Posts Tagged ‘tracey’

Pete’s Great Divide Race Ends Early

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

I’ve been following the two Continental Divide mountain bike races that are currently taking place in the Rocky Mountains between the Canadian and Mexican border.  The races  (I’m not going to get into why there are two separate races, its a rat’s nest) caught my attention because a few Iditarod Trail Invitational racers  (Pete Basinger, Jay & Tracey Petervary, Jill Homer) were competing.  Jay & Tracey just finished the race on a tandem, which is just insane.  Pete wasn’t so lucky.

About a year ago at this time, Pete basically saved a girl’s life after her  now-infamous bear attack in Anchorage.  This year, Pete was on the other end of a nasty mountain bike accident.  He was descending a pass in southern Colorado when he was hit by a truck towing a horse trailer.  Luckly, it sounds like he escaped with only a broken clavicle.  That’s good news, but  a broken clavicle is still a bummer unless you’ve got Lance Armstrong’s medical team.

Before the crash, Pete was absolutely crushing it in BOTH divide races.   In typical Pete fashion, one 2,500 mile race wasn’t enough, so he worked some logistical magic in order to do both at the same time.   He started in Banff (the start of the Tour Divide race) by himself and then managed to make it to the Montana border in time to offically start the Great Divide Race as well.    He was possibly setting course records along the way, but it was hard to tell because he was in stealth mode.   It took days before people even figured out he was on the course.  It was a really cool feat and was the most interesting story line of this year’s race.  It’s a shame he didn’t get to finish it off.

Pete is a remarkable athlete and a great guy.  I feel very lucky that got to ski near him for this year’s Iditarod Invitational.  Get well soon, Pete!

AKSpokes.com forum
Jill’s report from the scene

2009 Iditarod Trail Invitational: Rohn to McGrath

Wednesday, March 18th, 2009

This is part three of a three part story. Part one is here. Part two is here.

Thursday - Day 5 (continued)

Rohn to Bison Camp - 45 miles (255 miles total)

Because we had all spent a decent amount of time bivied during our trip over the pass, most of us in the lead group were feeling rested and ready to move on after a short stop in Rohn. We spent only a few hours in the checkpoint in order to dry out our sleeping bags, gloves and boots which had become damp or even soggy during the Pass snowstorm. I spent an hour or two nursing my sore feet. It was at this time that I realized my right knee wasn’t hurting nearly as much as it had the first few days. But instead, my left Achilles was aching. It’s always something. I also used the time to eat a few more cans of Chef Boy-R-Dee, restock food from my second drop bag (this time I took about half of it with me), and refill my water. By 4 PM I was on my way, along with Jay and Tracey Petervary. We were an hour or two behind Jeff Oatley and Ed Plumb who were the first to leave Rohn.

I had thought that this section of trail headed down the Kuskokwim River to the Farewell Lakes area. I was looking forward to easy cruising on the river. I should have known by now that nothing would be easy. Instead the trail went up on the south bank of the river, into thick forest called the “Buffalo Tunnels,” and gradually climbed towards Egypt Mountain. Once again the trail was unpacked, and thus I moved ahead of Jay and Tracey when they had to walk. Fortunately, this snow was only a foot to eighteen inches deep, and I was following Jeff and Ed’s tracks. My sled still provided a lot of resistance in the unpacked snow, but it was still light-years better than what I had experienced the day before.

During this section, I wanted to see how fast I was moving to estimate how long it would take me to get to the Farewell Burn. I pulled out my brand-new, super-fancy GPS receiver that I bought for this race. I turned it on (I kept it off most of the time to conserve batteries) and put it back in my pocket. I skied about 200 yards, then reached into my pocket to grab the GPS and see what my average speed was. The GPS wasn’t in my pocket. Oh no. Did I put it in a different pocket? No, I don’t have it anywhere. I glanced back. it wasn’t on the trail either. My mind started racing. So far in the race, the GPS had proven to be one of the most valuable pieces of equipment I had. I used it at least hourly to make sure I was still headed the right direction and to see how far I still had to go. I had maps and text descriptions of the trail with me, but the GPS had proven much more useful than either of those. Was it gone forever? My sled smoothed out the broken trail like a groomer as it passed over the snow, so if the GPS had fallen out of my pocket (or never made it into my pocket), it had been buried and smoothed over by the sled. I unhitched from the sled and took off my skis. I walked back 200 yards, kicking snow off the trail the whole way. No sign of it. I resolved to move every inch of snow off the trail in those 200 yards. I refused to leave until I’d found the GPS. I put on my waterproof overmitts, and dug in, starting where I had first pulled the GPS out of my pocket. I had only cleared about 4 feet of trail when I caught a glimpse of its gray and black housing, buried about two feet deep. I snatched it up, made sure it was still working, thanked god, and continued down the trail at about 3.5 MPH.

By watching their tracks, I could tell that for the next ten miles, Jeff and Ed were alternating lead. I was amazed that Jeff was able to keep pace with Ed while pushing his bike. Very impressive. My goal on this section was to reach the “Post River Glacier” (essentially a frozen cascade of ice that the trail goes straight up) before dark so I could follow Jeff and Ed’s route. I arrived at the base of the glacier just before 8 PM, with a sliver of daylight left. The meager light didn’t make for a good picture of the ‘glacier’, but here it is anyway.

I got confused trying to follow their footprints a few times, and had a few harrowing moments on the ice, but I made it up the glacier, using my ski poles for balance, and holding on to branches for dear life. Relieved to have the glacier behind me, I set my sights on making it to the Bison camp, still 25-30 miles ahead, before sleeping.

A couple of hours later, I passed Jeff and soon thereafter caught up to Ed as we neared Egypt Mountain. Ed and I were both planning on going to Bison Camp that night, and since I had been skiing by myself for almost the entire race, I was glad to have some company. I volunteered to spell Ed on the trail-breaking for a while as we started down the trail together. But the trail immediately transitioned from the woods to a open bench on the south side of Egypt Mountain, and the snow changed almost instantly as well, from powder to a firm rain crust. For the next mile or two, we cruised almost effortlessly over the crust, wondering just how long our good fortune would last. The crust was just barely firm enough to hold our weight, and it cracked as we passed over it. Every once in a while I would break through, a signal that the crust-induced bliss would not last long.

Sure enough, as the trail began to descend back into the woods on the west end of Egypt Mountain, my skis started busting through the crust on every stride. Once again we were walking. I was having an especially hard time because the short tips on my skate skis would sink below the snow level and get stuck under the crust. I had to give a swift upward kick to get the skis to bust through the crust layer so I could take another step. In addition to being frustrating, the crust-busting was also aggravating my Achilles even more. Ed was also busting through, but his classic skis were at least staying on top of the snow. After at least an hour (maybe two?) of crust-busting, I happened to glance down at my right ski and I saw the P-Tex base at the tip flapping around in the breeze. Oh shit.

My ski was broken and I had about sixty miles until the next sign of civilization. I took off the ski and inspected the damage. The ski itself hadn’t broken, but the base was peeling off the ski, starting at the tip and going down about six inches. The miles of busting the ski through crust had taken a toll. First things first, I need to repair the ski. I pulled about three feet of duct tape off the supply roll on my sled pole and wrapped the tip. I was careful not to wrap any of the base that might affect the glide of the ski, even though about four inches of that was delaminated. Then I cinched two zip-ties around the tip to hold the duct tape on. That would hold likely the tip together, but would the delamination continue to work its way down the ski? We’d find out sooner or later. Next question: Should I continue on? Or should I go back to Rohn. At this point, it was probably further to go back to Rohn that to make it to Bison Camp. And while Rohn might have had a few more tools to help me repair the ski, neither place was likely to have everything I needed to do the job right (epoxy, clamps, and a day or two to let it dry). I thought there was a better than 50% chance that the ski would hold to Bison Camp, so I continued on.

It took me more than half an hour to catch back up to Ed, and by the time I did, he was headed back the other way to find out what had happened to me. I appreciated his concern and was sorry he had to double-back for a quarter-mile or so. He turned around and we continued to break trail through the crusty snow. Ed had been telling me for a couple hours that he thought we would find a recent snowmobile track once we reached the Farewell Lakes area. There is a lodge in the area that keeps the trail packed, he said. I knew better than to get my hopes up, but they went up anyway. I was desperately longing for a decent trail. Fortunately, Ed was right. When we passed over Tin Creek, just before Farewell, we hit a snowmobile trail. I was relived that my ski and my Achilles tendon would no longer be abused by the rain crust. Our pace and our spirits picked up considerably.

As we passed over the Farewell Lakes and entered the Farewell Burn, I gradually pulled ahead of Ed and he was no longer in sight. A couple of hours later, maybe just after midnight, I stopped to put on an extra layer of clothes, as the wind had picked up considerably on the open expanses of the lakes and the Burn. I saw a headlamp coming across the lake towards me very quickly. “Man, Ed is flying,” I thought. When the light got within 50 yards I realized it wasn’t Ed, but Jeff. He was able to start riding when he hit the snowmobile trail and he was hammering. “I’ll have the fire going at Bison Camp for you,” he said as he cruised by.

The next few hours through the Burn were tough. I was fighting a stiff cross-wind and the exposed trail was going up and down hill after hill after relentless hill. I had long ago given up trying to get kick wax to stick to my skis for more than a few minutes, so I had no grip on the hills. The climbs were steep enough that I had to take off the skis and walk up them. They were also steep enough that I probably shouldn’t have been skiing down the other side in the dark either, but I was too tired to care. If I didn’t ski the downhills, I would have been walking most of the way, and I just wasn’t mentally prepared to do that. I was already exhausted from the deep snow and crust earlier in the day, and these hills were sapping every last ounce of energy. I needed to use gravity whenever possible. Besides, the hills weren’t big enough that I thought I would get injured if I crashed. Sure, I might break a ski, but one ski was mostly broken already. I had some “uh oh, this is it, this is the end” moments on a few downhills when I would start to outrun the beam of my headlamp, but I managed to survive them all.

This area is inhabited by a herd of bison that were introduced to the area years ago, I believe as a subsistence food source. Hence the names Bison Camp and Buffalo Tunnels. Before the race, I had thought it would be cool to see a bison. But now, in the middle of a snowy, windy night, I was praying that there wasn’t one blocking the trail on a fast downhill. Thankfully I didn’t see any bison.

I stumbled into Bison camp around 4 AM. There were at least 5 wall tents and I wasn’t sure which one I was supposed to go to. I remembered Pete telling us in Rohn that “our tent at Bison Camp is in the back on the left.” So I went that direction. One of the tents in that area had a snowmobile parked in front of it, but the machine was drifted in snow. The way the wind was blowing, it could have been there an hour or month, I couldn’t tell. That tent was also the only one that was not pad-locked on the outside. But the door wouldn’t budge when I tried to open it. I pulled and pulled, but it was definitely locked some how. I had a brief moment of panic when it occurred to me that I might not get inside, and I would have to continue on. My body had shut down and I wasn’t prepared to continue on. I let out a few loud “HELLO!?”’s but there was no response. I went back and yanked on the door even harder, so the whole tent frame shook. A voice inside the tent called out “Just a minute” and I breathed a huge sigh of relief. It took the man about three minutes to open the door. “What’s he doing, cleaning house?” I wondered. But when he opened the door, it was apparent that he had not been cleaning. The tent was a mess. The floor was half dirt, half straw, with a few musty sleeping pads thrown on top. There was a wood stove in the corner, but it was not going, so I was surprised that the man was only wearing a short-sleeve shirt. Dan (I didn’t find out his name until the next day) was very friendly considering I had just woken him up at 4 in the morning. He helped me get a fire started in the stove. He said he had come out to the camp earlier in the day from Nikolai to cut firewood for us racers. I thanked him very much for the support.

“I didn’t expect any of you until the afternoon,” he said.

“What about the first guy?” I asked.

“I haven’t seen anyone else. You are the first one.”

Hmmm, where did Jeff go? I didn’t worry too much about it, and after my damp overboots, hat and gloves were hung over the fire and I had something to eat, I crawled into my sleeping bag. I was just starting to doze off when Ed came to the door. He was a little confused because he thought he’d already passed by a deserted Bison Camp a few miles back. So he’d taken a few Excedrin and refocused on making it to the Bear Creek cabin, seven miles further down the trail. He was now set on the cabin, so he closed the door and went on his way. I found it very odd that everyone I talked to since Rohn had planned to stop at Bison Camp to sleep, and yet I was the only racer there that night. Was this some kind of trick to throw me off their real race strategy? The middle of the Farewell Burn seemed like a cruel place to play mind games with your fellow racers, but maybe they were taking this thing a lot more seriously than I was. I decided to give them the benefit of the doubt. Plans change as the race changes. No matter. The tent was warm and out of the wind and snow, so I was content to stay.

Bison Camp to Nikolai - 45 miles (300 total)

I woke up around 8:30 AM. The fire had gone out and the tent was freezing. I stumbled outside to relieve myself. My Achilles was really stiff and I walked with a limp. My feet were extremely sore, but that was normal by this point. The wind was still howling and the snow was still blowing sideways. Still no sign of other racers. I was starting to worry about crossing thirty more miles of the infamous Farewell Burn alone, on a broken ski, on an injured leg, in a blizzard on a trail that may or may not exist after because of the storm. It seemed like a really bad idea. At this point Dan the Mountain Man started talking about how these conditions were perfect for hypothermia. It was warm enough (in the teens) that we would work up a sweat, and then the wind and snow could chill to the bone with one strong gust, he said. It was true, but it wasn’t exactly the encouragement I was looking for.

I decided that I would sit tight until something changed, either the weather or the arrival of another racer. Safe and smart. No need to rush. I rebuilt the fire, ate some sausage, cheese and pop tarts, and used the time to inspect my broken ski. The base had delaminated an additional couple of inches on the way to Bison Camp. It was apparent that I would need to wrap it in a lot more duct tape if it was going to hold to Nikolai. I dried the ski out over the fire, then wrapped the first two feet of the ski in multiple layers of duct tape and new zip-ties. At this point I couldn’t worry about glide, I just needed the ski to stay in once piece.

Around 10 AM, things started to change for the better. Jay, Tracey and Pete all arrived, and the snow had stopped falling. The wind was still blowing, but it seemed much less menacing against a sunny blue sky. Dan spent a couple hours talking about how the ITI should hire guys like him to pack down the trail. After the sections of ‘trail’ we’d just seen, none of us was in a mood to disagree with him. Jay and Pete agreed that these were some of the worst trail conditions they’d seen in their years of doing the ITI. Jay and Tracey talked about how the ITI compared to the many other crazy races they have done, including multiple Eco-Challenges. Jay said the ITI was probably the hardest, but Tracey wasn’t sure. “New Zealand [Eco-Challenge] was pretty hard,” she said. Still, I had heard enough. This was one of the most difficult years in one of the hardest races in the world. What in the hell was I doing here?

In the weeks leading up to the race, I had been nearly certain that we were going to have good trail conditions. The weather had been stable and reports from the trail were good. Besides, there were a lot of horror stories from 2008 about post-holing through the Dalzell Gorge. What were the chances of that happening two years in a row? Never did it occur to me that it might be worse than last year. And yet here I was, dealing with some of the worst the Iditarod Trail could dish out.

Those of us at Bison Camp suspected that the trail ahead was going to be full of snow drifts. There was no way the new snow would stick to the rain crust. Instead the new snow would blow around until it found a depression to settle into - like a snowmobile trail. So when Dan mentioned that he was going to be riding his snowmachine back to Nikolai that day, we all planned our departures so we could be on the trail just before Dan. Hopefully when he passed us, it would give us a decent trail for a while, at least. I left Bison Camp with Jay and Tracey around noon, about an hour after Pete. We each gave Dan some gas money in appreciation for his help. I was also hoping that might make him more inclined to put in a good trail for us today. At first, Jay and Tracey were able to ride, and thus were faster than me, but once Dan came by and smoothed out the snow drifts the skiing was much better, but still very slow. I passed Jay and Tracey, and a couple hours later I passed Pete. I never saw Ed, but I did see where his tracks left the main trail to go to the cabin. Was he still there? I had no idea where he was. No sign of Jeff anywhere. His tracks were probably wiped out by Dan’s snowmobile.

It was a slow thirty mile trudge from Bison Camp, past Sullivan Creek and on to Salmon Camp, which was about 13 miles from Nikolai. The entire Farewell Burn was covered in a rain crust, which meant that the snow drifts in the trail continued. Fortunately Dan’s trail held up well, or it would have been even slower. My leg would throb in pain for an hour or two, then it would subside for an hour or two, only to return later. I was taking Advil, but it didn’t seem to do much. I was getting really frustrated at my pace. I was going about 4 MPH, barely faster than walking. I had been classic skiing all day, without kick wax because the snow was so slow. I was trying to mentally prepare myself for another 3-4 hours of trudging to Nikolai. But soon after Salmon Camp, after the sun went down, the trail hooked a right hand turn towards Nikolai and the snow conditions changed completely. The new, dry, windblown snow disappeared and the trail consisted of old, transformed snow that was refreezing after a day out in the warm sun. It was fast - the fastest snow I’d felt all race - and for the first time since day one I was able to double pole. This took a lot of stress off my Achilles. My speed doubled to about 8 MPH and I cruised into Nikolai in under two hours. What an unexpected treat!

When I arrived in Nikolai, it took me a while to find the right house. I didn’t expect it to be a mile outside town. But the locals were very encouraging and helpful with directions. I stumbled into Nick and Olene Petruska’s house at 9:40 PM. I was surprised to see that Jeff had only left here two hours prior, and that he had continued on without much rest. Why the rush? Didn’t he already have this race sewn up? It didn’t even occur to me that he, or others, might think I had a shot of beating him. As she served me a heaping plate of spaghetti, Olene asked me if I was going to hurry back out to chase Jeff. “No way, I’m not racing,” I replied. Looking back, I can now understand how odd that comment must have seemed coming from someone in second place. The confused look on Nick and Olene’s faces was priceless. So I explained, “I haven’t been racing, I’ve just been trying to survive. I’ve got foot and knee problems. I’ve got a broken ski. I’ve been resting a lot at each checkpoint so that my body can simply make it to the next checkpoint. The only reason I’m in second place is because the trail has been so bad. I’m not worried about winning, I’m worried about making it the last 50 miles on a bum leg and a broken ski. I’m going to get some sleep before I attempt the final push to McGrath.”

At this point, a young man who I believe was Nick and Olene’s son, volunteered that the trail to McGrath was not in the whole way due to the recent storms. “But,” he said, “There’s a group of us heading down to McGrath tomorrow morning at 9:30, so there will be a trail after that.” Very good to know. Another reason to wait a while.

Nick called in my arrival to race director Kathi in McGrath. She was very encouraging and wanted to know if I was heading out soon. “No, I’m exhausted and my legs hurt. I need to rest. I’m not really racing, anyway, I just want to make it to the finish.”

I then placed a quick call to my wife. She had just seen Kathi’s update on the web that I arrived in Nikolai. The update also said that I “sounded fresh but having a quick break before starting [my] homecoming”. So I explained to my wife that I was definitely not fresh. I also said, “I haven’t been racing and I am not going to start now. I’ve been going safe and smart, taking lots of rest, and the race has come to me. I’m going to stick with what’s working.”

Ed came in as I was finishing my second plate of spaghetti. He must have been traveling less than an hour behind me the whole day. He said he was completely wiped out. We both went to sleep in a spare bedroom with the same plan - sleep until we wake up, then take it from there.

Nikolai to McGrath - 50 miles (350 total)

I woke around 6:00 AM to see Jay and Tracey getting ready to head out after a solid eight hour break. I had slept about seven hours, just what I needed if I was going to make it through a fifty mile day. Pete was also up and starting to get his stuff together. As I ate a delicious egg, sausage and cheese concoction that Olene had prepared, I started to plan my own departure. The temperature was about -20F, so there was no glide to be found out there. If I could wait until daylight, the snow might be a little faster. I spent some time adding more duct tape to my ski, and figuring what clothes to wear on a day that would start at -20F, but likely warm up into the +20’s, then cool off below zero again before I was done. Pete was packed up and out the door at 7:40 AM. I still wasn’t concerned about racing, but since I had been the lead skier for almost the entire race until this point, I did want to maintain that position to the finish. Based on our times on previous legs, I figured I would be 2- 3 hours faster than Pete on the last leg. I figured if I left within an hour after him, it would be no problem to catch him along the way. It took me a little longer than expected to pack up (it always does), but I was on my way at 9:00 AM, an hour and twenty minutes after Pete, and feeling good about my position.

My first hint that Pete wasn’t going to roll over and let me catch him came immediately. Despite the extremely cold, dry snow I saw Pete’s tracks skating down the road from Nick & Olene’s house. I tried to follow suit, but my skis just wouldn’t glide an inch. How did Pete do that? Earlier in the race he had marveled at some of the places I had been skating, now he was putting me to shame. Was it the duct tape on my ski? I didn’t think so, because both skis felt like they were stuck on Styrofoam. After passing through Nikolai and onto the Kuskokwim River, thankfully his skate tracks turned to classic and the Iditarod Shuffle resumed.

By noon, the sun was up and it was quite warm out, but the snow never sped up. The crystals were too dry and sharp. I was still essentially walking on my skis, no glide at all. This was going to be a long fifty miles. I started thinking that I must be getting close to Pete. I tried to do split times to see how far back I was. When a snowmobile would pass me, it would wipe out Pete’s tracks. So I would time how long it was before I saw Pete’s tracks again, then either add or subtract a few minutes depending on which way the snowmobile was headed. The first time I did this, the gap was an hour. No way, I thought. I must have made up more than twenty minutes in four hours. About the halfway mark, six hours, I tried again. The gap was 50 minutes. Wow, Pete is hauling ass. Can he keep it up for twelve hours? I began to realize that the only way I was going to catch him was if I cranked up my own speed. I started to increase my tempo and I put a little more push into each stride. I was working a lot harder and I had increased my speed from 4 MPH all the way up to… 4.4 MPH. That was the most frustrating thing about skiing this race. The snow was so slow, and my sled so heavy, that it made no sense to actually ski. It was much more efficient to just shuffle, which I found to be boring and tedious. But maybe that 0.4 MPH would be enough to make the difference. So for the next two hours, I hammered at a pace that I knew I couldn’t keep up for the entire day, but which maybe would help me bridge the gap to Pete. The next snowmobile split time was 40 minutes, even after the hammer-fest. That split crushed my motivation and I realized that I wasn’t going to catch Pete before the finish. I had been overconfident, and made the mistake of underestimating a guy who just happens to have the record time in this race. It wasn’t that I slowed down. My average speed was faster than it had been in days. And I was three hours faster than Ed on that last leg, when he had been within an hour or two of me on all the other sections. It was all Pete. I should have known he’d be fired up. And I should have taken the hint back in Nikolai when he said he was thinking of quitting in McGrath, rather than continuing on to Nome. Either he pushed it into overdrive for those last 12 hours, or he had been holding back all race until then, but either way, he put in a great effort and earned the ski division win. My hat is off to him.

About the time I conceded the ski race, I came around the corner of the Kuskokwim River and encountered this view. This straightaway was about three miles long. Okay, well, I knew what I’d be doing for the next hour. The scenery was not going to change. I had already been counting down the hours until the finish, and this sight was really discouraging. For the first time all race, I pulled out my iPod, in hopes that some music would make the time go quicker. Instead, it seemed to make it go even slower. Each song seemed twice as usual. “Funny, I don’t remember ‘Story Of My Life’ being an eight minute song. Wait, did it just play ‘Begin the Begin’ twice in a row? No? Are you sure it was only once?” Instead of the time passing in ten or fifteen minute chunks, it was now passing in three minute chunks. After about six songs, the cold air thankfully zapped the iPod’s battery and it went dead. About this time, John Ross came by on his bike and he was really moving fast. That looks like a lot more fun, I thought. Soon, but not soon enough, that straightaway was over and the trail moved off the river into swamps and more interesting terrain.

With about five miles to go, I encountered a split in the trail. The Iditarod trail markings followed the branch that took a turn to the right, while an unmarked trail continued straight. There was a cardboard sign on the left side of the trail that said “Ultrasport 5.5 miles” but it didn’t say which trail to take. And I saw bike tracks going both ways. Damn. I was so used to following the Iditarod trail markings that I decided to go that way. After about 10 minutes, the trail dumped me out on the river. I was still following bike tracks, but something didn’t seem right. I looked for Pete’s ski tracks and couldn’t find them. I knew that Pete would know the right route. I skied back to the intersection, and after another few minutes of internal debate, I tried the other fork. It took a few hundred yards of close inspection, but I finally made a positive I.D. on one of Pete’s ski tracks. This was the right trail. The wrong turn cost me 20-25 minutes, which put any last hope of catching Pete out of reach. Now I was more worried that other racers might have passed by while I was sidetracked. It wasn’t until the finish that I knew for sure that hadn’t happened.

I passed a “four miles to go” sign around 8 PM. I desperately wanted to just be finished, and I had to keep reminding myself that I had at least an hour to go. Then, about a mile later, I popped out on a hard-packed road. Was I hallucinating? Did this fast, skateable road just fall out of the sky? In my exhaustion, I had forgotten that the last three miles were on a road. It was the best surprise of the race. I covered the last three miles into McGrath in about 25 minutes. I arrived at Peter and Tracy Schneiderheinze’s house at 8:55 PM, completing the last 48 miles in about twelve hours.

I took off my boots, hat, gloves, and jacket and went immediately to the kitchen table where I was given a heaping plate of ham, pasta, vegetables (first vegetables in a week!), and cake. I think I ate two full dinners while sharing stories with other racers. Jeff jokingly and grumpily said he wished he’d known I wasn’t going for the win before he left Nikolai. Sounded like he had quite an epic push through the night to get to McGrath, thinking I was right behind him the whole time. Looking back, it would have been fun to give it a shot, to push through the night to catch Jeff. But even now, I know it simply wasn’t possible. Given my battered body, and my broken ski, I’m not sure I would have made it. And I certainly wouldn’t have made it fast enough to catch Jeff. Besides, I would have been really hated in the bike community if I had snuck up and snatched victory from the guy who had built a full day’s lead early in the race, only to see Mother Nature take it away.

I had finished. That was my main goal (goal #3), and all I could really ask for. I also came back alive and with my body intact (goals #1 and #2 - although we are still awaiting a final ruling on my Achilles tendon. When I finally got a chance to inspect it in McGrath, it looked like I had a golf ball protruding halfway between my calf and my ankle. Not good.) I didn’t quite finish in less than 6 days (goal #4) but I am certain that with decent trail conditions, I would have been at least a day faster.

As for goal #5 (Have Fun), well, fun might be too strong a word. It was an amazing and worthwhile experience, and I am glad that I did it. There were certainly parts that were fun. Getting to know the other racers (especially Ed and Pete, who I saw every single day during the race), experiencing remote Alaskan lodges and villages, night-skiing to Finger Lake, cruising through Dalzell Gorge, double-poling into Nikolai, and hanging out at the Schneiderheinze’s house at the finish were some of the highlights. But as I said in an earlier post, I was pretty disappointed in the skiing aspect of this race. The skiing was never very good. I understand that a race like this will have highs and lows. I don’t mind the lows. I can deal with miles of trail-breaking or skiing through crud if it means that eventually I’ll enjoy gliding down a packed snowmobile track. The problem was that even the good trail sections, the parts that should have been the ‘highs,’ were kind of miserable. The snow was cold, dry and windblown, and I couldn’t get an inch of glide while pulling a sled. I couldn’t skate, I couldn’t double-pole, I couldn’t even stride. I wasn’t skiing, I was shuffling. I signed up to ski 350 miles, not walk 350 miles with skis on my feet.

I now understand why this race is much more popular with the bike crowd. Sure, it can be absolutely horrible to push a bike through untracked snow, but when you can ride, it looks like a lot of fun. With skiing, it was either bad, or not-so-bad. I bet it would be a lot better for skiing if you hit it when the snow was older, warmer, and/or transformed. But how often would most of the trail be like that? One year out of ten? Maybe? A better idea might be to wait until a few weeks later, after the Iditarod Sled Dog race, and try skiing it then, when the trail has been put in and the temperatures are a little warmer. But in any year, at any time, one storm can wipe out the entire trail, so you never know.

The scene at the Schneiderheinze’s house was very memorable. There was a steady supply of delicious food being handed out to famished racers, who would eat, sleep and repeat. At one point, about 5:00 in the morning, I woke up to use the bathroom, and somehow found myself back at the kitchen table with a huge sausage omelet and a “mancake” (a gigantic fried pancake) in front of me.

In between gulps of food, beer or ice cream, the stories were pouring out all night. My favorite was the tale of Chris Wrobel and James Leavesley who had basically disappeared after Rohn. It turns out they tried to ride down the Kuskokwim River all the way to Nikolai, rather than take the trail through the Buffulo Tunnels and the Farewell Burn. Apparently the first day was great riding on the ice, but by the second day they were pushing the bikes through snow (there is no trail on the river) and crossing small leads of open water. About fifteen miles from Nikolai, they encountered open water that they simply couldn’t cross. Their only option was to backtrack two days worth of travel, all the way to Rohn, where they planned to scratch from the race. Luckily, they were noticed by a wolf trapper flying overhead, who knew that no one was supposed to be in that area. He landed, and then flew them one by one to McGrath. I could only shake my head in disbelief. I couldn’t even comprehend the notion of taking such an untested, unknown route in an area like that. What a huge risk. But imagine if it had paid off!

As we lounged about and assessed the damage we’d done to ourselves, race veterans like Jay P, Pete, and Jeff were asking all of us rookies if we would do the race again. I think we all said no. They just laughed. “Yeah, we all said that after our first time too. So, we’ll see you next year.”

My play time is limited and there are a lot of other adventures I’d like to try, so I sincerely doubt I’ll be back next year. But already, my reply has softened from “No” to “I doubt it.” And I have to admit, I’m already thinking about all the things I’d do differently, you know, if I ever did it again.

I’ve got one more post about the ITI coming before I put this thing to bed. Kind of a Post Script. [It's now up ... here]  Apparently my race report has created more questions than it answered, so I am going to try to answer a few of the questions I’ve been asked the most. If you’ve got questions, put them in the comments or email me. I’ll also give an update on how my body has recovered since the race. Look for that early next week (I hope).

2009 Iditarod Trail Invitational: Finger Lake to Rohn (aka The Rainy Pass Adventure)

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

This is part two of a three part story. Part one is here. I went a little overboard in my account of the Rainy Pass section of the race, putting together timelines and maps, because I think some people had false impressions about what actually happened. The information that was reported during the race was great for easing the minds of family and friends, but it wasn’t completely accurate. That is to be expected when you are in a storm in the Alaska Range without any communication with the outside world. Each one of us who was out there has a unique story to tell. Here is mine.

Tuesday - Day 3 (continued)

Finger Lake to Puntilla Lake (Rainy Pass Lodge) - 35 miles (165 miles total)

The first hint of what was to come in Rainy Pass was dropped while I was resting at the Winterlake Lodge on Finger Lake. I was trying futilely to get some sleep on the damp floor of the tent when Billy Koitzsch came in and started chatting up John Ross and me. He said that the trail over Rainy Pass was still not in, and that the lead racers were piling up in Puntilla. Usually, there are two ways to get from Puntilla to Rohn. Rainy Pass is the shortest route and is used by most of the racers in both the ITI and the Iditarod sled dog race. The alternative route is through Ptarmigan Pass and Hell’s Gate. This route is 30 miles longer, but is usually well-packed by the Iron Dog snowmobile racers who came through a few weeks ago. If Rainy Pass looks to be difficult, it can be much faster to go the Hell’s Gate route. But now I flashed back to a conversation I had in Skwentna. Another racer (come to think of it, it might have been Billy, man that guys’s got sources…) had told me that the Ptarmigan/Hells Gate route was blocked off this year by open water. The Iditarod Trail crew going to Rohn via Hell’s Gate had a snowmachine submerge in open water on the Kuskokwim River and barely made it to Rohn. We had to go over Rainy Pass. At the time, it didn’t mean much to me, because I was planning on going over Rainy Pass anyway. Thirty extra miles? No thanks. But now, I was wishing I had the Hell’s Gate option. I was definitely not falling asleep after this news, especially since Billy kept talking. So I prepared to move on. After all, there was a full day until I would get to Rainy Pass. Plenty of time for a trail to be put in, either by snowmobile, or by other racers.

Pete and Ed finished their rice and beans meals and came to the tent to lay down as I was getting ready to leave. We chatted a bit. I really enjoyed that we three skiers were able to interact so much along the trail. We all skied at different paces, but because we took different amounts of rest, we were moving down the trail at almost the same pace.

I went through my re-supply drop bag that I had sent to Finger Lake before the start of the race. As I restocked my food supply, I was shocked at how little I had eaten. Because I was spending extra time at checkpoints to let my knees and feet recover, I was eating two full meals at each checkpoint, rather than the one I had planned on. This meant I was eating much less of my own food. I still had my appetite and was getting plenty of calories, but I was carrying a lot of food weight with me because I wasn’t making a dent in the cache. I had very little need to resupply with food.

This picture shows all the food that was in my Finger Lag drop bag. The pile on the right is what I took with me. The pile on the left is what I left behind. I hope someone ate that stuff. I left Finger Lake just before noon, in 12th place.

By this section of trail, it was finally beginning to sink in that not only would I not be skating very much on this trip, I wouldn’t really be classic skiing either. Instead I would be shuffling. The new snow that had fallen earlier in the week had only been packed down by a few snowmobiles, so the crystals were still sharp. And the trail was also windblown in most places, making it even slower. And now, as I started the ascent towards Rainy Pass, I knew I wouldn’t be getting any glide on the uphills. I resigned myself to shuffling - still mostly without kick wax because it wore off so quickly - until I was over Rainy Pass. Maybe once I got to the other side and the trail flattened out I could do some striding or even (dare to dream…) skating. But for now, the Iditarod Shuffle continued.

My second meal of beans and rice at Finger Lake was not sitting well in my stomach, and I was having a hard time keeping it down. For the first four hours of the ski to Puntilla, I was unable to eat anything else. Finally, as I approached the Happy River, I was able to force down a Snickers bar, and my stomach gradually felt better as the day went on.

About twenty miles from Finger Lake, I encountered the notorious Happy River steps. Here’s how the Iditarod Sled Dog race website describes the steps:

After a mile or so of dropping down toward the valley and zigzagging through the forest, you’ll plunge down a short but very steep hill; directly in front of you will be one of the warning signs and the trail will vanish over the edge of what looks like a cliff. It is a cliff. This is the entrance to the Happy River Steps. Stop the dogs at the top, say your prayers, revise your will, and then see how gently you can get the dogs to creep down the hill. Of course, you will be standing on your brake for all you’re worth.

I took off my skis and walked down the steps. This was tricky in its own right because my sled was pushing heavily on my back as I walked, and my ski boots had minimal traction on the icy snow. But I took it slow and made it down with only a couple spills and out onto the Skwentna River. Aidan Harding caught me during the short section on the Skwentna. But then to get off the river, we had to climb up a nearly vertical embankment. I was able to throw my skis up to the top, then claw my way up on my hands and knees while still pulling my sled. Aidan had to remove every bag of gear from his bike and carry each piece up one by one. I was gone by the time he had to haul the bike up, but I can only imagine what a trick that must have been. I breathed a sigh of relief for having made it through the steps. But as I soon found out, that was the easy part of today’s trail for anyone hauling a sled.

The trail between the Happy River steps and the open expanses of Rainy Pass was twisty and turny, with lots of ups and down and wavy bumps created by snowmobiles. This was difficult terrain to navigate a sled through, but the worst part was the alder branches and stumps that were sticking up through the snow the entire way. The smaller branches were constantly catching on my sled cover. Each time I would have to stop, turn around and give the sled pole a quick tug to break it free. The bigger branches sometime got under the cover, or snagged on the sled itself. This required that I stop, unbuckle myself from the sled, ski back and de-tangle the sled, then re-buckle and move on, only to do it all again in a few minutes. Some of the bigger stumps would flip the sled over completely, which meant an even longer stop before I could get going again. The sled cover took its toll in this section, as seams began to unravel and snaps popped off. This is where I began to think that Pete’s elevated sled frame was a brilliant idea. It was a beautiful sunny day and the trail was incredibly scenic as it passed across alpine lakes and through the woods, but I wasn’t enjoying the trip because I was fighting with the sled.

After passing by the Long Lake Hills, the valley widened and the brush gave way to open meadows. The mountains were spectacular, and for the first time all trip, I started snapping a lot of photos.

The last five miles to Puntilla were a slow uphill shuffle, but at least I wasn’t stopping every three minutes to de-tangle my sled. I arrived at Rainy Pass Lodge on Puntilla Lake at 7:30 PM, along with John Ross, Billy Koitzsch, Robert May, and Aidan Harding. I was surprised to find only two other racers at the checkpoint, Eric Warkentin and Louise (Lou) Kobin. As we ate Chef Boy-R-Dee ravioli straight from the can, the checkpoint worker informed us that there was a trail over Rainy Pass, and that everyone else had started their trip up and over. This was good news, and it put my mind at ease as I fell asleep on a bed in the extremely warm cabin.

Wednesday and into Thursday - Day 4 and 5

Puntilla Lake (Rainy Pass Lodge) to Rohn - 45 miles (210 miles total)

Having heard plenty of horror stories about Rainy Pass and the Dalzell Gorge, I was hoping to travel with other racers for that section. Billy, Robert, Aidan, and John departed at 5:00 AM. I knew I would be faster than the bikers, at least on the climb up to the Pass, so I decided I would follow them by about half an hour. I was a bit sad leaving Puntilla, because I thought it might be the last time I saw Pete and Ed. We’d seen each other at every checkpoint, and I enjoyed the fact that the skiers were sticking close together despite our different skis and sled/backpack arrangements. But the time gap between us was steadily growing at each checkpoint, and it was now about five hours. I thought that a long trip up and over Rainy Pass would increase the gap, and I would leave Rohn before they arrived. Of course, it turned out I shouldn’t have been too worried about that.

About an hour after leaving Puntilla, I encountered Robert who was on his way back down to Puntilla. “I don’t feel quite right,” he said. “I’m overheating. I’m going to go back and rest some more.” I continued on the gradual six hour climb, passing John and then Billy and Aidan along the way.

Just after passing the bikers, I crested a small hill and saw a dark-haired creature scurrying up a hillside about half a mile away. It was too big to be a fox or a porcupine, and too small to be a bear. Wolverine? It’s loping gait sure made it look like a wolverine, but I was too far away to know for sure. I’ve seen lots of wolverine tracks in the snow over the years, but they are elusive creatures and I had never seen the actual beast the wild before. I watched it disappear over a small ridge. It had to be a wolverine. Other than one moose and some birds, it was the only wildlife I saw the entire trip.

[To view full size map, click the map, then when it expands click it again in the lower right corner. Same for any of the photos.]

In the morning, we were teased with sun and blue sky, but as I left the Ptarmigan Pass Valley and entered the narrower Rainy Pass side valley, the clouds moved in, the light got flat, the wind picked up and it started to snow. There were a lot more alders in the side valley, and I had trouble guiding my sled between them. Soon, I came across a snowmobile that was stuck in deep snow and alders. The machine was a rental and it was identical to the machines being used by a couple of Italian guys who appeared to be shadowing the race on snowmobile. They had passed me the day before, about 10 miles before Puntilla. I had also seen them in Skwentna and Shell Lake, and it seemed like the Italians were up to no good (It is illegal for any racer to have external support or accompaniment out on the trail). I later found out that they were illegally providing support to racer Marco Costa who was disqualified and banned from the race. When I saw the stuck snowmachine, I immediately assumed it belonged to the Italians. I shook my head and moved on.

The wind was now howling, and it was all I could do to follow the footsteps of the bikers as they led me to the pass. Any snowmobile trail that might have existed was blown in with new snow. But I knew that the other side of the pass usually gets less snow. If I could just make it up and over, I was sure the trail on the other side would be better.

As I shuffled across Rainy Pass Lake, about a half mile below the pass, I had my head down, trying as best I could to follow the footsteps in the drifting snow. Just then a voice called out, “Hey Cory!” I looked to my right to see a man standing in front of a cabin, maybe 200 yards away.

“How’s it going?” he asked. Based on the voice and the fact that he knew my name, I figured it had to be Bill Merchant, the race director and the person putting in the trail for us.

“Well, I’m slogging along, but I’m still moving,” I replied.

“Okay, there’s a group of bikers up ahead of you,” Bill said.

“Great, thanks.”

And with that, I continued on my way. I guess I should have known at that point that something was not right. Bill was supposed to be ahead of us, packing down the trail. Why was he still here, on this side of the pass? But I was still operating with the information we’d been given in Puntilla - that there was a trail over the pass. So I just figured that Bill must have gone up and over, then came back up to pack it down better. Sure, I couldn’t see any sign of a trail where I was, but this snow near the pass was all rock-solid sastrugi, extremely firm wind-blown snow. A snowmachine would barely make a mark in it. I figured the trail would pick up again after I dropped down the other side of Rainy Pass and out of the wind.

The light was extremely flat as I crested the pass. Starting down the other side, it would have been good skiing on the firm snow, except that I couldn’t see a thing. It was all a giant white sheet. I couldn’t make out any definition. I was afraid that I would drop off a cliff or run smack into a snowdrift (and snap a ski), so I went really slowly. The slope was just the right grade to cruise slowly without having to work too hard, or pick up too much speed. It was the easiest mile of the race. “I’ll be down to Rohn in no time,” I thought.

But as I descended out of the wind, the new snow started to settle in on top of the old. I could now see the footprints and bike treads ahead of me that I assumed belonged to Eric and Lou, the two bikers who left Puntilla seven hours before me. But there was no sign of a snowmobile track! It wasn’t until this point, about two miles down the other side of Rainy Pass, that it occurred to me that there was no trail. Maybe that stuck snowmobile did belong to Bill and he never made it over. But what about the Rohn crew that was supposed to be coming up this side? Shouldn’t they have been through here by now? This was a bummer, but I wasn’t overly concerned. The snow wasn’t deep, and I was still averaging between two and three miles per hour. With about 10 miles to go before I reached the Tatina River, this meant it the section from Puntilla to Rohn would take about 12-14 hours, rather than the optimistic 8-10 I was shooting for, but not a big deal.

I continued following the bike prints as they entered a narrow creek bed in the couple of miles before Pass Creek spilled out into the Dalzell Creek valley. Here the valley was narrow. So narrow that a few racers I talked to thought this section was the infamous Dalzell Gorge, even after they had made it through the Dalzell Gorge (which is actually the last descent before we hit the Tatina River). The snow was getting deeper. I was trudging through snow up to my knees in places. I tried to think positively by telling myself that I was still better off than the bikers, but I had my own unique issues to deal with. Much of this section looked like this:

Yes that is the trail. You can see the markings on the trees. Now tell me how you would get a through there on skis, while pulling a sled? I don’t know the answer either. All I know is that somehow I made it by detaching and reattaching to the sled many times. I was mystified by the fact that the Iditarod Sled Dog race would be coming through here in four days. How would they buff out this trail in that short amount of time? Surely, it would take the trail crew a full week to clear all the brush. But as I discovered when I read Lou’s blog, I should never underestimate a man with a snowmobile and a machete. Words to live by, actually.

Because of the alders, doing this section on skis wasn’t much easier than pushing a bike. Sometimes the alders necessitated traveling on the creek, while hoping that I wouldn’t bust through into open water (I didn’t). Later Jay Petervary would tell me how the lead group of bikers came through here, taking turns leading the post-hole parade. Frequently, someone would take step and the snow would collapse into the creek, taking the person’s leg with it. Then everyone would hold their collective breath until the person announced “Wet!” or “Not Wet!”

Sometime around 2:00 PM, after traveling 3 miles in two hours, I knew I was getting close to where Pass Creek was about to spill out into the Dalzell Creek valley. I sensed that the vegetation above the creek bank was thinning out, and I popped up to see if it was any easier to travel on the banks. It turned out to be much easier. The snow wasn’t as deep (only just above my ankles) and the trees were spaced wide enough to ski through. I hadn’t gone more than 20 feet on this bank, which felt like a superhighway compared to the creek, when I looked down and saw a group of seven bikers in the creek next to me. My first thought was, “Oh crap, not now. Why do they have to see me now?” They were going to see me glide by, in relative ease, while they slogged through every step. They were going to absolutely hate me, and there was nothing I could do about it. I gave them a sheepish wave and and a meek “Hey.” The looks of frustration on their faces told the whole story.

“Is it any better up there?” a woman I later figured out was Tracey Petervary called out.

“Yeah, the snow is not as deep,” I replied.

“Do you see any trail markers?”

“Yep - two right in front of me.”

We had a brief conversation as they extracted themselves from the creek and climbed up the bank. They asked how the skiing was, and I tried to explain that, despite appearances at the moment, I was having my fair share of trouble with the sled in the alders. But they were having none of my excuses, and I agreed that it was still better than pushing a bike. Jay Petervary asked where Eric and Lou (the other couple on the trail, and Jay & Tracey’s main competition) were. I told them I had no idea, I had assumed they were in front of me.

“Maybe they are still at the cabin,” Jay said.

“Maybe. I didn’t stop there.” I replied.

At this point I started doing math in my head. I left Puntilla in 14th place. I passed 4 people on the climb. I apparently passed two more (Eric and Lou) who were in the cabin. And now I was passing a group of seven. That puts me in …FIRST PLACE?!? How did that happen? Last I knew, the lead biker (Jeff Oatley) was at least a day ahead of me. Only later did I hear the story from these guys how Jeff arrived at the Rainy Pass Lake cabin and found Bill stranded there. Bill had gotten his snowmobile stuck and had been holed up in the cabin (which, by the way, did not have a roof) for a couple of days. His satellite phone was also broken so he couldn’t call for help. Jeff, knowing there was no trail for him over the pass, elected to stay put at the cabin with Bill, as did the rest of the top cyclists when they arrived. Finally early that morning, the first seven decided to make a push over the pass as a group. And here they were: Jeff, Jay, Tracey, James Leavesley, Chris Wrobel, Phil Hofstetter, and Alec Petro.

My excitement about leading the race was promptly quelled when I started breaking trail. Again, it wasn’t bad at first. The snow was only up to my shins and I was easily able to follow the trail markings at a pace between 1 and 2 MPH. I wouldn’t make it to Rohn by dark as I hoped, but I was able to easily put the bikers out of sight. But with each mile, the snow got deeper, the pace got slower, and I swear the trail markings got harder to follow. I took these pictures when I thought I was breaking trail through deep snow. It turned out that this was nothing compared to the deep snow I encountered a couple hours later, but by then I was in no mood to take pictures.

After breaking trail for three miles, the snow was now up to my knees and my pace was about 1 MPH at best. It had started snowing. At this point I hadn’t yet heard Bill’s story of being stranded for days, and I was cursing him not only for not putting in a trail, but for not warning me about what was to come when I saw him near the pass. The snow kept getting deeper. Each step was a monumental effort. After five miles down Dalzell Creek, it was up to my mid-thigh. I could barely pull my skis out of the deep snow to take another step. On each step, my ski would sink through about a foot of powder and hit a layer of crust underneath. And each time I would hope that maybe, just maybe, the crust would hold my weight as I stepped up onto the ski. And each time the crust would collapse under my weight, burying the ski an additional two feet under and sucking all my energy with it. Anyone who has had to ski or walk through breakable crust knows how mentally and physically tiring it is. And did I mention I was pulling a sled? I had stopped keeping track of my pace because it was too depressing, but it was probably about 0.5 MPH. After six hours and about six miles of breaking trail, I couldn’t go any further. I was utterly exhausted. I had kept my motivation high until that point simply because I had faith I could make it through to Rohn before stopping. I was now faced with the reality that I was too tired. I needed to rest now. Besides, if someone else caught up, they could take a turn busting trail. There was no need for me to do it all by myself. I packed out a spot for my sled and bivy sack under a tree next to the trail, crawled in and ate some cookies and pop tarts before drifting off to sleep. It was about 6 PM.

Ed came by at about 11:00 PM. Even with my trail-breaking efforts, I essentially had a five hour lead before I stopped. That was gone now, but I couldn’t have cared less. I was just happy to have help with the trailblazing. We had a brief conversation about how ridiculous the situation was, then he said he was going press on a little further.

The bikers came by around 1:00 AM. I didn’t talk to them, but I did hear a few comments they made as they passed.

“Bivy. That’s what we should be doing.”

“There’s Cory - I thought he’d be long gone.”

That second comment made me realize that the bikers didn’t understand how difficult it was to ski this section. They saw me ski away with relative ease many hours ago and figured it was like that for me the whole way. They never saw me when I was breaking through 3 feet of snow, when it required an explosive full-body lunge and about three contortionist poses just to get my ski out of the snow on every step. I will readily admit that I had it easier than the bikers did, but it still was nowhere near easy.

I couldn’t get back to sleep after the bikers passed, and by 2:00 AM, I was packed up and back on the trail. I was no longer trudging through unbroken snow, but now I had a new problem. The trench that the bikers left in their wake was completely lopsided. One side was very deep from where they were walking. The other side of the trench, where they pushed their bikes, was only half as deep. I simply could not pull my sled through their tracks because it kept flipping over in the uneven trench. It flipped over six times in the first one hundred yards. I had a brief moment of panic when I thought there was no way I could get my sled through that section. Would I have to ditch the sled in order to save myself? Was my best option to leave the sled and gear behind, ski to Rohn and scratch from the race? Would I have to break a parallel trail? No way was I doing that. My only other option was to empty the sled. I took my three drybags, sleeping pad and sled cover and strapped them to my body, my hip belt and on my small backpack. I was able to pull the sled fine when it was empty, but the extra thirty five pounds hanging awkwardly on my body provided yet another degree of difficulty. I was insanely jealous of Ed, with all his gear in a backpack, and Pete, whose ingenious sled design made it possible to carry the load on his back when needed.

After a few hundred more yards, I was just staring to get into a rhythm when I came upon a cluster of bivies. And the end of the broken trail. At first I was in disbelief that they had only made it a few hundred yards beyond my bivy site before calling it quits, but eventually it occurred to me that it probably took a couple of hours to make that progress. Oh well, I was back to being the trail breaker.

I took one stride into the unbroken snow and quickly realized that skis were not going to work. My first step sunk so deep in the snow that my ski wouldn’t move an inch. I simply could not take another step. I reached down, unclipped my boots from my bindings and dug my skis out of the snow so I could continue on foot. With each step I sunk in to at least my waist, sometimes my chest. Each step required an explosive movement just to extract the leg and move it twelve inches forward. Sometimes it wasn’t even a step, it was more of a swimming motion, pushing snow out of the way with both my arms and legs. At this point I began wondering if this is what the Donner Party experienced. I was envisioning us being stuck for another couple of days. Things were going to get worse before they got better. I was fairly certain that we’d all eventually be okay, because we had plenty of food and warm clothes. I was more worried about all the people following in the race at home. What would they think when all the racers simply disappeared for a few days. I’m not sure my mom could take that. I reminded myself of Linda’s Rule #2: Don’t worry about them. I pressed on.

After about an hour and a half of this wrestling match, the trail started to climb up a hill out of the valley. It was 3:30 AM. I had been out here from almost 24 hours. I knew from the trail description in my pocket that this climb directly preceded the trail dropping into the Dalzell Gorge for the final two miles of descent onto the Tatina River. So I knew I had less than three miles to the river, then 5 miles to Rohn. But I didn’t know if there would be a trail on any of that. It could easily be another 16 hours at this pace.

If breaking trail through waist-deep snow on the flats had been exhausting, breaking trail uphill felt impossible. After half an hour and what felt like only 100 yards, I was sure I couldn’t take another step. I was starting to get above treeline where the wind was picking up and the snow was blowing in circles. I paused to assess the situation. I had no idea how big the hill was. With this weather, I needed to either camp right there, or make it up and over the hill and down the other side. I couldn’t camp where it was exposed. And even if I could make it up and over, I was still faced with the daunting task of descending through the legendary Dalzell Gorge, in deep snow, in the middle of the night, without a trail. Stories from last year of people falling in the water while trying to crisscross the Dalzell Creek gorge were fresh in my mind. That’s not a good situation for a race rookie. I decided to camp again. Safe and smart, I told myself. I had plenty of food and a warm (if slightly damp from the falling snow) sleeping bag. I’d be okay.

Ed showed up a few hours later, and also decided to camp for a second time rather than push on. The bikers came by in the morning, maybe about 9:30 AM. We all chit-chatted a bit and shared some stories from the night before. After a few minutes, the bikers started to move on. They hadn’t taken five steps beyond where I was camped, when one of them called out, “Hey, a snowmobile trail!” I was certain it was a joke. No f*%&$-ing way did I just camp 10 feet shy of the trail that would rescue us from this ordeal! Even after they disappeared, I was still in denial. I simply couldn’t allow myself to believe there was a trail until I’d seen it myself. That would be too cruel and too lucky at the same time. I was bundled up in my bivy, and it was a long process to get my boots and outerwear on so I could see for myself. It wasn’t until Ed packed up and took off an hour later that he confirmed for me that there really was a trail.

By the time Ed left, I was already in the process of melting snow for water (my CamelBak was empty) and cooking freeze-dried Mac & Cheese for breakfast, so it took me another hour to finish up and hit the trail. Besides, I knew that I very well might encounter the whole group breaking trail again in 45 minutes. I couldn’t assume that the trail was good all the way to Rohn. By now, I knew better than to trust any trail, no matter how promising it looked.

Pete came by as I was packing up and I followed him down through the gorge. The gorge did indeed have a snowmobile trail the whole way, put in by the Rohn Iditarod crew. The dreaded Dalzell Gorge turned out to be a really fun ski, and a walk in the park compared to the previous day. I arrived in Rohn around 12:30 PM, but I couldn’t shake the thought that I could have been there six hours earlier if I had simply walked 10 more feet the night before.

Throughout the Dalzell Creek ordeal, I thought a lot about my family following the race on the internet. I had estimated before the race that I could do that section in about 10 hours, and it took over 30. I could only imagine how worried they must have been. Fortunately, there was quite a bit of information put out to keep people like my wife and parents in the loop. Most of it was reassuring which was good. However, not all of it was true.

We weren’t all together. We didn’t all have shelter. We weren’t staying put. We didn’t all know what we had gotten ourselves into when we pushed over the pass.

For instance, one article in the Anchorage Daily News said, “Racers who left the Puntilla checkpoint after Oatley were advised to pack extra food because of the conditions.” Maybe some of the racers after us were told this, but I was distinctly told that there was a trail and that things looked good up at the pass. And even so, how would we pack extra food? Our last food drop was at Finger Lake. We only had the food we brought from there. In the same article it also stated, “Meanwhile, Terry Boyle, a longtime Iditarod volunteer and skookum woodsman, was reportedly leading the pack of snowmobiles that apparently managed to open the trail from Rohn up the Dalzell Gorge and over Rainy Pass to where racers waited.” These guys put in the trail up the gorge, true (and thank God they did). And maybe later they did get up and over the pass (although Lou’s blog says they didn’t). But there was no trail in the 10 miles between the Pass and the Gorge when we went through. I don’t think any racers “waited” until there was a trail over the pass. Some waited longer than others, but I think eventually everyone set out from the cabin before any snowmobiles made it up and over. It is a testament to this year’s group of racers that everyone who went over the pass made it to Rohn. There was potential for disaster with the conditions the way they were, but everyone was fit, smart and prepared. It was quite an experience to be out there with such an incredible group of athletes.

In Rohn, we all spent some time going through our drop bags, drying out our sleeping bags and other gear, licking our wounds, and telling stories. We also listened to a Rohn checkpoint volunteer tell stories of going through the ice on the Kuskokwim River on the Ptarmigan Pass route. Someone asked her how the Iron Dog Snowmachine race had gone through Ptarmigan Pass a few weeks ago without encountering any water issues. “Those guys aren’t afraid to ride open water,” she replied. “They just gun it.”

Wow. And I thought we were crazy.

Continue on to Part Three: 2009 Iditarod Invitational - Rohn to McGrath

Appalachian Extreme Adventure Race

Monday, May 19th, 2003

Sun May 11
Today I flew from Alaska to New Hampshire. At this point my training was essentially done. I would do a couple short workouts on Monday and Tuesday, then start resting up for the race. Had I done enough? It didn’t feel like it.

Going into important ski races, I know when my body is ready. It just feels lean, mean , and fast. I feel like a caged animal who will be unleashed onto the race course to devastate everything in its path. I do not have that feeling now. I feel like I am in the best shape I have ever been in for early May, but I also know that this is usually the time of year where I am ‘out-of-shape’ and just starting to train again after a few weeks off. I know that if I am able to survive this race it will be a testament to my years and years of ski training, which have built up an impressive base, and not to my three weeks of preparation. I think I have built my body up enough to endure the pounding of the trekking, running, and mountain biking, and that is the most important result of my recent training.

I have mentioned a few times on this website the mantra, “I am a cross country ski racer - I can do anything.” As athletes, we nordic racers truly believe that we are the cream of the endurance crop. We take pride in our impressive displays of fitness, not only in our own sport - but in others as well. Like the time in college I decided to to a 54 mile run on the Appalachian Trail - the day after a running time trial. Or the time I decided to bike the length of Vermont (190 miles) after having ridden a total of about 100 miles all year. Or the time we ran from one side of the Grand Canyon to the other - and then were disappointed it wasn’t harder. One of the best things about being a ski racer is that you know that you can try any insane endurance-fest at any time and usually pull it off.

Still, I am nervous. Had I finally bit off more than I could chew? Will my body hold together? Will my fitness level be enough to keep up with three very strong teammates? I can hardly function on less than 9 hours of sleep a night, how will I survive on none? Will I be mentally tough enough to keep pushing, but also smart enough to call it quits if I am in serious trouble? I didn’t have the answers to these questions.

And even if I did make it, my own teammates, who are just as crazy as me for enjoying this type of thing, thought I was completely insane for my plan to attempt a 103 mile mountain bike ride in Moab only four days after the race. They said I should expect to sleep for two days straight after the race, and then not do anything strenuous for a week or so. Surely, I would finally overstep the limits of my body at some point on this trip. The only question was when.

It was time to find out.

Fri May 15
Today was registration and certification for the Appalachian Extreme adventure race. I met my team at Sunday River Ski Resort in Bethel Maine. This whole day was a learning experience for me. I knew very little about the sport of adventure racing before signing on to this race and I was constantly picking up information as race time neared.

Here is a brief description for those who are as clueless as I was. Adventure racing is a team sport. Each team has four people. It is not a relay. The entire team must stay together (within 100 feet) at all times and complete the entire course. Each team must have at least one female. Adventure racing is basically an “extreme” orienteering race. Navigation plays just a big a role as physical fitness. The location of the race course is kept a secret until the evening before the start. At this pre-race meeting, they hand out race bibs, course maps and a the team passport. The passport lists the coordinates of all the checkpoints that you must reach along the course (our course had 32). The team navigators then plot these points on the maps and determine a route to get to them all, in order. Sometimes this route involves trails, sometimes, it doesn’t. Each section of the course has a specified mode of travel. In our race we would encounter sections of trekking (hiking & running), mountain biking, canoeing (with a kayak paddle - it is faster), and rappelling. The first team to make it through all the checkpoints to the finish wins. A team can receive time penalties along the way for rules infractions such as not having mandatory gear (two hours), not sticking together (4 hours), or losing a race bib (one hour). If you receive a penalty, you must sit at the next transition area (TA) for the required amount of time.

More info on the race at the Official Website

Our team captain is Tracey Cote. Tracey is also a cross country skier and coach of the ski team at Colby College. She has been adventure racing for a couple years now and was recently picked by Adventure Sports magazine as one of “Eight Women To Watch.” Since all 4 person teams must have a female and the team must stay together at all times, a lot of the race depends on how strong your female is. Tracey’s biggest complaint about some of her former teammates is that they couldn’t keep up. I had a feeling our female was pretty strong.

Tracey’s husband Pat is also on the team. Pat this is Pat’s second Appalachian Extreme. He and Tracey will be adventure racing all summer as a team. Pat is a former Dartmouth Ski Team member and is currently the program director for NENSA.

Our navigator is Vytenis Benetis. He is a world-class orienteerer (is that a word?) from Lithuania. He came to the United States in 1997 to attended the Naval Academy and is now pursuing a graduate degree in engineering at the University of Maryland. From what I had heard of Vytenis (we called him ‘V’) prior to the race, he is one of the up-and-comers in adventure racing. In addition to being a great navigator and a strong athlete, he is also a very outgoing and entertaining person. I could tell when I first met him that I would enjoy having him as a teammate.

The fourth member of the team was supposed to be Derek Mitchum, who is an excellent mountain bike racer. But about 6 weeks before the race, he broke his wrist and could not compete. That was when Pat & Tracey contacted me. Pat later told me that the main reason he chose me was because of an episode a few years ago in Park City, where he and I both raced the US Nationals 50K race at SOldier Hollow, then partied all night to celebrate the end of Nationals, then got up after a couple hours of sleep to race the Wasatch Overland - a fun, but hard, backcountry ski race. I won the Overland , Pat was second. Pat said that 24 hour period showed him I could handle an adventure race. I was the only rookie on my team (and the only rookie I would encounter during the whole race).


Team #17 - Masters Poles (L-r): Pat Cote, Tracey Cote, Vytenis Benetis, Cory Smith

During registration, V kept saying that other teams were nervous about us. We were the dark horse. V was telling people he was racing with three cross country skiers and they would immediately get concerned. Perhaps they had seen what the team of Nina Kemppel, Justin Wadsworth, and Nathan Schultz had done at the Gorge Games last year, coming out of no where to place third? Or maybe they just knew about skiers in general. We are tough and we like to suffer.

I had no idea what to expect from our team. All three of my teammates had mentioned that they were used to being stronger than the rest of their team. In fact Tracey and V first met in a race, while they were both waiting for their teams to catch up. They all felt this was potentially a very strong team with no weak link.

Tracey explained that the primary team goal was to finish the whole course. Apparently, the race organizers take pride in creating a very tough course that only 8 or so teams (out of 30 teams total) can complete in the allotted time. If teams do not pass through certain checkpoints before a certain time, they are then re-routed to a shorter course so that they will finish in time for the awards banquet. Only teams that finish the whole course get prizes. Last year, Tracey & Pat’s team got lost in the woods for four hours and missed a cut-off and had to take a shorter course. This year they wanted to finish the whole thing. They also felt that if we were able to do that, we might be able to challenge some of the top teams as well. My personal goal was just to survive and not hold the team back.

Sat May 16 - Race Day
When the course was revealed last night we found out that the start was in North Stratford, New Hampshire. The first leg was a 45 mile paddle down the Connecticut River. This meant that we would transition from paddle to mountain bike (the second leg) only 10 miles up the road from my parents’ house in Littleton. I had not realized that this race would be so close to home.

To see pictures of our team, go to V’s website.

The race started at 8 am sharp on Saturday. It was a surreal feeling to know that a race was about to start, but that we wouldn’t be finishing it for at least three days. I tried to put it into some sort of perspective that I was familiar with, but my brain kept spitting the information out - Does Not Compute. I tried not to think about the race as a whole and just focus on the task immediately ahead of us.

The paddling was tough at first. We had two canoes. Pat and Tracey were in one and V and I were in the other. V was in the front and I was in the back. V is a very big guy, at least 6′3″ and probably 200 pounds of muscle. In the current of the river, with so much weight in the front of my boat, I could not keep it going straight. I was zigzagging as I fought futilely to keep a straight line. V and I were faster than Pat & Tracey, so even though we weren’t going straight we were still slightly ahead of them. At the portage, 24 miles into the race, we found a more successful combination by putting Pat, who is much lighter, in the front of my boat, and putting V in the stern of Tracey’s boat. We picked up our pace a bit after the switch, but we still finished the paddle somewhere near the back of the pack.

When we transitioned to bikes, our race really started. The first bike leg was the easiest leg of the race, only three hours on a combination of pavement, dirt roads and a bit of singletrack. V really impressed me here. While other teams had to stop at intersections to look at their maps, V had one eye on the road and one on the map at all times and we never had to stop. In addition, he led the whole way and we drafted off of him. It was like being a railroad car hooked up to a huge locomotive. He powered us the whole way and we just had to hang on. We passed quite a few teams during this bike section to get us right back into the race.


Our support team awaits our arrival

At 6 pm on Saturday we made the transition from biking to trekking. We came into the TA, where our support team (Paul Cote & Anna Carvill) had laid out all of our gear and made us a warm dinner of mac & cheese with tuna. We changes clothes, refilled water, grabbed our food and left. One of Tracey’s strategies as captain was for us to make the transitions as fast as possible. She said that if you stop for too long, it is easy to get sucked in and that makes leaving much tougher. All our eating would be done on the trail. This was tough on me - as a rookie I was paranoid about forgetting some important gear and being rushed in the transition did not help ease my mind. But I saw her point and tried to transition as fast as I could, while still double-checking my gear. At almost every transition station, as we exited the race officials would say, “Wow, that was fast.” We definitely spent less time in the TA’s than anyone else.


Heading out for a trek.

We knew that from a physical standpoint, trekking would be our strongest event. V is an orienteerer, and the other three of us are used to long OD runs through mountainous terrain. We started the trek at a very fast walk and as soon as we could not see any other teams around us, we picked it up to a run/jog. This surprised me a bit. Were we going to run for three days? Could we really keep this pace up? Vytenis even voiced his concern, saying that we were “Crazy skiers” for trying to run in this race. But as he was saying this he was also ahead of the three of us and setting a very fast jogging pace. He was game for whatever we wanted to do. We reached our first trekking checkpoint (CP), on top of a mountain, just at sunset. We stopped for about 1/2 a second to admire the view before charging off in search of the next CP. At this point we had made up a lot of time and were among the leaders. Our running and V’s navigation heading up the mountain had paid early dividends.

That night was tough for me. All day long I felt good, but as night fell, my body instinctively craved sleep. I started feeling very tired, though I could not tell the difference between mental tiredness and physical exhaustion at that point. Which one was it? I was not sure. Our team kept pushing the pace, and I became increasingly concerned that I could not keep it up. I tried to put one foot in front of the other and not think about the fact that I was less than a quarter of the way through this race. But it was extremely tough. The way my body was declining, I wouldn’t make it until dawn, never mind Tuesday. During the night trek, we stopped for a 10 minute nap. I was so nervous about making use of the full 10 minutes that I never fell asleep. I laid there, on the cold ground with just tights and a long sleeve shirt on, thinking, ‘I have to fall asleep. I have to fall asleep.’ The ten minutes were over before I ever nodded off. We got up and pushed ahead. At this point I was trying to figure out how to break it to my teammates that I couldn’t go on. I just couldn’t hack it. They had taken a risk by teaming with a rookie, and risk backfired. I wondered exactly how far I had to push myself before I could quit. Could I stop just because I was feeling nauseous and tired? Or would I have to push my body to the point of collapse before they would accept that I tried my hardest. As these thoughts raced through my weary mind, I just tried to keep my feet moving in pace with theirs.

At one point as we were trying to navigate up and over a pass, we were following a very primitive trail. It was a challenge just to follow the trail and this challenge helped to wake me up. I had plenty of practice trying to find trails in the dark as a child who spent all his summers at a camp in the woods. I was back in my element and I was beginning to feel better. I was gaining confidence that I could finish the trek. But the rest of the race was still very daunting.

At one point we were descending from the ridge, and I had an uneasy feeling that we were heading down the wrong side of the mountain. I thought about saying something, but I also knew that I was very tired and I was the rookie. V had the map and he knew where we were. I would just follow. About 30 minutes later, V stopped and after studying the map for a few minutes, confirmed my fears. We were on the wrong descent. We would have to climb back up and head down the other side - bushwhacking most of the way. At that point I realized how important it is for all team members to know where we should be going - and for me to voice my concerns if I didn’t think we were heading the right way. From then on I made a concerted effort to ask V where we were and where we were headed.

Sun May 17 - Day Two
As the sun was beginning to come up, we stopped for another 10 minute nap. This one, I fell right asleep and didn’t wake up until Tracey’s alarm went off. We got up and pushed through the last few hours of the trek, arriving at the next TA, at the Balsams Resort, at 8 am. By the time we reached the TA, the thought of quitting was no longer in the forefront of my mind. My body had overcome the initial shock of no sleep and was beginning to realize that the end was not coming anytime soon. It had settled into a sustainable state that I could deal with - tired, but not exhausted, weary but not completely spent. It was the kind of state that, while mildly uncomfortable, I felt I could tolerate for an indefinite amount of time. At the TA we transitioned back to mountain biking.

At first it was a welcome change of pace. But then my teammates, who had looked this section of the maps over closer than I had, began saying how this section would be incredibly tough. Quite possibly the toughest thing they have ever done. Insane climbs, plenty of bushwhacking, and hard to find CPs. It was going to be a long day.

Indeed it was tough. It seemed that each CP was at the top of a mountain, and each one had to be descended before ascending the next. Some had trails, some did not. We spend a good hour bushwhacking early on, which was tough because we found out later that there was a much more direct trail leading to where we wanted to go. Many times we got off our bikes and walked up hills. In a three day race, you can’t waste energy by trying to ride up insane grades. Better to swallow your pride and walk. It was also a hot 85 degrees and sunny which made for even more suffering. After a long day of up and down, up and down, we finally reached the top of our last big climb and we knew we only had one more CP before the next Transition Area, and it was all downhill from where we stood. We should have known it would not be that easy.

A general rule of adventure racing, if something seems too straight-forward, it probably is. Race organizers love to use trails that aren’t on the maps, or trails that don’t go where the maps says they do. It is all part of the plotting and guesswork that goes into navigation. You have to read the maps and the terrain for clues. Without going into too many painful details, suffice it to say that the last bike CP was not where we thought it would be. We thought it would be next to the creek, which it was. Only we didn’t know that there were three creeks in the general area. We spent almost three hours lost in the woods looking for the CP. Times like that are the most frustrating. You work so hard to move up in position, and then you can lose it all just because you are a few hundred yards off target. As we wandered through the woods looking for the flag that marked the CP, we had no idea if we would be looking for a few more minutes, or for many more hours. Earlier in the afternoon we had been in third place. How far would we drop because of this blunder? We finally found the CP and raced to the next transition area, a bit frustrated, but happy to be moving forward again. We reached the TA at 8 pm. We had been biking for 12 hours. We lost a couple places due to our meandering in the woods, but we passed them back in the transition and maintained our fourth place.


Exchanging gear in the TA


Talking briefly with my Dad in the TA. My parents found out the hard way that this is not a sport for spectators.

At the TA we swapped our biking gear for our trekking gear again. This time we would also have a rappel somewhere along the trek, so we had to carry our climbing gear with us for the whole trek. We grabbed delicious helpings of mac & cheese and mashed potatoes, refilled water, grabbed extra food and hit the trail. Initial reports in the AT were saying that this trek should be shorter in mileage and time than the last was. We expected to finish it around 8 am or so.

At 10 PM we reached the rappel site. This was the part of the race I was most nervous about. I had never done a rappel bigger than the 20 footer I did with Nick, and now I had to do a 150′ rappel in the dark. I knew I was tired, so I set up my gear slowly, and I triple checked everything. I was so focused that I did not even notice the official race videographer in my face then entire time with her super-powered spotlight and camera. I did not even believe she was there until she showed me the footage of my entire rappel at the race banquet two days later. Once I was locked in, I eased myself over the edge and slowly worked my way to the bottom of the rock. No big deal, but I was glad that was over.

Our trek that night was pretty slow. We were in fourth place at the rappel, but we knew that there were at least a couple teams not far behind. I was feeling pretty good at this point and would have liked to move faster, but no good can come from pushing your teammates too hard when there is a lot of racing yet to do. They did not push me too hard when I struggled the first night and I would not push the pace here. Early on during the night, we laid down for a twenty minute nap, but we were all so tired that we slept through the alarm and we only woke up 40 minutes later when we began to shiver from the cold.

Fortunately, the entire night’s hike was on a trail, so navigation was not a problem in most areas. We did have one mistake where we completely missed a sign pointing out our trail, and once again we started down the wrong side of a ridge. Right away this descent seemed wrong to me (I had been paying closer attention to the maps as time wore on), and I asked Vytenis, “V, is this trail doing what you want it to?”

“Yes, this is fine” he said. So we kept walking.

15 minutes later, I still had a bad feeling about the trail. “Are you still comfortable with what this trail is doing?” I asked. “Because I am not.”

V looked at the map again, and sure enough we had missed a turn. We climbed back up and got the right trail. Fortunately, we only lost about 30 minutes on that one.

We kept our position through the night as we summitted Mt Cabot, the Bulge and a few other peaks. As the sun came up, we could tell that V was getting very tired and his mind was not as sharp as it usually was. The last thing you want is a navigator who can’t think straight. We sat down for a fifteen minute break. V laid down in the middle of the trail and fell right asleep. I was feeling good and awake, so I used the time to change out of my warm clothes into shorts and also to eat some food. As we sat there, a team came by us. We exchanged pleasantries with them, but we were disappointed to have lost a position. Now in 5th place.

Mon May 18 - Day Three
When we woke V up, we told him about the other team and we set off in pursuit. We were moving faster than we did at night, but it wasn’t until we saw yet another team coming up behind us that we really got moving. We picked up the pace so that we were jogging all the flats and downhills. Yes, we were 48 hours into the race and we were still doing some running. Crazy skiers. When we reached our next climb, Mt Weeks, we had regained 4th place and we were flying. We went up that mountain faster than I would normally climb a mountain during a three hour hike. The faster we went, the better we felt. I had heard that the race doesn’t really start until the last day. It felt like the race was really starting, and we were looking strong. We hit the checkpoint on the far side of Mt Weeks and then headed down. From this CP, we needed to bushwhack down 1500 feet of elevation to a road below. We had two choices, go straight down and hit the road, or veer to the right and possibly hit another road, which was on the map, much sooner, which would be easier going and get us there faster, even though it was longer. We decided to try for the road to the right. Unfortunately for us, the road on the map either did not exist or was extremely overgrown with bushes and fallen trees. We lost a lot of time before we eventually found the road. And when we did find the road, we also found the two teams we had left behind earlier. Our bushwhacking gamble had nullified the gains we had made on the trail. Aaarrrgghh. The frustrations of adventure racing.

Even worse, I had expended a lot of extra energy going back and forth across the hill looking for the elusive road. I was so focused on finding it that I had forgotten to eat or drink. When we finally reached the road, I was very tired, dehydrated, and hungry. At this point I also thought we had about 17 more miles to go to the end of the trek. It was another hot day and I wasn’t sure I would make it. On the road, the others wanted to run again. I knew they were all tired, so I couldn’t figure out why they would be running if we had 17 more miles to go. We’d never make it if we kept pushing the pace. But I just put my head down and shuffled along with them. We passed one team to move into 5th or 6th - we weren’t sure how many teams passed us on the bushwhack.

We soon left the road and started another bushwhack up and over another pass. This was the low point of the second trek for me. I was still suffering from lack of food and water -even though I had begun to replenish. I also felt like we were wandering and didn’t really know where we were. Of course V and Pat were a little ways ahead of me and Tracey - who was also suffering - so I had no evidence to support my perception of being lost. Besides that, I thought we still had to go over this pass, down the other side, run 9 miles on the road, and then climb up and over another pass, around an area called Icy Gulch before a final 3 mile run to the end of the trek. When we started this trek, we thought we would finish by 8 am. It was now 12 pm and I was hoping to finish by dark.

I kept moving, trying to hide my weakness, wondering how I would make it the rest of the way.

It was after an hour or so of this that I thought I heard V say, “Here’s Icy Gulch!” I had been seeing things and hearing things for quite a few hours now, so I knew better than to trust what my brain wanted to hear. I was sure it was just a hallucination, like all the roads and buildings I thought I saw in the woods a few hours ago during our bushwhack. We still had about 12 miles to go before Icy Gulch. It wasn’t until a minute later when the sign that read “Icy Gulch” was staring me in the face that I realized that we were indeed, there! I had misinterpreted what V had showed me on the map earlier. We didn’t have 17 miles to go, we had about 5! We were almost there! V had lead us perfectly through the previous area, while the other teams around us all struggled. V’s navigation had saved us again. This did wonders for my energy level. I perked right back up and began to get excited for the finish of the trek. After the trek, all we had was a 24 mile paddle down a swift moving river and then a 6 mile bike on pavement to the finish. If all went well, I could sleep tonight!

The original race course was designed to go through Icy Gulch. Icy Gulch is a canyon lined on either side by steep granite walls at least 300 feet tall, with a river at the bottom. It gets its name because the canyon walls block out a lot of sun, and therefore the snow and ice from the winter stays in Icy Gulch much longer than it does in other places. The first two teams in the race both tried to go through Icy Gulch, but quickly turned around because it was unsafe. The snow was becoming soft and unstable. They were in danger of breaking through and plummeting into the icy water below. The race organizers then decided that the rest of us would have to go around the Gulch. So we had to bushwhack, yet again, along the ridge of the Gulch to reach the next checkpoint at the bottom. At the checkpoint, we were back in 4th place.

The rest of the trek was not easy, we were all fighting extreme fatigue and blisters. But no one more than Tracey. She was having extreme stomach problems and blister problems, yet she kept on moving and we made it to the TA about an hour after the previous checkpoint. At the TA, we found out that no one had come through the previous CP since we did - so we had at least an hour on whoever was behind us. This was comforting. We knew we didn’t have to hammer on the paddling. As long as we paddled steadily, the current would get us there eventually.

We left the trekking to paddling TA at about 4 pm on Monday, hoping we could finish before bedtime.

The first part of the paddle leg was awful because after that long trek we just finished, we still had to walk/run two miles with our paddles and PFDs, etc just to get to the water. Tracey’s blisters were so bad that V ended up carrying her part of the way. We were so happy just to reach the canoes that I think we relaxed a bit too much on the paddle. We knew we had a team only about 30 minutes ahead of us, but we were too tired to summons a final push to catch them. Instead we paddled leisurely down the river, taking our time, enjoying the last hours of our race.

We all kept a nervous eye on the water behind us, just inc case some one was mounting a late charge, but we never saw anyone. Eventually, Tracey had us do some paddling intervals, just so we would pick up some speed.

As we neared the last TA, we expected a nice leisurely transition to the bike and an easy cruise up the road to the finish at Sunday River. But as soon as we landed the canoes, our support crew gave us big news: the team ahead of us was serving a 1 hour penalty in that TA for a lost bib. If we could get through the TA in less than 15 min tues (the time left on their penalty) we could take third! This was doubly amazing because the team we were passing was comprised of many famous adventure racers. Their team bios read like a Who’s Who of Adventure Racing. Could a team comprised of relative newcomers, cross country skiers, and one rookie really pull off a podium finish?

We flew through the transition and jumped on our bikes. We had about a 10 minute lead on them when we left. We knew that it was only a 20 minute ride, so, barring a mechanical failure, we had third place. We were so excited that we hammered the bike section even though we didn’t have to. Third place! Third place! We kept repeating it. None of us could believe it. My teammates, who had done this type of thing before kept saying this was strongest team they had ever raced with. This was their best finish ever. Tracey said something about this being comparable to a top 5 finish at US Skiing Nationals. I was just really happy I made it and I was able to contribute to a successful team effort. We crossed the line just before 10 PM.

We were so wired from our exciting finish that it took two hours for us to calm down. We waited at the finish for the next team and congratulated them. They were in good spirits despite getting nipped at the last minute. They had all done too many of these races to get upset about a 1 hour penalty. By about midnight, we were all showered and relaxing in our hotel room. We crammed all six of us (four racers and two support people) into one hotel room at the Grand Summit Hotel (race headquarters), which meant that I was on the floor in a sleeping bag, with no sleeping pad or anything. No matter. I fell asleep before my head hit the pillow and slept straight through until 7:00 AM. At one point our air conditioner started screaching, but I never heard it. I was out cold.

Tues May 19
I was surprised when we all woke up at 7 am, and were relatively awake. I had expected to be a zombie for the entire day. Since we were all awake, we went out for a big breakfast. Then it was back to the hotel to sort and organize gear, then relax and nap until the awards banquet at 3:00 pm.

Full Appalachian Extreme Results

So now the ordeal was over. It was a very rewarding experience and I am very glad to have done it. It was definitely the hardest thing I have ever done, which says something.

Would I do it again? Too soon to answer that question. I think I would, except that I worry about the abuse the body takes. For the last part of the second trek I had to take a few Advil because my knees were very sore. I would like to do more of these because of the challenges they present and the sense of accomplishment you get from finishing, but I also want to be able to walk ( and run and ski) in 20-30 years. So I am not sure if I will try another. We’ll see.

In the meantime, I have more pressing issues. While everyone else gets ready to head home and relax for a few days, I need to get ready to head to Utah for the third segment of my Spring Triple Crown: the 103 mile mountain bike ride on the White Rim Trail in Canyonlands National Park. It is only four days away. Ouch.