Archive for September, 2008

BPN Adventure Race Team Takes 2nd at Vail

September 9, 2008

BPN Adventure Race Team Takes 2nd at Vail Adventure X-treme.

Well it was another beautiful day in Colorado on Saturday September 6th for the start of the “Vail” Adventure Extreme 12 Hour Adventure Race. Using Vail as the destination city was a stretch since we were about an hour north of the resort town but nonetheless it was a beautiful spot and camera ready day.

Our team for this race was comprised of Stacy Moeller, Travis Macy, Shane Sigle and Scott Swaney. We all knew this was going to track meet since the navigation was pretty low and the course was set for speed but we still liked our chances at winning.  Our collective thought was that with the wealth of experience on this team we felt that all other teams had to get by BPN first in order to win this race.

From the opening start the pace was torrid. The bike race pace saw all teams, duo’s and solos fall to the wayside except for the 3 pre race favorites of Eolus, the Durango team and BPN. The Durango team had a few new faces brought in just for this race and we knew they could really cook on the bike and the run. After a super fast bike start that seemed all too fast for our slow twitch muscles we came into the 1st Transition Area ( TA) in 2nd place. The BPN team really proved it’s experience by leaving the TA with the trail running O points plotted and gear changed faster than most triathaletes transition in a road tri. We knew it was going to be a short race so we gave up niceties such as extra food/ fuel and changing any clothing for the entire race. After a few CP’s we still couldn’t shake the Durango team of pro triathletes so we had to try to play a cat and mouse game with them to see if they would blow up going so fast early on in the race. A personal highlight for me in this race was seeing our good friend Adam Chase on a county road trying to hand us a pack of cigarettes as part of a “gear pick up”. Nothing like a good laugh to bring you back to earth. We came into the 2nd TA in second place behind the very persistent Durangoteam by about 2 minutes.

Once again Team BPN’s quick TA turn arounds came into play and we got into our Duckie kayaks on the river run in fist place. Racing with guys like Shane and Travis is always a joy for me but it’s particularly fun on water sections. Those guys can really make a boat move. BPN had a good 5 minute lead off of the boats and with the drop of the PFDs and change of shoes we were off on the bikes. During this section we experienced a 3000 ft climb and a really fun down hill. Along the way we couldn’t hold off the massive bike attack of the Durango team and took a chance on a possible navigational advantage that did not fully pan out. As usual I am in awe of Travis’ drive during a race – he is truly a race horse. Also along the way on the bike section we got to tour the nice county side and watch the locals partake in their outdoor activity of shooting things in fields. I honestly thought one campsite was a CP until the alpha male shot his rifle at a beer bottle or something threatening like that.

By the time BPN got to the final TA and jumped into the Duckie river boats for the final 40 minutes of slow river paddling our fate was sealed for 2nd place. The last paddle was still enjoyable for us given that all members of this team seem to really enjoy each other’s company and we got to start plotting our next race in Moab. Stacy is a trooper and is always quick with a smile. Who could ask for anything more?

The Moab Expedition race is just around the corner and we all feel pretty confident in how well we will perform there. We all love to race with each other and enjoy every race but none of like anything other than 1st place at the end of the day…..  

 

BPN Athlete Jeremy Rodgers Wins Col. River Race

September 9, 2008

BPN Athlete Jeremy Rodgers wins the Colorado River Race setting a new course record!!!!!!!!

 

It all started innocently enough loading kayaks at my home (see photo 1) in Boulder County Friday evening to make the drive to the 2008  Colorado River Race held on the class 2 section from Dotsero to Hanging Lake on the Upper Colorado River. I stayed the night in Leadville, Colorado Friday night to pace my patient Joy Robertson in the Leadville 100 trail running race on Saturday morning from Winfield up over Hope Pass to Turquoise Lakes. Nothing like running 27 miles at 10,000-12,000 feet the day before a race but the Leadville 100 race is truly legendary and paddlers don’t really use their legs anyway (actually I pump my legs quite aggressively while paddling and felt the fatigue immediately but they loosened up). I spread Clif Bar love the entire way on the Leadville course handing out my favorite Mojo bars to unsuspecting weary runners wearing my fancy Clifbar visor and KEEN pack. Rain, hail, and lightening was the word for this years Leadville 100 being under cloud cover and precipitation almost 75% of the time. I heard from the course medical director post race that only 30% of field finished this year to compared to usual 50%. 
 
I finished pacing Leadville at 10pm, slept for 5 hours, then drove to Dotsero/Vail for my own race. I was hell bent on breaking the course record I’d set last year on this same course as the race director put an asterisk besides last years time noting that the Hanging Lakes portion of the Colorado River was actually flowing slightly last year. Shoshone Dam below this section was under construction last year so the usually stagnant water of Hanging Lakes was flowing slightly but was only 6 inches deep compared to usual 6 feet deep. In that shallow of water the bow wave coming off my bow hitting the river bottom slows  me down more than the slight flow offsets so I was ready to let it rip this year. Regardless, I set my Garmin pacer 1 minute faster than last years course record and set off at 8am. Andy Hall, a jolly 200 lb power lifter from South Africa in a Fenn Surfski and Mike Lesnick from Missoula, Montana in a West Coast Boat Shop Thunderbolt gave immediate chase. South African’s are always a concern as they know how to paddle a surf ski better than any other country as a whole and surf skis are generally lighter than a closed kayak like I was in.  Luckily, Andy is a known sprinter and the 1 hour length of this race didn’t suit his strength but he sure made me paddle hard the first half of the course. My strategy was to get 0.5 mile ahead of my Garmin pace setter by midrace as I knew the slack water at Hanging Lakes would drop my pace significantly. The 5 class 2 plus drops were a welcomed encounter for this new wildwater paddler even though I was in my 23 ft JKK Supernova open ocean racing kayak from New Zealand. 
 
I did indeed finish the race in a new course record time of 1:04:32 almost 4 minutes ahead of 2nd place at 1:08:33. Mike Lesnick, one of my old mentors from my early days and now almost 55!, finished 3rd in 1:09. He reads water like no other and still amazes me with his pre-race drawings of every rapid on a notepad that he always shares with me demonstrating every minute detail of flow gradients. I also give special thanks to my wildwater mentors on the US Wildwater team as my paddle stroke efficiency and water reading skills were exponentially improved this year. 
 
Sorry in advance the photos are not close enough to show the KEEN, Clifbar, and IR branding as this boat has smaller stickers than my wildwater boats as I ran out of the super big ones. The race director took them and perhaps his lense wasn’t clean..kinda hazy but I was in all out sprint the last kilometer!
 
I’ll be sending out a professional 2009 promo video sometime in the late fall complete with slow mo video and summary of 2008 season. Wildwater national trials will be held late next year as part of FIBARK in June then world cups will be held in Aussie and Tasmania fall 2009. This will allow me to do alot more US whitewater festivals held in June every year. 
 
I have a couple of more regional races yet this summer including paddling the paddle leg for the Adventure Xstream Race in Vail next weekend with Adam Chase under Team Clif Bar (Mark, Adam is sponsored by Salomon and wouldn’t budge on Team Clif Bar KEEN but says he’s still a big fan of KEEN) I’ll use my wildwater boat in this race of 500 some racers so at least I’ll spread the KEEN brand!
 
Best, 
Jeremy