Stories from a town where life is not too short.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Forest Racing

Saturday, and one was adventure racing in some forest neat Bracknell, as part of a joint effort with my brother ('Team Low Fliers'). Adventure Racing, of course, is a combination of running, mountain biking, and orienteering, with the occasional other challenge thrown in to make it that little bit more, well, interesting. Some Adventure Races have a kayaking section as well, but not always. Races can go on for several days, although ours was only a quick 5-hour jaunt around the forest. That's not to say that it was easy, it was a pretty intense 5 hours...

Race conditions were pretty warm but wet – we've had some quite heavy rain in the last week, although it only rained for about 20 minutes on the day. We spent a lot of time trying to avoid puddles, not because we were worried about getting muddy but because it is seldom sensible to ride a bike at speed into puddles in a sandy forest. We did pretty well and made each of the 20 checkpoints, but then a navigational frak up on the way back got us pretty lost, and we eventually ended up about three miles away from where we needed to be. It's easy to get lost in the forest. Luckily we were on bikes, so we raced back (technically illegal to race on public roads in the UK) and made it through the gate with five minutes to spare.

Most of the checkpoints are just little stamps with which you punch distinctively patterned marks into your scorecard, but five of the checkpoints had extra challenges on them. Mostly they were pretty simple things like cross a rope bridge, carry a bucket without spilling the contents, follow a rope blindfold and walk on these big skis for 20 meters. One checkpoint – checkpoint E – had us walking through a waist deep pond carrying our bikes. You didn't have to carry them out of the water but most people did.... it sounds really horrible, and although the water was dark it wasn't cold, and there wasn't much in the way of undergrowth. It was pretty easy to get across, and not altogether unpleasant.

All in all we had an awesome good time, and I'm planning on entering a second one later on this year, either at the end of August or beginning of September. Not sure yet if my brother will come or if I'm going solo...


And that would be me by my bike, wearing one of our v. cool home made t-shirts.

I crashed once during the race. We came down a hill pretty fast, and then noticed a big puddle at the bottom. Dave went round it to the right, and I went to the left, aiming for this little track which I'd seen. I noticed to late that it was a tractor track, a deep, steep-sided puddle created by some tractor. Not good – my front wheel bumped something and hit the side, throwing my to the left. I put my foot out to stop the fall but it folded under me, and I skidded to a rather abrupt halt. I'm sure you all know that feeling of relief when you check your leg and realise that nothing is broken or dislocated. I landed on soft mud so didn't even get a scratch, just a bit of a strain on my knee and a bruise on my ankle where the frame had hit me.

I wasn't feeling 100% on Sunday, but was feeling good enough to run the prestigious Crawley 10k run. On the whole Crawley sucks but there is a good 10k race. I didn't know it was good until this morning, but I think it is one of the coolest I've run in. The run goes almost entirely though Tilgate Forest, with some pretty good hill stretches to run up. Most of the runners were doing it in regular running shoes, but I've got my off-road background and did it in some nice, grippy off-road shoes. I found that when we got to puddles or muddy patches I could race right across them, whereas the rest of the crowd where had to slow down and work there way round them. I crossed the finish line 55 minutes and 9 seconds after I started – not bad considering I was running injured.

So that was my exciting weekend.



The Adventure Race organisers gave out this groovy bit of headwear.

Isa Guha also had an exciting weekend, taking 5-14 (5 bowled out, 14 runs conceded) against the West Indies in the second of the recent ODI series on Saturday. The first of the ODI matches on Friday had looked a bit more promising for the tourists until heavy rain led to the abandonment of the match with England on 156-4 (156 runs, 4 batters out). The second match did not go well for the Windies at all, with them all out for only 41. England soon got the 42 they needed, winning the match by ten full wickets and taking the series 1-0.


England captain Charlotte Edwards in full flight against the Windies. She made 50 in the first match - her 30th international 50, which is pretty impressive.

England Women's Cricket team are really doing well at the moment, despite playing less often than the chaps do. I think that this is because unlike the men's teams, which are usually overworked and constantly under attack from an hostile press, the women's teams don't play so much and the press pretty much leave them alone.

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