Monday 28 May 2012

Kathmandu Royal National Park Race Debrief

Yesterday my teammate Glenn and I completed the Kathmandu Adventure Race in the Royal National Park (RNP) in Sydney.

It was a great race, very well organised with a great weather. 

Nothing like my very first adventure race in the Royal National Park three years ago where it was pouring rain and so cold! Check the pictures below:


Covered in mud but smiling  So happy to cross the finish line!
This time the sun was out and the temperature was perfect for the race.

The organisers actually changed the bike drop location, and maybe a great omen, the picture featured in their email had Glenn and I rushing from the starting line!

The two guys with the white caps and the sunnies in the middle, that's us!

Copyright Maximum Adventure
After registering and grabbing our registration bag and bibs, we discovered that we were going to do the grey course. This involved the following legs:
  • Run
  • Bike
  • Run
  • Canoe
  • Run
  • Kayak
After reviewing the instructions and writing critical information on the map (I am planning to do a movie on this later on), we cut away most of the useless bits to keep the map as small as possible and then contacted it. While I bought a waterproof map holder, I don't find it very useful when racing.

Glenn, having built an awesome map holder for his bike, we decided that for the first leg, he would not only do the navigation but also dip the timing chip at the bike checkpoints. Being faster on the bike, he would make up the time lost stopping and dipping the timing chip while I would continue riding with my old mountain bike. This worked well, Glenn did an amazing job and we did a very strong bike leg. I was actually very happy and surprised with my performance on the old bike! As you will have read/seen in the previous post (Crushed Bike, Last Patrol & Adventure Racing), I crushed my beloved competition mountain bike and so was back to riding the old mountain bike I used three years ago in the RNP race!

For the people new to adventure racing, being able to adapt and balance the strengths and weaknesses between you and your team mate(s) prior and during a race is really important.

After that, we ran a short leg to the start and then to the boat shed. Thankfully we did not have to row a boat as done in the last few years (gosh these boats are horrible and you feel like in a huge pinball or bumper car going from one river bank to another). 

Got really annoyed with Glenn a few times as paddling he was watering half my body and shoe with icy cold water. I felt like hitting him with my paddle on the head but decided not to as this would not have increased our chances of winning.

Not sure if Glenn has been watching too many "Starsky and Hutch" on TV but for the last checkpoint with the canoe, he decided to jump off the canoe, run to the checkpoint under the bridge and jump back onto the canoe. It was not that smooth and a team overtook us in the process but at least we did not capsize!

Anyways, back on the firm ground, we ran up the infamous "Honeymoon Track", a seriously steep track with lots of steps to start the main run leg. I did the navigation and sadly did a small navigation mistake that costs us 10 minutes and then lost some more time looking for a very tricky checkpoint (#18) towards the end.

By then, we had been racing for 2h30mins, my quads were starting to cramp and Glenn's knee was starting to give him grief.

After a steep run down Honeymoon track (so much easier than going up) encouraging people on the way up with "Good job!" and "Keep going! Nearly there!" generating several smiles on the go, we got back to the final transition at the start/finish.

We jumped into a kayak, paddled frenetically to the last two checkpoints and crossed the finish line with a massive smile on our faces in 3 hours and 18 minutes.

We finished 9th overall out of 188 teams and 6th for the male category. Not bad!

For more details, check the results HERE on the Maximum Adventure website.

The best is always at the end, eating a delicious and freshly grilled burger sitting down in the sun going through the race with many other competitors and sharing each other's pains and funny moments.

This was definitely a great workout and without my two mistakes, we would have been sub three hours (a time we are normally more used to) and closer to the podium. Next time!

While I do enjoy a few days resting, my next race is coming up next Sunday with the MS Fun Run. The MS Fun Run is a great initiative to raise funds and awareness around Multiple Sclerosis (MS). It is a great run, in the words of the organisers: "A challenging route through picturesque harbour-side streets from Milsons Point to Balls Head Reserve and return. Finish with a sprint down the famous Luna Park boardwalk".

I have created a profile and I would like to invite you to sponsor me to raise funds for people affected by Multiple Sclerosis (MS) by clicking on the image/link below:


2 comments:

  1. Nice debrief. You could even explain how to build your own map board, which is very useful in such a race.

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  2. Thanks Pierre and congrats on your performance too! That is a great idea and I do not have a map board myself, thanks for the feedback.

    I will have a chat with Glenn to see if he is OK with sharing his design and how to build it and come back to you, maybe a future post!

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