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The G-Rant : Grant's Rants on Adventure Racing

“Without adventure, civilization is in full decay.” - Alfred North Whitehead

August 2007 - Posts

  • Melting back in Boston

    I stepped out of Boston airport yesterday and was struck by an unexpected wave of heat.  It was around 4 in the afternoon, but still powerful hot out there.  Is America always this hot, and in 2 months have I grown "soft" enjoying the 60 and 70 degree summer days of Switzerland?  Pam, Mike, and I are dusting off the old jerseys and racing this weekend in Vermont at the Green Mtn Adventure Race and I could melt into the woods if I'm not careful! 

    I've hardly looked over the race site or gear list for this weekend, but I think we as a team have to decide to use pre-plotted maps or plot ourselves -- to me, this is a no-brainer if they've got pre-plotted maps and there is no time penalty for using them, then, by all means, give me the maps with the CPs precisly plotted thank you very much.  Why spend the time plotting if you don't have to?  I have nothing to prove to anyone, so give me the pre-marked maps and I'll have more time to put my feet up before the race!

    Speaking of races, somebody shot me a link of Team Hype at the finish line of the GOALS Krista Griesacker Race (Yellow Jacket Extreme) from a few weeks ago . . . check out Rodney's shirt (on the far right).  It's always nice to see the Untamed gear get some exposure in other locales, so thanks for that.  We spared no expense on those visors and shirts so that people could actually use the stuff besides just have a momento from the race.

    So, I'm not back in the States just to race this weekend.  Actually, the Labour Day race came together last minute as I was planning to return to New England to sort out some final logistics pertaining to the Untamed New England adventure race.  I really can't elaborate, since keeping our 60-hour course a secret ensures the race is a real challenge and the most adventure possible, but by the time I leave New England in a couple weeks we'll have most of the race details wrapped up.  We'll be opening race registration later in September; I think it's important for a race of this magnitude to give teams plenty of time to consider it, look at their calendars, and (hopefully) plan their commitments around doing it.


  • Zermatt

    The calves are stiff today, we did a lot of hiking and celebrating (wine drinking) -- I didn't do any stretching or watch my nutrition and recovery so I'm paying for it today.  Whine whine whine, I'm sure you're thinking.  I'll just get straight to the photos then:

    Jill and I at the spine of Europe (no, that's not an artificial backdrop):


    Here I was thinking about work, laundry, and chores around the house I need to do:


    I love this photo for some reason . . . the view from the ridge was just astounding and Jill and I were laughing about how gorgeous it was.  You can't stop and take a picture every minute, but I was tempted! 


    I'll end with a picture I took from our dinner table on Friday night (that's the Matterhorn in the sunset).  The shot belongs in a coffee table book or something more worthy than my weblog!


    Here is a link to all the shots I uploaded from Zermatt.


  • Adrenaline Alert

    And so another experiment begins . . . the Summer 2007 Adrenaline Alert, Untamed Adventure's online newsletter, is hot off the press.

    Lots going on, but I have to pack for Zermatt this weekend!  The weather forecast is just right so we're in for some astounding scenery.  Like I mentioned in the Adrenaline Alert,  we can now start building custom itineraries with you for your own guided adventures through the eastern Swiss Alps so don't be shy if you want more information.  I hope to have an electronic brochure together in September highlighting some of the options.



  • O Distractions Where Art Thou

    You may or may not know that the World Orienteering Championships took place this week in the Ukraine.  I have to give a big shout out to the first place female, and probably best female orienteer in the history of the sport, Simone Niggli; she's Swiss so by moving here I now can hop right on that bandwagon.  Granted, I had never heard of Simone until her site popped up while I was googling for orienteering in Zurich . . . and all I know about her is what the babelfish translator gives me from her site . . . but anyone who posts this many orienteering maps on their website deserves some praise and she apparently kicked butt at the World Championships so big kudos to her!

    I like looking at orienteering maps.  I examine route choices, the type of terrain, the control placement, and lots of other things.  I think I could make my million$ by designing orienteering map wallpaper, so people could just stare at their walls all day long.  Wouldn't it be cool if we coul look at the orienteering World Championship 2007 maps and track the routes of the various competitors too?  Well we can!

    This link is for the women's final from yesterday. If you compare Simone Niggli vs Heli Jukkola (a Finnish orienteer who I actually had heard of before this summer!) on that map, it's a very interesting study in attack strategies.  If you look from Control #10 through to the finish, for example, you'll see Simone subtle deviations from the 2nd place finisher that earned her the victory . . . of course, I also think Simone's pace is just plain faster in the last 1 or 2 K than
    the competitors, and that's got to help too!

    You can also check out the routes for the men's final where the dominant Thierry Gueorgiou won by over two minutes!  The mens' leg from Control #6 to #7 is particularly interesting . . . and it's a longer leg which is of more interest to us adventure racers (although I still do find the small details of a short orienteering leg of interest, too).



  • Wednesday's Mission: Glarus

    The Klontal region near Glarus:


    I chose the Klontal region (near Glarus, Switzerland) for my long training day this week.  The above photo is taken from some travel website but shows the main lake (Klontalsee) that I'm planning my route around.  I have a good 1:25,000 topo map that shows a bazillion (Scott Lerberg: a bazillion is a lot) trails and roads crossing through this area so I'm certain I'll have a good time.  The weather looks a bit iffy, though, with rain on the horizon so I may not get such good  photos this time around.  We'll see . . . maybe a chance to test the waterproof gear out!

    By the way, there's an adventure race going on this weekend near the Glarus area.  It's called the Adventure Race Walensee and while I did toy with the idea of racing it, I don't have any teammates around (Russ: where are you?) and didn't feel like playing the teammate lottery out here -- too risky to spend 12 hours racing with total strangers.  Furthermore, this race features inline skating which is something I've never really done much of . . . or, for that matter, enjoyed; I emailed the race organization to see if I could 1) race it solo and 2) run the skating leg and they said "no" to both questions.  That sealed the deal for me.  Not to mention the race instructions could be tough to read if they're in German and . . . and  . . . and.

    So, I have lots of excuses for why I'm skipping the local race.

    Besides, the best excuse of all is that my wife and I are going to Zermatt this weekend to do some exploring together.  There is so much to do in Zermatt, from the Matterhorn and alpine via ferratas to glaciers and fine wine . . . I might wake up early one morning and knock out this little juncket, but only if we don't stay out too late.  Zermatt is a car-free city, by the way, so I'm curious to see how that is implemented.  We don't have a car in Europe, and aren't planning to buy one, but I'm interested to see an entire town  devoid of those combustion vehicles.



  • Some New England Notes

    A few quick things about the Untamed New England site . . . first quick thing: the bulletin board is up and running.  Second: we elected to scrap the whole "include a hotel room with the race registration" because it was getting too complicated.  The host hotel has it's own complications, and I know some teams would want more than one room while some local teams might not want any at all.  There were just too many permutations to worry about and so we reduced the race fee and eliminated that element from our plate.  Teams now get complete control over their hotel situation.

    Another bit of news about New England: Pam McKay, Mike Jones, and I  are going to race up in New England in a few weeks.  I've had a heck of a time getting in touch with the race director for Ultimate Adventure (multiple phone calls, multiple emails . . . all unanswered) and their online registration doesn't seem to accept payments, but assuming I get that ironed out we'll be reuniting some of the old HRAdventure crew to have some fun up North.  We'll be racing as Untamed New England -- it's a great opportunity to promote the event in the local area!




  • Lots of photos

    I drank the Flickr kool-aid and now you can check out all the pictures from my trek earlier this week.  Words don't really do the day justice, but the pictures are . . . well . . . worth 1,000 words and then some.

    That's it for now, I have a new rental mtn bike that needs some riding this morning (the old one just wasn't cutting it).



  • Elevator Tax and Filzbach

    Back in the old days, I used to work at a company where we had this fun rule: anytime you were caught riding in the elevator by a coworker, you had to contribute 25 cents to the "elevator tax" jar.  At the end of every month, the elevator tax money would go to a charity or social event -- I actually don't recall what we did with the money.  I do, however, clearly recollect that the company was spread through a 6-story building.  There could be a lot of up and down during the day.  If you were running late to a meeting on the 6th floor, you knew the elevator tax was just one more thing to contend with.
     
    That experience has forever coloured my perception of elevators, escalators, moving sidewalks, and other such inventions.  I take the stairs whenever I can and will go out of my way to avoid those electronic conveniences.  No, I'm not the uni-bomber or anything extreme like that.  I just prefer to use my own muscles to get to where I'm going.  I suppose my way does burn some more calories and, in a very loose sense, constitutes a bit of exercise . . . but it's almost to the point where it's superstition for me. 

    With that as background, when I picked the tiny town of Filzbach as the launching point for my long training day (aka Lactic Acid Day), I scoffed at how the hiking guides all began by having you take a long ride up a mountain on a chairlift.  That is no way to start a training day!  In planning out my 6-8 hour route, the first thing I included was a hike up to where the chairlift dropped you off.

    About 10:30 AM yesterday morning, 2/3 of the way up the mountain, I was second guessing my decision against the chairlift.  Here is a picture I took from my trek; as if to taunt me, the trail I took crossed just beneath the chairlift several times:


    That was a serious calf and quad burner of a way to start my day!  2000 feet of climbing in 45 minutes (that's 7+ feet every 10 seconds) is a heck of a way to kick things off in Filzbach. 

    Once I reached the summit, sweaty and out of breath, things started in earnest because this was just one of several summits and mountain ridges I would ascend that day.  I truthfully had no idea what I was in for -- just found some good topographic maps of this region near the convergence of Liechtenstein, Austria, and Switzerland and made a day of it.  Oh mercy!

    I'm looking for a good online photo gallery to post all the pictures to, that way I don't tax this hosting server too much, but let me pop two more photos on here and leave it at that for now:


    So that high pinnacle near the top of the above photo -- I crossed about 400 feet beneath it later on in the day:


    Yah, so a day or two in Filzbach will be staples of any Untamed Adventure Experience: Switzerland guided trips I run.  Just check out the aerial photo.  More on this tomorrow, or whenever I find a good image hosting solution . . .

    And avoid those electronic transportation gadgets!  Bad ju-ju.




  • Am I A Fire-starter?

    I recently dug my iPod out of a box -- yes, we still have boxes and suitcases to unpack, but until our furniture arrives we have nowhere to put the stuff -- and went for a run with some music.  I'm not a strict iPod devotee like some people, I usually enjoy my exercise without a musical backdrop.  This day was different, though.  We had just left Zurich as it was gearing up for the  annual "Street Parade" festival where the city shuts down and jams techno/trance all weekend.  I'm serious!  It's considered the biggest dance party in Europe; check out the website if you're really curious.  It's so progressive that they have stands that will validate the purity of the drugs (GHB . . . Ecstasy . . . and lots of other new crap I've never heard of) before you consume them -- sort of like a needle exchange program taken to an extreme.

    Anyway, as we navigated the train station in Zurich we were surrounded by dancing loonies bouncing to the rhythms pumped out from the city square.  People wearing furry arm warmers despite the 70 degree day . . . people in swim suits or elaborate Elizabethan costumes . . . a genuine freak show of the highest order.  Here's a picture I snagged from the official Street Parade website:


    I haven't seen something like this since Ybor City down in Tampa during my undergrad days -- and this was much more crazy.  Everywhere you went you could feel the bass through the ground. 

    The thing is, and I'm a bit embarrassed to admit it, but I actually like the techno/industrial sound.  And so after surviving the Zurich train station we got home and I rummaged through my junk, found my iPod, and went for a trail run with the smooth sounds of the Prodigy and the Chemical Brothers to keep me company.  That's right, Prodigy, the band whose videos have been blamed for inciting British teens to acts of arson, can get my adrenalin going better than just about anything else.  Don't knock it until you've tried it!

    It was bliss.  No need for any pharmaceutical supplement to my weekend, the trail running around here was euphoric enough.  There's this brilliant trail system behind our apartment that follows a river and canyon system.  Trails weave South and East of Zurich and offer some big climbs and lots of paths to explore.  And there are waterfalls.  Hundreds of waterfalls -- hundreds!  Coors Brewery should film commercials here (note the plug for this Colorado business -- can an Untamed Colorado be in the works?).

    Here are a few pictures of the waterfalls that set the mood for my drug free euphoric run:




    From the psychedelic techno-fest in town, to the serene mountain waterfalls of my trail run, it was a very interesting weekend.  Holding it all together, though, was the fierce beats and bassline in my eardrums. 

    I don't run all the time with my iPod, but every once in a while it can be a really good time!



  • March of progress

    Oh, I'm going to have to look into this: a folding bike helmet.

    It's not as new an idea as the folding bike helmet, but I also like the idea of having a sail attachment for canoes and kayaks.  For the HRAdventure Storm 2007 -- she used to be my girlfriend -- coming up in September, something like a sail could be a huge advantage!

    For the race I'm doing in Patagonia in Feb, they explicitly do not allow kayak sails.  Too bad, that would've been fun!

    Speaking of progress, I finally made some headway on the Untamed New England site and it now shows some small but important things like race dates and has a preliminary gear list etc.


  • The Tale of Crash and Splash at Untamed Virginia 2007

    On my way in to Zurich this morning I started thinking of the whirl-wind I've been on this summer.  I haven't given just due to the Untamed Virginia Adventure Race we ran back in June; in fact, the website still shows the race in progress content . . . one more thing for me to work on when I find the time.  By "just due" I mean reflecting on the stories from Untamed Virginia, and there were many great ones. 

    Possibly the most stirring memory for me will be the duo Crash and Splash at the transition area before the final trekking leg.  The sun was peaking through the trees and scattering away the early morning mist, but there was still a chill in the air.  From this point, teams had about a 10 mile trekking loop and then a 20 mile bike ride and then they were done; the end was nearly in sight!  Instead of brimming with excitement, Crash and Splash, the two-person male team who I had gotten to know through our races and some training over the last year, were hanging by a thread.  You see, they had been racing very well and had extremely high expectations of themselves, but the race had started to get the better of them.  This was the longest race they had ever done and it showed.  To complicate matters, Crash and Splash had volunteered to have Marshall Ulrich embed with them for the second half of the race; since 6 PM the previous day, Marshall had accompanied these guys while they biked, trekked, and orienteered around the central Virginia piedmont. 

    Marshall is easy going and very friendly, but having an endurance sport legend like Marshall looking over your shoulder can't be easy.  When I saw Crash and Splash, along with Marshall, at checkpoints prior to then they were always in good spirits.  That's why we were so surprised by the looks on the guys' faces when they came back from the trekking loop.  Their time seemed really quick for the loop -- they had only been gone for two hours or so -- they were blowing the trekking leg away!  I think the converse, however, was more true: the trekking leg was blowing them away.  I think Crash and Splash headed out on this leg in 8th or 10th place out of 40+ teams, maybe even better, but by their facial expressions I knew something wasn't right. 

    I approached the guys with a smile and said something like, "Way to go guys, can I see your race passport?"  I thought I had to verify their punches for the trekking leg before clearing them for the final bike leg.  Crash (or was it Splash?) just shook his head.  I looked at Splash (or was it Crash) and he took a deep breath and struggled to make eye contact with me.  Now, I know these guys.  I consider these guys my friends, and I love having friends on my race courses because that's the best of both worlds: your buddies get to enjoy your race creation.  It's why I started organizing races in the first place!  But these guys were struggling to even speak to me, visibly sagging around the fire at the transition area. 

    "What's up guys?" I asked, concerned, curious, and a bit sleep-deprived.  Crash (or was it Splash?) held up the map and said:
    "This map . . . the roads in there and trails . . . nothing is right.  We can't find anything.  We spent hours roaming through this area of  the map -- no, wait, it might have been over here -- but I just can't make sense of it.  We only got one of the four trekking checkpoints."
    My first reaction was relief that nobody was physically injured.  After that, however, I recognized the signs.  The race for Crash and Splash was circling the drain -- that is, they were prepared to throw in the towel right then and there.   Splash (or was it Crash?) held out their race passport in defeat and I just looked at it.  I said something like, "Hey, I know it's hard in there.  Dense veg, nearly all bushwhacking, and the maps show terrain but not really much more."  A side note: this is the sort of trekking leg I love and labour to include in any race I'm involved with: a bushwhacking bravado buster.  Now, Crash and Splash didn't need to hear that at the time; they didn't need to hear how many hours were invested in designing this trekking leg to be really really tough.  Instead, I encouraged them to go put their feet up and catch their breath before calling an end to their race.  They were, after all, still on the full pro course and racing around 12th place at the time.  They had hours and hours until the next course cut-off.  They were still doing great, but their expecations were so high that they were disappointed with themselves. 

    As if on cue, Marshall Ulrich said something wise like "let's take these packs off and think it over.  30 minutes will make a big difference on our outlook.  Let's just head over to our support vehicle and stay in the race while we recuperate."  Marshall, a competitor in every eco-challenge and ultra-running phenom, was intent on helping these two guys -- total strangers until the day before -- stick it out and finish the race.

    Crash and Splash silently nodded and shuffled behind Marshall as he found their support crew and car.  I lost track of those guys while they rested, and I don't recall exactly when they headed back out on that trekking leg but they did return to the trekking leg.  And they finished that trekking leg.  And they finished the full pro course of the Untamed Virginia adventure race.  They went from the lowest of lows . . . nearly withdrawing from the race . . . to the finish line and 16th place overall.

    Those 5 minutes with Crash and Splash around the transition area camp fire, with their hollow expressions and them on the brink of ending their race, stays with me.  Maybe it was my lack of sleep . . . or the fact that these were two of my friends struggling on a course of my creation . . . or just their downtrodden condition . . . but Defeat was looming large at that campfire and those guys put Defeat behind them.  It wasn't pretty or graceful, but the good stuff in life isn't always packaged for Hollywood.  But this was good stuff.  I'm proud to have witnessed it, to have played a very minor part in it, and am a better person because of it. 

    Everyone has their moments confronting Defeat, and I have many of my own strategies for avoiding it, but now I have the Tale of Crash and Splash to add to my arsenal for when I find myself circling the drain.  If I remember nothing else from Untamed Va 07, it will be that  sunrise conversation with Crash and Splash and Marshall.



  • I'm busy . . . but check out Marsh's notes from Death Valley!

    We're in the midst of settling into our new apartment south of Zurich, so I've been busy arranging furniture deliveries and getting utilities setup.  A big internet connection for the apartment is a necessity for my work, and it's been a major inconvenience not having one this past week.  Ever try moving without a car, by the way?  This is why I've been quiet of late.  The moving is just about done, though.  We moved from Newport News to Appomattox in May, then on to Cumberland in early June before Untamed Virginia, then on to New England after the race, and into temporary housing when we landed in Zurich in early July.  Finally . . . finally . . . all the relocating is coming to a close.  And I can start investing in some fun things like a new sea kayak now that I'll have a place to keep it!

    So, while I may not have time to share much right now, I can refer you to Marshall's blog where his latest tale from Death Valley is inspirational and well worth the read.  If perseverance has a face it just might be Marshall Ulrich!

    I'll be back in full force in a couple days, with tales of crazed kayak salesmen and the 100+ waterfalls out the back of our new flat!


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