Dark and White and Purple Harry!

This weekend's Dark and White event is being supported by Purple Harry's bike cleaning products. The event centred on Carsington Water promises fast riding on the rolling White Peak area to the south east of Matlock. With a weather forecast for cold and clear conditions it should be a great event.

The Purple Harry crew are kindly going to send Stodge-Blog a few samples of their innovative, British-made products for me to try over the coming weeks, so I'll let you know how they perform against the worst Cannock Chase and its Monkey Trail can throw at them.

 

Grizedale Forest MTBO

Results available here http://www.bmbo.org.uk/images/event/a90c64978cb9da70dd8b24b25f08330e.html

Grizedale Forest’s autumn colours greeted us for the last round of the British Mountain Bike Orienteering national league of 2010.

A long pull up to the pass north of the forest visitor centre brought us to the start, where the usual jockeying for a late start time seemed to be missing for a change. It was another event with the usual November issue of deciding what to wear, I went brave with shorts, normal gloves and a light thermal, which in the end seemed about right, particularly on the long climbs, but my fingers were a little parky on the descents.

The route choice to number one was a difficult call, straight out of the start gate, with two options. Without an actual contour count I punted for the lower route which in hindsight was a bit slower, but it did give me time to tune in to the rest of the course and figure out my route for the next few legs.

I made a stupid mistake turning up the wrong track on the way to number two, concentrating too much on planning ahead and not on the leg in hand, and losing about a minute before piling back down the hill.

I then rode cleanly picking some good routes until a small mistake at number 6. I was looking for a smallish track and therefore turned back at the big track junction I really needed, assuming I had somehow overshot and playing safe. After backtracking for 200 metres or so I realised that it must have been the correct track and returned but I perhaps lost another minute.

Now not trusting some of the track ridabilities marked on the map, I then made what now turns out to be a great decision and double-backed for number 8 using a track I had already eye-balled, avoiding an unknown track which turned out to be a steep loose climb which lost even the fittest riders nearly a minute to me (see comments below).

The rest of the course passed in a blur of puffing and pain as I fought hard to keep up the pace on the long punishing course.

Other than the two mistakes and the route choice to number 1, I felt I had a great ride and was very pleased with the way my strength training is starting to pay off, my number of mistakes reducing as I relax a little and was pleased with 4th, a couple of minutes down.

The weekends racing was excellent, with the Brand Barkers putting on some very well planned courses on two classic MTBO areas, Whinlatter and Grizedale. 

Whinlatter MTBO 2010, a win at last

The penultimate round of this years British MTBO League was held in Whinlatter Forest, near Keswick, in the Lake District. The drive up the M6 past the Howgills and along the A66 to Keswick was stunning. Bright sunlight falling on autumnal colours, blue skies and spongy clouds hanging in the valleys.

I had not ridden at Whinlatter before, so I poured over an old MTBO course I had managed to get hold of the night before. From this I knew route-choice was going to be key, and had decided in advance to go for the longer routes round on main tracks/roads and generally avoid the single-tracks where possible keeping the speed up.

The slippery conditions immediately became apparent on the way to number one, the track snaking in and out of the trees from the start, testing confidence. I rode cleanly through the first few, taking the longer route-choices round and really gave the hills everything, knowing there was plenty of recovery time on the descents.

The long leg to number 10 brought the first big route-choice decision. I chose the straighter route with slightly more climb. I think, perhaps, although I was fairly quick, that the higher route via the trail centre car park may have been quicker. The climb at the end of the leg was punishing and I was all in at the top turning for number 11, another difficult route-choice. I, like most, took the bonkers steep, slippery, single-track up a rain-soaked gulley. It was a horrible 80 or 90 metre climb alternating the bike from shoulder to pushing to literally dragging it up behind me. Eventually a flight of steps led up the final few metres to the forest road above. Together with the climb up to the previous control, the climb totalled 260m and broke several riders for the rest of the course.

The route in and out of 13 was a sublime needle-covered single-track and very fast, bringing smiles to every one who flew down it.

Turning for home I had a near accident on the 'red route' singletrack from 14 to 15. My right hand slipped off the bar somehow and I careered forward, just managing to scrub off most of the speed before dunking myself in a huge puddle. Then came number 15, the control that has since caused controversy. I belted round the high berm and didn't see the track junction to the right. I took the next and punched the control on that track but the code was wrong. I carefully descended the track to the bottom and stood puzzled for a few seconds before realising I was just too far from the edge of the forest. Turning right I found the right track 70m or so further up, averting a miss-punch, but others were not so lucky.

So to download and told I was first, even if organiser Tony had thought I was over 40 and had stuck me in vets! Being a late starter, most people were in so no waiting around to see if anyone else would go quicker, I had finally won something this season :o) A very happy Stodge!!

Alan and I hung around to collect in controls and I spent a beautiful half hour climbing back up through golden forests of leaves for fantastic views over the Northern Fells, a great way to finish.

results available here http://www.bmbo.org.uk/images/event/a0aae642b6d559df9dd46ad21cc0d26c.html

West Midlands Cyclo Cross Rnd 6 – Wolverhampton

Last year I did not manage to do any of the West Midlands CycloCross series, clashes with other events and various things getting in the way. Being addicted to competition and with no chance of making it to the West Midlands foot Orienteering Champs on the Sunday morning after returning from an evening down south, I decided to take in the Wolverhampton Wheelers, Fred Williams Scramble CycloCross race on the way home, as the seniors race did not start till 2pm.

The atmosphere as I arrived to register half way through the Vets, Juniors and Women’s race was fantastic, with lots of supporters and even commentary blaring out. The course seemed to snake its way around the parkland and old railway embankment at Aldersley Leisure Village, home of the Wolves football academy, with lots of opportunities for spectators to get a good view of the racing as the riders pounded round the short, lapped course.

I seemed to stand out like a sore thumb on my Corratec mountain bike as we lined up ready to start, pretty much everyone else on shiny, light cyclocross bikes, many even having a spare one in the pits!

I had to start at the back, as I did not have a league position to grid me. On "Go!", I tried to scythe through the slower riders ahead of me before the course narrowed and get a better position, but was frustrated somewhat on the corners as many wobbled and slithered their way round generally getting in the way. After a ½ lap on the flat open area of the course to spread out the pack, we got stuck in to the course proper with its very steep short power climbs up onto the old railway embankments, equally steep descents and standard cyclocross weaving in and out of the woods and flatter areas of parkland.

I slowly reeled in a few more riders and then started a cat-and-mouse battle with a Shropshire Wheelers rider. He would pull away on a couple parts of the course only for me to get back on his wheel later, though his thinner tyres seemed to get more bite on one of the climbs and particularly on the slippery traverse. Eventually, we caught a Rugeley Peloton rider and the Shropshire chap attacked. I simply couldn’t hold on and found myself alone for the last few laps, until I was caught by the leader on the straight after the finish line. Unsure of whether I would have to do another lap I dug deep and managed to hold off the second place rider until just before the line and got a taste of the sort of speed needed to win at this level.

I was very pleased that the results show me mid table at 21st which I’m sure raised a few eyebrows as to why I wasn’t on a proper cross bike, but I simply don’t have one. I now have the cyclocross bug back again as it feeds my racing habit very nicely and can’t wait for the next one to come along.

Results available here http://www.wmccl.co.uk/results/league06/league06.html

Sherwood Pines MTBO

After a few months break the British MTBO scene is now in full swing again with not only racing at Sherwood Pines this weekend but a double header of Mountain Bike Orienteering in the Lake District next weekend.
I arrived fairly early to help organiser and planner Killian with the Sportident timing which meant I got a late start which Killian assured me would be beneficial as many leaves had fallen obscuring the tracks over the last few days.
I started strongly certainly helped by recognising many of the tracks having ridden at the Sherwood Pines centre many times, Dark and White challenges, British and Midland XC races and recreational riding over the years. The course on two maps wound its way around the area and was characterised by long route choice legs. I had a fairly clean ride on the first map, just hesitating at a couple of unmarked tracks and a wobble on number 8 but was pleased to be still going strong at map changeover, number 16. I promptly fluffed number 18 not looking at the map enough but then noticed John Houlihan in the distance on the way to the next. I slowly wound him in till I eventually caught him at number 22 with a great standing punch which saw me pull away. We then pretty much raced head to head till the finish, though unfortunately losing time at number 24 after missing the indistinct track the control was on.
John beat me into the finish by a few seconds after I tried to take a short cut through some boulders, muppet!
Downloading I was pleased with 4th, just 8 secs down on 3rd and 30 secs down on 2nd , though I always seem to be on the wrong side of these tight results not making the podium.
It was a great event by Killian, Sherwood Pines delivering huge smiles as always from the fast singletracks on offer. It was also good to see lots of newbies but I think its probably time we have another look at what’s on offer for those new to the sport so we do not get so many retirals.
results available here, though I will get some splits up when I get the kit back from Killian.
http://www.bmbo.org.uk/images/event/a77e489b27733c94bb8169d73482015b.pdf

http://www.splitsbrowser.org.uk/splitsgraph.php?eventId=4260

Happy 2nd birthday Stodge-Blog

Typing the Shoal Hill report sat at the in-laws in North Wales made me think that it must be close to 2 years since I started this Blog. Looking back, it started with a report of my first cyclo-cross race on 12th October, but my 3rd posting was done from here after a mad training session in a blizzard on 29th October, 2008. I've also just noticed that this posting is the 251st, so another milestone.

Stodge-Blog has grown from a few visitors a week 2 years ago, to now well over 50 unique visitors per day, rising to well over 100 around big events. So, a big thank you to all my readers, as lots of visits makes it easier for me to obtain the sponsorship that helps with the costs of competition.

Event report – Shoal Hill (foot orienteering)

A fantastic white frost glinting in the morning sunlight shining from a glorious blue sky greeted me as I rolled into the assembly field with a car full of kit, ready to set up the timing for the Walton Chasers. Tent up, generator running and computers on it was time for me to get a run, and Auto Download is now so reliable and easy to use, I can run with no worries that I am going to come back to sort out chaos, leaving others to deal with finishers.

Shoal hill is one of those little areas that is really starting to mature well. The mixture of mature forest, open heathland and now more and more reclaimed quarry land brings a surprisingly difficult orienteering experience with little pockets of more intricate contour detail and a fiendishly complicated network of paths. This all makes the area very difficult to map in combination with the new generations of dog walkers who come and go.

I had a good run, losing a little time on a couple of controls but it was my legs that started to give in towards the end of the 9km brown course, hips, feet and knees succumbing to the fast and furious pace on this very runable area.

As usual, it was close at the top for the local boys, with Iain Stamp pipping me by a minute but elite NOC runner Richard Robinson was 6 minutes clear, so I had to settle for 3rd.

Rather than publishing my map here as usual I thought it an idea to remind non-orienteers, or those new to the sport, about routegadget. This fancy little webtool enables competitors to either plot their route manually or upload GPS tracks.

You can then watch little virtual races online, not only seeing where others have been but also enabling visually to see where you lost time.  

Chasers routegadget is hosted by Paul Frost on the routegadget.co.uk site where he provides clubs the service for a very small fee to cover hosting costs http://www.routegadget.co.uk/