“It’s water running under the snow pack.”
“Is that bad?”
“Only if you fall in.”
“What should we do?”
"Move faster and get off the snow pack.”
Glacier Lake was frozen with every shade of blue imaginable. It was surrounded on three sides by snow slopes topped by skree ridges where jagged boulders had been placed as if by some insane artist. The tracks of the other teams in the snow led down and around a massive ridge to the next Glacial Lake – Moose Lake. The climbs in the snow (some in the dark) up the incredibly steep slopes were exciting, if not exhausting. From Moose Lake, it was a climb to the third lake, Campfire Lake. It was clear this place did not see too many humans. The snow muffled all noises, so an eerie silence pervaded everything. There, hanging on a lone tree at the edge of the lake, was the checkpoint – looking totally out of place in this absolute wilderness.
Everything is vertical in the Carzies.
I shot this video with my cell phone and no I did not have a signal
Even after the CP we still had to climb and get out of the glacial bowl, about 500 more feet of purely exposed snow and skree at a dizzying pitch. Finally standing on top of the ridge looking back we felt the true wonder and awe of this place. The Crazies were not like the other mountain ranges. They were sculpted into odd shapes and patterns. They were remote and they were stunning in their uniqueness. We still had to get down and out, and it was a long way. The steepness of getting out was scary, and Julie and I both experienced some serious trepidation at going down some of the snow hills we had to descend. But down was the way and we finally went from snow to rock, to dirt, to forest, and then back to road leading us to the small comfort of the TA.
The Second (real) Bike Leg
Our crew – Jamie and Johnny Sheriff are both experienced racers. At this point in the race with a total of 5 days of racing and 6 hours of sleeping we were looking rough. The crew in these races must have a strong nose (we smelled), a pleasant disposition (we were grumpy and short), incredible organization (we always needed that one piece of gear that we could not find). They had to anticipate our needs (I don’t want stew – I want ice cream) and be soothing. We had an incredible crew in Jamie and Johnnie and that allowed us to eat, sleep, repack, eat again, and head out on bikes for the next section – the long bike. This started with a downhill followed by a long slow mild uphill to the remote town of Ringling, Montana – Population 14. At Ringling, we headed onto hard packed cattle roads and started going through small rollers until reaching 16 Mile Canyon Road. This was aptly named as it was a 16 mile long stretch of wonderful road going downhill through a slot canyon. We were able to fly down this canyon at breakneck speeds (I almost hit 40 mph on one stretch). At the end, it was simply following a series of country roads to the foot of the Bridger Mountains and the next TA. The nearly 100 mile ride had caused some butt rash and chafing for my team-mates – I was simply happy to not be on my feet for a while.
The Bridger Mountains (Trek #4)
As incredible as it sounds at this point we had another 24 hours trek facing us, this time the Bridger Mountains. We would start the usual way – by going up. We took a long transition to fuel up. We planned to cross the first major ridge in the daylight and then spend the night trekking up and down over the ridges. On the way up we ran into Blain, Ulf, and Trish (team TravelCountry.com). They had suffered dual disasters – first with a sick team-mate and secondly by getting separated from one of their team-mates who appeared to still be missing. This was a moral blow to me. I was not competing against them, they are my friends and team-mates and I wanted to share the taste of finishing the race with a top team who I knew and had raced with before.
Still the race went on and we found ourselves doing the forever climb. My training strategy of climbing the stair-master and the treadmill and max slope was working. My muscles were handling the climbing quite well. Notice there was no downhill training in that regimen – that would be a mistake that would cost me greatly later. When we reached Sacagawea Peak and the pass (CP21) we had a good bit of daylight and a few teams around us. We needed to pass over the ridge on to the Bridger Mountains National Scenic Trail. Only problem was, everything was covered in snow and there was no clear direction to go. The trail on the map appeared to contour down along an very steep ridge line - but there was no way to do that. To make things more ominous, we could look down into the snow and see fresh boulder paths from boulders knocked loose.
We decided to go straight down into the bowl and then work our way over to where the trail should be. This was another glissade/snow plunge into another bowl. By now, we were getting pretty good at this. As we reached the bottom we did spot the trail carved into an exposed slope and headed that way. Another team had crested the ridge and was looking down. We got to the trail and started our long slow march putting the bowl out of sight. I sneaked one last look at the team that was back on the ridge – they were still there and it was obvious they were arguing with each other.
This section of course was a dream to me. I had an amazing sense of Déjà vu. I felt that I had experienced this place, with these people before. It was also where I would be tested more than I had ever been tested before. We had to climb over 6 major ridges – most of which would take us at least 2 hours. I was experiencing sleep monsters - the worst I have ever felt. Everything in my body said stop and rest. Also, on the ridges there was no source of water. Finally, in a low moment I stopped. I could go no further. Kent was there with a Red Bull, just the smell of the drink promised at least an hour of lucidity. For a while I was back and lucid. I remember stopping at a mountain spring and tasting the best water in the entire world. I remember voices and route choices – that I had to pass off to Kent as I could not even remember my name and age.
The pain had started small when we first topped the crest. I thought nothing of it, it was not blisters – I knew that pain. This pain was different, but it was not bad. By the time we reached the last part of the mountain the pain had become a living thing. Every step downhill was agony. My feet had swollen so much I had to cut my shoes open and then they just swelled over the top. And my pain was not alone. Everyone was in their own private well of pain. Blisters, feet, toes, and knees were taking the shock of it. I had no way of knowing if mine was the worst pain – but I was in my own world now. I called the team to stop and rigged up a cord from of my shoe that allowed me to pull up on my shoes with my hands. This seemed to work a little – it would get me off the hill. Kent took my pack. We went back and forth through switchbacks that would simply not end. I was slowing the team – so I felt guilty. All we wanted to do was get out and get out now.
And then we came out. We were on a road and it hurt less going on a flat road than down a hill. Kent was navigating – I was long past being able to do anything that required thought. I think we got a little lost for a while (I’m not sure, though I remember vaguely doubling back at one point). And then we were in the transition area and the medical tent. And there was one thought screaming through my head – I’ve got another 50 mile trek ahead. A number of things were happening now. Kent’s strength, Julie’s drive, and Don’s spirit and sense of humor had gotten us through the last section. As we came out my wife Linda and kids were there. When I needed a moral boost I would think of them, but nothing is better than actually having them there. Linda held my hand and told me it would be OK. I calmed down and looked at the race rationally. We had a long bike ride, the ropes course, a long trek, and a final push on bikes to the finish ahead. The bike ride I knew I could handle – so I would push the trek out of my mind until after I completed the other tasks. Linda was there and soothing. The team was intact. The medical team was taping my leg. Strangely – I knew this all happened in the day, but in my memory it was dark, or at least it was until Linda was around me – then it was light again.
Bike Leg #3
Even though this leg was painful on the team – it was recovery to me. Kent who was a rock the entire race was dealing with knee pain from an injury back in the river boarding that made riding tough. Both Dom and Julie were suffering terribly from the effects that doing a 3rd long hard off-road ride would have on your rear-end. This ride was a 7 hour climb followed by a one hour screaming descent. The descent was well beyond my abilities and that of my hard tail bike – the one everyone makes fun of. But still with my rim brakes smoking and sparking I made it down one of the most frightening, challenging, and exhilarating down hills I have ever ridden. Leave it to Primal Quest to seek out the best downhill runs and put us on them. Eight hours later we were in the TA at Storm Castle, eating and getting some sleep (this time 5 hours) to prepare for the ropes course.
Ropes and Orienteering
We woke up at dawn to hike (3 miles) over to the start of the ropes course. We knew that the course had taken most teams about 8 hours to complete including the orienteering, so we figured on being out for a while. The ropes course can best be described in the numerous pictures of the course. The course was made up of 6 pitches, one of which was a free climb. Between each pitch you would traverse and scramble on a hand line to the next pitch. The scrambling required a mixture of strength and flexibility. Most of these I simply used Batman technique and muscled my way up the rope. About halfway through, as my sweat caused the nylon to stretch, I had to change the ascender setting on my daisy chain. This was challenging as I had to do it while on a rope. That was a first for me.
Yes it was as high and scary as it looks. We walked along thing (inches) ridges and rocks and roped up amazing pitches.
The ropes course was long and spectacular. Incredible views from dizzying rock spires were the norm of the course. When we reached the top, we decided to find three of the bonus orienteering points and get to the rappel. We were not sure how to get to the rappel (no instructions or trail given here) – so we went the wrong way twice. The biggest challenge of the rappel was the path to reach it – it had been eroded away into loose skree and we were told we could not use this path after we were half-way up. The teams were shuttled to an alternate path and we made our way to the top. Rappelling was fun as it is an essentially no energy sport. We double rappelled – so Kent and I went down together. I had to call for a fireman belay on his rope – the Figure 8 he was using was not giving enough friction for him to control speed. As we hit the bottom we could hear the cheers of Dom’s wife and our crew. We were now getting ready for the next big trek.
Trek #5 Indian Ridge to Ennis Lake
There is really not too much I want to say about this section. We were shuttled to the start and listened to the cheers of our crew and family as we started the long and tortuous walk up the mountain. We hiked and hiked and hiked. We stopped roughly every hour for five minutes to check feet and eat. We tried to break it down into a number of smaller treks setting goals of reaching different areas. There was some navigation involved in areas where the trail was lost due to downed trees. In the end it left us at the top of the final mountain with a steep decent to the road and Ennis Lake. The pain in my tendonitis was killing me, but my team rallied – knocked some sense into me, took my pack and we all made it down. It was getting near dusk when our haggard, worn, swollen, bodies limped into the final TA for some food and a little sleep before the last leg. The trek took us 20 hours.
My favorite pictures of the race. Finally trekking in to Ennis Lake we were greeted by our families at the final TA.
Final Bike Ride
The sleep monsters from the previous trek forced us to get about an hour of sleep before attempting the final bike ride and 2,500 foot climb to the finish line. We knew this would probably be a 5+ hour climb – but would not require too much physical effort compared to the other legs. We were wrong. Julie was audibly sobbing in pain as we started ascending so I took her pack; I was feeling physically strong – my only real pain being my feet and tendonitis. We kept riding and then I saw something that sent shudders up and down my spine – bike lights from another team. We did not know nor care who it was, we had worked so hard – we were not going to lose a place now. Dom impressively grabbed Kent’s pack. Kent put Julie on a tow line and we started what would be an uphill 4 hour sprint. Kent was impressive – you could physically see Julie’s bike jerk forward with each power stroke of his bike. He yelled out to us – “push the flats too – not just the up hills!” – so, we did. He was also navigating and he led the team to the finish line. The folks following us on SPOT said it was pretty impressive how we took off, and we matched times with the best of the teams on this leg.
The Finish
After so much pain and suffering – sprinkled with euphoria, joy, fear, adrenaline, and emotion it was nice to see the finish line. PQ does act like a big hammer with each leg pounding you into submission. You don’t conquer it alone, you bond together as a team, you lock arms, you push together and you withstand its blows through the efforts of the team. If one person feels pain or falters, the team falters – but when we succeed, we succeed together – and this was our success. 15 place. Well beyond ours or anyone else’s expectations for our ragtag group of racers who still do not have matching uniforms.
P.S. For those of you who cannot get enough of the PQ stories the PQ web site has lots of pictures and stories from PQ 2008 - Montana http://www.ecoprimalquest.com/wp-primal/pq/
P.P.S.
NBC Caught Dom and Julies Self Rescue on Film at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-ZTyGF6o5s&NR=1
NBC Catches Team 8 on Bike on Day 3 Coverage http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uJhbTbVZ7NE&feature=related
If you are interested in more details - I have posted the maps and a detailed analysis of our trek sections at http://trailmaps.pbwiki.com/Montana+-+Primal+Quest
The Wall Street Journal did a great article on PQ - with a nice embedded video at http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB121695015234783463-OPlHApb8h_XnfvzBDLGT01MDpwY_20080823.html?mod=tff_main_tff_top
The Central Florida Future also did an article on my journey to PQ at http://media.www.centralfloridafuture.com/media/storage/paper174/news/2008/07/17/News/Ucf-Professor.Challenges.The.Limits.Of.His.Body.Mind-3391758.shtml
6 comments:
Ron,
What a great post about Primal Quest.
I knew you guys would finish and do great.
Congrats!
Absolutely amazing! Great post.
Great post!
I have one question: would you do another PQ?
The jury is still out on that one. I woke up last night as the drugs keeping my tendonitis inflammation down wore off - and was in extreme pain, quickly re-icing and getting some Advil in my system. My heart rate (even 5 days later) is elevated by about 15 bpm. Though I know enough about myself that I'll be looking for the next challenge in a few weeks after I fully recover - so I'd have to answer yes.
As a side note - I started the race at 165 pounds and weighed in this morning at 152. I need to gain back some weight.
Good job on the report. I love the pictures, too.
Julie
It is now over a month later - and yes I am looking forward to another Primal Quest. We won't know where it will be for a while, though I am hoping for Alaska. No matter where it is - I am sure Don Mann will prepare something that will test us to the absolute limits.
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