Didn’t really feel like writing this one up as obviously it
was far from the result that I was after but as the good old sporting cliché
goes, you learn more from your defeats than victories, so let’s see what I
learnt..
Saturday dawned fine but it was already windy, from the
south-west, so knew the Thames coast would be hard but should get a cross-tail
from Kopu home (mostly). Met up with Peter Coveney on the start line, as well
as Steve Lawrence and his mates Deon (Dr Speed) and Dennis. Plan was for Mondo,
Peter and Myself to stick together, help each other when it got tough etc etc..
well that plan didn’t really happen.
First hill was Kuaotunu which was hit pretty hard and the
bunch split within a couple of km’s.. I was still climbing with Peter and
Mondo, looked at my HR and it was 175! But I thought, well it’s early days and
the pace should settle once the faster guys get away and we form a bunch of
riders of similar ability, which it did. The next 30ks is all up’s and down’s
but I still felt that I was climbing well and not pushing too hard.
Whangapoua is the big climb so I was trying to go as easy I
could there but without losing momentum and keeping a good cadence. Again it
seemed like I wasn’t pushing too hard but on a climb like that, 9% for 3.5kms,
you’re gonna have to use some energy. Peter was climbing ahead of me so I let
him go and Mondo was just behind and as we crested, Mondo said he’ll grab a
banana and a drink and we agreed to meet at the bottom as I was happy with food
and drink.
The descent off Whangapoua is awesome and I just let it
roll, unfortunately got held up in a couple of corners by some slower guys and
had to break harder than I liked.. the last 2 corners are a 25k and 15k (speed
warnings), and as I was breaking for the 25k, pssssed, the front tyre blew..
luckily I was already slowing as it went flat real fast and I was breaking on the
rim.. but stopped without incident (but with plenty of expletives ;-) I’m
assuming it had to be a heat flat, carbon rims heating up too much and the tube
just went? Didn’t find any cuts or debris in the tyre but on the positive side
the tyre went back on the rim really easy as it was nice and warm.
While changing the tyre Mondo came past and checked if I was
Ok but I said just go, I’ll be fine. Tim must have passed me in this time as
well. Once I got going again no-one was around. I spotted a DOC guy just up the
road so caught him up and we worked together till Manaia. Head wind was nasty.
Started climbing Manaia nice and easy but then some fast guys caught up so I
thought if I go with them, they will drag me to Kereta, which they did but I
used a lot of effort to get the draft. I knew I couldn’t stay with them up
Kereta so let them go straight away and climbed at my own pace. There’s a drink
stop at the top of Kereta (in the saddle) and here I realised I had only drunk
one bottle (in nearly 2.5hrs of hard hilly riding.. not good).
I started the long flat of the Thames coast on my own but
soon found a couple of guys to work with but was still doing long turns into
the wind.. by the time I got to Thames I could feel that cramp wasn’t far away
so was trying to get lots of food and drink in to keep it at bay. Just coming
into Thames we caught another group that Tim was in. He said he was cramping
too so I gave him some Endurolytes. We worked together (Tim just hanging on)
with the bunch and once we hit the Kopu turn the wind definitely helped and was
at our backs. I started climbing Kopu not too bad and soon dropped Tim but by
the time I reached the top, I wasn’t in great shape. I stopped at the drinks
station near the top, took a comfort break and got the bottles topped up with
Electrolyte and carried on but knew the damage was done.
From here it was pure survival mode, bombing the descents,
trying to high cadence the flats but grovelling up the hills. Anytime I tried
to push, cramp. I tried everything that I’ve ever heard to help with cramp,
banging the muscles with your fist, biting the bottom lip, Electrolytes, and
even the pickle juice ;-) but nothing really worked. I was blown. Tim re-passed
me not long after the Kopu descent and seemed to be going fine, ticking along
in a bunch.
Not much to say from here, just kept focusing on the next 5k
and counting them down. Pumpkin hill was really hard as I cramped while seated
about 50m into the climb so the only way I could go was standing. Must have
looked funny, just rocking back and forth in my lowest gear, up a 6% gradient
doing about 6kph. Really felt like the guy with all the gear and no idea (with
my new bike and the carbon wheels on..)
Finally started to feel ok about the 170k mark and luckily
the last 10-15k must have been a tail wind as I was sitting on 35kph along the
Whitianga flats. So ride time was around 7.18 and gun time 7.31.
So what did I learn? That group 6 was too fast. That I still
have no idea about pacing myself. That cramp really hurts. That carbon wheels
go really fast down-hill but unfortunately heat up a lot under breaking…
What the ride has done is question why the hell I do it?
It’s supposed to be fun but all I end up is disappointed, tired, grumpy and
broken (seems like 50% of my rides end up this way.. so is it really worth
it??) I’m not thinking of giving up riding but definitely thinking of giving up
events.. for a while. I really thought I was well prepared for this ride and I
suppose the expectation was high but the confidence has really taken a hit.
P.S. I will still be doing Taupo as I’ve already booked the
house and friends are coming who don’t even ride, just for the catch up, so
can’t back out now. Also the last paragraph is just an honest rant of how I’m
feeling right now (so please don’t shower me with sympathy) and give it a
couple of days and I might change my tune completely.. ;-)
P.S.S. To cap off a crappy weekend, I left my Garmin at the
house we were staying at. Good news is the lady has found it and sending it up
to me.
And apologies in advance for the bad grammar but I can’t be
arsed re-reading that.

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