Tuesday 21 October 2014

Bridge Cape Pioneer Trek

One year exactly has passed since I was last in South Africa where I raced the Pioneer with Team Asrin and whilst last year I had one week to prepare, this year the last six months really has been focused on the event.  Last December we went to work in the Alps, a life long dream that we happily fulfilled until the 1st of March when my leg gave way from the rigours of massive ski days and it broke.  Another 3 months off the bike and I was desperate to get back to the stage races.  To get fit for the back end I found some races through the summer heading over to Canada and America and racing on much more technical terrain than I’m used to.

Knowing I was unfit it was good to race over there with no pressure on performing but picking up some skills from the top riders there.  I followed that with a week at the Tour de Timor, a last minute one again but helped build up more endurance for the Pioneer. 

This year Team Asrin consisted of a three teams in the three main categories each with the podium as an aim.  In the men’s Austrian Herman Persteiner paired up with James Reed, Nizaam paired with Hungarian rider Barbara Benko and I paired with Alice Pirard from Belgium.  As well as riders we had a great backup team: JP, the mechanic, Angela and Kurt, the masseurs and helpers and new to the team, Zac, a chef as well as two helpers there to set up camp, drive and wash our kit. It may be a hard race but if it was anything like last year we were spoilt rotten once off our bikes!!

The prologue
15.3km Buffelsdrift

We just managed to ride a lap the evening before having travelled from Cape Town as a whole team.  This year we went the opposite way to start and I led us out apparently pretty hard.  Alice has been racing XC World Cups this year so I thought I’d set a steadier pace in the front and let her lead through the single track.  I blew massively as soon as we hit the first climb on the single track and had to back right off.  I seem to be able to keep one pace but once I go above that I blow and need to back down for a long time to recover.  Alice looked like she was cruising and crossed the line saying how much she enjoyed it whereas I was interviewed with a very croaky voice  from breathing so hard!!  We didn’t do too badly missing out on a podium by a few seconds.   The stage was won by Robyn de Groot and Jennie Stenerhag. 
 
Before the race starts
Stage One
100km Oudtshoorn to Calitzdorp

Leaving the comfort of a hotel we rode down to the start for 7.30.  The start was very fast and again I battled to push that hard.  We soon settled into a good pace though and caught up the lead girls who we stayed with most of the day.  Alice was super strong and I held onto her wheel a lot.  She also descends confidently and straight away I could trust her line.  She had to change her wheel at the tech zone as the free wheel wasn’t working then I punctured soon after on a rocky descent which we managed to plug and bomb and not loose too much time but by then we lost sight of the lead ladies and came into the finish 2nd after a good fast last 15km slightly down hill on the road. 

Stage Two
85.9km Calitzdorp – Swartberg Summit

Every team going for the top finish today will certainly have woken with butterflies as the top of the Swartberg Pass offered R125 000 to the first men’s and woman’s team.  We raced the stage as any other, there was a lot of climbs and long road sections to get through before the pass started.  The first half of the race we had Jennie and Robyn in sights, I had my usual first hour of biting the bars but certainly felt better than yesterday.  Alice though was quietly battling with stomach cramps and slowly we lost sight of the other two and rode our own race.  There was a new section added onto the stage that was pretty slow going terrain but despite Alice clearly feeling very rough we didn’t slow much at all and kept a positive spin on things, we held onto 2nd position and didn’t lose a massive amount of time. The big prize went to two very deserving riders but we would fight on for the overall.  In the men’s race Herman attacked everyone and got away up the climb with the idea been that James would sit in and come round in the final sprint.  Unfortunately James went as hard as he could but blew, Herman crossed the line unaware and 4 minutes ahead of James landing them with a 30 minute penalty.  
 
Massage in style only with Team Asrin
Stage Three
107km Prince Albert to De Rust

We rolled away from the start with a strong tail wind and blue skies. The tail wind mean’t a very fast pace and soon the race was cracking up. Once the race spilt we were with the other girls and mixed teams.  Off that road we had a flat sandy section.  I was too far back in the group and was constantly having to slow and accelerate to keep on, not the way to ride through sand at all and I was more than happy to see the first water point and the climbs looming ahead.  My racing on the steep technical climbs in Brek Epic had certainly paid off and I can ride a lot more than in previous years and as Alice is also good on the steep climbs we pulled away from Theresa and Esther with Robyn and Jennie on our wheels by the bottom.

From then on we rode together, happy to be in a good sized group as the wind was howling and making it hard going.  We all stopped at the last water point, and it made me laugh how we all dive in for different things.  Alice grabbed the 32Gi chews, Jennie was happy to find marshmallow fish and I was over the moon to find koeksister, a year has passed since my last indulgence in these sweet treats!! That gave me the sugar kick I needed to focus on the most fun single track section so far in the race and I emerged on the road at the bottom on a high.  From there we flew down towards the finish and knew we faced a sprint to the line with Jennie and Robyn.  My memory is so bad I couldn’t remember the finish at all and swung round the last bends leading the four of us.  The two pink jerseys upped and left us. I don’t think I posses a single fast twitch muscle fibre at the moment and we had to settle for second, still a great day out and extending our gap on third The afternoon was made up of eating and resting, the best thing about stage races!  Zac had made us some delicious chicken lunch and I later caught up with good mate Leana in the tent and ate pancakes and drank tea. 
 
One of Zac's many delicious lunches

Stage Four
109km De Rust – George

The queen stage lay ahead and with it the worst forecast of the week.  Waking up at 5 I heard the rain belting down on the camper van and was thankful not to be in the tent.  Everyone gets up early in Team Asrin so I am always out last and opened the camper to find everyone huddled around eating Zac’s porridge and scrambled eggs and Nizaam’s coffee machine was in full swing.  He has also been boiling up water so I have my much needed cup of tea and rusk.  I spent the extra time that is normally used packing up bags from the tent to stress about my choice of layers for the day, climbing out of the Kammanasie the temperature was 10 degrees lower we were told and if it rains it can feel colder still.  I opted for the Helly Hansen long sleeve thermal in the end with my waterproof jacket stuffed in my pockets and thicker gloves.  Once into the reserve we got in a group with 2 mixed teams and the leading girls and as we hit the steep climb at the end I weaved through so we were ahead and was pleased that Alice was right on my wheel.  By the top we were out of sight of the others and they didn’t catch us on the descent.  After that we were in and out of river crossings.  We had both settled into a perfect pace and after the long hike bike section, and a tricky, rocky descent in pouring rain we apparently had 4 minutes on the other girls at the first feed.  The rest of the stage we had no clue where anyone else was but I could tell we were having a strong day, both sharing the work load on the open trails and neither of us even flinched when the heavens opened and we were drowned .  After 5 hours we were both feeling good, we both admitted we had no idea how long that feeling would last but as we neared the dam in George and still could see no pink jerseys we started to realise we were going to win the stage.  The ‘mountain’ (tiny drag in reality) out of the dam hurt a lot but soon we were on the muddy field and through the finish.  We were elated about the stage win then 17 minutes later we realised we were in pink, the others having had a day of mechanicals.  


Unfortunately Barbara had a bad day and had to pull out with pains in her heart.  She was checked over and later given the ok to ride the rest of the race still with their number boards so at least they can still be involved in the race. 


Stage Five
71km George – Herold

At dinner last night we were given two bits of information that made everyone cheer following one of the hardest days in Pioneer history.  The first was that today would be shortened to 51km, the whole starting loop of single track round the dam having been removed because of the mud.  The second was that we would only start at 9.15am in order for the crew to get the next camp ready.  It was a shame to miss the single track as the trails are excellent round the dam but with rain having fallen most of the day and evening they would have been such a mess and no fun at all. 

So at 9.15 we rolled out of George in our pink jerseys. The race was neutralised until the bottom of Montagu Pass then we were off.  Alice and I climbed on our own and over the top were chased down by the next group including Cherise Stander and Candice Neethling.  The route turned onto a jeep track with a side wind where we felt the effort of yesterday catch up and we were both relieved to turn up into the hills again near the end.  Candice and Cherise were flying and they dropped us both on one of the descents.  We didn’t have the legs to chase them back and instead rode our own pace to the finish.  Theresa and Esther were close on our heels but we extended our lead overall as Jennie was battling with flu and scared us all by passing out at the finish line. 

With another later start tomorrow things were a little more relaxed in camp and after the presentation I joined in round the camp fire wrapped in 7 layers with Nizaam, Kurt, Angela, JP and Zac, eating Cadburies Bubbly and laughing about anything and everything.  It was on of those race memories that will stay with me a long time. 


Stage Six
Herold – Oudtshoorn

The final stage and I had mixed feelings on the start line.  Another stage race almost over, no more afternoons and evenings socialising with friends and guilt free eating, no more racing along with Alice and sharing the highs and lows, the adrenalin of surviving a rocky descent and the burning lactic of the first hours racing.  No more excitement at what food Zac would have waiting for us back at the camp or box of goodies Angela always had at the feed and no more excellent massage that got rid of the massive knots in our legs and back.  On the other hand we held the pink jersey and only had to get through one more day without incident to win.  The day did thankfully go by without any problems.  We had a good start, got in a fast moving group along with Cherise and  Candice again and flew along the duel jeep track and out on the open road.  With 30km to go we turned off the road onto the rough jeep track trails round the Chandelier Game and Ostrich Farm.  Here the other girls put in an attack down hill.  I followed for a short time before backing off, only a bad fall or serious mechanical could loose us the leaders jersey and while a stage win on the final run into Oudtshoorn would have been the cherry on the cake we were happy to settle for just the cake.  We passed under the finish arms in the air and I tried and failed to spray champagne around. 


Our Asrin team mates managed to jump up into 4th on GC only 1 minute off the podium despite the 30 minute penalty they got.  Nizaam and Barbara also got some good racing in winning stage 5 and getting on the podium in the prologue. 

Final results
Men:
1st Simon Stiebjahn/Tim Bohme – Team Bulls 22.08
2nd Philip Buys/Matthys Beukes – Scott Factory Racing 22.17
3rd Johann Rabie/Gawie Combrinck EAI South Africa 22.49
4th James Reid/Herman Persteiner Asrin Cycling 22.50

Woman:
1st Catherine Williamson/Alice Pirard – Asrin Cycling 25.59
2nd Jennie Stenerhag/Robyn de Groot – Biogen Toyota Cape Brewing Co 26.43
3rd Theresa Ralph/ Esther Suss – Meerendal Wheeler 26.57

Huge thankyou to Dryland for another fantastic event, to Team Asrin for all the support at the race and throughout the year and to CycleFunatic of Durbanville and to 32Gi for providing the race with drinks, chews and bars as well as myself with my energy products for the season,