Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Gauteng winter trail series

Trail running really is the best. Running in nature, no tar in sight, sweating against a challenging course that doesn't apologise for being there, it is awesome. It takes you back to your prehistoric self where you needed to climb the mountain to survive, it is a primal, visceral experience and we love it!


The Gauteng Winter Trail Series took place this past month over four different venues (Groenkloof Nature Reserve, Segwati Lodge, Hennops River and Pelindaba) and each time the organisers put together a great day for everyone from Pee Wees to Masters to enjoy! We took part in the Short Course 'Challenge' series (part of the Training Philosophy not to aim for the Long Course just yet - more on that later) which comprised of 5-7km trails, each very manageable for the moderately fit and lots of fun for the overly enthusiastic! Each race had about 100m-150m of climbing so nothing too hectic with a good mix of open dirt road, twisty singletrack and a good helping of technical rocks thrown in the way.

Groenkloof was our training ground so we had a distinct homeground advantage going into the first race. Definitely the most technical of the four (especially when listening to the post race ranting and raving by everyone splayed out on the grass afterwards!) it was also the most fun.

Such is the growth of off-road sports in South Africa and especially in Pretoria that the race was almost overrun by day entries - both the long and the short course races had to start 30 min later to accommodate everyone (Apparently the summer series will ONLY take online entries - Take note!). Great to see trail running alive and well and growing rapidly!

Each race would see the young kids under 11 line up at the front - as the commentator would say - they only know one speed - FULL GAS! Amazingly there would always be a few in the top 10, most of them racing a very shrewd strategy of an interval-like nature, where they would run all out until they were exhausted, walk about 50m and then do it again!

We definitely had an advantage training on the technical course, since they sent you straight up the first hill right out of the gate, going down the other side it was almost too easy, since we did the same descent almost weekly, we were definitely able to open up significant time gaps to the people behind us going over the rocky terrain. Thereafter it was a relatively flat out and back with the same hill featuring at the end, and a fast downhill finish. The idea of a 5km race is basically a full on time trial, seeing how fast you can go, and for how long you can hold out (or so we thought - We managed to get our pacing strategy right only in the third race, Segwati - but only because we did the first of the Nissan Hazeldean series 75km marathon mountain bike race the day before).

We finished in 11th and 3rd position respectively, having raced our lungs out and feeling quite terrible and sore the next day!(and 2 days after that!).

At the second race in Hennops River there was a nice gradual climb to start, followed by a steep downhill with a nice section of singletrack along the aforementioned river, winding through trees, ducking branches, chasing the guy in front of you. This was one of my most memorable experiences, we were a group of about 5 running through trees and rocks following the twisting path and i was hit by the exhilaration as if in a movie featuring fugitives, chasing the bad guys in some heist movie - Awesome! I managed another 11th place in the Mens, while the Tarrin managed to win! The prize was awesome products from the main sponsor Adidas! They really had a lot of spot prizes and most people walked away with something with 3 stripes on it - bottles, caps, bags, towels shirts, socks - they had it all covered!

The third race was more of a road race - less singletrack with two hills before another downhill finish.  This was the race we did the day after the mountain bike race, so we were both just going to see how it goes and take it easy, not sure how 75km in the legs would feel the day after.  I managed my best result, it was a great feeling managing to keep in mind the mantra 'Easy.Light.Smooth' courtesy of Christopher McDougall's Born To Run and just gradually pulling away from people by the top of each climb. With a few steep sections thrown in, and a steep downhill which we also managed with ease due to our Groenkloof training, it was another downhill finish and I managed to overtake the guy I had in my sights for the last kilometer right on the line, my Inov-8 F-Lite 230 racers doing a wonderful job of cornering a sandy off-camber turn (wish they had live coverage to see that!). We managed a 9th and another first place with more Adidas prizes, we were really impressed with the level of Sponsorship.


The last run was held at Pelindaba, with Tarrin aiming for a Challenge Series win, while I wanted to improve on my 9th place as a best result. However I got a bit of a cold during the week and right from the first increase in incline I realised this would be a looong day. I managed to break out my 'old man shuffle' - because 7km is-a-long-way-if-you-have-to-walk. I managed to come in at about 4min longer than I could have, so all in all i felt good for surviving, although it was another great course with a nice downhill finish which I would have loved to race. Tarrin had a bit of bad luck, missing a route marker, and then turning back only to be unable to find the split, backtracking all the way to the start for a DNF - luckily they only take 3 out of 4 races into account so she still won the Challenge Series!


The organisers really went out of their way, and the Spur partnership was a real success, nothing like a seemingly unassuming Spur burger after a 5km Lactate fest to brighten your day! We thoroughly enjoyed our month of racing and will definitely be back for the Summer Series which starts in October!

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Nissan Trailseeker #1 Hazeldean

This past weekend we took part in the first of the Nissan Trailseeker Series at Hazeldean - and it really was the coldest race i have ever done! 70km of freezing wind is something else! The Previous record was held at Babba's Lodge where the temperature at the start was 5 degrees - this time however the mercury hovered just above zero as we pushed off!! It was a huge event as there were 2000 entrants (although judging by the list of DNF's I imagine a few people opted out on the day!) Really well organized, and quite refreshing to see the organizers choosing a venue that could actually handle the number of people. The seeded starts worked really well, as we were the last batch to leave and there were no real bottlenecks anywhere along the course, which included quite a bit of singletrack.

I reasoned the weather HAD to warm up sometime so i opted for the minimalist approach to winter clothing (my reasoning being that i would be frozen after an hour any way) - and i was right! So without legwarmers or a windbreaker i literally WAS frozen from start to finish - especially after the nice watercrossings which had pretty much deteriorated into un-rideable-ness after 600 wheels came through! Icy Feet always a hit! The other half of our team opted for more ample winter protection and she never complained! (from now on she is the manager!)

Our strategy was to ride within ourselves and test our fitness, which held up amazingly well - Klapperkop is a good spinning class after all!(we do three sessions a week if anyone is interested?) Testing our nutrition (muffins and bananas) as well as Hammer Perpetuem/PVM Octane XTR went awesome-ly well, no issues with cramp, bonking at all. must say the waterpoints were nicely stocked, if a bit overcrowded - especially one section where the 40km joined our route. I also tested a packet iof 32GI gums right at the start and it did last me a good hour into the race, very impressive and good tasting stuff! will definitely add that to my future stash.

All in all some pretty standard farm roads for the first half, with all the fun in the second half, singletrack, tree lined canopy - twisty stuff, riverside dropoffs and one little tough hill right on 65km - also a good test of the legs and we passed! Great day for us in our first 70km race for the year, aiming for the Hill2Hill in September.

We are also in the middle of the Gauteng Winter Trail series, with the last race taking place this Sunday. Tarrin is leading the Series and she has a good chance of winning the Short course Championship! Holding all thumbs and toes!


Till next time
Just keep spinning

New Direction

Welcome to the new home of the Adventures of Flint and Fuel. This will be our account of our travels as we see new places, new races, search for the best trails and aim to be the best athletes we can be! We are a multisport couple who love to Bike, Run, Swim Repeat - We will document our journey as we try and experience as much as we can! Our long term goal is to ultimately do a stage race like the Absa Cape Epic, or the Joberg2C (which we are approaching one race at a time).

We started off last year successfully completing the 94.7 road race on our mountain bikes with skinny tyres in around 4h15. Since then we have incorporated the principles of Joe Friel (a sure Genius!) and seen great leaps of improvement through consistent effort! This year we have completed one Babba's  Lodge race in Northern Gauteng (which most people will know is flat and fast), the Rapids Country Estate Challenge out in Dullstroom (1100m climbing in 40km!) and recently the first of the Nissan Trailseeker series at Hazeldean (in 2 degrees C!). In between we have managed to take a few weekends away with bikes in tow, to Sabie and the Waterberg - all of which good training camps! So if you want to see what we're up to, or what new goodies we are testing, or you want to join our training rides, check back here for a few laughs!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Survival of the moment

 Woke up this morning a bit fragile after working late, had a tempo session at klapperkop planned – and I thought: how am I going to make this day?with training, work, dinner etc.? The mountain looked way too high from down where I was! These past few days I have also been thinking about the idea of staying in the moment, whatever that moment is, in order to be in a better mood in general. It has been proven that people who are totally ‘in’ the moment, whatever they are doing at the time, are generally happier than people who are not.

So trying to put these two together in one head – I realised that one should not think too far ahead in general, ie that presentation, that meeting, that big training session. All one needs to do is think about the moment you are in, and maybe the one after that!you only need to have energy for whatever you are doing next. This way you will stay present (where the grass is generally greener) and take each day piece by piece; however big it might be!