Ive just put my entry in for this popular event, held over the first May Bank Holiday weekend just down the road at Catton Park. The 6 hour enduro is a ‘parc ferme’ meaning I will have to have all my food, drink and spares in a box in the pit area, but this wont be too much of a problem, being used to 3-6 hour mountain bike orienteering challenges where you have to be independent anyway, its just a case of balancing the carried weight against the number of stops. Riders compete solo or in pairs.
I will be riding solo for CycleShack, my new Heath hayes Bike shop sponsor, but if owner Matt Williams is riding I might just have to let him beat me 😉
10am this morning saw Holly and I rushing to get to Zip Vit’s Headquarters building in Rugeley after a very broken nights sleep, as Holly had had a sleepover for her birthday, but not a huge amount of sleeping was done.
We were a little late so missed the mass photo session but managed to get our new kit on in time for some racing around the enterprise park, Holly in charge of the lap boards.
I only had my mountain bike, complete with map board, so decided the B race might be a better idea than the A. With no warm up I sat on the start line with 10 others on various carbon racing steeds feeling a little daft. On the whistle I went off hard, not really knowing how long the course was, how fit my fellow competitors were, just knowing it was 10 laps. I lead the first few laps before those tucked in behind powered past at the end of the back straight as we turned out of the wind. Rather than tuck in and have a rest I stupidly raced back up to the front again. This carried on until eventually after passing holly ringing the bell we settled into the last lap. I kicked far too early and blew up just before the last corner, shattered I backed off as the peloton surged past me on the finishing straight leaving me in their wake. I learnt two things, 1) a little about racing tactics and 2) I was cornering faster than the road bikes meaning either I was being foolhardy or they all need to commit more to their cornering speeds.
We then got cool Zipvit goody bags packed with bars, gels, beans and a couple of water bottles. Thanks to Zipvit, whose contribution to the club is substantial, we now all look smart in subsidised kit and also have some tents and feather flags to raise our profile plus investment for the future.
Phew, what a few days. Planning and organising an MTBO event more or less on my own (thanks to those that helped on the day, to Cath for helping sort out the map and Pam for smoothing the permissions) took its toll, I slept like a log on Monday night.
I thought a quick look behind the scenes might be useful.
Permissions and politics played its part to start with. I had been intending to leave Beacon Barracks for a year and try and stir it in to a World Ranking event bid for 2012, however withdrawal of permissions by the County Council on the Chase meant I had to move fast to find a new area. Having a club member working inside meant that getting permission was a doddle, and I soon managed to get hold of the map from British Army Orienteering after a few emails.
Of course getting in to check the map and reccy the courses was also a challenge involving the signing out of keys, passports and vehicle passes and many strange looks from personnel as I scooted round the base.
Online entry takes lots of hassle out of organising and allows for less manpower on the day. I used Fabian 4 but BMBO now has its own system that can be used too.
I was going to do a traditional sprint but Cath worked on me to persuade me to try the cloverleaf idea which although complicated in the end worked a treat. The main issue was trying to get it to not only look OK on the map (using CONDES for the first time in anger too)and be safe but also so the event software Auto Download would process the results.
Putting out controls on Saturday afternoon I came across every organiser / planners nightmare, a late withdrawal of permissions. The off road driving area had had a unauthorised training session on Wednesday. The chap in charge was very unhappy, threw his toys out of the pram and changed the padlock. He then refused to give anyone access. I had no choice but to ditch the 4 controls in there and do some last minute changes to the courses. Luckily I tend to only print the courses after I put the controls out.
So Sunday morning dawned, more keys, signing and passes and I was opening up the hanger and putting out the last couple of controls. The weather was beautiful, blue skies, just above freezing. Then came torrential rain….
The event went well, in fact from my point of view perfectly. I got the winning time on the prologue spot on, and if it weren’t for the loss of the off road area the final would have been correct too.
I enjoyed doing a little bit of commentary, getting the heads up on approaching riders from a wired pre warning ‘radio’ control and was gobsmacked by the closeness of the results. 1st and 2nd tied to the second and 3rd place 3 secs down. All after 37 mins of independent racing !
So time to look forward to the next events in early May. A sprint with a prologue and a final again on another Army area, Swynnerton Camp, where we now have confirmed permissions and a middle race on Hanchurch Woods, hopefully Ill get a little help with the planning on one of those but I’ve started on the Hanchurch map already.
Thanks again to those who helped on the day and thanks to those who travelled so far to compete.
With the Walton High School gym, our normal venue for WCH club circuit training, closed for half term, Cath organised another Tuesday night ‘orienteering in the dark’ mini training event on the Wildwood estate in Stafford this week. This time we were to be using the fruits of a her winters nights of OCADing a brand new A3 1:4000 map, complete with every house, fence and wall plus the surrounding parkland.
My calf not being 100% for running and it being very low key (15 runners) I decided to go off last and use my bike (and be very careful not to run anyone over). I started well but at number 3 smelt trouble as I dropped the bike to punch a control on some steps going down to the playgrounds and sports pitches.
A large group of youths were on their way, bottles in hand, to get smashed in the park. Most walked on but as I rode away I saw two getting quite intimate with the control. At over £100 each I took the decision to bin my ride and go and get it. I got a fair bit of catcalling but just rode off ignoring it but got a loud cheer when I couldn’t get a gear on a steep bank and had to get off. Returning the control to Cath about 400 m away at the finish she told me there was another one at risk on the shorter course, so I had to return to rescue it from where it had been thrown. This time I got a lot more abuse and started to feel a little intimidated, but I managed to get it out of the tennis court and away to safety. I then had to go and stand at the previous control on the short course to tell runners to miss out the ‘youth’ control, but I didn’t manage to catch one runner who had a nice chat with the youth as he hunted around for it!
Unfortunately we also lost one other control, I suspect by the same group of kids. At £100 to replace it was an expensive training session, but we will leaflet the few houses around where it went missing to see if it ended up in a garden !
The weather forecast said snow, in fact Sheffield had enough for snowballs and sledging on Saturday. After checking the event was still on, I left the house with the car thermometer showing 6 degrees. Slowly, as I climbed up out of Ashbourne towards the event, the temperature started to drop. Parking up in Biggin (glad I don’t use satnav so I didn’t make the mistake a fair few other people made by going to a different Biggin some 15 miles away) the temperature had got down to 2 degrees and a cold wind was blowing from the East.
The penultimate round of the Dark and White Winter series 2010/11 had brought us right down to the more rolling South of the Peak District again, but we noticed from the map samples before hand that some of the deceptively contoured hilly terrain around Yougreave was included. The key to navigation in this area are the several long distance cycle trails, which wind themselves around hugging the contours. Although gravel and not as fast as the roads, they are relatively flat and good for getting around quickly.
The foul weather of the previous few days had taken its toll on the car park so we all had to park on the roads around the village. A control had also been removed from the course as it was a quagmire, apparently.
I got ready but had this nagging feeling I had forgotten something. Rolling up to the start line I realised what it was – map board. Muppet, it was at home, still on my other bike.
After 20 minutes of stress and phaffing trying various DIY options, I eventually decided just to carry it in my hand.
I started stressed, and, not being able to see the complete map unless going very slowly, I immediately picked a daft route to number 1, not noticing a quicker way up onto the Tissington Trail, but after than things went OK. I rode one handed a lot, I stuck the map in my mouth and down my shorts a lot, but I didn’t lose too much time to it.
The wind wasn’t strong, but it slowly sucked the energy out of my legs and I felt I was not riding as strongly as normal. The mud in places was horrendous. Other competitors noted afterwards that my lack of mapboard had resulted in my face receiving more than its fair share of muck, and I struggled at times with it getting in my eyes more than normal (I don’t wear and glasses whilst competing as they seem to steam up, perhaps I should try it again).
Muddy Scrunched Map
After a couple of hours my map situation was becoming desperate, the plastic bag muddy and the map scrunched up inside making it more and more difficult to navigate and even more difficult to plan ahead more than a couple of controls. With 30 minutes to go I had to take a risk and go for another loop north on the old railway line. I gave it everything but my legs were really starting to tire. Turning for home and number 8, I had a nightmare. I found the tape marking the site but not the SportIdent timing box. After checking the descriptions and looking about for a couple of minutes I had to eventually assume it had gone missing and head for home, but the control had seemed a little out of place.
I eventually skidded to a halt at the finish, quads on fire after giving it all, about 7 minutes late and a few points down on the winner. Apparently, the tape for number 8 had been moved by persons unknown so hopefully I will, like a few others, be credited with that extra score.
Another well planned event from Dark and White and with just one more challenge left the league is very close, so an exciting finale awaits.
I spent most of Saturday screaming round the emptiness which is MOD Stafford at a weekend, checking the map and getting planning ideas ahead of the race in two weeks time. This huge ex-RAF logistics base is now home to Signals and Logistics Army Regiments and consists of literally hundreds of buildings, tracks and paths. I think it could be one of the most enjoyable events to hit the UK MTBO scene so far and I am certainly excited by organising it.
Final details are now available on the Chasers site. The Stodge-Blog SportIdent Punching Challenge will also be making a comeback with a challenging little course too!
Pre-entry is preferable due to the security implications of getting everybody into the base in good time. Don’t forget photo ID.
New Stodge-Blog sponsor, Cycle Shack, is holding a Scott Demo day on the Chase about 15 -20 minutes drive away on the same day. If anyone is interested please contact them to book a place and tell them (there’s also a road bike demo on the Saturday), you wont be there until 3pm, though.
Fellow MTBOer and general adventure racer, Chris McSweeny, has made us all very envious this winter by competing in the World Masters Ski Orienteering Championships 2011 in Norway. He has now started a blog all about his experiences. Check it out here at http://racingdad.wordpress.com/
At last the tired old International Orienteering Federation (www.orienteering.org) website has been updated with a swish new one. Not much new content, but all now easy to find.