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

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

March 2008 - Posts

  • 3 Weeks to Untamed Switzerland

    We've got a bit more for you to salivate over for the Untamed Revolution in April; we've only got a few weeks to go so it's high time we ramped up the online angle to this 3 day event. Pictures, maps, check it out.

     

    We never really opened registration for this event to the public . . . I sent an email around to some friends last year and there was sufficient response from them that we elected to try this new race concept out on them instead of just anybody.  So, we've got a good bunch of friends coming over from the US for this as well as some local Swiss friends in the mix.  There are benefits to trying this experimental race concept out on just friends, instead of paying "customers."  For instance, we can test some new GPS tracking technology as well as our website infrastructure for video updates from the field.  We also don't mind throwing our friends into mountains of snow if that's what the Spring Alps deliver!  We're lucky to have some willing guinea pigs!

     

    Like I said, this whole thing is an experiment and we're not sure what to expect.  Will people really red-line with intensity for 3 days through the Alps, or will they stop and drink a beer and eat strudel on the summit of Rigi while the clock keeps ticking?  I suspect it will be a combination.  One of the other things I'm excited about with this event is I get to actually get out on the course; I'm going to hang with some of my friends on each day, since the CPs are all unmanned and the best way to stay close to the action is to be in the action, right?

    Let's see, another goodie I can toss out here is an elevation profile for one way (about the shortest way) for Stage 1 around the Mythens.  Note that elevation is in Meters.  For all those people who arrive at a race checkpoint, point their finger at me, and then say, "I'd like to see you do that" you can rest assured I'll be sweating with the rest of you at this event.  For all our events, in truth, I end up beating myself up way more than racers do in arriving at a workable course.  This Swiss event is no exception, but this time I get the pleasure of running the course too.  Nice!  It's probably time I fire up some Prodigy and go get a workout in . . .

     


  • Snow and Bells (and Whistles)

    We were out in Schwyz this past weekend, and the snow was outrageous.  I got a bit of video from the town square in Schwyz (where the Swiss nation was born); this is also where the Untamed event in April will start from.  I hope to get some good video throughout the event.

    Here's a photo of us (I talked Jill into coming along for the snowfest):
    Untamed Rev Snow

     I'll link to a few other pictures from the day if you're curious (these were all taken from on the course -- we hope to see significant snow melt between now and then!).

     

    So, yeah, we're looking at snow shoes and goretex for the event -- it's barely more than 3 weeks away and the snow isn't going anywhere fast!  This is one of those places where it'll be sunny and warm at the base, but cold and brutal up on top -- or, I've seen it foggy and rainy at the base and clear and divine up high.  The weather is unpredictable so our group will have to just be prepared.

     


    It's looking likely that we'll have some live tracking for the Untamed Switzerland event, too.  We have to nail down the details, and I'll have a bit more computer nerd-work to finish, but it will be a great test run of the new hardware and be really fun to see how it all comes together.  Ample distraction for those of you having to work April 18-20th!

     

     

     

  • Publicity

    BreatheMag.ca highlights the Untamed New England race . . . pretty cool.  Long time participants in our events will get a kick out of the author credit to Johnny Utah.

     

    Speaking of news, there was a near-factual article in the VA Pilot about our team in Patagonia last month.  I say "near factual" because there are quite a few amusing inaccuracies, but any publicity is good publicity, right?

     

    Too busy to write more, maybe tomorrow . . . 


     

     

  • Untamed Virginia 2008 Opens Registration

    We had time to come down from the mountains and wire up the registration for Untamed VA 2008.  The details are on the Registration page.  We're excited to have the support of Blue Ridge Mountain Sports again and we'll have more announcements regarding this race later this Spring.

     

    I'm really excited about this course as it uses lots of areas I've either trained or scouted in advance of some past races, going way back to Sproute 2006 and -gasp- earlier.  I actually got really lost a few times in some of these areas, I have to admit!  The time of year, September, is ideal to be out in the Virginia wilderness and it's going to be a fun time!

     

     

  • Race Multimedia

    I've still got more in my head regarding Patagonia; there's the navigation, my feet, sleeping bag and tent insights to share . . . but I'll save those for later this month.  Instead, we've got a new Untamed Adventure Media section up on the homepage with a couple video snippets from the 2007 race.  Scroll to the bottom of the home page if you don't see them straight away.  Yes, we're entering the realm of multi-media and it's long overdue.  The clip of the A-List transitioning cracks me up.  Maybe it's because I've seen the clip so many times as we were wrestling to get it into web-ready format, but the muttered phrases from Scott Pleban are entertaining and illustrate just how serious a competitor he is.  I get the impression he'd like for Jim to wrap up his chat with the film crew and get the hell out of there . . . not in a mean or angry way, just in a matter-of-fact "we're here to win this race, not to talk" sort of way.  I also like the clip because it's a peak into the dynamics of that team and how each person helps the others out etc.  You can just feel the energy bubbling out of Kristin Eddy, their female teammate, and how she's prodding them out the door.  They're all very conscious of the clock ticking and a 4 minute (or 5 minute as Mike says at the end of the clip) turn-around is very speedy.

    We've got a ton of footage and interviews to start bringing to the website, so let me know what you think and if you have any suggestions (you can comment at the bottom of each video clip or just use the "Contact" link on this blog).  I'm particularly interested in knowing if the videos actually play in your browser -- it's one of those things that's hard for us to test so a broader field test by the readers of this blog would be very helpful.  The Untamed Revolution, our 3 day alpine stage race coming up in about 6 weeks, will be a big beneficiary of this multi-media setup; we'll have video from each stage so that those who couldn't make it to Switzerland can still feel a part of the action.

     

  • Patagonia Expedition Race: Training (or Getting Comfortable With Being Uncomfortable)

    Cavemen would've made great adventure racers.  This thought came to me on my run this morning (yes, my feet have recovered to the point where running isn't painful . . . now if only my GI tract would get past all the unfiltered water I drank down in Tierra del Fuego . . .).  Here's a photo from the scene of the crime: Grant scooping water directly from a lake (essentially a big stagnant body of water):

    Scene of the crime 

     

    Cavemen, at least in my stereotypical view, lived every day like an adventure race -- they were trying to move a little more quickly, get a bit more energy from their food, and travel as light as possible but not sacrificing the absolute necessities.  Cavemen had to figure things out on their own and get past that mountain range, around that river, or through that forest no matter what.  Their lives, literally, depended on it.  Cavemen were active and tough, much tougher than we are today.  That darn agrarian revolution has made us soft!  I'll spare you the Deep Ecology talk -- just go out and read Guns, Germs, and Steel -- and I'll cut straight to the adventure race stuff . . .

     

    My physical training for the race in Patagonia was pretty good, in hindsight, but I should've taken some more cues from the Cavemen.  In the months before the race, my general training week might look as follows:

     

    • -Monday: 3-4 hour hike with heavy pack, lots of hills
    • -Tuesday: 3-4 hour bike with heavy pack
    • -Wednesday: 2-hour paddle and 2-hours at the climbing gym
    • -Thursday: 3-4 hour hike with heavy pack
    • -Friday: 3-4 hour bike with heavy pack, lots of hills
    • -Sat: 90 minute track interval workout
    • -Sun: 90 minute hill repeats on the bike

     

    When I say "heavy pack," I'm not kidding around.  I would carry 5 or 6 liters of water in my pack sometimes, just to top the weight out.  My toes would be bruised from the impact and my traps would ache sometimes, but it was good training; I couldn't do it every day and my knees would sometimes ache, but it didn't kill me and so made me stronger.  This "not kidding heavy pack" weighed more than my pack did during the real race, which was the whole point, and I was glad for the lighter load during the actual event.   That being said, I was still real sore from lugging my pack around by day 3 of the race; it's impossible to train for all the hardships of multiday racing. 

     

    That last sentence, "it's impossible to train for all the hardships of multiday racing," is really the crux of what I want to get across with this post.  Instead of living your life and having training time as something you do for a portion of your day, you need to weave the training into the fabric of what you do so that you blur the line between "training" and "living your life."  This is why Cavemen would be great adventure racers: their full time occupation is just surviving.

     

    It will be different for each person, but the ways that I found to blur that training/living line were:

    • -Not owning a car (we sold them when we moved to Zurich and haven't had one since); we have about a 1/2 mile walk to the train station and that's how we get anywhere other than our little town.  I also rode my bike a lot as a means of getting around; for example, instead of a 30 minute train ride to the climbing gym, I could ride my bike for an hour and get two workouts for the price of one!
    • -Carrying a big heavy pack around a lot of the time.  When I'd walk the dog . . . I was wearing my weighted backpack.  On a trip to the train station . . . put on the weighted backpack.  Running an errand in town . . . might as well wear the backpack.  You get the point.  I'm probably known around town as that crazy American who always wears that orange backpack, but it was a good investment in my race fitness.
    • -Finding ways to train that were close to home.  This goes along with the not owning a car thing, but any time spent driving to your training destination is time lost.  You're better off finding trails or activities near by so that you can spend more time being active and less time in transit to your activity.  I know: easy for the guy in Switzerland to say, but it's true.
    • -By training heavy on weekdays, for 3-4 hours, I was building a core of fitness for the long haul.  My focus was on Monday through Friday for 3-4 hours every day.  It became part of my routine and something I adapted to.  My metabolism was sky high, let me tell you!  I know some who will do heavy weekend training and very little during the week, and that might work for them, but I prefer spreading the effort across more days and I think it suited me better.  I really didn't hit it for long durations on Sat or Sun because weekends are the prime time for traveling around Switzerland with Jill and our dog; I intentionally limited my weekend training.

     

    From a physical fitness perspective, I reached the starting line in Patagonia in the best condition of my life.  I'd lost 15 pounds or more, was climbing on the bike better than ever, and had great cardio fitness.   Sherry sweet talked a bystander to take our photo at the start of the race . . .

    Team at the start 

     

    Great fitness at the start of the race isn't enough, though.  The race we competed in was won by experience (15 years of expedition racing experience since their captain had been doing Raids since 1993 or something!); all the inexperienced teams at this race bowed out during the 75 mile trekking leg, ourselves included.  In case you forgot, here's some additional pics from that mega trekking leg where the only "trails" were the ones blazed by the guanacos:

    PER Trekking
    PER Peat Bogs and Dense Veg
    PER River Crossing

     

    When training for my next race like this, I'll know better.  I'll try to be even more Caveman in my preparations and encourage my teammates to do the same.  I should mix the following into my training:

    • -Bushwhack days.  Instead of hiking on trails for 3-4 hours, I need to find an area off-trail to work through.  The hours and hours of dense vegetation in Patagonia was something I wasn't prepared for mentally as well as physically.
    • -River opportunities.  Instead of taking the nice bridge across that river, I should just cross through the darn thing or maybe even trek in the river.  I'm not talking about anything physically risky here, just the fact that I need more practice having soaking shoes and clothing and unstable footing and continuing on.
    • -Feet management.  This will be a big one for me, and I'll probably just do another post on this topic, but it involves either lots of tape or lots of lubricant and I just need to determine which brand and how often.
    • -Overnights.  I'm not talking about training through the night, but actually trying to sleep outside with your race gear.  Maybe plan a 4 hour hike, a few hours of sleep, and then a return to home.  I'll have a post dedicated to sleeping bag and tent thoughts, but it's good to have this here so you experience it before the race.


    Even with all the above, there's no substitute for race experience.  A race that's measured in days instead of hours is going to put us non-Cavemen outside our comfort zone in ways you wouldn't expect.  The Patagonia air, with the cold arid winds, was very dry and my skin wasn't used to the harshness.  My finger tips dried out, I got bloody noses that were tough to stop, chapped lips, and that's even with my copious supply of lip balm!  Next time I'll bring a blood vessel constrictor like Afrin as part of my gear (for bloody noses and just to moisturize); I'll bring some kind of cream for dry hands and face.  It sounds silly: but keeping your skin in good working condition is nothing to be taken lightly when you're racing for so long a time.

     

    I mentioned before about antibiotics and how I got an infection on my right hand; you have to anticipate things that most people never think of during their regular life. 

     

    I think it's due to stomach acid, but we got these sores on the insides of our mouths that made eating uncomfortable -- especially those spicy cashews I brought!  We used mouthwash and brushed our teeth (twice a day even, honest!), but at least Sherry and I didn't do it enough or use strong enough products; I was running low by the time Day 6 came around, so next time I'll need to plan for more and better oral hygiene products.

     

    Oh yeah, 2 little words: toenail clippers: it shocking how quick those little nails can grow and using my medical clippers just didnt do it.  You can also get your fingernails with the toenail clipper.

     

    Another hygiene item: hand sanitizer.  I thought I had plenty but it turns out I was wrong.  Probably those individually wrapped "moist toilettes" would be perfect, but you need a few each day and I burned through mine quick -- especially once things started getting muddy and we had to start cleaning blister spots, cuts, water bottle spiggots, etc.      

     
    I'll stop here, before this turns into an ad for Walgreens or you start to think I'm a hypochondriac.   The fact is, you must take care of yourself in these races because the daily things we take for granted are not going to be there.   You could start the race in peak physical condition but you're doomed to failure if you don't manage your body through whatever the wilderness throws at you.

     

     

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