a minute up the road. We look over our shoulders and,
seeing no one, jog it in for a fourth place finish.
It's
2:07AM. While we're happy to be done, we are confronted with an unexpected
dilemma. We assumed the race would be considerably longer so we didn't rent a
room for the night. Now we are cold, dirty, and tired and can't do much about
it. To the rescue comes Matt Luetje who offers us the Race St. Louis Team room for the
remainder of the night. He even carries our bags up to the room. There are some
small favors that will never be forgotten and this is one of them.
It's
tempting in such cases to torture oneself with what-if scenarios. What if we'd
seen the branch and kept the boat upright? Being a few places further up the
field would have saved us some serious time at the logjams. What if we'd
accounted for the fact that the cold had us burning fuel faster than usual?
David and I might have avoided the bonk (a rare condition for either of us.)
What if I hadn't misread the punch card on the Farsta? That would have been 15
minutes for free. But the truth is that all teams have problems. Last year's
champs couldn't even finish after dumping their boat and running into severe
hypothermia. Getting past the obstacles is what matters. In that respect, we did
pretty well and we never turned on each other. So I'd say fourth in this field
is probably right about where we deserved to be and have managed to sleep
through the subsequent nights without dreaming up a thousand ways to save five
minutes and get third. Certainly, getting 40 minutes for second would have been
quite a stretch and no combination of factors would have had us in at 12:05 when
the winning team, Hooked on the Outdoors, was finishing.
The
course was a bit lean, both technically and in distance, for a championship
event. The organizers had originally planned for a caving section, which would
have been cool, but still wouldn't have put the winning time anywhere near 24
hours. However, the race organization was nearly flawless, and the course layout
was well thought out. On the whole it was a very satisfying weekend and a great
reminder of how much I enjoy racing with David and Yvonne.
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