I had returned from Switzerland to stories of a heatwave and drought effecting the UK. In fact it wasn’t until the shape of the Severn crossing loomed on the horizon that grey clouds closed in, and as I drove into the Brecon mountains the rain began to fall.
Llandovery was the base for the Marathon Champs this year. The
race starting with a 7km neutralised road section out to the course proper. The
60 or so riders were gridded and then followed the commissaire cars out of
town. As soon as we hit the trails it was slippery and muddy. The kind of slick
surface over solid rock foundations that provides zero grip. What only a few
days previously had undoubtedly been fast flowing dry dusty singletrack, was
now a sodden sticky mess. Through the gloop jutted the Welsh rock, ready to
throw the bike off line into an unrecoverable slide.
Within a couple of miles riders and bikes were totally coated
in mud, all apart from our shoes that is, which had been cleaned by the stream
crossing, the water level swollen by the rain. Our shoes were soon needed as
the course turned upwards and we were all scrabbling for grip. No hope of
riding the incline in these conditions.
In fact there was a reasonable amount of walking to be done.
Not only were some of the climbs steep and traction limited, but also the descents
were dangerously slippery. Having passed buckled wheels and bloodied bodies, I
decided discretion was often the better part of valour!
It very soon became apparent to me that the day wasn’t going
to be about racing, but pure survival. Sections of the course seemed to run
along streams, the surface of the path hidden under flowing water. There was
also the unrelenting change in gradient, the course constantly climbing up and back
down again. The miles seemed to tick away painfully slowly.
The course consisted of two 40km loops of 1500m climbing. From
20km onwards I really began to doubt I would even start the second lap.
Conditions were appalling, and the repetitive sapping climbs really meant there
was no respite. The final grassy climb of the lap was especially challenging.
I had been riding for 3hrs and the thought of making myself do it all again was
a really tough ask. I still hadn’t decided if I was going to pack it in or
continue as I approached the arch marking the end of the lap. More importantly it
marked the opportunity to take the road back into town and end the suffering.
If the sun hadn’t come out I probably would have called it a day.
I didn’t and continued on at a slow plod. Conditions
improved slightly in the sunshine and at least I was able to commit to some of
the descents I had walked previously. Many of the climbs had been churned by
dozens of wheels so were just as impassable. On the second lap I didn’t see
another rider for almost an hour at one point. When I did we met each other like
old friends, congratulating each other on our stupidity and sharing tales of
woe. Both of us were suffering visibility problems due to the mud in our eyes
(glasses were pointless as they became coated in moments.)
After 6 hours and 30 minutes of riding we had a little
tussle up the final climb, my one bit of racing for the day! I crossed the line
20th, but just reaching the line was reward
enough on a day like this.
For the second time in 3 weeks I finished behind the winner
Ben Thomas, who reclaimed his National title for 2016. This time my wife wasn’t
there, but it will definitely be NEVER AGAIN!
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