Atomic 30-Hour
Adventure Race
Blue Ridge,
Ga. 12-13 May 2012Racers: Chris “Big Sexy” Spiller, Julie “Not too Butch” Lee, and David “Pain” O’Rear
By David O'Rear
The Rev3/MK Southeastern AR Team (AKA: Team Dysfunctional-Synergy)
came together again for a second time in a little over a month to take on the turbulent
Toccoa River and the Steep North Georgia Mountains. This time our mission was Pangea Racing’s, 30
hours Atomic Adventure Race. The race course would take place in the high
mountains of the Chattahoochee National Forest and centered on Blue Ridge Lake.
The different race segments would take us 360 degrees around the lake, and through
the towns of Blue Ridge and Morganton as well as slicing through the center
along the Toccoa River. The weather
report called for rain and thunderstorms with wind, and temperatures that started
in the 70s however would plunge into the 50s. The weather would end up being a
huge factor for many in the race.
Packet pick-up and pre-race briefing was held the morning of
the race. I personally wish more race directors would follow suit with this practice
as it almost all but eliminated the pre-race evening marathon strategy sessions
that usually lasts past midnight. I also like the idea of teams having to develop
a race strategy in a compressed time setting rather than having hours and hours
to pour over maps. I was also surprised to see that all CPs were pre-plotted on
the maps. Map reading is an integral part of land navigation and accurate
plotting of points is an important facet that can mean the difference between
success and failure. Although convenient I would prefer that teams have to plot
their own points. I think Julie and Chris were both surprised of my politeness
as I offered to allow teams to jump the line in front of us at packet pick up…...heh…..
(Inside joke, sorry). To the unfortunate sole that did……yep, I’m that guy that
doesn’t like that….I just said what everyone else was thinking… I also got a
chuckle out of Julie’s disclaimer for me…..”Sorry, he’s an Army guy”…. Priceless…
Deep thoughts at the pre-race briefing |
Once we received our maps we spent a few minutes studying race
layout and developing our strategy. The race seemed pretty straight forward. There
was to be a short trekking prologue, followed by three Mountain Bike Segments
that would be separated by two trekking/orienteering segments, with a paddling
segment in the middle. Parts of the
biking and paddling segment followed the same areas used during the Blue Ridge
AR a month or so earlier. Although the points were in different locations it definitely
was a confident booster as a few of our first CPs were on familiar terrain. Even though this was only our second race
together as a team we all felt very confident we would finish on the podium.
Our strategy was simple, Use every minute of the 30 hours and collect all 40
points.
As we were called to the race start, teams stopped lakeside
for race photos before moving to the starting line. We were decked out in the
new Rev3/MK race kits which look incredible, and drew favorable comments. After
a quick study of the prologue map we were issued at the line, the gun sounded,
and we were off! Although we were one of the slower teams during the prologue
at 39 minutes, we would quickly make up the lost time with a fast transition to
the bike.
The first bike segment was mixture of paved and gravel roads,
as well as about 10 or so miles of single/double track on the steep and rocky Flat
Creek and Long Branch Loops and the Green Mountain Trail. It was on this
segment where I miraculously avoided injury as my front wheel of my bike
dropped into a well camouflaged hole sending me over the handle bars on to my
head. I carried a pounding headache for several hours and managed to pick up
some pretty hideous bruises on my inner thighs and shoulder to boot. This
segment also included a river crossing requiring us to swim across a deep
section the Toccoa River with our bikes. It was at this point where we realized
we had passed all of the other teams save one in route to sweeping all 11 CPs
in 5:23:00. Hats off to Julie for supplying the team with floaties to help
float our bikes. How did she know I was a SpongeBob fan!
Julie Crossing the Toccoa |
Although the navigation for the second trekking section was
pretty easy, I made a tactical error which caused us to lose about 40 minutes.
This error was the order in which we attacked the points. The route I selected
was fast however it did require us to backtrack to avoid crossing the Toccoa a
second time. Looking back with hindsight, I would eliminate the back tracking
as we ended up crossing the river anyway as we realized on the ground it was
much faster. We swept all five points in 3:13:00 and were still in the top two
or three teams. We were right on schedule as planned with our goal of beginning
the paddling segment before 6 pm to avoid going through the rapid sections of
the river in the dark. Even though we had planned to portage around the biggest
set of rapids there were still several sections of turbulent water we had to go
through.
Unfortunately the rain had begun to fall and a constant wind
was blowing. After an hour or so we were all soaked and cold. We were also very
hungry as we had packed food only for eight hours and it was pretty obvious at
this point we screwed the pooch on that one. The first CP we went quickly and
as we were approaching the second CP which was manned, we were invited up to
have a bowl of fresh chili and French bread. I’m generally a pretty focused competitor
and try to take every time advantage I can. This however was too good to be
true as Chris, Julie and I were all pre-hypothermic, and starving. The 10 extra
minutes was well worth it. The water proved challenging however we continued to
improve as we moved from rapid to rapid. Once we hit the big rapids we
immediately portaged. This was a decision we had made prior since in our last race
the decision to ride the rapids ended up in the famed Rev3 floating yard sale. Once we were back in the river we were all
surprised how well this segment was going. Then Chris made the statement that
doomed us all. ” You know guys; this is the first time in a race I haven’t
dumped in the canoe”. That was all it
took. At the next segment of rapids a hidden submerged rock pitched the canoe
sideways and dumped all three of us in the drink! Damn….. Soon after we hit the flat water and our next
CP. We threw on jackets and settled in
for a long night of paddling. Our next
CP was ashore requiring us to locate an old cemetery and gravestone and record
the date of death of the graves resident. After what seemed an eternity of
searching we recorded our date, boarded the boat, and finished up the paddling
only after finding our final CP and taking an extended tour looking for our transition
area. I’m sure the residents of Blue Ridge thought the occupants of our little
boat were slightly touched as Julie and I performed a little concert on the
water. Highlights were our rendition of “Ole Black Water” “Thunder Road” and a very
special performance by Julie of “Move like Jagger” which Chris and I both agree
was better than the original. My advice is if you can’t sing well, sing loud! Funny
what 6:53:00 of paddling in the rain will do to a person…..
Chris grabbing a CP |
The final Trekking segment would be where we finally would
drop our first points. We simply ran out of time. We determined we would need
three hours to get back to the finish on the final bike leg so we made the
decision to go for only four of seven CPs.
We would unfortunately have to climb Brawley Mountain three times. Once
we collected our CPs we moved back to Brawley Mountain one last time to our
bikes (only after a second offering of Chili by the staff at the top). Trekking
segment two: 4:22:00.
The final bike segment would take us back to the TA. Teams
would have the option of collecting five points along the route back. It
appears after nearly 24-27 hours at this point, many decided to hightail it to
the finish. Unfortunately we determined we would only have time to gather four
of the five CPs. A necessary decision but unfortunately hard to swallow at the
time (Great call Chris). Looking back it
would have been a moot point since we would more than likely been over the time
limit. Final Bike Time: 2:46:00
Overall it was a great race. The Pangea Race Staff did an
outstanding job designing a course that was hard yet flowed very well. All
transition locations were logical and points were for most part located as
marked. I would recommend however a bit more effort should have been put in the
post race activities. The food was great however it would have been nice to have
some cover to eat under. Having volunteers, food, and competitors all under one
pop-up shelter in the rain didn’t work well. The prospect of juggling a small,
overloaded plate with a drink in the rain, standing in the mud after a 30 hour
race made me not want to eat. Next was the award ceremony. Pangea needs some
work on that one. Lots of teams out there racing, lots of first timers, lots of
great finishes. The race staff seemed intent on promoting the Pangea Club as
well as their races however only recognizing the top two teams at the finish seemed
rather cheap. Just sayin…. Rev3 Epic does it right for sure!
Final Roll-up:
We finished in fourth place overall and 2nd Place
in the Coed Elite Division. We raced for 29 hours, 28 minutes. We spent 8 hours,
14 minutes trekking, 6 hours, 53 minutes paddling, and 14 hours, 21 minutes on
the bike! We gathered 36 of 40 points. Only one team cleared all 40 points. Chris
made some great calls and was a big help to me navigating at times when I would
second guessed myself. Julie…what can I say. Girl can ride the sh*t out of a
mountain bike. Who needs brakes, right?
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