This past weekend, Brent, Brian, and I teamed up for our penultimate race of the season – the East Coast Adventure Racing Series Championship.
After injuring my ankle in Scotland, I went back-and-forth a fair bit about whether to race, ultimately concluding that it would be smarter to find a sub and rest up for Nationals, coming up in mid-October. But of course, it’s the end of the season and a busy time of year, and most of our AR friends were either racing, recovering, resting, or rehabbing.
So, a week and a half ago, with my ankle seemingly healing quickly, I decided to go for it.
And truth be told, I was sort of looking forward to racing. We’ve had a great season, have put in a lot of hard work, and have earned some results that I’m really proud of. I wanted to cap it off with the two championship races and share in the excitement with my teammates.
(Plus, my picture’s on the website banner – how could I not be there?)
With a midnight start and a ton of elevation and distance to cover in 18 hours, the race provided some unique challenges, but overall, we had a great time out in the woods.
When the dust settled (and some logistical issues were sorted out), we ended the day tied for second with Team Rev3, earning enough points for a second place finish in the ECARS series as well.
Check out Brent’s blog for a recap of the race (and explanation for the tie).
All in all, I was really glad I made the trip out there – but I was also reminded that almost nine months of near-continuous racing is beginning to take a toll.
Though mentally I felt good, physically I was spent. My lungs felt foggy, my legs were heavy, and my ankle – which I thought was well on its way to normal – lasted about 10 hours before it blew up again.
When I got home Sunday night, I didn’t waste any time. With fewer than four weeks until Nationals, I knew I needed to come up with a solid plan for rehab and recovery.
The first stop? A phone call to one of my teammates, a physical therapy virtuoso, to schedule an appointment ASAP.
I went to see him tonight, and after an hour of pushing and pulling and poking and prodding, I learned that there’s a little bit more going on than I initially thought.
That self-diagnosed tendonitis during the race?
Turns out it was a high ankle sprain – complete with a partially torn ligament connecting my foot to my knee and a subluxated talus (the bone on the front of the ankle).
Yeah, I did a lot of googling to figure out what all those something-or-others were and how all the this-and-thats fit together.
And so, between now and October 12, Operation Ankle-Rehab will be in full effect.
There will be bags of ice, handfuls of ibuprofen, heel lifts and ankle braces and IT stretches and achilles ultrasounds.
I’ve got three weeks and three days to get this ankle into shape.
It’s been nearly two weeks since Brent and I returned from Scotland, and 15 days since we crossed the finish line of the Adidas Terrex five-day adventure race.
The prospect of writing a report of our 106 hours on the race course has me quaking in my Salomons, but since we have our next race coming up next week, I thought I’d better get started!
So, without further ado: Storming the Castle: The Adidas Terrex Adventure Race in Five Parts
The lineup: Thor, Mark, Brent, and me
Part I: The Prologue
The race began in earnest on Monday morning, August 20, but teams gathered the night before at the famed Stirling Castle for a four-leg relay. Each member had to complete one section – a trail run, an orienteering loop, a short mountain bike ride, and a longer trail ride. For us, it was a process of elimination to determine who would do what. Thor-the-H-is-silent-Egerton is a world-class orienteer from Australia. She was the obvious choice for Leg 2. Mark is the strongest biker among us. Leg 4 was his. Brent’s much faster out of the gate than I am on foot (and faster in general), and I’d been feeling pretty strong on the bike, so he would take Leg 1 and I would round out the group with Leg 3.
The event was free and open to the public, so there was a healthy mix of Terrex competitors and local orienteers and triathletes lining up at the start. With the real race beginning just 12 hours later, we made a pact to have fun and maintain an even pace. We weren’t sure what to expect from everyone else, but we wanted to avoid going out too fast or pushing too hard.
But of course, when each leg is only 20-ish minutes long and you’re in constant contact with other racers, it’s hard to pull back. Brent said he managed not to kill himself. The rest of us? We weren’t quite so smart.
We ended up finishing in just under 90 minutes, 11 minutes off the lead team from the adventure racing division. This meant that we would be serving a 22-minute penalty at a TA on Day 2 of the race. Somehow, a mandatory pause after 24+ hours of racing didn’t seem like such a punishment…
We left the castle a short time later, paused for a quick dinner, and then went back to our dorm rooms at Stirling University to finish packing our gear.
Team GOALS ARA: Supporting the shoe industry one pair at a time.
Part 2: Easing In
We returned to Stirling Castle the next morning, staged our bikes, and got ready for the first leg of the race, a 10k road run to the Wallace Monument and back. When the bagpipes sounded and the gun went off, we eased into a comfortable pace for the quick separator. We shuffled along smoothly, determined once again not to get caught up in the excitement and push the pace. ”I wish we could run all separators like this,” I said to Brent, enjoying our leisurely jaunt through the streets of Stirling.
On our return to the castle, Thor started to get anxious about our overall plans for pacing. In an effort to calm her nerves, Mark suggested that they switch personalities for a day. ”I’ll be the worrier,” he said, “and you can be–”
“–the flirt!” I finished for him.
Without missing a beat, Thor ran in between Mark and Brent. “Boy to the right of me, boy to the left of me, what more could I want?” she crooned, imitating Mark’s earlier assertion about the benefits of racing on a team with two women.
We laughed our way up the hill, and after a swift transition, set off for the first bike leg – a projected 80 kilometers to the banks of Loch Te.
Over the next several hours, we found ourselves storming (or walking respectfully through) castles, in search of Monty Python’s holy grail; rowing to priories surrounded by water; visiting Rob Roy’s grave; and hike-a-biking through Scotland’s rolling grass-covered, mud-slicked hills.
The ride turned out to be just over 90-k – this extra 10-k would come to be the norm of all of the bike legs, and it never ceased to be demoralizing – and we all welcomed the short 6-k canoe leg, as all four of us piled into one boat and paddled right through the brightest rainbow I’ve ever seen.
From where we sat on the water, we could see its full expanse. We thought about heading off-course to find a pot of gold, but instead pushed on toward the overnight trek through the Ben Lawers range.
Because of the unique scoring system, we knew that strategically, it may have made sense to cut out sections of the course early to minimize our time on the clock. Instead, we decided that we wanted to see as much of the course as possible, taking full advantage of the opportunity to race in Scotland.
That meant we had until 10:00 AM, roughly 14 hours, to get through 30-k of mountainous off-trail trekking and 20-k of canoeing. We knew that this stretch would be our first major test.
We set off quickly, trying to take advantage of what little daylight we had left. An hour in, we said hello to Team Adidas Terrex as they bounded down the trail back toward the TA. Half a day into the race and the previous world champions were already 6 hours in front of us. Damn, they were fast.
Still, we were moving well and, more importantly, working well together. We shared weight and shared food. We pushed each other and supported each other. We had never raced together before, but we quickly found our rhythm and figured out how to move as a unit as efficiently as possible.
By 5:30 AM, we were back in TA, still on the full course and with more than four hours to paddle across Loch Te.
We would need it.
Though we’d been all but guaranteed a tailwind, we quickly found ourselves battling a persistent headwind as we paddled through the open water. After an early bout of sleepiness, we moved steadily, but it was still all we could do to maintain our momentum. We reached our target at 9:30 AM, caught our collective breath, and as a reward for our efforts over the first 24 hours, we allowed ourselves a lazier paddle down the rapids of the River Te and into the next transition in Grand Tully.
We stationed our boats, rebuilt our bikes, changed our clothes, and clocked in to serve our 22-minute penalty from the prologue. Though the TA was hopping, it was a welcomed respite, and we all managed to close our eyes for a few minutes as the time wound down.
Part 3: Riding High
The next section of the race was a monster mountain bike section, broken up into three parts. We had a short ride to the canyoning, a longer stretch to the orienteering loop, and then the final leg up and over Mount Keen and into the TA at the House of Mark. In total, we would cover roughly 200 kilometers.
First stop: The Falls of Bruar.
Someone else going through the falls. We did a good job of missing the official photographers through the bulk of this race.
Here, we were outfitted in wetsuits and PFDs and led up a trail a couple hundred meters to the jump site. From there, we would spend the next 90-ish minutes jumping, sliding, swimming, and scrambling our way through the obstacle-laden canyon. The wetsuits certainly helped with the cold when we were waiting on land, but every plunge into the frigid water took our breath away.
An hour and a half later, we were treated to hot drinks as we changed into dry clothes and debated our next step. We knew that we wouldn’t make it to the next TA at Mar Lodge, some 90 kilometers away, without sleep. We also knew that between the cold of the canyon and a fast-approaching storm, we needed to find shelter.
After several minutes of debating, we hopped on our bikes and headed off down the road. Half an hour later, we’d set up shop under a covered pavilion in a little town. Minutes after we pulled all our gear in, the skies opened. It was 10:00 PM when we curled up in our emergency space blankets, set our alarms, and drifted off to sleep. An hour in, Brent and I were awake and shivering. The two of us relocated to an unlocked trailer adjacent to the park.
At 12:30 AM, we packed up and continued on our way. We knew by this point that we wouldn’t be able to clear the full course, so we decided to skip the next checkpoint and streamline the ride to the orienteering course. It gave us a 5-hour penalty, but we’d heard that it had taken the lead team upwards of 6 hours to get it – and that was during the daylight. It was the right call.
We’d been told before the race that this next stretch offered some of the prettiest scenery in Scotland, a deep river gorge surrounded by rocky cliffs. Sadly, we missed all of it as we rode on through the night.
Other than a 5-k hike-a-bike that definitely tested my resolve (as my friend Val said after the race, never make any decisions about future racing plans during a middle-of-the-night hike-a-bike), it was an uneventful night 2.
We pulled into Mar Lodge at sunrise…
…and were greeted by an entire hall, filled with deer skulls.
Check out the ceiling.
There was an optional orienteering loop out of Mar Lodge, and though many teams elected to skip it – it carried a 2.5-penalty and would take at least that long to complete – we stuck to our initial plan of covering as much of the course as we could. There were eight checkpoints and teams were allowed to split up into two groups to collect them, so Brent and Mark took the western half of the map and Thor and I took the eastern. The boys would have less distance – about 10 kilometers to cover – but more terrain. We got 15-k’s of trails and dirt road.
It was a nice break and Thor and I enjoyed chatting as we pushed each other along. Unbeknownst to us, Brent and Mark made a bet as to how long we would take. It was an over/under of 10 minutes from the time they returned to the TA, with Brent taking the over. Winner got a guinness (this was one of many wagered guinnesses along the course). We got back with two minutes to spare. ”That’s my girls!” Mark called, adding another beer to his collection.
When we reconvened, we packed up our gear and got back on our bikes for the final ride to the TA. Our nap the night before had served us well and we continued to move smoothly, pacelining along the welcomed stretch of rolling roads.
A brief break from pacelining for a group shot
Thor taught us all an R-rated song about various adventure racing woes (chapped lips, sore bum, scummy teeth, burnt cheeks), and we rode through the quiet backroads of Scotland singing expletives at the top of our lungs.
We paused in the first and only town we passed for a quick meal – our first real food in three days – and a post-lunch catnap and then made the final push.
Snoozing in a local park.
We pedaled past Balmoral Castle, Queen Elizabeth’s summer residence (sadly, she didn’t come out to greet us), and rode by lots and lots of farms before turning off onto a trail that ascended gradually for several kilometers – and those several kilometers were stretched to still more kilometers, as Mark underestimated the distance to the top of Mount Keen by 8-k.
He carried my pack up the mountain as penance.
All that separated us from the TA was one big climb, followed by a blistering ride down the other side. But at 3,000 feet high, that was quite a climb.
We pushed, pulled, and lugged our bikes up the steep, rocky terrain. Finally, we reached the top, and were rewarded for our efforts with a 360 degree view of the valley below.
But of course, we couldn’t stop long – we had a lot of racing left to do.
Though riding up the mountain was impossible, the trail down the backside made for the biggest mountain biking descent I’d ever done. The first stretch was slow-going as we had to pause every fifty meters to negotiate the constant runoff ditches, but once we passed those, the trail transformed into a series of steep, rocky switchbacks.
I gripped my brakes more than I should have but stayed steady on the bike, following my teammates’ line all the way down. By the time I reached the bottom, I was beat.
We sped through the final few kilometers and I yelled in triumph when I saw the House of Mark appear before us. It was a remote guest house, in the middle of the expansive Highland wilderness. And it was beautiful.
Our last two TA’s had been slower and we were determined to get back on track. I called out all of the reminders we’d written down on our pre-race spreadsheet and we set about dismantling our bikes and changing into fresh clothes for the next leg of the race – roughly 100 kilometers of trekking.
As we worked, the lodge owner – perhaps Mark himself? – took food orders. This race was remarkable for its amenities. At almost all of the TA’s, adventure chef extraordinaire Clive Ramsey had set up a hot food cart where racers could run a tab for the duration of the event. So far, we’d arrived at all of the transitions just as Clive had run out of food, but we knew that at the House of Mark, there would be fresh Bacon Butties available for purchase.
Bacon Butties are sandwiches consisting of – as you might guess – bacon and butter.
Now, I don’t like butter, and as a failing omnivore, I don’t like bacon either. When Thor ordered four sandwiches, I told her that I wasn’t going to have one. But when they were delivered right to our bike boxes, I found myself unable to resist. And let me tell you: it. was. good. As I bit down, the chef told me that the pigs were homegrown and humanely slaughtered. I thanked him for his assurances of sustainability and tried not to think about the pig and I ate the rest of the sandwich.
My teammates ordered a second round (I skipped that one), and we paid the man before donning our trekking shoes and setting off down the trail. It was a smooth, efficient TA. We were excited to be off the bikes, buoyed by the beautiful scenery, and filled with adrenaline. Going into night 3, we were all feeling good.
Part 4: Constant Forward Progress
The mammoth trek, like the monster ride, was divided into three parts. The first leg would take us through the night, across exposed ridgelines peppered with subtle peaks and saddles. Leg 2 would get us from Glen Muick to the Glenshee Ski Station and include scrambles up, down, and around the mountains surrounding Lochnagar. The final stretch would get us to our bikes for a short 40-k ride back to Grand Tully and our awaiting canoes.
But we had a lot of kilometers to cover before we reached those boats.
Leg 1 began smoothly enough. We continued down the road for a few kilometers before turning onto a trail, taking out our headlamps, and beginning the long traverse to Glen Muick. Before long, we lost the trail, and then the trail disappeared entirely, and it was just us, the maps, and those faint contours for the next 25-30 kilometers.
Thor, who had been serving as backup nav for some of the earlier legs of the race, took the lead here, and she led us steadily through the darkness, orienteering the team from summit to summit and saddle to saddle. It was slow-going, particularly once the fog rolled in, and we had to tread carefully through the minefield of boggy peat. I felt like we were walking on the moon.
This is the first race I’ve ever done where our team had not one, not two, but three expert navigators. Generally, the navigator works the maps and the remaining team members follow along, listening to cues and reference points and talking amongst themselves. Here, though, especially because all teams were given two full sets of maps, my teammates developed a sort of navigational shorthand as they talked through the various options. I noticed it most on this leg of the race, as I faded into the fog (meteorological and mental) and they went back and forth about the best route from A to B.
After awhile, the trek began to take its toll. While Thor held strong, both navigationally and physically, Brent and Mark joined me in my sleep-deprived haze. We knew we needed to stop, but we were either in soggy bogs or atop the wind-beaten ridge. There was no protection and no place to set up our tent.
And so we continued on.
At some point, my left foot broke through the ground and I fell into one of the peat holes. I didn’t twist or turn it, but I felt a jarring pull through the front of my ankle. I pulled it out of the hole and kept moving, aware of the nagging ache that was starting to creep in.
Not long after, another team caught wind of Thor’s navigational prowess and decided to come along for the last two checkpoints along the ridge. This provided a bit of a reprieve as the non-mapsmen among us were able to track the lights of the other foursome and gauge how close they were.
Finally – finally – we crested the final hill and saw the dirt road we’d been aiming for. It was just a couple hours before sunrise. We promptly set down our packs, pulled out the tent, and set it up right there on the road.
Brent and Thor both had individual emergency bags and Mark and I had planned to unzip my sleeping bag and use it for cover. We took off our shoes to dry out our feet and crawled into the tent for a two-hour break. We’d underestimated how exposed we would be with nothing more than the tent bottom between us and the cold, damp ground. It was a fitful, chilled sleep but a much-needed break.
When we awoke with the sun, we were all in good spirits again. We packed up and took off running down the road, eager to check another TA off the list.
We were in and out of Glen Muick quickly, stopping only for fresh water and bathrooms, and with little fanfare we found ourselves on Leg 2 of the trek. We would follow the dirt road a ways until our course diverged onto a trail, and then through a boulder field, and then up our first scramble.
I felt good when I was climbing but I began to notice some stiffness and pain in my ankle any time we were on flats and downs. It felt better shuffling than walking, but no matter what I did, I couldn’t find any real relief.
I fell back a bit, trailing behind as my teammates brainstormed about their dream adventure racing teams, from a pool of racers around the world. Fun chatter to listen to, but I was too distracted to join in. As we descended the final few hundred meters to the boulder field, I paused, pulled down my sock, and tried to bend my ankle.
And discovered that it wouldn’t move.
That jolt that I’d experienced the night before when I fell into the hole had apparently done a number on me. For the rest of the race, the range of motion in my left ankle diminished to next to nothing as I trekked stiffly through the hills.
Mark had experienced something similar in an expedition race in Australia and determined it was just acute tendonitis. I was relieved to know that it was nothing serious, but that didn’t lessen the discomfort. Each step downhill caused a shot of pain up through the front of my ankle and into my shin. Mark told me that he had cried when it came on at XPD. There was no shortage of tears here, either.
Still, we kept moving.
My teammates took most of my weight as we made our way across the boulder field.
Thor in the boulder field
And then it was time for the first scramble.
We caught a couple teams here who were each losing a member to injury and fatigue. The mammoth trek was taking its toll – and the race directors knew it. A marshall told us that we could elect to have our bikes moved to the next TA, effectively cutting off the last 20-25 kilometers of the trek. We would still be official, he told us.
But we weren’t ready to cry Uncle just yet.
“You have until the start of the second scramble to make the decision,” he said. We thanked him for the notice and made our way up the steep crag to the ridgeline.
And then we looked at the clock. To this point, we had dropped only one checkpoint on the whole course, but we knew that it was time to start making further adjustments. We were still committed to attempting to get through the remaining 50 kilometers of the trek, but we decided to let go of some of the further afield CPs en route.
First to go was the second scramble. Going up had been reasonably quick, but getting down the other side would be slow-going and painful. Instead, we would follow the ridgeline around and then descend briefly to Lochnagar before regaining the elevation on the other side for the final couple points into the Glenshee Ski Station.
We got through the next two points – both on the ascent along the ridge – quickly.
A checkpoint on the wing of an old airplane.
But as we began the descent to the lake, Mark realized that something was amiss. His feet had begun to sting, and he knew the sensation well. This past winter, during a ten-day race in Patagonia, Mark and his teammates had contracted a flesh-eating bacteria. By the end of the race, they had lost much of the skin on the bottoms of their feet.
He pulled off his shoes and, sure enough, he noticed some of the same early signs of the fungus.
There we were, 20+ kilometers from the next TA, one teammate already hobbling and a second with the potential to go down fast.
I took back some of my weight from Mark and Brent shouldered some of the heavier gear. And then it was time to move.
Mark spread iodine on the bottoms of both feet, changed his socks, and charged on. We shuffled down to the lake and I pushed the pace on the endless ascent to the next ridge, knowing that my strength at that point was in the climbs.
When we reached the top, I clipped into Brent’s tow and followed him through the next two checkpoints, whimpering quietly with each step. It was a pathetic sight, I’m sure.
Still, it never crossed my mind to stop. Two nights earlier when we were hike-a-biking along a muddy ridgeline? If someone had asked me then if I wanted to keep going, I may have said no. But here it was never a question. I’m not totally sure why.
We descended the final ski slope, talking about our various options at that point. We had roughly twelve hours to the next time cut-off, and we still had 25 kilometers of trekking and at least 40 kilometers of biking before we got there.
The best that we could hope for was that the race directors had made the decision unilaterally to move our bike boxes to Glenshee. We would suffer some sort of time penalty, but we’d be able to continue onto the river put-in entirely by bike, moving more quickly and ensuring that we’d make the cut-off. A number of other teams had already gone this route.
Alternately, we could request that our bikes get transferred there, wait until they arrived, and then continue on with Plan A, not knowing how much time we’d have.
Finally, we could make a push for the last stretch of the trek, but we all knew that our odds of getting through it in the allotted time were growing slimmer with each passing kilometer.
We limped into Glenshee just after 6:00 PM.
Our bike boxes were waiting.
I put down my pack, sat down, and cried in relief.
We’d spent the past 24 hours in wet shoes. We were windswept and sunburnt. We were red, swollen, and chapped. And we were beat.
As we sat, one of the race directors rushed into the room and called out to us. ”Guys, you have to come outside.”
It’s a rare experience to spend so much time with the race director during the event. James and Nick of Open Adventure were top notch designers and directors. At almost every step, the race was well organized and well executed. By the time we’d reached Glenshee, we’d been singing their praises for four days.
Still, in that moment, we looked at him incredulously.
“No, really,” he persisted. ”You need to see this.”
We joined James at the door and looked on as a man dressed in a green tutu danced down the street to the music blaring from small speakers attached to his waist.
He was Ben Hammond, and he was on a quest to set to Guinness World Record for the longest continuous dance ever. He was traveling from Lands End at the southern tip of England to John O’Groats at the northern tip of Scotland to raise money for and awareness of Burmese refugees.
And he was just the morale boost we needed.
We came back inside, laughing. Clive Ramsey was long gone by that point, but the marshalls stationed there made us egg sandwiches and a pot of rice. We decided that we would sleep for a bit in the warm hut before rebuliding our bikes and making the final push back to Grand Tully.
Mark received medical care for his feet and I iced and wrapped my ankle.
We laid down and even though I was dead on my feet, I struggled to fall asleep amidst the activity of the TA. An hour later, we got up, put our bikes together, and took off down the road.
We had a long descent, about 8 kilometers, before we turned up a trail for several more kilometers of hike-a-biking up through cow pastures and single-track riding down through mudslick.
I felt good riding, less good hiking, and pretty terrible on the single-track, where every time I wobbled (which apparently happens a lot four days into a race when you only have a bar-mount light because the cord for your helmet light never made it into your pack), I’d reflexively put my left foot down and shudder in pain.
It wasn’t so fun.
Before long, though, we were back on roads with less than 50k separating us from the final cut-off of the race. At Grand Tully, the clock would stop, and from there we’d have all day Friday to complete 60 kilometers of paddling and another 60 of gentle road riding. The TA at Grand Tully had been our target from the start, and we were so close it made me giddy.
Still, we had to get through those 50 kilometers, and when you’ve only slept for six hours over the past four days, that’s no small feat.
We took caffeine, told stories, ate candy, and chugged along through the night.
At one point, Brent got so sleepy that he resorted to snapping pictures, trying to wake up by blinding himself with the flash.
When that didn’t work, he took to snapping pictures of his teammates instead.
One final stretch of single track and a few more kilometers on roads later, we pulled into Grand Tully at 3:30 AM.
We had made it. We were off the clock.
And we had 2.5 hours to kill before the dark zone lifted and we were allowed to get on the River Te for the final paddle.
Part 5: Stirling or Bust
We took off our shoes and mended our feet. Mark’s early intervention had held the bacteria at bay. He was holding steady. My ankle had swollen too big for the first wrapping. I iced again, popped some serious ibuprofen, and wrapped it again.
We ate, finally getting the chance to enjoy Clive Ramsey’s spread. There were chocolate croissants and bowls of pasta, hot coffee and fresh fruit. We bought some of everything and passed it around.
And then we slept. It was the best sleep I’d gotten all the race – a blissful hour, uninterrupted by shivers or rain or wind. It was glorious.
By 6:15, we’d boxed up our bikes and were carrying our boats and gear the 300 meters down to the river. We punched out and shoved off, and for the next several hours we enjoyed the swift-moving water, littered with rapids.
Not us, but one of the fun rapids we passed through
Several teams flipped, but Brent and Mark negotiated our two boats well, and we made it to the take-out in the town of Perth unscathed.
We pulled out, unpacked our bikes for the final time, and set off for the last 60 kilometers of the race, a rolling ride back to Stirling to cross the finish line.
Except that I wasn’t going anywhere. By that point in the race, everyone’s bikes were a mess. Brent’s was whining, Mark’s was whistling, and Thor’s was grinding its way down the street. Mine had been reasonably okay to that point, just the occasional slipped gear, but as we pulled out of the TA I felt like I was pedaling through molasses.
At first, I thought I was just done. I thought that the last four days had drained all my power and I was riding on fumes. Mark hooked me up to his tow, but before long, he, too, was tiring under the strain. Then, Thor called from behind.
“Your momentum really slowed through that descent. Are you sure it’s not mechanical?”
“I don’t hear any scraping or rubbing,” I responded. Still, we pulled off to check it out. Mark took my bike and tried to spin the rear tire. It stopped immediately. Quickly, he worked his magic, and minutes later we were back on the road, this time with four fully operational-ish bikes. Mark put his tow away and I maintained our pace with ease.
For whatever reason, I felt pretty awake during this final ride, but some of my teammates were struggling. So as Brent navigated us toward Stirling, I sang terrible camp songs to keep everyone from falling asleep.
You know – the really terrible ones with call-and-response verses, made up words, and stupid animals doing stupider things.
But it worked.
We crested our final hill and coasted into Stirling, dodging traffic and following the yellow arrows that the race staff had strung up, just in case we couldn’t find our way through this last little stretch.
We turned onto the road where the finish line stood and were promptly directed off the sidewalk and onto one more short stretch of single track – in case we hadn’t had enough – before pushing through the last few hundred meters.
When we approached the line, we were directed to drop our bikes, take off our helmets, and run – or limp – across the line.
Thor’s partner, John, greeted us with congratulations and good cheer.
We hugged and laughed as we were handed medals and a bottle of champagne. Our friend JD, another American racing on a British team, handed us a flag.
We were sweaty, swollen, chafed and chapped. And we were done.
When the final results were tallied 24 hours later, we would come out in eleventh place. Not bad for a team that decided before the start not to worry about strategy and instead just to see as much of Scotland as we could.
“We made it,” Brent said to me as we mugged for pictures.
“We did.”
“And you didn’t quit,” he continued.
“It never crossed my mind.”
“Are you happy?” he asked, referencing, I knew, that middle-of-the-night hike-a-bike that had me questioning whether this multi-day racing was really for me.
“I am,” I told him.
And with that, we all finished off the champagne, loaded up our gear, and went back to the university. For showers, for pizza, for stories – and for sleep.
Five years ago, I stood at the paddle TA of this race (then in its 12-hour incarnation) in absolute awe. Brent – my husband of one month at the time – was in his second season of racing and it was his first event outside of the Philly area. I was seeing an adventure race for the first time because the race coincided with a drive up to Massachusetts for a wedding, so I decided to see if they needed any volunteers. As the racers flew in on their bikes and grabbed their kayak blades, I turned to NYARA head honcho Denise Mast and said, “there’s no way I could ever do anything like this.”
Hard to believe that was half a decade ago…
With Bruce out of commission for this year’s race, Brent and I teamed up with Brian Reiss of Adventure Pocono fame, and Team ARMD’s Joel Ford. We had raced with Brian last year at the Rev3 Epic and I had joined Joel and the rest of the ARMD crew two years ago at Untamed New England. While none of us knew quite what the day would hold, I was confident that as far as team dynamics were concerned, we were in for a fun 24 hours in the woods.
Before the race – too cool for school…
The race began at 10:20 AM on Saturday morning with a short relay separator. Half of the team members were to follow a loop in one direction, the other half would run in the opposite direction, and when we passed en route, we were to hand off a small plastic easter egg, which would be used to mark attendance later in the race.
Joel at the start – thanks to “Extreme” Prestige Worldwide Photography for some great shots!
At go, Brent and I joined the 60-odd other runners gunning through the grass to the trailhead. It shouldn’t be news at this point that I hate sprint separators at any race, and this weekend was no different. By the time we reached the halfway point, I found myself gasping for air. I knew that if I just pushed through it and got to the true start of the race, I would be okay. In the moment, though, I wasn’t sure how I was even going to make it back to the trailhead.
Photo doesn’t lie…
Of course, fifteen minutes later, the separator ended, and with our pink egg stashed snuggly in the top of my pack, we took off down a railroad bed for the first section of the race.
We’d learned earlier in the week that there would be some unique scoring rules for this year’s race. The event was broken down into several distinct sections, and for teams that cleared all of the flags in a given section, there would be bonus points awarded to the final tally. Because the course consisted of a mix of mandatory and optional CP’s, there would significant strategy involved in every decision.
When we received the maps early Saturday, Brian and Brent noted that there was more opportunity to maximize points in the first half of the race, so with that in mind, we set out to clear the early sections and go from there.
So as we took off running alongside the railroad bed with Brent setting the pace, I knew without question that we’d be pushing the pace in those early hours. The only problem? I wasn’t recovering.
In fact, I ended up spending the first six hours of the race wondering what I was doing out there. Sure, there were some totally logical reasons for my early fatigue – the lack of sleep in the days before with a 4:30 AM wakeup call to make it to graduation on Thursday morning, a rough semester that had ended just the day before, the fact that we’d raced seven times in the preceding eleven weeks – and yes, we were gunning from the start. But that didn’t stop me from beating myself up as we ran up and down the trails of the Shawangunk Ridge.
Because of the nature of the course – the combination of optional and mandatory CP’s, the amount of route choice each section required, and the possibility of those bonus points – we had no real sense of how we were doing in this early section. So when we pulled into the first TA to learn that there were two teams in front of us who had cleared the first loop (SOG, who’d come and gone nearly an hour before, and Calleva, who checked in only moments earlier), we were happy with our progress.
We refilled our bladders – completely dry after only four hours of racing – and transitioned onto bike. For the next 15-16 hours, we would be jumping in and out of the saddle as we rode, pushed, and lugged our bikes up and down the steep terrain from checkpoint to checkpoint and section to section.
The ride out to the second loop began on roads, and I felt immediate relief as I pedaled along the smooth asphalt. We paused for a couple points before crossing a wide creek and heading back into the woods. And once again, I began to sag. ”Dammit,” I almost said out loud as I hiked my bike up a particularly rocky trail. ”If I’m so much better at riding roads than trails, I should just stick to f*ing triathlons.”
Of course, everyone was hiking up those trails. And everyone was sweaty and dusty and laboring for breath. But sometimes it’s really hard to get out of your own head.
Eventually, we reached the ridgeline where mandatory checkpoint #5 was supposed to be. But instead of a flag, we found a dozen racers wandering around the overlook just beyond the summit. We joined in the hunt, ultimately spending 45 minutes searching for the missing CP.
Though we never did find it – we later learned that someone passing through had cut it down before the race – the break from the hills and the company of other racers proved to be exactly the reprieve I needed. When we started up again en route to the next section, I had sufficiently recovered (mentally as much as physically) from those early hours. Aside from a few minutes of sleepiness in the middle of the night, I felt solid for the rest of the race.
The other highlight of that unexpected pitstop?
I got to see my first rattlesnake!
Half an hour into our search, as a handful of us were rooting around a small clearing, I heard a distinct shaking sound. Brian looked over and saw a 3-ish foot long, 2-ish inch thick tan snake slithering along the rocks. Several people crowded around for a closer look. If the sound of his tail was any indication, he was not amused.
He disappeared into the woods a few seconds later and I was disappointed that Brent and Joel weren’t around to catch a glimpse of him, but when they came back down to the overlook, Brent said that they’d run into a rattler of their own – and had the photo to prove it.
We all decided to take a risk and abandon CP 5 at that point. From the top of the summit, we rode down and into a maze of trails for the next section of the race – an optional Memory-O. Here, we had the first checkpoint mapped, and when we arrived there we found a map for the next point, and so on. It was a fun twist and we found ourselves criss-crossing the loop with Teams Calleva and Untamed Adventure. Once again, we had a sense of the top handful of teams out on the course, but we had no idea where we fell within that handful.
We pulled into the next TA about an hour before dark. There, we ran into race co-director Charlie Hunt, who explained the issue with checkpoint 5 and told us that we’d have a 45-minute extension on the upcoming section, upping our next time cut-off to 11:45 PM. It was unclear whether that extension would hold for the remainder of the race, but we weren’t thinking about it in that moment.
We rolled out for another short stretch of road – sweet reprieve once again, especially as a generous gardener allowed us to fill our empty bladders with his hose – and headed toward the next loop.
The next several hours are a bit of a blur at this point, but here are the highlights:
-The fast, rolling trails of Sterling Forest (I had no idea I enjoyed night riding so much!)
-The unexpected opportunity for an extra three points that had Brent swimming through a bull frog-infested pond late into the night.
This was as good a shot as I could get of Brent’s night swim. He’s that little gray spot in the middle.
-The all-night gas station convenience store we found at 11 PM. We’d made a decision before the start to leave behind precious calories and in favor of racing light, banking on the promise of refueling opportunities on the course. By late Saturday, we hadn’t passed anything for several hours and were all running dangerously low on food. While Brent futzed with maps, I ran into the store to load up for the two of us and quickly deposited four clif bars, two bags of GORP, a snickers bar, a bagel with cream cheese, and two sodas onto the counter. ”That’s a lot of food!” the clerk said. ”Yeah, we’re in the middle of a long race,” I replied. He promptly dropped two more bagels into the pile. “Take these too, then!”
At some point in those overnight hours, we paused for a brief pow-wow. The next cut-off was listed as 4:00 AM. We weren’t sure whether it, too, had been extended by 45 minutes, but we did know that if we wanted to get through the next section, we were going to need that extra time. We decided to take the risk. If we were wrong and ended up getting disqualified, we reasoned, then at least we would have gone down fighting for every point.
We spent the next couple hours slogging our way up a 2-mile climb to the top of a fire tower. Just a few minutes into the ascent, we passed Team Calleva running down the mountain on foot. They’d opted to leave their bikes at the bottom and trek up and back before riding around on roads to the next transition. And as the stretch of steep rocky trails kept going and going (and going), we wondered if we should have made the same decision.
Eventually, we reached the summit, wrote down the clue for the CP (1933, the year the cabin at the base of the tower was constructed) and began to make our way down. After one more short rock-riddled stretch, we were able to ride down the bulk of the mountain. Even after Brent took a nasty fall, pitching over his handlebars and landing on his wrists and knees, he shook himself off and jumped back on, pushing the pace as he negotiated the technical terrain with the three of us following close behind.
And it was a good thing. We were fighting a fast-moving clock and weren’t sure whether we’d make it to the next transition before the 4:45 AM cut-off. We pulled through Mandatory CP 14 at 4:23 AM, skipped the bike and foot orienteering loops there altogether, and blitzed the next several kilometers of trails for the TA.
We arrived with roughly 95 seconds to spare.
There, we deposited that little pink plastic egg into a basket (proof of our presence – it turned out that there was no one there to make sure we’d pulled in in time), collected ourselves, and got back on our bikes once again.
Though we were quite tempted by the last big optional loop of the course – between that TA and the boat put-in was the now-defunct Jungle Habitat in West Milford NJ, an old Warner Brothers’ wild animal park that was abandoned in the 1970s – we knew that we would never make it through even the first point and get to the kayaks by 6:30 AM, the late cut-off for getting on the water.
(photo care of “Weird NJ”)
We made quick work of the next transition and shoved off at 6:15 AM for a short paddle around Greenwood Lake.
We moved smoothly enough from checkpoint to checkpoint – except for one minor communication issue. At the first flag, I jumped out of the boat to punch the control, and as I was turned around and Brian was resettling gear, Brent and Joel pushed off for the next point. We thought they were continuing on down the lake and so we headed that way as well, following not far behind a yellow kayak with two racers in it.
After 10 minutes, I looked more closely and realized that the racers in front of us had square-bladed paddles, not the rounded edges of our Werner blades. A few seconds later, we heard a distant yell from the back bank of the lake.
Brent and Joel, it seemed, had turned left while we had gone straight. After 10 futile minutes of yelling for us, they finally connected with a man in a motor boat who joined in the effort. As Brian and I turned to meet up with them, the motor boat pulled up beside us.
“Abby and Brian, I take it?”
“Yep, that’s us,” we responded.
“Your friends are back there.”
Yeah. Thanks.
We managed to keep in eyesight of each other after that, and when we pulled off the water at 8:50 AM, we had an hour and a half to climb up to the final ridge, nab as many of the remaining optional checkpoints as we could, and get ourselves into the finish.
We took off through the small town and began the steep climb up to the ridge. Fifteen minutes later, we’d found the last mandatory point. Then we had a decision to make.
We could run the ridgeline – a rocky, technical stretch of the Appalachian Trail – a mile each way out and back for a possible two-point punch before running the final 1.5 miles in the other direction for one or two more optional flags before transitioning back to our bikes for the final short stretch to the finish, or we could play it safe and skip the out-and-back.
But of course, there’d been no playing it safe for the previous 23 hours. Why would we start then?
We took off in the opposite direction of the finish. The run took longer than we anticipated, but Brent navigated to the point with relative ease. We turned back at 9:47 AM. We had 2.5+ rocky miles to run, one more transition, and a ski slope to bike down.
I think all of us were pretty sure we’d never make it.
We’d retraced our steps by 10:01. At that point, Brent was beginning to bonk and I was pretty sure my right IT band was about to rupture. He downed a tube of shotblocks, I gritted my teeth, and we continued on. We got to the attack point for the final optional point at 10:06. There was no time to spare.
We continued on and spilled out onto the road that would lead us to the Bellvale Farms Creamery, where our bikes awaited us. Instead of wasting precious seconds slipping into our bike shoes and clipping in, we stashed them in our packs, pulled on our helmets, and took off down the intermediate slope at the Mount Pete Ski Lodge.
At 10:17 AM, we pulled into the finish. We’d left everything on the course. We had three minutes to spare.
Still, we had no real sense of placement. With so many variables in play and so many strong teams in the field, the best we could hope for was a spot on the podium.
The awards ceremony was still a half hour away, so we set about sorting gear and recapping the past 23 hours and 57 minutes.
“You know,” Joel said to me as we walked away from the finish, “you got pretty frustrated with yourself out there.”
“I know,” I replied rather absently, thinking about repacking the car and getting home, always a challenge after an overnight race.
“You shouldn’t be so hard on yourself,” he continued. ”You rocked that course.”
I’ve heard this many times before (the being too hard on myself) and since it’s a hard switch to flip off I’ll no doubt hear it many times again, but something about the way he said it struck a chord. When I volunteered at that Longest Day in 2007, I’d never run on trails, had mountain biked perhaps 10 miles in my life, and had only ever been in a canoe at overnight camp. Sure, there’s plenty more I can do to improve, but I feel pretty good about where I am right now – and even better about how we are as a team.
As further affirmation of that, when we returned to the ski lodge for the awards, we learned that we’d won the race, with Team SOG in second and Rev3 in third.
Now, admittedly, we finished on top because of that bonus scoring. The monsters of Team SOG had killed the course, collecting more checkpoints than we did and covering more ground, but because we’d cleared one of the sections they didn’t, the points swung our way on this one.
Still, we worked ourselves into the ground for 24 hours. To be among the top competitors felt pretty good.
I know I’ve got a lot of catching up to do on here – we’ve raced a total of six times since March 1 this year, spent a week traveling through North Carolina and Tennessee, scaled two high points, and planned a 24-hour race (not to mention chaperoned a high school camping trip) – so I thought I’d start with the most recent and work backward.
This past weekend saw the 2012 running of the American Adventure Sports Yough Extreme, a 10-hour adventure race in southwestern Pennsylvania’s Ohiopyle State Park. This was my fourth time participating in the Yough, and each year I’m reminded that this is a race of strength and speed. It’s a linear course with relatively little in the way of navigation and strategy; to do well, you need to pound your way up and down Sugarloaf Mountain once, twice, sometimes three times throughout the day.
This year, Brent and I teamed up with Brian Komoroski, a veteran of GOALS sprint and 12-hour races who recently moved to Pittsburgh.
At 2 PM Friday afternoon, our friend Bill, who was racing in the solo division, pulled up in front of our house with his mom’s SUV. Bill had recently installed a new roof rack on the car, and the plan was to load all three bikes up top, pile in all our gear, and swing by Brent’s school en route to the PA turnpike.
We made it through the 7 miles of suburban roads unscathed, all the while joking about the new and untested bike rack. We picked up Brent and swung toward the highway. And then, not 10 miles later, a panicked Bill pulled over onto the shoulder.
“A tire just flew off the roof!”
“Sure it did,” Brent and I responded.
“No really, there’s a tire on the turnpike.”
Brent turned around to peer through the back window.
“Um, there really is a tire on the turnpike.”
We all jumped out of the car and looked up.
“Whose is it?” I asked, before noticing that the claw that had been holding my front tire was now conspicuously empty.
Brent took off down the shoulder. I sprinted after him.
Somehow, the wheel had rolled off the top of the car and, when it hit the ground, continued rolling across all three lanes, coming to an upright stop when it hit the median.
I ran the 100 meters back to where the tire had come to rest, and when a brief lull in traffic presented itself, I sprinted across. I grabbed the tire and, holding it close to my chest, leaned back as cars whizzed by not 18 inches from my nose.
Within a minute, the pre-rush hour traffic broke again, and I took off for the safety of the shoulder.
Brent, who had paused briefly to tie his sneakers, looked on incredulously.
“I didn’t even see you run across until you were on the other side! What were you thinking, doing that in those shoes?”
I looked down at my feet, and sure enough, I found them covered in bright orange crocs.
We laughed and walked back to Bill, still standing by the SUV in disbelief.
Miraculously, the wheel seemed unscathed.
After loading my front wheel and Brent’s securely in the trunk (Bill’s was still attached to his bike), we got back in the car and headed west.
Little did we know that our highway adventure was a preview of what was to come.
Four hours later, we pulled into the parking lot of Ohiopyle’s Wilderness Voyageurs and unceremoniously registered and received our maps. As in previous years, the 2012 course promised lung-burning sprints and quad-groaning climbs as we traveled up, down, and around Sugarloaf. Starting at 8 AM the following morning, we would have ten hours to collect eight checkpoints between start and finish.
Brent, Brian, Bill, and I headed out then for a quick dinner and a full night’s sleep in our own private tented cabin in the park’s campground. Kudos to Bill for that find!
The next morning, following a brief pre-race meeting, all participants congregated on the pedestrian bridge across the Yough River and got ready to run.
Lots of photos taken on the course, but so far only the pre-race and start shots are posted.
In keeping with custom, the race began with a 4-5 mile sprint for the first CP.
We’re tucked in behind the girl in zebra tights
Following the early surge, I settled in a few meters behind Brent and focused on finding a controlled, manageable pace. I generally hate these early sprint separators, that necessarily bring with them the bursts of adrenaline that threaten to give way to breathing issues, but this one went reasonably smoothly. A short time later, we returned to the TA, punched our second flag, jumped on our bikes, and began our first ascent up Sugarloaf.
I will say again that if you like tests of speed and strength, the Yough is a great race for you. For me, however, it proved to be a mental battle in the early hours of the race to commit to the day. It was our sixth (and shortest) race in 9 weeks, and my energy lagged as we climbed up and up the steep, technical trail.
Brent had said that it would be a 5-kilometer ascent, so when my odometer read 5k and there was no end in sight, I fought hard to ward off grumpiness. At 6k, I was getting desperate. At 6.5, I remembered that Brent had measured the 5k from the trailhead, rather than from the TA. At 7k, I finally caught a glimpse of the open field and the Sugarloaf warming hut, the site of CP 3.
We dropped our bikes, and as we took off on foot for the next section of the climb, Brent noted that his rear wheel was soft.
“We’ll need to change that when we get back,” he said.
But that was still a few hours away. Neither Brian nor I thought much of it.
The next CP sat near the summit of the mountain, and after a few kilometers on roads and trails, we hit it cleanly. From there, we had a decision to make. We could follow the rolling trails around to the boat put-in, or we could cut down the side of the mountain to a flat canal path, and run the remaining handful of kilometers to the next TA.
Bill was traveling with us at that point, and the four of us headed for the adjacent powerline and began the slow bush-whack down to the water. The descent was relatively moderate at first, but the further we went, the steeper it became. At times, we were sliding down the rock- and log-strewn cut at what seemed like a near 90-degree angle.
We grabbed hold of what we could and skidded our way along the mountainside, calling out for falling rocks and debris that had been dislodged in our travels.
Eventually, we reached the flat path and shook out our quads on the gentle run toward the boats. We reached the water at 11:30 AM and set off in our rubber duckies for a nine-mile paddle on the Middle Youghiogheny River.
The water was low, with the dry spring we’ve had, but the rapids were still moving and Brian navigated well through the class-II swells. Though the three of us had never paddled together before, we reached the take-out smoothly, hitting land at an hour and forty minutes, our fastest run to date in the Yough Extreme.
We made quick time back up the mountain, running the lion’s share of the climb and trekking when it got too steep. We were in third place at that point, second in the premiere division behind Team SOG, and we felt good about our prospects for a strong finish.
As they say, famous last words…
When we reached the TA, we discovered that in addition to Brent’s back wheel going soft, my front was completely flat. We changed Brent’s without incident, but when we went to swap out mine, the new tube wouldn’t inflate. We pumped it up and it went flat. We pumped it up again, and it again went flat. Brent shot it with a CO2 cartridge and it promptly deflated.
When Brent took it out of the tire and inspected it, he found a series of small punctures along the seam of the tube.
Defective.
By this point, the storm that had been threatening was right on top of us. Rain poured down and thunder rolled as more and more teams began making their way to the TA.
Brent pulled out our final spare and handed it to Brian. I turned to Team SOG’s Dan and Kristen, racing as a coed-2 that day, to see if they had extra CO2.
That’s when Brian realized that the tube had a Schrader valve, incompatible with my Presta tires and our Presta pump.
We were sure our race was over. But somehow, no coed-3 teams were coming into the clearing.
Our friends of Team Gung Ho had reached the TA minutes earlier, and they generously offered us both a tube and more CO2. This time, we successfully changed the tire and ran our bikes across the field to join the crowd pushing up the steep ascent toward checkpoint 8, on the other side of the mountain.
We alternated riding and pushing for the next few kilometers along the saturated trails. When we reached the top, we hopped on and began pulling away from the teams around us – until my back tire skidded out on a wet branch, and I went flying off the bike, hitting my helmeted-head hard on the trail.
I was disoriented at first, but recovered soon enough and climbed back on my bike, taking stock of the bruises that were quickly popping up along the right side of my body.
We continued on and Brent deftly read the trails, leading us directly to the flag in the center of a park scout camp. We made our final turn and began a steep descent to the checkpoint, when I rode over a small log. As my front tire popped up, I heard an abrupt hiss, and I was thrown over my handlebars and chest-first into the right bank of the trail.
Brian, who’d heard the hiss from 15 meters away, ran back just as I was getting to my feet. Together, we discovered the fourth flat tire of the day.
I questioned whether the wheel’s flight on the turnpike had, in fact, caused damage to the tire. Brent was sure it was just bad luck.
With the flag only meters away, I walked my bike to the bottom of the trail, and we paused to consider our options.
“We could try patching the tire with duct tape,” Brent said.
“I think this one’s pretty much shot,” I said, rubbing my chest.
Brent leaned down to inspect it more closely. ”Well, here’s your problem,” he said, holding the tube by its valve.
Brian and I looked over to see that the valve had been completely sheared off.
This is what a Presta valve normally looks like:
This is my tube:
Our best guess is that the tire nicked the log.
Duct tape was not an option.
I opened my pack to pull out one of the already-punctured tubes, when several teams converged on the flag.
Bill didn’t have any spare tubes. Team Gung Ho was out, too. Solo racer John Miller had one left. Brian, who had raced with John the previous summer, pleaded for the tube.
“If you get a flat,” he said, “we’ll be coming up right behind you, and we’ll give it back to you.”
John generously pulled out his lone spare and Gung Ho gave us another canister of CO2.
We made a quick switch, all the while waiting for one of our coed-3 competitors to fly by. When we were set, we took off for the final climb up Sugarloaf, this time on roads. It was a quick and uneventful ascent, and when we reached the top, we elected to forego the more direct Baughman Trail in favor of the gentler, less thorn-riddle, Sugarloaf Trail.
It was a wet and messy ride down, and after two hard falls, I struggled to trust myself – and my bike – on the technical terrain. I started off slowly and cautiously, gradually gaining confidence as we continued to drop. We passed one team on the trail and were building momentum, when Brent came to an abrupt stop, less than a mile from the bridge where we’d begun that morning.
“Another flat!” he screamed. I wondered if the race staff could hear him cursing from the finish line.
Once again, we were stalled. Before long, though, the team we’d ridden by moments earlier approached, and miraculously, they had both CO2 and a 29-inch tube to spare.
Five minutes later, we were dropping our bikes in the TA and sprinting the final 100 meters into the finish, 8 hours and 40 minutes after we’d started.
Team SOG had finished nearly two hours earlier, but somehow, we’d managed to secure second place in the premiere division. It seemed that almost all of the coed-3 teams experienced problems of one kind or another that day.
As usual, the Yough Extreme was a race of strength and speed – but this year’s was also a race of mental fortitude and perseverance, and it was a profound affirmation of the generosity of the adventure racing community.
One of my favorite parts of adventure racing is the team dynamic; to race well, you need solid individuals and an even more solid group. But last Saturday reminded all of us that when someone is struggling, that group expands exponentially, and we all find ourselves on the same team.
This photo was taken at roughly 8:00 AM, en route to checkpoint #1 during last Saturday’s Start2Finish Natchez Trace Adventure Race, a 12-hour event set in the rolling hills of western Tennessee. At the time, I was thinking, “well, it can only go up from here.”
If only that were true…
Brent and I had arrived at the park’s Pin Oak Lodge the previous afternoon. We connected with our teammate, JP Bordeleau, who had driven down from Chicago that morning, filled out paperwork, stationed our TA, ate dinner, packed our gear, and climbed into bed at 8:30 PM.
I had had the opportunity to race with JP two summers ago at Untamed New England and was looking forward to the chance to team up again. The three of us fell into an easy rhythm, swapping race stories and watching college basketball before turning off the lights around 9:30 for what has to be a record-setting pre-adventure race night’s sleep.
We awoke at 5:30 the next morning and made our way out to the start, eager to get a look at the maps. While most of the teams there were regulars at Natchez, familiar with the terrain and the organization, this was new territory for us in every way, and we were unsure of what the day would hold.
At 6:55 on the dot, the race director handed each team a large topographical map and coordinates for the first three sections of the day.
We quickly plotted the checkpoints and jumped on our bikes for the first leg. There was just one problem. The map offered no trails whatsoever, and the clue for CP #1 was George Trail.
We pulled out of the TA as we discussed our options. The CP looked to be on the edge of the lake, presumably at the bottom of the trail. We could ride several kilometers around on roads and assume we’d come across the access trail eventually, or we could take the first possible turn and bushwhack the kilometer or so to the flag. We opted for the latter and made a quick right toward the water, and when the trail ended, we lifted our bikes onto our shoulders and entered the dense woods.
For what felt like hours but was probably only about 30 minutes, we pushed, pulled, coaxed, and dragged our bikes through the Tennessee thicket.
This is the only other photo we took during the race.
Finally, we reached the flag and rode back out the infamous George Trail toward checkpoint 2. As we negotiated our way through this early section, we began to get a feel for the organization of the trail system. Each major trail, it seemed, bisected the main road in alphabetical order. We’d end up relying on this pattern later on in the day.
We pulled into the first TA and learned that we were in fourth place.
“How’s it going so far?” asked a chatty volunteer as we changed into running shoes and Brent set about plotting three new checkpoints.
“Not bad,” Brent replied. “We’re flying pretty blind out there and we made the mistake of bushwhacking for the first point, but we’re starting to get a feel for things now.”
“Yeah,” the volunteer responded, “you guys are definitely at a disadvantage here. Not to worry, though, the next section doesn’t rely on trails at all, so it levels the playing field. Just be careful – the navigation is tricky.”
We thanked him for the advice and took off for the woods, eager to make up time in what’s normally a strong discipline for us.
With Brent manning the maps, the three of us moved well through the first two points, picking our way through the dense, thorn-riddled terrain.
“I nearly lost an eye back there,” Brent said as we broke through to the road en route to the third flag.
“Me too,” I replied. “These woods are thick!”
We ran down the road as Brent and JP matched the contours of the map with the terrain. Awhile later, we turned back into the woods in search of one of the many spurs flanked by two of the many re-entrants and even more creek crossings.
I have no idea what happened in here. What I can tell you is that we spent well over an hour wandering amongst the brambles, searching spur after spur for the third point. We passed by CP 10 and then 9 and then 10 again. Brent looked at the maps. JP looked at the maps. Even I looked at the maps. None of us could get oriented.
We criss-crossed the woods, and the woods criss-crossed us. By the time we finally found the flag – and again, I have no idea how we did – our arms and legs were riddled with thorns, and I had taken a nasty whack to the face. My right eye was red and puffy, and so blurry I could barely keep it open. A trip to the doc a couple days later would reveal a corneal abrasion. I’d walk out with a prescription for two weeks of antibiotics and the instructions to steer clear of thorns.
But I digress…
Once we finally found the elusive point, we nabbed the final flag on the o-course and ran back to the TA to retrieve our bikes.
We were in seventh place and the lead team had pulled out of the transition nearly two hours earlier. My eye was a mess. JP’s rear tire was flat.
The boys changed the tube as I packed up the gear, and we set off on a 15-point bike-o. We were all sure that we’d blown the race.
I don’t remember much of the next 2+ hours. I know that Brent made a great comeback navigationally and led us smoothly from point to point. I know that we moved relatively well through the network of trails and roads. And I know that with one eye squeezed shut, I had absolutely no depth perception as I attempted to keep myself upright on the narrow single track.
As we flew down the main road toward checkpoint 19, two away from the next transition, we heard a rustling in the woods. We pulled to a stop at the flag and saw one of the coed teams riding down a narrow trail.
When they saw us, they paused, surprised. “You guys must have taken a different route than we did. Have you cleared the course so far?”
“We did,” I replied. “But not particularly well.”
We shoved off down a trail for the final CP, crossing paths with one more team en route. When we returned to the road, we saw another group of three.
By the time we made it back to transition, in the midst of a heavy downpour, we’d managed to pull ourselves into second place. We reached the TA and retrieved the coordinates for the rest of the course, and when we set off for the paddle, we learned that we’d made up more than half an hour on the lead team.
At that point, it was 2:30 PM. We’d been racing for 7.5 hours and had 4.5 to go. There were five points on the water and an additional 20-ish on the bike. Since all CPs were optional and we were pretty sure we wouldn’t be able to clear the course, we decided to drop the two furthest points on the water and focus on the final leg.
After a quick trip around the top half of the lake, we pulled out of the TA for the last stretch of the race, a large o-loop that would have us riding on everything from smooth roads and gravel paths, to muddy single-track and red-clay power lines. One more navigational blunder cost us an additional 40 minutes, but otherwise we moved well here from point to point.
Somewhere around checkpoint 39, I realized that my back brake was no longer working. Awhile later, JP discovered that his rear tire was soft.
With time running short and our bike woes slowing us down, we opted to drop the final two points. Instead of using up precious seconds to change JP’s tube or work on my brake, we shoved off for the TA, confident that as long as we made it in by 7 PM, we had done enough to secure a second place finish.
We pushed through the final several kilometers and turned down the long driveway with 13 minutes to go. We contemplated dropping our bikes and swimming the 200 meters across the lake for the final CP, but ultimately decided it wasn’t worth the risk.
We reached the finish at 6:51 PM, with nine minutes to spare, good for second place overall. A few minutes later, Team Los Locos crossed the line for the win.
Despite the thorny navigation (pun intended), it was a great day in the woods. We could have easily fallen apart amidst the early bumps and technical frustrations, but instead, we pulled it together and were thrilled with our comeback. It was an early-season reminder of what makes adventure racing so special – on days like this, the team really is bigger and better than the sum of its individual parts.
We parted ways later that night, JP for the 8-hour drive back to Chicago and me and Brent for the 15 hours to Philly and, after a week of roadtripping, a swift reorientation to the real world.
This past weekend, Brent, Chris, and I took to the swamps for the 2012 running of the Kando Adventures Palmetto Swamp Fox, a 12-hour adventure race in South Carolina’s Francis Marion National Forest.
It was the second time we had made our way to McClellanville; the three of us traveled south for the same race two years ago and were hooked on the great organization, the unique terrain, and the opportunity for an early season tune-up.
With my spring break and Brent’s coinciding for the first time in six years, we decided to take advantage of the overlap to plan a short road trip, bookending the week with the Swamp Fox on one end and another race in Tennessee on the other.
So, I drove down with our gear as soon as I finished teaching on Thursday evening, Brent followed by air the next afternoon, and Chris and his girlfriend, Debbie, made their way from Delaware on Friday morning. All four of us converged on a house that Chris had found, just a mile or two from the start of the event.
We had all wondered how different this year’s course would be from 2010, and when we received the checkpoint coordinates at 5:00 AM Saturday morning, we were excited to find a new adventure awaiting us.
The race kicked off promptly at 7:00 AM with a short sprint separator. In the spirit of St. Patrick’s Day, each team had to run to the local middle school to retrieve two riddles. We would not be allowed to start the first section until we returned to the start and solved the riddles.
GOALS is generally a pretty strong team, but we’re rarely out first when it comes to pure speed. On Saturday, though, Chris jetted to the front of the pack with me and Brent following close behind, and by the time we ran back to the start, we had solved the puzzles and were all surprised to find ourselves out in front as we shoved off for a 20+ kilometer paddle.
The early morning fog was burning off and the water was like glass as we kayaked through the Intracoastal Waterways. For a brief moment, we all paused to take in the scene – and then we remembered that there were 50-odd teams chasing us.
As we pushed for the first checkpoint, Brent was careful to match the contours of the channel with the route on the map to make sure that everything lined up. Everything, he said, seemed to be in sync. We were looking for two tributaries that jutted up to the north; our plan was to take the second right turn.
We approached what seemed like the correct spot, but there was only one river coming down. Since everything on the map had been accurate to that point, we assumed that meant we needed to push on ahead a bit further.
We would later discover that the maps dated back to the 1970s. Hurricane Hugo, in 1989, had decimated the waterways and changed the course of the channel for decades to come.
Oops…
Half a mile past the first tributary, we paused to regroup. Several teams passed by as Brent and Chris studied the maps, and when we ultimately made the decision to turn back, several others opted to do the same. We pushed for the turn and paddled up toward the first flag, watching as boat after boat turned to join in the chase.
By the time we reached the checkpoint, our early lead had vanished. Now it was time to play catch-up.
We pulled the two kayaks up a mud-slicked bank and received plots for two additional checkpoints. Brent sat down to triangulate the coordinates (something new to me!) and we made the seamless transition to foot for a short orienteering course.
There were four flags in an area roughly 2-3 square kilometers, and we could retrieve them in any order. As we started off on a clockwise loop, we saw racers running in every direction. We had no sense of how many teams were in front of us.
The flat terrain and well-groomed trails allowed us to sprint from point-to-point. There was no such thing as AR pace during the Swamp Fox; we were pushing near-maximum speed for the entire day, our only respite coming as we slowed to search for and punch each of the flags.
We arrived at the first point on the o-course to see the flag hanging high in a tree. Brent dropped his map case, grabbed the passport from Chris, and ambled up to punch the card.
As he jumped down, I took a breath. My legs had felt heavy at the start of the run and I was preparing for a long slog to the next point. But minutes later, we were pulling up in front of an orange flag, hanging in the center of a swamp.
When we raced here in 2010, I was mildly panicked the first time I stepped into the swamps. This time, though, I had a pre-race heart-to-heart with the race director, who assured me that with three people running through the muck, any alligators would steer clear of our path. To my surprise, his easy logic stuck, and I felt reasonably calm as I prepared for our first trip in.
I got a temporary reprieve, though, when Chris jumped onto a log and ran out to punch the flag.
It would turn out to be the only trip into the swamps all day.
We pushed for the next two points and then returned to the TA for the second paddle leg. As we pushed off in our boats, a volunteer told us that there were four teams ahead of us, and seventeen that still hadn’t made it to the first checkpoint.
We had another hour of paddling, followed by a second short foot section and one last kayak to the bikes.
This was the first time Brent and I had been in a boat since Nationals, and Chris had only been out recreationally in recent months, so during that final paddle, we all began to fatigue. The winds grew stronger and the tides was pushing against us, and we were all starting to feel rather deflated.
“Where are all the ‘gators?” Brent said. ”I want to see an alligator.”
“We’re still in the channel,” Chris or I replied. ”The water’s too brackish.”
We debated the salinity of the water for a minute or two and then, off in the distance, we saw a fin pop out of the water. We watched as a lone dolphin glided through the channel not 50 meters from us.
“Okay,” Brent said, “that makes up for it. That may be one of the coolest race experiences we’ll ever have.”
And then, it got cooler.
A few minutes later, we saw a second fin surface, just off the shore. While the first had been noticeably rounded, this one was more angular.
“Are you sure that’s a dolphin?” I asked.
“I’m pretty sure,” Chris replied, but he didn’t sound quite as confident as he had before.
We continued watching as the animal skimmed the water, not diving up and down as the first had but rather cutting through the surface.
And then the fin turned, and started heading right toward us.
“Um, guys,” I said, “are we really sure it’s a dolphin?”
“I’m not positive,” Brent – my SCUBA instructor of a husband – said, curious.
I didn’t want to wait to find out. We dug our paddles into the water and pulled hard. And then, ten feet to our right, the fin paused and a big, grey dolphin popped its head out of the water and smiled at us.
“Okay, I take it back,” Brent said, once we recovered. “THAT was one of the coolest things we’ll ever experience in a race.”
The dolphin sightings carried us through the next half hour, and just as we began to drag again, Chris spotted a small alligator sunning itself on the banks of our tributary.
“Finally!” Brent yelled.
Even I was excited.
It was enough to get us through that last sluggish kilometer on the water, and when we rounded the final corner and pulled in front of the boat dock, we found ourselves tied for the lead.
We were now 5 hours into the race, and there was one bike section and 15 checkpoints separating us from the finish. And I was ready to ride.
With Brent manning the maps and Chris and me following close behind, the three of us weaved our way along pebbled dirt roads and pine needled trails. Though the terrain was just as flat as it had been in 2010, the bike course this year brought a welcomed variety.
We pushed hard from point to point, Brent’s navigation close to perfect. Within the first handful of CP’s, we’d passed the one solo racer who was in front of us, but we felt a handful of other teams nipping at our bike shoes.
Each time we thought we’d begun to open up a lead, we’d see them pull in to search for a point within minutes of our departure. It was perhaps the first time for any of us that we’d ever been the rabbit in such a close field.
Four of the final five checkpoints formed a small loop at the far north end of the course, and when we’d mapped it earlier, we thought we would tackle them in a counter-clockwise circle, bushwhacking through the swamps for the final point. As we rode, though, we realized that we would need to move nearly 5 miles an hour – on foot, through swamps – in order to equal the time it would take us to bike around to the point.
When we did the math, it was an easy decision. The only problem? That meant that we’d chosen the wrong route for that last stretch, and with two coed teams close behind, we thought we’d lost our chance at the win.
We hit checkpoint 22 and then powered through to 23.
The night before the race, a small forest fire had broken out near CP 22. When we arrived there, the ground was still smoking.
As we turned back onto the main road for CP 21, we had a chance to gauge how close we were to the trailing teams. We hoped that we wouldn’t pass anyone until we were comfortably moving down the trail toward the flag. But sure enough, within a few minutes, two teams were coming toward us, on the back end of the loop that would take them to the finish.
I watched Brent’s whole body deflate as he calculated our chances. We thought it was over.
Still, we didn’t let up. We sprinted up the trail, dropped our bikes and ran for the flag. Then we jumped back on and retraced our steps to the trailhead. We turned back on the main road and, as with the trip out, found ourselves sliding through loose sand as we willed our bikes to move. Brent and Chris made steady progress but I struggled to power through.
Then, Brent turned back and looked behind me.
“They’re right there,” he urged. ”And we’re so close.”
I gritted my teeth and continued on, and when I made it through the worst of the sand, I turned around to see the coed team turn right for checkpoint 22.
This was our chance. If we could hold on for the final 10k sprint, the race was ours.
We pulled back into a pace line and shot forward. We dropped our bikes for CP 24 and I ran into the woods to punch as Brent rearranged the maps. From there, we had 8 kilometers on smooth roads separating us from the win.
We stuck close and powered on. I was terrified that if I fell off Brent’s wheel, I’d never get back on – so terrified that I nicked his rear tire several times before Chris was able to convince me to ease up.
Finally, we crossed the last major intersection. We sprinted by our rental house and flew past the middle school where we’d retrieved the riddles earlier that morning.
At 4:20 PM, 9 hours and 20 minutes after we began, we dashed in and punched the final CP.
Seven minutes later, the second place Northern Lights powered in.
All six of us agreed that it was the hardest we’d ever pushed in a twelve-hour race. They were gunning to take us and we felt their presence every step of the way.
It was a hard fought one-two finish – and it sure made for an exciting race.
Brent, Chris, and I came out of the day with a comped slot in the East Coast Adventure Race Series Championship, to take place in September.
Then, as Chris and Debbie headed for home, Brent and I began our week-long trip from the lowlands of South Carolina to the hills of Tennessee, where we’ll team up with JP – one of my teammates from the 2010 Untamed New England – for Saturday’s 12-hour Natchez Trace Adventure Race.
The title of this post came to mind at roughly 5:05 AM on Saturday morning, as I began narrating my race report in my head.
We had peeled into the Bolton Valley Ski Resort – the site of the Green Mountain Adventure Racing Association Frigid Infliction – about half an hour earlier, trying to recover from the early morning snow and a wrong turn up to the mountain that delayed our arrival, and in that time we’d completed registration paperwork, “organized” gear, eaten breakfast, hit up the bathroom, glanced at maps, and – 30 seconds before the start sounded – discovered that none of us seemed to be able to get into our cross-country skis.
Let me back up…
The biggest winter adventure race in the country, the Frigid Infliction combines snow shoeing, post holing, cross-country skiing, ropes, and, of course, map-and-compass navigation. After making the trek to Central New York for our first CNYO Snowgaine a few years ago, Brent and I began eyeing this Vermont event, and earlier this winter we decided that this was the year to make the trip. We convinced GOALS teammate Tracey to make the trip up from her home in Massachusetts and readied ourselves for a full winter of training.
The only problem?
There was no winter to be had…
Which meant:
(1) There was no opportunity for snowshoeing.
(2) There was no chance to learn how to cross-country ski.
(3) We had no reason to pull out any of our winter gear.
All that is to say, when Brent and I left for Vermont on Friday afternoon with a car filled with unsorted gear that hadn’t been used in a year or more, we were probably the most unprepared either of us had ever been for a race.
So when the the start sounded just after 5 AM Saturday morning and teams shot past us on skis, there was little we could do but laugh.
Photos c/o GMARA
Fumbling in the early morning darkness with fierce winds whipping all around us, we eventually fought our way into our bindings and, with no other teams in sight, we set off on the first leg of the race, an uphill climb to the first TA.
But remember that whole “learning to ski” thing that never happened over the winter?
Yeah.
Within half a kilometer, I had abandoned all attempts at skiing and instead opted to carry my skis and poles up the mountain as I post-holed my way through the shin- and knee-deep snow.
Fortunately for me, Brent and Tracey were both rather rusty as well and I was able to match their strides with relative ease as we slowly made our way to the top of the ridge. Still, we surprised ourselves. We began catching teams at the first split, and Brent, who hadn’t had a chance to digest the course before the start, made a quick decision to turn left up a trail – instead of following most other teams to the right – that brought us to the transition with only a handful of sets of skis in sight.
Buoyed by the thought of making up so much ground, we staged our skis in the snow and pulled out our snowshoes. I think I had one shoe on and was loosening up the other when a volunteer came over to see what we were doing.
“Guys, this is a post-holing leg,” she said, “not snowshoeing.”
Right. So much for a quick turnaround.
We pulled off our shoes and stashed them in our packs and took off into the woods for the first CP.
Well, “took off” might be a bit of an overstatement.
With snow hip- and waist-deep by this point and nothing but our ski boots to prevent us from breaking through, we labored slowly, with Brent up front doing the hard work and me and Tracey following close behind.
Trails were off-limits for this section and we quickly discovered that crawling on all fours was the quickest and easiest way form of travel. So off we went, slithering through the featureless snow with nothing more than Brent’s expert nav skills to guide us.
Before long, we came across a set of ski tracks that seemed to be heading in the right direction.
“My hope is that these are from the person who set the point,” Brent said as he paused to catch his breath.
“I was thinking the same thing,” I replied.
We followed the tracks for several minutes, and sure enough, they led us straight to the orange-and-white flag. When we arrived, it was clear that no other teams had reached the CP yet, but because there were two checkpoints in this leg of the race and they could be collected in any order, we all assumed that everyone else had opted to go for the other one first.
We made our way toward the next flag and as we were getting ready to go back into the woods, we found Molly, Dave, and Jason of Team Untamed beginning the trek in.
“Hey Molly!” I said cheerfully, greeting my friend who I hadn’t seen since the previous summer. “How’s it going so far?”
She offered a big hello and a weary smile that left us wondering what had happened to leave them feeling down so early in the race.
Instead of just following in their tracks, Brent led us down a small hill, where we broke through the tree line and began crawling toward the point. This lower attack gave us a more direct line to the CP, but it also made for slow, labored travel as we attempted to traverse the rolling terrain through waist-deep snow.
Brent continued to break snow most of the way, and when I took over several minutes later, I realized just how hard he’d been working for the past few hours. Clumsily, I picked my way through the mess of branches and up and down the shallow ravines. We finally began to hear voices and looked over to see several racers gathered around the flag, just 15 feet above us.
Though travel had been slow, Brent’s strategy had worked well. Now all we had to do was get to the point.
Easier said than done.
I clawed at mounds of snow and grasped for small trees as I willed my entire body up the small slope toward the CP. But no matter how hard I worked, I couldn’t make any progress. It was the first seriously frustrating moment of the day.
Eventually, we fought our way to the flag, and after a quick punch, we moved easily down the trail that had been beaten down from the teams that had opted to follow Untamed.
As we made our way back to the TA, we heard lots of chatter about an elusive Checkpoint 1. It seemed that there had been a flag on that first leg of the race up the ski mountain. In the frenzy of the start, as we were trying to recover from the morning craziness and get organized for the race, we’d misheard the directions and assumed that the TA was the first point.
Not a typical GOALS mistake, but nothing we could do about it at that point. It turned out that only three or four of the teams ever found that first checkpoint. The experienced trio of Team Untamed had blown by it as well. Now I understood why they had looked so glum.
We made it back to the TA shaking our heads and quickly transitioned to snowshoes for a drama-free loop of checkpoints. We all enjoyed finding our footing and even got to run for stretches.
As we reached the final snowshoe checkpoint, Brent looked at his watch. If we arrived back by 10:00 AM, we would have the opportunity to go out for a bonus checkpoint. We had 20 minutes to make the cut-off.
We ran back to the TA and pulled off our snowshoes.
“You’ve got two minutes to get into your skis and go,” a volunteer told us.
“Does the bonus get us an extra checkpoint or just an hour time credit?” Brent asked, reading through the race directions. In the chaos of the moment, Brent thought he received confirmation that if we were able to get out in time, we would have the opportunity to go for an extra flag, effectively making up for the early CP #1 blunder. We would learn later that this wasn’t the case.
The good news: we wrestled with our skis and managed to shove off down the mountain with fewer than 30 seconds to spare.
The bad news: we had to ski all the way down a mountain.
I made it approximately 10 meters before my feet flew out from under me. I stood up and tried again. 10 more meters, 2 more skis pointing up in the air.
This wouldn’t do.
So, once again, I pulled off my skis, balanced them in my arms, and ran down the mountain, laughing all the way at the show that Brent and Tracey were putting on.
There were a few close calls – some nearly-clipped tree trunks and nearly-torn ACL’s, but the two made it down without incident, and when we turned down a relatively flat groomed trail toward the bonus CP, somehow they convinced me to give the skis another shot.
I clipped in – I was becoming pretty good at getting in and out by that point – and to everyone’s surprise, I managed to stay on my feet as I slowly found my rhythm and chased them down the trail. Before long, we were moving along the path three-across.
“Look at us, guys!” I yelled. “We’re a team of skiers!”
We glided along for a kilometer or more. A competent skier came flying down an adjoining trail and when he saw us, he said, “Are you guys part of the race? You sure don’t look like you’re racing.”
All three of us nearly doubled over in giddy giggles. We were having a blast.
As we neared the turn-off toward the checkpoint, Brent paused to look at the maps and I clipped out of my skis for a quick pitstop. When I came back, my left binding wouldn’t open. No matter how hard I tried, no matter which way I pushed or pulled, no matter how much I yelled at it, it wouldn’t budge.
With that, my short-lived ski career was over.
Seriously frustrating moment #2.
Dejected, I picked up my skis and poles and trudged up the hill behind Brent and Tracey. Even though I’d carried my skis for 95% of the ski legs of the race, I was beyond dispirited.
Still, I plodded along, avoiding the deepest snow and shuffling where I could as I tried to keep up with my teammates. We climbed the final ascent for the flag and then turned for the TA.
Half an hour later, I ran down the final hill and dropped my skis on the ground. With aching arms and heavy legs, I nearly hugged the volunteer who told me that they were transporting our ski equipment back to the finish.
We pulled on our snowshoes once again and headed for the last major obstacle of the day, the tyrolean traverse.
There was a bit of a backlog when we arrived at the ravine, so we had the chance to scope out the different lines. To save time and with the blessing of race staff, Brent opted to attempt the notoriously hardest rope while Tracey and I stood in line for the mid-grade rope. None would be easy. All were graded up-hill. Brent’s was the steepest and the one that Tracey and I had chosen required racers to negotiate around a tree 2/3 of the way across.
Brent started first and I hooked in a few minutes later. Before long, we were both hanging from the middle of the ravine, side-by-side.
It was a slow process, pulling ourselves across the static rope, but I made steady progress until I hit the tree. There, the combination of fatigue and calorie deficit began to set in, and when I looked over to see my struggling husband clinging to a tree (his line really was the worst – it was no coincidence that only two other teams opted to cross it all day), I started to get a bit woozy.
I grabbed the rope and attempted to shake out my arms, and when I began pulling again, I discovered that my pack had been snared by the tree.
“Are your snowshoes tied on?” someone called from the other side of the rope.
“Well enough,” I yelled back.
A beat.
“Okay,” she replied. “I’m going to need you to reach down and grab the branch behind you.”
I looked down to see that my snowshoe had fallen out of my pack and was hanging from the tree. Carefully, I pulled it back in and tied it to my front caribiner. A minute later, my other shoe fell into the ravine. Then the first one followed suit.
Eventually, I managed to pull myself across, and one of the many great volunteers out on the course sent my shoes across with a pile of gear. Brent and I reached solid ground at the same time and sat down to wait for Tracey, an awesome climber who made it across all too quickly.
From there, we shook out our arms and pulled on our snowshoes for the final leg of the race, a final trek up and around the downhill ski slopes and into the finish.
Race staff at the tyrolean had recommended that we attempt no more than two checkpoints here, but we were moving well and ended up nabbing three with ease. We contemplated a fourth but ultimately decided that we didn’t have quite enough time. We ran down the final descent and clocked into the finish at 2:42 PM. With the bonus checkpoint and the hour credit, we estimated that this would give us a good shot at the #3 spot on the podium.
As we sorted gear and chatted with friends, all three of us agreed that it was one of the best 12-hour races any of us had ever done. A great staff and an awesome and challenging course. The past ten hours had flown by.
GMARA capped off the event with a festive post-race banquet. We sat with our friends on Team Pain Syndicate and rehashed the day, and when the standings were announced, we cheered for our tablemates, who’d managed to nab that phantom checkpoint #1 and snag first place and a slot at the USARA National Championships.
It turned out that the bonus, in fact, did not count as a separate checkpoint and instead only offered an hour time credit, which meant no chance of a podium finish for us. Though we were all a bit disappointed by the confusion, knowing we may have made different decisions with more information, we left Bolton Valley that night thoroughly satisfied with – and thoroughly exhausted by – the first race of the season. GMARA put on a great show, and we’re all looking forward to making the trip up again in the future (perhaps a year when we can actually train for it a little bit).
As Brent and I drove south toward his parents’ house for a few hours of sleep, I looked out the window at the piles of snow lining the road.
“The nice thing is,” I said, “I think I’ve had my fill of winter for the year.”
My apologies to the english majors among you for foreshadowing a snake encounter and then not delivering!
The finish line of AR Costa Rica was at Almond and Corals, a beachside eco-lodge on the Caribbean coast just north of the small town of Manzanillo near the Panama border. The lodge consisted of a series of bungalows, joined together by raised wooden pathways laid over characteristically dense vegetation.
In each room, there was a small placard that read:
“In 20 years of operation in the area, we have never had any person bit by a snake. However, it is possible to find a snake around the hotel.”
Once the race ended, I stopped worrying about the prospect of viper encounters and went about my business, walking along the wooden planks to and from our room with careless abandon.
Then, on Friday evening, Brent and I went outside to head to dinner. It was raining and dark, with small lamps lighting the pathway. Five feet from our room, Brent stopped and held his arm out to stop me from going any further.
“There’s a snake,” he said in alarm, pointing to the small leathery pile on the corner of the walk.
I peered over his shoulder.
“It’s definitely a viper!” I exclaimed, recalling our snake lessons the weekend before. ”Does he have small eyes?”
“I can’t tell,” Brent replied.
“What about loreal pits? Does he have loreal pits?” I asked, referencing the small poison-filled nostrily things between the eyes and the tip of the nose.
“You think I’m getting close enough to check?”
I walked carefully around and went to alert the clerk at reception while Brent stood watch.
“Hay un serpiente afuera de nuestra habitacion!” I said. ”Es una vibura, pero no se si es venomosa!”
I expected a nonchalant response, but instead the clerk’s eyes widened in excitement. He and his friend jumped up from behind the desk and ran down the walkway toward our room.
By the time we returned, there was a small crowd gathered.
“Donde esta, donde esta?” the clerk called.
“He just slithered into the bushes,” Brent replied.
We all looked to see the last of his tail vanishing into the brush.
After dinner and lots of excited chatter with our waitress, Brent and I returned to our room and promptly pulled out the camera. We flipped through the pictures until we landed on the shots that we’d taken of the fer de lance, one of the world’s deadliest snakes.
We continued on down the bumpy Costa Rican roads, and everyone seemed to be managing well. Twenty kilometers from transition, we passed a member of the french team lying on the side of the road, his teammates tending to him.
“He looks like where I was a couple hours ago,” Brent said.
We paused briefly to make sure he was okay before pedaling on, not realizing that they had already used their emergency phone to call the race directors for transport out.
At 4:30 PM, we pulled into the TA and got down to business. We broke down our bikes, rinsed off, changed our clothes, and downed our first real food of the race.
Finally, it was time to take advantage of our fast-on-our-feetness. The 65-kilometer trek would take us up and over a 9,000 foot peak through the dense jungle. Race directors had estimated the section to take 14-24 hours. Given our condition, we thought we were looking at 20 hours on our feet. We learned later that the world champions made it in 19 hours.
We pulled out of the TA and sped up the road toward the trailhead, only to be waylaid for an hour as we figured out what to do with two broken headlamps. Several stops and one duracel flashlight later, we were back on track.
It was 4 kilometers to the trailhead and another 2-3 to the first river crossing and the beginning of the sharp ascent.
Night sets early in Costa Rica, and by the time we reached the water it was well past dark. We had been told that the river may be impassible, and that if we couldn’t cross on foot, we were to use the cable car above to pull ourselves over.
The river didn’t seem deep – up to our waists at most – but it was moving fast over the slick rocks. And the cable car? An unmanned seat hanging from a wire with a long pull cord attached.
As we paused to consider our options, a team that we’d passed in transition came barreling through. Their navigator was a bear of a man, easily the size of two members of our team put together, and their captain was the most seasoned racer in the field, having competed in some of the sport’s earliest and most rigorous events. We watched them wade across and quickly decided to follow suit.
The same crossing eleven hours later, in the light of day
From there, the only way forward was up. We had roughly 2,700 meters to climb over the next 10 kilometers, and we would be doing it all in ankle-deep mud.
We passed the team that had passed us in the river crossing and pushed forward. For the next few hours we made steady progress on the narrow trail, listening for the sounds of the waterfall that would bring us to the first checkpoint.
We had thought that with night and elevation would come cooler temperatures, but we were all dripping as we climbed higher and higher. We tried to continue eating and drinking, but both were becoming increasingly challenging, especially once we refilled our bladders from a muddy trickle of water and purified with iodine.
Around 10 PM, Brent told us that he needed to pause. He was tired, struggling to keep himself awake and make forward progress. Tiredness, of course, is relative 40 hours into a race, but he’s done enough to know that this wasn’t normal second-night fatigue.
We deliberated on the side of the trail for a few minutes and then decided to pull out our bug nets and settle in for an hour’s sleep. The rest of my teammates seemed to crash easily, but I drifted in and out of consciousness, chilled from sweat and recalling the snakes that we’d been warned about over the weekend briefing.
Finally, Bruce’s alarm went off and we started to ready our gear to continue on.
Brent rolled over and began to pack up the bug net. And promptly threw up.
We started up the trail slowly, and he threw up again. And then again.
We paused. We considered our options. I volunteered that it didn’t seem safe to continue on, with 2,000 meters yet to climb before we got out of the jungle and then another 30+ miles to the next transition. The others agreed. There didn’t seem to be any other options.
We turned around and slowly retraced our steps.
We made it back to the river crossing just as daylight broke. We were all feeling pretty battered by that point. Brent hadn’t been able to hold anything down through the night. Ali and I estimated that we’d each eaten roughly 500 calories over the 11 hours since we’d left the TA.
The only thing that seemed to have held up was our feet.
After a night of trekking through thick mud up and down narrow trails, there wasn’t a blister among us. Turns out Brent was right – our Thorlo socks had served us well.
Pruny, but blister-free!
We trekked out to the road and hitched a ride the 4 kilometers back to the last transition in a hotel parking lot. By that point the race organization was long gone, but hotel staff gave us a phone number and made the call.
An hour later, we were transported to the next TA, on the sunny banks of the Pacuare River, where we sat for five hours. Ultimately, we left with the french team we’d passed during the final bike leg and headed to the finish line lodge – two days before our anticipated arrival.
There was still talk of continuing on – by that point only six teams were still on the full course, the rest having skipped one section or another and been transported to the next TA – but it was clear that we wouldn’t be able to keep moving as a four.
We still don’t know exactly what happened to Brent. EMT advice and internet research suggests a combination of heat exhaustion and overhydration resulting in hyponatremia. Everyone agreed there was nothing he could have done differently. It was three days before he truly recovered.
On Friday morning, Bruce, Ali, and I caught a ride with race staff to one of the final TA’s and completed a short stretch of a later trekking leg, 16 kilometers along the Caribbean Coast.
Monkey-ing around
No turtle sightings, but lots of sea turtle tracks
Monkeys in the trees - they threw figs at us as we passed below
It was a nice distraction from feeling trapped at the finish line. We spent the rest of the afternoon watching teams come in, and the next day traveling back to San Jose and Toyota City for the awards ceremony.
We awoke Sunday morning and hit the road, ready to leave the race behind and play tourist for a few days.
Well, he responded, we’re pretty small – average 5’5″ tall and 125-130 pounds – so we may not be the strongest team physically, but we’re quick on our feet, strong on maps, and steady on bike.
If the race directors had been listening in, they probably would have laughed behind our backs.
That strategy works well in many races in the States, where adventure racing is often lighter on paddling, heavier on navigation, and full of steady inclines or rolling hills.
Not in Costa Rica, though.
When we saw the maps on Sunday afternoon, we knew we needed to reorient. No longer would this be a race of strategy and skill – the relatively straightforward orienteering, the 200 kilometers of paper flat road riding, and the estimated 25-30 hours of kayaking and rafting made this a race of strength and speed.
Our goal became to move steadily, to minimize pitstops, to manage time , and, if all went well over the course of 106 hours, to pass the teams that went out too fast and finish in the middle of the stacked field.
On Monday morning, teams lined up at the starting line at Hotel Sueno Azul, and after a brief delay as we waited for the camera-equipped helicopter to circle overhead, we counted down from diez and all seventeen teams sprinted for the banks of the Sarapiqui River.
The opening separator? Jump in, swim across (packs in hand), and grab a boat for 20 kilometers of rafting.
Playing bad ass
Small and quick on our feet? Not such a plus on a rambling river…
This guy was spotted by the race photographer. We missed him, but saw a couple dozen of his cousins that night.
We exited the water third from the back and set out to pull our bikes out of their boxes and put them back together for 8 hours of riding.
After the rafting, the race was made up of five long legs that zig-zagged to and from the Caribbean Coast, followed by a series of shorter stretches that brought teams to the beachside finish.
In my mind, that meant we had to get through 7 hours of biking, 10 hours of paddling, 10 hours of biking, 20 hours of trekking, and 8 hours of paddling, and then we were essentially home free – just a couple short paddles, treks, and rides along the shore to cap off the race.
After a couple of short fumbles getting out of transition, we headed out for our first ride through the banana plantations and toward the coast. For seven hours we traveled the flat dirt and paved roads – less than 300 meters of elevation gain on the entire leg - and from the first bite of clif bar, we could all tell that we’d have to be careful.
We’d been expecting five days of overcast skies and rain, but instead we found ourselves baking under the oppressive Costa Rican sun. We stopped at regular intervals to apply sunscreen and refill on water, and early on we began to supplement the fuel we were carrying with juices and ice cream bars from local tiendas – liquid calories to make up for the chips, nuts, gummies, and bars we were struggling to choke down.
From checkpoint to checkpoint we formed steady pace lines, swapping the lead and trying to conserve energy. We all experienced hints of dehydration and heat fatigue, but we seemed to manage it well enough. And when we pulled into transition and readied ourselves for a night of kayaking, we found five sets of boats waiting – we were gaining ground and feeling good.
We were on the water by 4 pm and enjoying the gentle quiet of the jungle tributaries from our sleek, speedy kayaks. Our stomachs settled and we were all able to replenish on calories and hydration.
For the first few hours, our only companions were the monkeys in the trees and the water snakes nosing around the boat. And then, just as dark was setting in, we made a play for one of the few navigational decisions of the race.
Paddling into the sunset
The first checkpoint was roughly a kilometer up a channel separated from the main river by a narrow spit of land that housed a dozen houses and a handful of eco-lodges. If we hit it at the right spot, rather than paddling to the end of the peninsula and backtracking, we’d be able to portage the boats overland and come into the channel from above the checkpoint. It was a bit of a gamble in the otherwise dense jungle terrain, but when we saw a narrow opening through the trees, we decided to chance it.
We paddled to shore and pulled the boats out of the water. Two minutes, one short dog chase, and a neighborly chat with a Costa Rican homeowner later, we were in the channel heading upstream, less than 250 meters from the point. As we pulled in, we came upon two other teams, and in the distance we spotted three more.
The gamble had paid off. We were beginning to close the gap.
We continued on back into the main river and made our way toward the ocean. There was thunder in the distance but the waters were calm. We avoided using headlamps for the most part, relying on the stars and the Milky Way to light our path, but anytime we turned on our beams we caught the glint of orange crocodile eyes lining the banks. Going to shore wasn’t an option. We crossed our fingers that the storms would hold off.
It was around midnight when the drops began to fall, the only time we’d experience the “rainy season” during our 48 hours of racing. The showers continued into the early hours of the morning, through the rest of the paddle, through our transition back onto our bikes, and right up until the sun began to rise and the temperatures began to climb.
Then the rain stopped, and we were left to contend with another day of sun.
The second bike leg was about 40 kilometers longer than the first, but that didn’t seem to account for the extra four hours that the race directors had estimated for the third long leg.
That is, until we set off on our first stretch of road, and encountered the rib-chattering cobblestones that would be with us for much of the day.
Except when we were climbing through barbed wire fences…
…or riding the rails…
…or crossing bridges (Ali: “We have to do what?”)…
…or fording creeks…
Shortly after the “raft crossing,” Brent began to feel woozy. We’d all had our heat-related ups and downs throughout the morning, but this was something different. His heart began to pound and his breathing became labored. He was overheating quickly and it was clear he needed to pause.
We were between villages at that point, but within a couple minutes we came upon a small, isolated house. As the resident spanish speaker on our team, I passed through the gate and walked up to the front porch, calling out to see if anyone was home. After a few minutes of knocking, a woman came to the door. She was tentative at first – why are there four dirty Americans at my house? – but once I explained to her that Brent was sick, she invited us to rest on the porch.
She brought us iced tea to drink and water to pour over Brent, and her son followed suit with a damp cloth. There was no shortage of Costa Rican hospitality during this race, but this was surely the country’s finest.
We stayed on the porch for an hour, ultimately deciding to settle in for a short nap so that Brent could recover. The family offered us lunch (we, perhaps foolishly, declined) and took their pet bird inside when they saw us getting ready to sleep.
We awoke refreshed 30 minutes later, packed up our gear, and after thanking our hosts and offering them clif bars (they wouldn’t accept cash for our imposition), we continued on our way. Brent was feeling good. We’d finally hit a short stretch of gentle rollers. We were ready to move.
We didn’t know then that this would be the beginning of the end of our Costa Rican adventure…