Riding Lynda's scorchmark
Oh my. So much has already occured since the last post. The race is epic - a tremendous experienc on so many levels. For one, the Transrockies course designers won't settle with a dirt road sort of course, something I've come to expect in a lot of enduranc events. The first day was the most phenomal day of ups and downs, super pretty techy, and just for fun a few unrideable sections, although they appear rideable at the top. There is a whole other set of standards for course difficulty in Canada/BC/Alberta. Just check out the Fernie links from the transrockies homepage to see what I'm talking about.
Then there is the event organization. I'm continually impressed by the level of detail shown. The second days start procedure, for instance, was fair and based on times where they put riders in a start block appropriate of the first days ride time. We have the deluxe package, which means, for instance, that we have an RV, someone to drive it to the next stop (and they also dump/fill it), massage daily, a personal concierge to see we have what we need, free mechanic service. There's more too...but the point is they set this up so teams could focus on their race, which, BTW, is what Lynda and I have been doing...
Yesterday the start was a free-for-all. The course started 15 km of roads, paved with deep potholes and dirt, rolling a bit. Everyone was so fresh and eager to get going, so the pace was extremely high. Our start position was about 200 back in the 450 person field, so it was pretty dicey weaving through the sketchy crowd to get a good starting position in the first singletrack. But, we did it just fine. We were pretty amped up too and had some energy fluctions during the ride, but in the end came across the line together, the biggest smiles beaming, victorious after a hard ride. After dinner comes the awards ceremony in which Lynda and I donned the GC leader jersey for open mixed teams. It was a pretty cool moment in and of itself, but made even cooler since they bring up all GC leaders from the 6 different categories. The open mens team was the Andreas Hestler/Seamus McGrath duo. Pretty cool to share a podium with those cats.
Today was a terrific ride. At the start we weren't where we were supposed to be, so they called us to the front of the field. Lynda lines up right next to McGrath and gets on his wheel for the leadout from town. Bitchin! We rode steady, not too hard off the start, had our team tactics dialed in, and had a super consistent ride. Big climbs - one of well over 3,000 up a rocky 12% grade under a big canopy of underbrush, the larger branches would occasionally grab our helmets and jerk our heads back. Again we came across first.
It's not a cakewalk though. Lou Kobin and Eric W are riding super strong, and not far behind is the team of Trish Stevenson and Sam Koerber. After today, the GC gaps are about 15 and 20 minutes, respectively. So we must keep our consistency up to achieve the big prize.
Lynda is riding absolutely outside of her body - especially on descents. She's risen to new levels, which was the purpose of her TR peak. Well, she's nailed it. One guy comes up to me after the race today, and with pie plate sized eyes exclaims "your gal is a wicked fast descender!" She sure is - we finished 10th overall today of 230 teams, and to do so we were riding in some elite company - and she would attack the top of climbs and drill descents. I rode her scorchmark twice, watching her do this to these fast cats. Crack is everywhere and we are loving it.
On tap for tomorrow is one doosy of a stage. 8,000+ feet of climbing, super steep stuff, and about 70 miles. Based on the past two days, we expect it be over 7 hours for us. And since were at the pointy end of the field, I really feel for the mid-pack teams faced with a 10 hour time limit cutoff tomorrow.
Not too sure what the story is...but the open mens GC changed hands today. McGrath/Hestler were 2nd to Troy Missighers and his partner today. Troy and I bumped elbows (literally, at the start sending me to the dirt) at the start of the mesa marathon. Super nice guy though - I look forward to chatting with him on the podium in 2 hours.
So there's a big ol update for y'all - thanks for checking in!
Then there is the event organization. I'm continually impressed by the level of detail shown. The second days start procedure, for instance, was fair and based on times where they put riders in a start block appropriate of the first days ride time. We have the deluxe package, which means, for instance, that we have an RV, someone to drive it to the next stop (and they also dump/fill it), massage daily, a personal concierge to see we have what we need, free mechanic service. There's more too...but the point is they set this up so teams could focus on their race, which, BTW, is what Lynda and I have been doing...
Yesterday the start was a free-for-all. The course started 15 km of roads, paved with deep potholes and dirt, rolling a bit. Everyone was so fresh and eager to get going, so the pace was extremely high. Our start position was about 200 back in the 450 person field, so it was pretty dicey weaving through the sketchy crowd to get a good starting position in the first singletrack. But, we did it just fine. We were pretty amped up too and had some energy fluctions during the ride, but in the end came across the line together, the biggest smiles beaming, victorious after a hard ride. After dinner comes the awards ceremony in which Lynda and I donned the GC leader jersey for open mixed teams. It was a pretty cool moment in and of itself, but made even cooler since they bring up all GC leaders from the 6 different categories. The open mens team was the Andreas Hestler/Seamus McGrath duo. Pretty cool to share a podium with those cats.
Today was a terrific ride. At the start we weren't where we were supposed to be, so they called us to the front of the field. Lynda lines up right next to McGrath and gets on his wheel for the leadout from town. Bitchin! We rode steady, not too hard off the start, had our team tactics dialed in, and had a super consistent ride. Big climbs - one of well over 3,000 up a rocky 12% grade under a big canopy of underbrush, the larger branches would occasionally grab our helmets and jerk our heads back. Again we came across first.
It's not a cakewalk though. Lou Kobin and Eric W are riding super strong, and not far behind is the team of Trish Stevenson and Sam Koerber. After today, the GC gaps are about 15 and 20 minutes, respectively. So we must keep our consistency up to achieve the big prize.
Lynda is riding absolutely outside of her body - especially on descents. She's risen to new levels, which was the purpose of her TR peak. Well, she's nailed it. One guy comes up to me after the race today, and with pie plate sized eyes exclaims "your gal is a wicked fast descender!" She sure is - we finished 10th overall today of 230 teams, and to do so we were riding in some elite company - and she would attack the top of climbs and drill descents. I rode her scorchmark twice, watching her do this to these fast cats. Crack is everywhere and we are loving it.
On tap for tomorrow is one doosy of a stage. 8,000+ feet of climbing, super steep stuff, and about 70 miles. Based on the past two days, we expect it be over 7 hours for us. And since were at the pointy end of the field, I really feel for the mid-pack teams faced with a 10 hour time limit cutoff tomorrow.
Not too sure what the story is...but the open mens GC changed hands today. McGrath/Hestler were 2nd to Troy Missighers and his partner today. Troy and I bumped elbows (literally, at the start sending me to the dirt) at the start of the mesa marathon. Super nice guy though - I look forward to chatting with him on the podium in 2 hours.
So there's a big ol update for y'all - thanks for checking in!
7 Comments:
Awesome! Keep it up.
Hey man, nice stage today but get some rest. Eric and Lou are not far behind!! I'm jealous.....
Ed E
Awesome Dave! Please keep up the reports. It's gettting me so amped for leadville in less than 4 days!!!
Chris
Hey Dave and Lynda, keep it up, Rob and I are watching from the UK and planning for next year :-)
Gavin
Well done. Hope you can keep going strong and keep us well informed
Put the ole hurt on 'em. You guys rock...
Brad in SLC
You two are AMAZING! Go! Go! Go!
Karen M
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