Monday, July 14, 2014

Race report

Get out of bed at 1.30 a.m to get ready. After double checking everything, set off at around 3.25 a.m  to Riverland, where I catch a bus to Le Morne Kite surfing spot, which is the starting point of the Dodo Xtreme.

Temperature around 14o C, strong winds, a slight drizzle and calves feeling a bit tight despite stretching and a mild warm up. Add to that miserable weather during the last few days that probably made the trails extra slippery, 7 superfluous fatty kilos (put on 2 extra just in the last 3 days trying carb loading!!! Hopefully it's 2 extra kilos of glycogen stores, and none of the nasty stuff...!!! ) and close cut off times (for the hiker that I am) at each feeding station. Looking promising... ... ...

Warm Up...
Everyone just wants to get on with it...!!!

5.30 a.m. and it's a go...!!! The first 3 kms run off a dirt track at the back of Le Morne Mountain, followed by another 3 kms of tarred road through Le Morne Village, before taking a left into Baie Du Cap Chasse. I Switch on my head lamp, and start running.

Right off the bat, something is off, the head lamp is just emitting a very faint red light, which is just not going to cut it when we hit the hardcore dirt track!!! Thought it was just in a weird mode, and tried fiddling with it whilst jogging, to no avail. The NEW and freshly recharged batteries are probably flat!!!

DO NOT BUY...!!! CRAPPY...!!!
Can't stop there to have them replaced, it's almost pitch dark, and no one is going to stop and help so early in the race. So I decide to follow other trailers who have working headlamps till Le Morne Village, where there are street lamps to assist with the battery fumbling. 

Start running again and I can just see a single light bobbing around behind me...!!! I'm next to last...!!! DAMN...!!! On the plus side, calves have loosened up and I'm feeling great...:) Catch a few other runners before I get into the chasse, where the trail ramps up very gradually.

As the slope gets steeper, start overtaking lots of people who are already in tortoise mode. These same animals overtake me as soon as my camera comes out…  And I have to play catch up continuously…L
Moonrise or Moonset...Not Sure which...:P Prob Moonrise, cos it was pitch dark before...

Hop over a set of ladders to the ‘Mont Sur Mont’ Chasse, and we follow the fence separation between the 2 chasses up a steep single track to 'Piton La Prairie' at 505 m. Undulating terrain brings us up to 'Piton Du Fouge' at 550m, followed by 'Montagne La Porte' at 560 m. Pictures..Pictures…and more pictures J All panoramas attempts failed though, because the heavy winds made the camera too unsteady… L




Check the time and I only have 25 minutes until the cut off time, with some very technical downhill to go,  so I tell myself to quit the picture taking, otherwise I might be out of the race. Duh... As if not taking pictures was possible…






Le Morne at Sunrise



Tourelle du Tamarin in the distance, Illot Benitier in the mid ground
Stop several more times during the descent for more pictures, and in the rush, nick my compression legging with some sharp rocks…!!! Reach PK1 (first water point) with only 5 minutes to spare…!!! Quick water top up, and a couple of electrolyte tablets, and off I go again towards 'Owen Griffiths' chasse.

Comparatively easy section until we reach the foot of 'Piton Canot', from which point, the terrain rises steeply. Since I more or less already knew these sections, decided to minimise the picture shoot and concentrate on gaining a time buffer for the subsequent cut off points. The initial descent from the 'Piton Canot' summit (467 m) is just crazy steep and slippery, with ropes to assist. More undulating terrain till I reach PK2, a kiosk at the entrance of Chamarel.

I had decided on a refueling strategy based on alternating energy gel and cereal bar every 30 minutes, but by the second hour of the race, I started to feel nauseous and the stomach would just not accept the cereal bars. Even the energy gel had to be swallowed carefully, at the risk of inducing a full bout of vomiting. I tried the Bananas at the feeding station, and they seemed to be much easier to swallow without making the nausea worse. New refueling strategy: Energy gel every 30 minutes, and PiG out on bananas at every feeding station!!!!!!!!

Ask the control people what rank I crossed this checkpoint, and I hear 70…!!! Definitely had not overtaken that many people, so there must have been an extra slow bunch of people at the starting line…!!! Plus I had managed to gain about a 45 minute buffer with respect to the cut off times at this checkpoint. Not doing so badly after all…J

Vire from the summit of Piton Canot


Cross the road and jump into a single track leading to Piton De La Petite Riviere noire (828m) , highest point of the island. On the way, I start feeling light headed, so I deliberately slow down the pace. Was it a result of under feeding caused by the nausea, or the cumulative effort so far, or both...??? Doubts creep in again… … … In any case, I have to be extra careful, otherwise, I run the risk of smashing my face on some low hanging branches and other trees scattered on the narrow trail…!!!

1 hour of steady climb and the upper parts, smothered by the clouds, are just ice skating slippery. Chains and ropes all the way to the top: Super FUN…!!! By this time, the light headedness had disappeared, and I take a couple of minutes to chit chat with the rescuers posted at the peak. Worst place ever for them, with cold temperatures and very strong winds! Follow the very muddy trail to 'Grand Piton', slightly lower down, before tackling a long rolling descent into the forest down Black River Gorges National Park. The last couple kms of the descent are just brutal steep, slippery, bouldery and hard on the joints, which are surprisingly holding up amazingly well…







Pk3, the midpoint of the race at the kiosk reached soon after (4 hours 36 minutes into the race) and I take an extra long 10 minutes break to change shirt (personal bag drop off), feed (TONS of bananas and coke!!!)  and stretch. Manage to cross the radier without getting my feet wet by hopping over rocks, and start the deadly Camphrier ascent with a stich on the right side (Gim reckons I must have eaten too much at the feeding station). As usual, Camphrier is dry at the bottom, and muddy towards the top. I manage to catch a few people on the way up, and follow a bloke all the way to the 'Maccabee' kiosk (PK4 feeding station) after a 1 hour climb. On the way, I bump into a trail acquaintance who was way ahead of me, tackling the common ascent/descent section…Tried to high 5 him, but he said he was out of the race… Upset stomach and vomiting…!!! That was very nearly me a couple of hours back…!!!

At the feeding station, I check my water levels, and I thought I was good till the next feeding station which the people there say are just 7 kms down. I had printed and laminated the course profile with the distances and cut off points, but unwittingly dropped it somewhere along the course, (profile printed at the back of race number was no longer legible) so I was relying on the info given by the people on the course for pointers. 

Tried to stretch my quads, but hamstrings would threaten to spasm, so had to resort just to massaging the different muscles before tackling the super steep ‘Zepol’ descent in super slow mode. Towards the end of the descent (steep fil section), I bump into a fellow trailer with yellow race numbers (50K peeps) walking up again…!!! He had forgotten to give his number to the control peeps at the checkpoint, and was going all the way up again (about 400 meters higher up in elevation)..!!!

At the bottom of the national park, I could only manage a brisk walk on the flat trail section till the parking, where I bump into Sylvain, who informed me that Gim was way ahead, but that there were a couple of friends still behind me.  Boosted by that info (since I thought amongst the people I knew doing the trail, I was last) I shift gears, and run the tar section to the start of ‘Brise fer’. On the steep climb, I cross a fellow 50Ker not looking good at all. He was having acute tummy ache. Offer some paracetamols, but he informs he has already taken some, and was going to get medical assistance at the next feeding station. I was not doing so great myself, with all the major leg muscle groups threatening to cramp up. Finally reach the end of this hill, and proceed to cross a ladder into the 'Senneville' Chasse. More rolling terrain into surreal section with a large stretch of almost completely flat land surrounded by hills. (should have taken pics...!!!) Once you cross over the other side of the hills, wide open dry areas that the organisers justifiably describe as 'savanne', with vast expanses of dry burnt land. See a fellow trailer in the distance, but I don't even consider trying to catch up to him with the menacing cramps.

According to my GPS and the information given by the helpers on the course, I should already have crossed the next refreshment point (PK 5 @ Matala). Only problem is that I was fed wrong info, and the actual water point was 2 kilometers further than expected, just next to an IRS development. Only barely managed to make it there with just a few drops of water left in the Camelbak (Hydration backpackers will know the feeling when you suck in a mixture of air and water from the bladder). By that point, we were dead in the midst of a very hot sun, so I made sure I would have plenty of water to make it till the last feeding station.

Setting out again, I nearly take a wrong turn. Luckily, one of the fellow trailers who had caught up, got me on the right path, and we hike the next couple of kms together. The lady is probably in her late 40s, and talking to her, I find that she's well versed into ultramarathon trails (>100 Kms with more than 5K ascent). She was however struggling with the dodo, which she describes as extremely technical, and relentless in the steep ascents and descents. Usually, she's used to more gradual terrain, and the sudden change of extreme pitch had made her legs cramp for the first time ever during a race!! It might be 'short', but it bears the Xtreme name very well this Dodo...!!! She goes on to explain that every fortnight, she does 24 hour outings, starting from Friday night with head lamps...!!! MENTAL...!!! Ohh...And she's regularly either first or second in her category on all the ultras she takes part in...!!!

Terrain starts to go up again, and the landscape starts to become more interesting, so camera out, and PiGgY dropped by the lady.






Last hump before the Tourelle Du Tamarin ascent...


On the way, meet a friend who I tried to recruit to do the 50, but who ended up registering for the 25K... We walked a couple kms together to the last feeding station. ICE COLD COKE THERE...!!!!!!! Also medics tending to someone on the ground taking his blood pressure... Hope it's nothing serious...




Friend needs to rest some more, so I resume the trail solo. Direction: straight UP to the 'Tourelle Du Tamarin' (548m) along another fence on the ridge, with several kodak stops (Sony stops rather:P ) ...:) Last section to the summit is just pure scrambling bliss, although not so blissful doing it with cooked legs. The descent to Tamarin  is just a killer with loose slippery soil along one of the steepest downhills I've ever done...!!! Quads and hams threatening to cramp up at the same time on the several occasions where I lost my footing!

Le Morne in the distance, Salt pans and Tamarind bay in the mid ground ...





Pouce in the distance, corps de garde to extreme left,  Rempart left center, Candos Center, and 3 mamelles to the right...

Last Pic before the steep descent

The final section of the trail is fairly non eventful with a small river crossing and flat trail to Riverland.
According to my GPS, 47 kms with 2,800 m ascent and descent in 10 hours 5 minutes, a few hours quicker than I had extrapolated before the race...!!! Putting it in perspective, the winner, and world trail champion (some guy named Ricky Lightfoot with REALLY light feet:P ) completed the course in 5 hours 19 and first Mauritian resident in 6 hours 27...!!! 136 crazy animals registered for the Xtreme race... 110 completed...

Had the weather been any warmer during the day or the trail been the full 50K and 3.5K ascent, there's no chance I would have completed... We just got lucky that despite the crappy weather of the last few days, the terrain was generally fairly dry and compact (Piton and Camphrier are always muddy). I'm not looking forward to the week of old PiGgY walking syndrome!!!  :P

Race exercise log and stats:




Method and logic to the madness...!!!

Started considering the Dodo Xtreme at the beginning of the year ( http://www.dodo-trail.com/ ) , when I saw the Dodo newsletter with a description of  the trails. This year's trail covered lots of private grounds that are not usually accessible to the public, and this was a great opportunity to discover places I'd probably never even knew existed in Mauritius, and take Pictures...!!!! :). Snag, is that this monster is advertised as a 50 Kms leg buster with 3500 m of elevation gain. Last time I tried doing a trail during a competition was the 35K Royal Raid with half the elevation gain, and I almost killed my knees in the process, limping my way to the finish line almost from the midway point. I had sworn to myself: NEVER AGAIN!!! Hmmm... ... ...

What tipped the scale was a stage of the TMB I did last year: 31 kms with 2300 m (Just checked, not 2700!!! ) of elevation gain with 23 Kgs on my back! With no cargo to lug around, I thought it was doable with adequate training and equipment :P . And as a gadget freak, there was no way I was taking this on without a few new gizmos...:P

1.       lightweight trail hydration backpack.
2.       trail shoes (previous one died during one of my subsequent test trails).
3.       running shoes.
4.       compression legging.
5.       trail head lamp (trail starts in the dark).

So, 4 months ago, I started quietly testing the legs, to see how they would respond. I have notoriously weak knees and ankles, and wasn't confident they were up to the job of tackling the extreme pounding they would be subjected to. The plan was to build up trail fitness and joint strength gradually by starting some road work, and only move to the trails once the body was adequately prepped for it. Signal up and down once...Then twice...Then 3 times...By the third week 4X...!!! Time for the first trail outing!

Small session in the national park from Petrin parking all the way down Camphrier, my trail shoes start to literally disintegrate some 8 kms from the starting point!!! Super cautious snail walk back...!!!




Is that a sign from above that the Dodo is not meant for PiGgY??? Lucky PiGgY does not fall prey to such petty superstitions...!!! New trail shoes bought the very next day!!! :P

Things were going well, until I was hit by my annual bout of flu that literally negated all the training done to date!!! Once I had recovered, combination of lack of drive (mentally, it's really tough to get going again after all the hard work is wiped clean, knowing that you have even less time to get ready) and mountain bike related events, which precluded trail specific training. Another series of signs from above??? NONSENSE...!!!

About 7 weeks before the event, after a quick E-Mail Exchange with Gim (the endurance trail master), who reassured me that it was still feasible, I finally resume training, still a bit conflicted. Should I tone down my expectations, and go for the mini dodo Trail (10 Kms) , which would still allow me to climb Tourelle Du Tamarin? But then, I would miss out on the Chasses at the back of Le Morne! The mini was out of question (25kms) since I already knew most of it, and it defeated my main objective for doing the Dodo to start with (Take pics of trails I hadn't done before, pointless suffering not part of that equation). I would leave that decision to the very last minute, depending on how things went.

So back to Signal mountain, and the first week is pure torture. Muscle and joint soreness after only 1X Signal mountain...!!! Morale sapping stuff...!!! Luckily within 3 weeks, back to 4X again, and was ready to move to trail running. First outing was a 39Kms test run with about 1700m elevation gain. In pain for the whole week with no mid week training sessions whatsoever possible. Second outing the next Sunday was about 42 Kms with 2200 m elevation gain, and the outcome was just like the previous week's trail outing; another week completely out of commission! With so little time left to prep, I could not really afford to have days off like that, so no more extended trails during week end, and concentrate on 2 sets of Signal mountain road workouts during the week, with a shortish Sunday trail session!

On registration deadline week, I managed to cram 2X parakeets (trail) and twice 4Xish signal during the week, so I confidently registered for the Xtreme. Had been trying to recruit some fellow peeps to suffer with me on the Xtreme, but they all either bailed out completely, or went on the lesser trails... :( Last week of training was ruined by crappy stupid weather, and somewhat jello legs....So doubts started to creep in again... Too late now anyway...happen what may...

On the eve of the dodo, I got all my race gear ready, attended the registration briefing and in bed by 8.30. Must be the excitement, but could not get decent sleep, and was wide awake by midnight! Might was well watch the loser's final of the world cup!!!