With the National XCO champs coming up in
Mankele, Paul Cordes, Yolande Speedy and the guys from Epic Sports decided to
hold a weekend training camp to prepare us for the event. I am so glad I went,
the course is PROPER, doing the race without practice, would be detrimental! Here is a run-down of how I experienced it:
Day 1 (Friday)
I was packed and ready with my trusty
racing machine, the super light and fast Ghost Team edition XX bike, my
Singletrack Fuel and Bryton Rider 40; prepared and anxious for what Mankele had
to throw at us.
Angie and I travelled together which was, well, an adventure... We earned ourselves a collection of “Darwin awards”, from travelling in completely the wrong direction at first, having to do a U-turn through two toll roads, forgetting the flysheet to the tent and (amongst other things) only packing half a gazebo. Lucky Paul and Yolande, Petru and Francios and Wardie and El-Marie were staying in a cute wooden cabin which we all piled into during the day for breakfast lunch and dinner!
Angie and I travelled together which was, well, an adventure... We earned ourselves a collection of “Darwin awards”, from travelling in completely the wrong direction at first, having to do a U-turn through two toll roads, forgetting the flysheet to the tent and (amongst other things) only packing half a gazebo. Lucky Paul and Yolande, Petru and Francios and Wardie and El-Marie were staying in a cute wooden cabin which we all piled into during the day for breakfast lunch and dinner!
We arrived at Mankele just after lunch
time. Once we had pitched the tents and settled in, it was time to test out the
XCO National course...
The course: The
lap begins with a flat dirt road of about 600m which would be a flat-out sprint
into some single track, and out onto a short but seriously steep climb. I like
the way it starts as it gives the field time to spread out before going into
the proper single track that makes up the body of the technical 6km course.
Most of the course is undulating but flat, twisty and at times very rocky!
I was enjoying it until we ended up at what seemed like an impossible bridge/drop-off. It was quite terrifying and I had never seen anything like it. I watched the guys doing it numerous times from all different angles, most making it look annoyingly easy, some nearly falling from lack of speed and Rex Benson falling OTB Chin first, earning him 5 stitches and a ripped shirt.
After much consideration I resolved to
“sleep on it” and try again the next day.
More single track brought us to a bull run/chicken run split. There were
crowds of people, so I tottled down to see what all the fuss was about, only to
find that this “drop-off” was more of a fly-off. Once again most guys made it
look like a piece of cake, Joel Hieber likened it to riding off a pavement, the
only difference being, that it was about a metre high, you needed to come at it
at break-neck speed and brake as soon as you landed, else you’d go flying over
the corner at the bottom. I was at two minds, I knew that I could do it in
theory, it’s all mind over matter. There was a fair amount of broken bicycles,
wheels, bones and scary falls that happened as a result of this fly-off. I was
disappointed with myself for chickening out, but without the confidence, and,
considering my reputation of breaking things, I figured it was the wise
decision…
The rest of the course was a lot of fun
with bridges, more rocky, undulating single track next to the river. There are
quite a lot of roots and sticking out branches which resulted in lots of tree
hugging and line re-considering. Angie, Paul and I all ripped holes in our left
sleeves from bashing into the same branch which was quite amusing! The single
track comes out into the BMX track, and the beginning of the next lap.
We ended the day with a yummy braai at the
cabin, some wine and chatting about the course. I slept well that night but my
dreams were riddled with riding off the drop offs.
Day 2 (Saturday)
The morning was freezing and I began my day
with a 15 minute roller session. This was my first time on rollers and it was
really weird and unstable at first, I even came off once, which, of course, was
caught on video camera. I got the hang of it pretty quickly… Concentration and
speed is the key!
Today was proper. Straight after breakfast,
we practiced the start; 6 sprints from the start to the single track. I pushed
myself so hard to try and keep up with Yolande that I thought I might see my
breakfast again! After a few minutes rest, we did 6 hill attacks up the first
climb which was also very painful but great training and I was feeling good!
I was most nervous about having to face the
drop offs. After analysing that first drop-off for what seemed like hours,
Yolande, Francois and I finally plucked up the courage. It was now or never!
Francois and Yolande went first, doing it a lot smoother than me, I must have
gone a bit slowly, I made it down but then fell quite hard at the bottom. I
luckily fell into a bush and had a relatively soft landing escaping with a few
scratches. I was shaking from nerves and adrenaline but I knew I had to “get back
on the horse” and do it again. I made it down the second time I felt elated,
that was scary but so much fun! High fives all around, we did it! I was
starting to feel more confident, it was really helpful and challenging chasing
such an experienced, willing to teach, seasoned racer, Yolande, around the
course!
That afternoon we did two more laps, I was
still a bit rough around the edges but felt I was getting smoother and more
confident as I practiced.
We finished in time to watch the last few km of the Tour de France.
All the riders looked rather zombie-like and some more worse for wear than others, Joel sadly broke his thumb and tore ligaments in his shoulder; Werner broke a wheel and hurt his arm coming down the fly-off, me, just full of scratches and bruises.
An awesome, scary, painful and fun day was a good day in the office indeed, a delicious braai with great company made all the effort worthwhile!
Day 3 (Sunday)
The third and final day was a longer ride.
To mix it up, we did some of the Avalanche route which is technical, rocky and
steep. Besides falling a few times it was a lot of fun.
We then did a final two laps of the XC course.
We then did a final two laps of the XC course.
I’m really stoked to have done the training
camp, aside from an amazing experience, I feel strong. The hard, quality
training from Paul is paying off, my Ghost feels fast and nippy and I am happy
with the course. I now feel far more confident about the race!
Much thanks to Epic Sports and everyone involved for an awesome weekend!!
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