The race started with what looked like a 6 mile loop around the wetlands park on hard packed berm roads.
Note the tight bike line!
Two team (Village Bike and SWIM) pushed the early pace and established a pretty strong lead on the remainder of the pack as we cam around past the TA and received our first set of race instructions.Village Bike lost some time as they had left their trekking shoes in the TA and had to go back and get them as we would be trekking later in the race without a chance to return to the TA before that. It was off to the boat pickup, another few miles where we would do a challenging navigation paddle to Hatbill Park. The day was gorgeous and there were lots of folks on the river (or should I say rivers) – this section of the St. John’s River is really a complex maze of streams cutting through grassland flats with lots of gators. We made all the right navigation choices here and made it to the CP at Hatbill Park where we hopped out of our boats early and ended up giving ourselves a little swim (hey it is in our name).
The paddle had some shallow portages and clear water
We passed Village Bike who also hopped out of their boats early on the little island as we did and I chuckled as I knew they would also need to do a little swim.
As we returned we saw teams everywhere on the river. The tricky navigation had teams moving in all directions through the maze of canals. We missed one turn heading back, but quickly caught our mistake and recovered. The camera crews at the boat drop got some great shots as we decided it was easier and faster to run our boats through the shallow swift current near the boat drop rather than paddle that section. We were able to leave our boats at the boat launch, and quickly transition back to bike to head to the orienteering. We decided to do the O in the order 1, 3, 4, 2 (we could choose our order). This required a tricky bushwhack from 1 to 3. We found both the first and second streams but my “aiming off” on the nav was off and we headed east on the stream when we should have gone west. This was compounded a bit by the flag location being (slightly) off on the map, still mostly our fault. After nabbing 3, we had no trouble with 4 (near a fence on the treeline) or 2 (easy attack point from the forest corner SW of the control). We took Florida Trail back to the bikes and began the most grueling leg of the race – the cow pasture bike.
The next leg had us doing a roughly 5-6 mile loop to find 5 checkpoints (easy navigation) in the cow pasture. Most teams were unable to ride through the thick grass and mud – we simply geared down and chunked along. Except for a few cows running in front of us and the occasional section where we would have to carry our bikes (in other words very wet) we moved well through this section. WE did have one interesting section where we biked across a small canal feeding a pond and startled an amazingly large alligator (for a small pond).
A team with a nice tight running formation - this does not work on narrow trails though.
When we arrived at the TA we received our next set of instructions and passport, a 5-6 mile run with a short paddle in the middle. The first part of the run was to our bikes (we had done this route before) – so we put our heads down and dropped into a nice pace. My pace was a little less than the team pace, though we were running well – I knew I was holding them back a little. We had not seen Village Bike for a while, so we knew we had a decent lead (I get much more motivated when there is a team right on top of us). The paddle was a short paddle to a control on Bear Island and then back. We ended up punching our instruction sheet as our punch card was safely back in the TA where we had left it, I think we could convince the RD we visited every control. The paddle and punch took 18 minutes and we arrived back at the boat drop just as Village Bike was heading out.
I think this was leaving the boat drop - good spirits here
We had a 3 to 3 1/2 mile run back to the finish with one CP along the route. We were supposed to take the North Woods trail which despite being wet in a few places was a really nice run. I was still feeling good and was not slowing the team too much through this section. We came out of the woods at the berm road at Lake Searcy. The road weaves around the lake and we could see across the lake. We kept a light pace and the muscles in my back that had never healed from the swamp stomp started giving me some real pain. We decided to take the South Woods trail instead of running the berm the entire route. We were trying to beat 5 hours which we just barely missed as we came into the finish line.
As I dropped my pack, Rob hollered to put it back on as we had another section of the race to go. Mercifully it was a short out and back run on the trail we had just left, but Rob carried my pack for me as just putting it on caused me some nasty back pain. We finished the race in 5 hrs and 23 minutes, followed shortly by Village Bike (Jason and Marghi) at 5:43. It would be a while till the remaining team, which were really spread out at this point, made it in.
Another great race for Pangea http://www.pangeaadventureracing.com/race_archive.php?r=3 and a fun race with Team SWIM.
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