Showing posts with label Adventure Race. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adventure Race. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Prepping for Raid the North Extreme

The days seem shorter as Raid the North Extreme is rapidly approaching.  About all the training hours have been banked, it is now time for banking sleep and final packing.  The team is hoping that you take a moment each day to check our progress and give us a shout out.  The long days and nights will start to run together, it will give us a needed boost as we transition from one discipline to another to know that our friends are out there, willing to give us a virtual pat on the back for what we have accomplished and kick in the butt to keep us moving down the trail.

Team Midwest Mountaineering Training in CO
You may be asking....  What is Raid the North Extreme?  Here is a link to the event website.  Read as much or as little as you would like.  We are going up against some of the best teams in the world.  Our goal.... to complete the event, have fun, maybe learn a little about ourselves and each other.

One item we are really excited about!  British Columbia's West Kootenay!  The are will have spectacular vistas, some of the best mountain biking in the world, epic paddling opportunities, and plenty of opportunity to suffer.

The teams will be equipped with SPOT tracking.  This will enable you to follow our progress and see where we are with respect to other teams.  It is unclear at this point where you will be able to do this, but I recommend visiting Checkpoint Tracker and the Raid the North Extreme sites.  One of them will have a link to the tracking page.

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

MNOC Adventure-O 2010

Sometimes, getting to the race with an intact team is half the battle.  At least you see it that way from a "before the race" perspective.  The 2010 Adventure-O, hosted by the Minnesota Orienteering Club (MNOC) seemed to be one of those races.  Coordinating training, getting crushed by rain when you do get a chance to train, and personnel swaps add to the excitement.  From an "after the race" perspective, that was all trivial.

MNOC puts on excellent events.  The group, composed of map geeks with a penchant for going deep in the woods, places a premium on navigation vs. outright physical prowess.  They don't mind getting dirty, and certainly don't mind it when you get dirty.  This years event was held at Savannah Portage State Park, near McGregor, MN.  The course was set and vetted by two members with a lot of Adventure Race and Orienteering experience, Jerritt Johnston and Ian Harding.  Special thanks to Pete Curtis for the photos he took and provided for our blog.

The TMMAR team was composed of Will Eddy, Clark Flowers, Suzanne Pfeifer, and Peter Wentzel.  The format:  short O-course, transition to bike for a medium length Bike-O, transition to kayak for four controls on big Sandy Lake, transition to bike for a longer Bike-O, and a final O section on foot.  The race was given a 7.5 hour time limit.  The weather was warmer than expected, highs in the mid 80's and a nice strong wind was expected to kick up.

We started out with a sprint for controls 1-4, right at 9:30 AM.  Clark and Pete sharing the nav, with Will and Suzanne following close behind.  Suzanne volunteered to be towed during the runs, admitting that running wasn't her strongest suit.  PROPS to Suzanne.  While the MNOC regulars sprinted the course with TMMAR practicing a fast follow, Suzanne volunteered to hook herself to a bungie cord while Will attempted to pull her over logs, rocks, stumps, holes and pits, so the team could get in front of traffic on the bike section.  Not for the faint of heart.  All went well until Will caught a root and twisted his ankle.  This caused a minor change in pace, but we pressed on and finished the first O section, a little over a mile, in good position.

We transitioned well to bike and headed down the trail, looking for control 5 and 6.  You knew it was going to be fun when there were already teams doing some head scratching as we left the first road and entered the XC trail system.  Jerritt had warned us all, "Take it easy on the trails, especially the downhills, as there are a lot of hidden obstacles." So, we didn't bomb the first downhill, or the second, or the third, but that was getting a bit old....  We followed a group bobble (control confusion, map error, group think) and dismounted to find the first bike control in an area I thought was way too early.  But, we did it non-the-less.  Remounting and recalibrating, we cruised through a rutty section where Pete almost bit it, and secured the first bike control.  We navigated the maze of trails, growing increasingly frustrated with having to dismount to cross trees and go slow through thick grass because, "you just don't know" what lies beneath.  Pressing on, we witness a fellow racer find what lurked beneath.  A quick stop to critique the triple flip (and ensure all his parts still worked) and we left with a new appreciation for "the junk below the weeds..."

We emerged from the woods, unscathed and did a quick road ride to the paddle put in.  A quick transition and we are floating... and eating.  Most of us had not been keeping up with our fuel and took a quick break to shove food in our mouth before pointing down course and trying to catch the five teams in front of us while seeking controls 7-10.  Pete and Will in one boat, Clark and Suzanne in the other.  Luckily, the forecast wind had not picked up yet and we followed a mild chop south to a sheltered bay where the controls were located. Pete, not being the smoothest motivator, responded to the other boats reminder that Will and he couldn't get too far in front, with a reminder to the other boat that they can't get too far behind.  They didn't.  You would have to go back nearly two years for TMMAR to have such a good paddle leg.  We were setting a good pace coming off the first control when we ran into a bay full of grass.  It looked to us that the whole bay was grass (we missed the channel) so we picked a thin spot, pointed in the right direction and let her rip.  We looked like a cross between the Swedish Chef and the Tasmanian Devil tossing a salad.  Grass, moss, fish, frogs, and unknown entities went flying in the air as we attempted to maintain pace through the obstacle.  Coming out the far side, we saw that we made some serious time on the other teams.  We hit the next control and did a U-turn, this time, it was more of a slap chop scenario.  Equally effective.  We passed a couple teams!  Dig deep team.  We quickly grabbed the last two controls and headed back to the transition point.  The wind on the main lake had really picked up.  Teams were struggling to get to the sheltered bay as we surfed the downwind waves back to dry land.  We returned as the 2nd team to exit the water, passing 4 teams on the leg.

Off we go on the bike, in search of controls 11-16, catching up on food and arriving back at the XC trails with two other teams who pushed hard to catch us.  Pete did a quick map swap and the other teams went ahead.  Will put forth a huge effort int his next section.  We tow when we run, we tow when we bike, and we tow when we paddle, only when necessary, but such is AR.  Suzanne, an accomplished racer, came out of retirement for this event and admitted that she would need help on occasion.  Towing is a team exercise.  You rotate, you collaborate, you communicate and you get it done.  Unless you forget to bring your towing equipment....  So the team had one tow rig, and will agreed to be the tow on the bicycle.  Again, Suzanne gets props.  Most people don't like to tow or be towed on anything but asphalt.  Suzanne, held on through thick and thin.

We progressed down the trail, watching for key intersections and more obstacles.  There were plenty of the later, and just enough of the former.  The first half of this bike O saw plenty of logs, one tricky intersection, a crazy bridge, and a chest deep beaver lake that we carried our bikes across.  Jerritt and Ian at their best.  The second half made the race.  Coming in to an intersection, it was clear that a lot of traffic went right, which was actually straight ahead.  There was a hidden trail entrance that require a turn of approximately 135 degrees, which TMMAR took.  A smile crossed our faces once we confirmed we were on the right path, some others were not....  Making the turn was half the battle.  What followed was multiple dismounts, some voluntarily, others... not quite as graceful.  Nobody got hurt, a few got laughed at, but the course was competed with TMMAR in 3rd place.

Final transition to the run went well.  On to controls 17-24.  We knew Orion was less than 10 minutes in front of us.  A bobble on their part and maybe we could capture 2nd.  We set off at a jog and found the first control with no issues.  Getting in and out of the next control was problematic.  Not from a navigation point of view, but the terrain between the controls was thick.  A lot of trees down, then bog hopping, and then more trees.  The flies were horrible. We got out of the thick stuff, grabbed the next control and moved east, deciding that trails may be a quicker route after all.  We jumped on the continental divide trail (who knew?) and gained the next two controls in short order.  A quick look at the watch showed we had to change strategy. Jogging the flats and downhills while walking the uphills was not going to get us back in time.  Switch to jog the uphills and make your heart pound on everything else.  Luckily, the controls and map were dead accurate and the next three controls came quickly.  The last involving wading through a river...twice.... all of us.  I am sure some other teams opted for a drier approach, but we didn't have the luxury of looking for that route.  One final bushwhack through the woods and we are on the road home.  A good pace to the finish led to a third place overall.  The last team to sweep the course.  Congrats to WEDALI and Orion for first in the 4 person and two person coed divisions.  TMMAR took 2nd in the 4 person.

Good race, good times with the friends, new and old, from MNOC.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Shout Out for the Shockspital

GoathorkI found myself in a world of hurt/panic this past Sunday.  I was prepping for the upcoming Planet Adventure Old School 36 hour event.  Paddles on the bike, all the gear organized....  this race requires you to carry 100% of the discipline gear (minus the canoe and bike) for all 36 hours.  A lot of weight.  I wanted to check the air pressure in my shock.  I go to attach my pump, and the fitting breaks off of the pump.  Sunday night... can't do anything but fret and pump my neighbors for information on a speedy repair.  "Call bike shops.... and I think there might be a guy behind Alt.."  Monday, 9 AM and the local shops start opening, I make a few calls and are greeted with doubtful commits.  The Alt opens at 10, and I get the name of "the man" in town for suspensions.  I checkout the Shockspital website and place a request.  "HELP"  By the time I get Brian on the phone, he has hung up with the SRAM folks and the part is on its way.  Three day turn around, no problem.  Today, I get the bad news that my part didn't arrive... but Brian had a solution.  He pulled an old part, made sure it was fully functional, and told me to come back post race for the real deal.  Thank you much!

Paula and I will be assisting Team MAAR at this event.  Follow us and give us a shout out of your own!

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

POCAR 2010

Team Midwest Mountaineering Adventure Racing traveled to Southern Indiana for the 2nd year in a row to participate in the Purdue Outing Club's Annual Adventure Race, POCAR.  Held in the Hoosier National Forest, the same rugged terrain as the previous year, we knew we were in for a good, hard race.  We were excited for our first event of 2010 and also to have our new Icebreaker clothing to keep us warm.  Icebreaker makes the best, in my opinion, merino wool athletic wear on the market.  The best looking also.  With unpredictable weather, we were thrilled to be prepared for any condition.

For the purpose of this narrative, we have relabeled the control points, CP's, numerically in the order we visited them.  Teams were given the option of visiting the controls on their current leg in any order.  The controls were named, b-28, u4, etc.  It seems easier for you to follow if we just label them numerically.  We had some GPS data logger issue early in the event, which sorted itself out on the way to CP2.  The random path around the start and CP1 doesn't depict our course, the rest is accurate though.


The competition starts with a portion of the teams gaining entry to the race HQ to begin plotting the control locations.  Teams are assigned one of three start times and given 25 minutes to get their work done.  Then it is off to the races.  We decided to take a safe attack point to the first control CP1, getting our feet wet, and headed up the main road.  We found our attack point and dove in to the woods.  We came in to the spur a little too far west, subjecting us to a climb that wasn't necessary.  So much for taking a safe attack point.

CP2 was in a location that we had difficulty with the prior year.  An area with multiple reentrants, we jumped too soon and ended up too far east this time.  Deja' vu?  We hoped, because we got things on track after this area in 2009.

Mass starts to an adventure race always create a train of teams.  Why search for a control when you can follow a team?  Although we didn't exactly put on a stellar navigation display to the first two controls, we are an experienced team with some competence.  We don't like to follow, because the team you are following is often more likely to get you lost than to the control you are looking for.  This is especially true early on, before the lead teams distance themselves.  As we meandered towards CP3, we picked up the pace, hoping to shed a few teams in the area.

Saturday, January 9, 2010

TMMAR Commits to the Fat Otter Raid!


Team Fat Otter is putting on a Raid this spring and Team Midwest Mountaineering Adventure Race is going to attend.  Forms are sent in, check is cut, just need to train and prep.  What is a RAID?  Good question.  My research didn't reveal anything definitive, but my intuition tells me it is the international term for an expedition length adventure race.  Although not used much here, it is pervasive enough that equipment manufacturers place the Raid word in some of their product names, such as the Salomon Raid Revo.

We visited Wisconsin for another event last summer, the Sweaty Otter, also put on by Fat Otter racing.  This event is as close as an event this length has ever been to home, Black River Falls Wisconsin.


The details:
20-23 May, 2010
4 Person (Pete, Will, Chris and Paula W.)
Teams are allowed 2 totes for gear, all other items must be carried.  No support crew is allowed.

We have always wanted to do a race longer than 24 hours.  They are difficult just to get to the starting line.  Logistics, team commits, expense and travel all create issues.  Thank you Team Fat Otter, for putting on an expedition style race so close to home.  We are pumped!

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

POCAR Prep

Team Midwest Mountaineering has been busy training in this harsh Minnesota winter.  Cold weather and snow has made training difficult, but we have still managed some 3 hour outdoor runs, weight training, yoga, XC skiing and other cross training activities.  Why?  POCAR.  The Purdue Outing Club has been organizing an Adventure Race for a number of years.  They host a collegiate and an open division with team sizes between four and six members.  Not wanting to go small on the only event they host, they go for multi-day, allowing 48 hours for teams to complete the course.  Your prize, a patch for finishing.  It doesn't seem like much, but not many earn the patch.

48 hours is enough time to see large temperature and weather swings.  You have to be prepared for anything that can happen.  Last year, the Midwest Mountaineering finished in twenty hours.  Trekking up and down hills, for 40 miles, most of it in the dark.  We can't plan on 20 hours this year.  You don't know what the combination of course and weather will bring.  Train for the worse case scenario.  Pack for the worse case scenario.  Mentally prep for the worse case scenario.


Last year was not without issues.  Forty miles on frozen ground is hard on the feet.  William went with borrowed shoes and still bemoans that decision.  We opted not to carry trekking poles, but will probably carry them this year.  Paula opted not to whine, even though the bottom of her feet earned her the right too.  The right to whine, not to quit.  Last year was a victory for Team Midwest Mountaineering.  Not because we were the fastest or best prepared, but because we were persistent.  We kept going when the front runners bailed.

More to come when we return.  Wish us luck.  Post a comment!

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Sweaty Otter Video

This video was taken while navigating to the last control in Sweaty Otter. Clearly, some of us are a little tired / slap happy.

Monday, April 13, 2009

Bike, Hike (, Ass-Slide) and BBQ

Team,
David and Pete took an unofficial first place at the Bike Hike BBQ this past weekend. We beat Justin and Molly from WEDALI who were riding with Tom Puzak from 24-7 by 1-2 minutes. Tom rode the whole event with a broken finger....one hand on the handlebars. We were neck and neck, then Molly had a flat. We got to the orienteering section, and searched for CP10 for about 10 minutes. It wasn't out yet (Dan Williams strikes again.....).

David showed me how to properly descend a cliff.... at least how to properly descend the first 10%. The rest was an excerpt from Will'e Coyote. Complete with the poof at the bottom of the cliff. I made it down 25% before I did my imitation.

No bragging rights for this event. It was fun and a great day.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Race Overview


Okay....I lied below. I have no idea if TMMAR is 'still going strong' but I am going to assume they are still going strong. I know they made it through CP 8. Here is a recap of the race (still going on) as provided by USARA:


Course Description Friday 11:07 PM
As requested by a race follower in Philadelphia (some may know him as Dr. Evil), here is a brief overview of the race:
The teams began with a quick two-mile prologue before setting off on the water for a 15-mile paddle leg. All teams were in canoes; third seats were expressly prohibited (including beach balls).

Following the paddle, teams trekked from checkpoint 3 to 4, where they picked up their bikes and headed on an extended mountain bike leg, grabbing checkpoints 5, 6, and 7 before reaching checkpoint 8 and the first major orienteering section.

Racers dropped their bikes at checkpoint 8 and embarked on a seven-mile foot loop, where they could get checkpoints 9, 10, 11, and 12 in any order. Checkpoint 13 was located mere feet from checkpoint 8, and after they punched in there, they picked up their bikes again for a short ride to checkpoint 14.

Teams followed another orienteering loop, estimated at 8 miles, to checkpoints 15-17 (again, in whatever order they chose). At 18, they picked up their bikes and headed off on their final leg, a bike-o section whereby teams could get 19-23 in any order, then 24, then 25-28 in any order, and finally 29 before coasting into the finish at the Blue Ridge Mountain Arts Center on Main Street in downtown Blue Ridge.

Because the race was a ROGAINE format, several checkpoints were optional and a number of teams elected to short-course themselves after checkpoint 13, biking directly back to the finish. It's unclear to us at race central whether this will result in a DNF or an official finish with fewer points.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

48 hours and counting……


Finally. The Thunder Rolls 24HR race begins at midnight on Friday. This is going to be a great race but we have one significant problem…..our female (Jess) ended up tearing a calf muscle last week and is out of commission. So this week has been spent calling, posting and basically begging female athletes across the Midwest to join our team……yeah you can imagine the luck we have been getting “excuse me, you have run a few marathons and/or tri’s right? What do you say about competing in this Adventure Race? Well, it starts at midnight (keep in mind we have to drive 6 hours to get there), you’ll be running with four strange (I do mean strange) guys for nearly 24 straight hours, you can expect mountain biking, running (through dense woods with poison ivy and other stinging stuff), canoeing, some Tyrolean traverses, and some swamp crossing/swimming. Oh yeah, we also want to finish in the top three.

Needless to say it looks like we are going with four pairs of X and Y chromosomes (no female).

Should be a great race.