Tuesday 16 February 2016

Iditarod Trail Invitational 2015 - day 4 race report


I savoured around 4 hours sleep in the cabin, banking the time that I'd lose unpacking and packing the bivvy and kit. My regular breakfast of oatmeal, a Bonk Breaker bar, peanut butter cups and a hot cocoa was an efficient affair today - enjoyed even more by the warm fire. Checkpoint suck. I got moving, into my gear and just about ready to leave, my friend Jim appeared from the shadows to get ready as well. We chatted, laughed and joked about the trail. His bike was playing up - too many falls on the trail left his shifting all out of alignment - 'no wuckers mate,  I'll get her sorted' was my response in true aussie drawl, naturally this was a foreign language  to him and I'd have to repeat myself - but this was part of our comedy routine.

 
 Word got around quick - I had several racers bikes lined up with the same malady. Thomas wasn't able to ride many segments, reduced to pushing the bike a lot of the distance - this explained his general malaise when I last saw him a day ago at Shell Lake Lodge. Re-align the derailleur hangers, reset limit screws, adjust cable tension and gear operation restored. Thomas was off like a gunshot, a quick test of the gears, he was off down the trail and I never saw him again during the race - it felt good to have had a positive influence on another racers' outcome.

 Jim wanted to shout me a big breakfast as thanks for the repair. The rookie racer in me was eager to get going, I'd given away a bit of time already, however the next segment over Rainy Pass was best tackled with another racer if possible. I was also learning how the camaraderie on the trail was important to the experience of Iditarod - there is no prize money in this race, no podium. The only things you get are the gold medal friendships that are forged through shared hardship, the battle scars you earn through suffering and the memories that never fade. Helping myself to triple helpings of bacon and eggs, pancakes drizzled with maple syrup, taking in the atmosphere of the lodge and the incredible views over the lake - well that's an experience you can't forget or say no to.

 
Our trio left the lodge around 9am. Jim was a veteran of Iditarod, it was great to be learning some of the tricks and route nuances from a man of his calibre. I joked with him that there was a mythical Churro stand at the top of the pass, run by latinos and we better get there quick as they don't like being out in the cold for long.

 
Lars had also joined us, he was a rookie like me, he lives in Anchorage and we chatted for months before the race about many things Iditarod based.

 
The trail really flattened out here with lighting, no contrast. These tripods are the single most important navigational icon of the trail, along with the reflective markers. The trail wound its way down through the valley floor, aiming for the gap in the range, called Rainy Pass, which is just above the bike in the pic. The forecast was for mild conditions, but this range separates two very different weather systems and Rainy Pass can be quite unpredictable.

 

Down on the valley floor, the scrub Willow is both a blessing and a curse. The short, stubby branches grab at your spokes, chain and rear derailleur - you've really gotta watch your line so the derailleur and hanger don't become a statistic. But in contrast, the Willow also shows you the shortest way through the valley, as you can see the bark has been scuffed from the snowmachines when Bill and his team cut the trail a few weeks prior.  This is an instance where navigation by GPS does not work effectively - it might show you the general direction to head, but it won't reveal the exact line to follow - you have to rely on ground intel. There are also deep, hidden streams waiting to swallow you if you veer off the safety of the trail.

 
We all fell off a few times - the central trail gets compacted by snowmachine and racers, so it forms this centre ridge about a foot or two wide. Off to the side of this ridge, the snow can be many feet deep. In low contrast/visibility conditions though, it can be hard to stay on the ridge. When you veer off trail and fall, you fall into this bottomless powder, along with your bike on top of you. You virtually have to swim out of the snow to get back onto the trail and then fish your bike out. 

 
At night people have become disorientated - one trick is to tie reflective rope segments onto the willow, should you need to backtrack. The opening to the pass grows near, with a bit of cloud closing in around it. Many racers have been caught out in harsh weather up here - it's one of those places that force you to make decisions about whether to move forward, stay put and bivvy, or turn back to safer ground. Today though, the weather looked stable enough for the traverse - onwards and stoic.

 
Sometimes there is trail, sometimes not. Sometimes it's just a thin crust over a stream, and your boot punches through. There were a few racers' 'fall' imprints, some into the sub-ice crust streams.

 
It was a solid push, we were very lucky the snow wasn't deep - veterans embellish us rookies with stories of snow up to the waist and breaking trail for hours, days. Quite a few steep sections that had me thinking of putting on the crampons, the process of steep push is lock the brakes, shuffle the feet forward, anchor feet, push bike forward a foot or two, repeat the process. This is serious avalanche country too, the sides of the pass rise sharply for hundreds of feet very close to the trail.

 

Up on the plateau there is a huge frozen lake and a small hunters cabin, there is no trail and you just make your way forward as best you can - it's not like you can take a wrong turn. I thoroughly scanned the area for the Churro stand.

 
Next best thing to a churro :)

 


We reached the summit of the pass and high fives all around.  Obligatory pic at the sign, it was getting late and we needed to move forward - a light snow was falling and visibility was starting to drop. The descent was punchy with a lot of traps.

 
Lars  fell into a deep snow hole, hyperextended his knee as he was extricating himself. It was almost a game changer for him - the leg could not bear weight and we were descending into one of the most remote areas of the 350 race - into the Dalzell Gorge and to Rohn checkpoint. I could not leave him, I later found out that he'd left his sleeping pad at Rainy Pass, so there was no chance of a bivvy for him. We worked through a strategy, had a snack and some anti-imflammatories, he rode slowly ahead to set the pace, I had time to meander and fuss with my camera.

 
The Dalzell Gorge was unbelievably hideous. The trail is narrow through the cut willow, ever present risk is browsing moose - of which there were very fresh footprints. There is a fast running stream with broken ice bridges to traverse as you criss-cross the gorge.

 
I fell many times on the glare ice shelves further down the gorge - this is where my knees really copped some abuse, falling directly into a kneeling position many times as I prevented the bike falling into the abyss. I really should have put my crampons on. Lars had moved well forward, I slowed down to take it all in and calculate my moves (Lars had a GPS trail, whereas I was still following ground intel, trail cues and markers) and it's when you slow down, you start to notice more things - like the Wolverine prints in the snow.

 
With the horror of the Dalzell Gorge over, it was a few pleasant miles through the forest with zero snow cover. This side of the range is drier than the other side, hence the lower snow falls and more glare ice which I was to witness over the next few days. I came through the camp of Eric (of Revelate Designs) and a few of his buddies - they were doing a north to south journey on the Iditarod, they were bivvied out among the tall spruce at the mouth of the gorge into the Tatina River.

 
The trail led onto the confluence of the Tatina River and the Kuskokwim River. I was still a way off from Rohn checkpoint and the river section in front of me was what nightmares are made of. Let me paint a picture: there was virtually no snow, so the light from my headlamp was absorbed by the dark shapes and surfaces. The ice was black, hard and slick - even the hardened steel runners from the hunters snowmachines barely left a mark on the ice - which meant the safe path on the ice vanished.  I had to use my backup light - an Exposure Joystick - to highlight the details in the ice, but it still didn't extend very far. Off to the side I could hear the river rushing under the ice through holes. The ice would creak, crack and groan as I rode over it, impossible to gauge how thick or stable it was, whether it was rotten, corniced or hollow underneath. Even the camera was puckering - it didn't want to focus...
 
Finally, I made it to Rohn checkpoint around midnight - basically it's a canvas tent in the forest, inside is a stove with hot water and a thick bed of spruce branches to bivvy on. There were a few snoring racers inside and I wanted outdoors, so under a huge spruce is where I set up. That was after 3 hot bratwursts fresh off the fire...

2 comments:

  1. Thanks again for your help, Troy. Reading your blog is like living through this adventure again. I am sure you will make it to Nome and will follow and cheer you from afar!

    Thomas

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  2. Good luck Troy - hard yards are always worth it. Very selfless helping the injured rider, some people need reminding it's not about winning all the time this kind of spirit is good to see. ref: knees- You clearly needed your Bliss pads!

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