| *Giggle* Nervous anticipation |
We were herded into the stock yards and waited for the 40km riders to be sent off. I remembered part of my to-do checklist from last year and lined up in the third row. The shotgun sounded and we were off.
We circled around and back through the race village. It was nice to see some cheering faces, but also a little disheartening to know we'd only covered about 6km. The next part of the track was a slippery snake of clay slithering through the brush. Progress was a little stop-start, more traffic, thick mud, and slippery roots. I felt quite uncoordinated with a serious lack of traction as my tyres turned into two big brown donuts.
Those two big brown donuts had to be pushed through the track and forward progress became my mission of the day. Up Mount Oh Not Again, by foot (again). This walking and pushing was getting rather annoying.
I felt pretty good going past the turn-off for the 18km ride, and knew I had it in me to get to the end. That was until I hit The Boiler Room. Steep, slippery, unrelenting, seemingly never-ending. It sucked. Everyone was pushing up this hill. I think I blew my fufu valve somewhere around the 22km mark. Every hill was a mountain, and the headwind could no longer be overcome. The headwind was so strong I even had to pedal on one of the downhills, so that I didn't come to a complete stop. Strangely, on the brief occasions it was a tailwind, it didn't seem to have anywhere near the same force.
I was relieved to make it back to the 18km turn-off point and see the sign saying 3 1/2km to go. And I felt an even greater sense of relief when we bypassed the Turnip field we had to trudge through last year. One more slippery uncoordinated downhill and I was done. When I was asked how I felt at the finishing chute, I replied "good... well, not really good, but it's good that I've finished."
| Cheesy podium shot with the sponsor |
Thanks to Greg Gibb from Imagine Media for the photos.
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