It's been a while, too long really, since I've written a blog post. But I'm making up for it with this one. It's long, and about a really neat race that you won't get to read about in too many other places.
The Kluane-Chilkat International Bike Relay (KCIBR) is a
race that goes from Haines Junction, Yukon, to Haines, Alaska. 240 or so kms in
spectacular scenery, that can include snow and wild animals on the road (think
bears), headwinds galore, and involves a border crossing (bring your
passport!). It can be done in teams of 8, 4, or 2, or as a solo rider. We did
it this year, and here’s our story.
Background: My
dad lives up in Whitehorse, and when we visited last summer he planted the idea
of coming up to do the race in my husband’s head. The idea percolated for
months, and he (the husband) talked to a friend who’s really into biking (the
two train together almost every weekend) about doing it together as two solo
riders. He (the friend) seemed intrigued, and so he (the husband) kept thinking
about it. He started reading everything he could on the web about the race, and
eventually decided to do it, and somehow convinced the friend to (sort of)
commit to it. We talked about driving up together and making a big 2 family
trip of the whole thing (the friend’s family and ours). The husband stalked the
website and registered on the first day it opened (it fills up pretty quickly).
So we were set. Then the friend’s life got more complicated (good things at
work for both he and his wife), and we noticed it was at the end of the school
year, something our 7 year old didn’t really want to miss. So taking the
time to drive up was looking too hard to do. So we booked flights for our
family, and eventually the friend booked his, but just for him, as his wife and
kids couldn’t come along (this time…).
The two guys had been training for this for months (one more
so than the other, due to the previously mentioned work stuff), and in the days
leading up to the trip I was feeling a little jealous of them to be honest.
Excited for them, but wishing I could take part too. And in this I was kicking
myself a little, as I had had a chance to join a relay team but had passed on
it, not knowing whether I’d be up to the task and not willing to commit to
something I didn’t know I could do. I hadn’t started my Intro to Fondo course
yet, and didn’t know how it would go. Turns out, the class is great, and I felt
like I could do it now, but too late. Then, 2 days before we were flying
up north, I got a text from my dad asking if there was any way I could ride for
a team as a last minute fill in. He had told the person probably not, but I
looked at the legs they needed someone to ride (7 and 8, lots of downhill and
flat, how hard could it be right?) and called my husband asking if he could
source a bike box for me so that I could get my bike up there. If I was going to do this, I needed my bike: I wasn’t going to ride 65 km on a borrowed bike that didn’t
fit me properly given my long standing issues with saddles (that were only
partly resolved, more on that later). Husband found a box to rent, so I let my dad
know I would do it. I was going to get to ride too! Luckily my dad has a truck (that the husband fell in love with which is OK by me - I love trucks),
so there was room to transport 2 bike boxes plus our luggage pretty easily from
the airport to his home. We flew up 2 days before the race (our friend the day
before) and we met someone else flying up for the race checking in for our
flight. He had done it numerous times, both as a solo and on a 2 man team. It
was an annual tradition for him and his friend from up north. It was fun to chat with someone who had done the race before. And the reason that he kept heading back for the race year after year eventually became clear to us. We saw him briefly
as we were putting all our stuff in the truck, and wished him luck. (I looked
for him during the race, but didn’t manage to spot him again.)
Speaking of the truck, that’s (vehicles) where things got
really complicated. I was also supposed to be driving the support vehicle for
the guys. Oh, yeah, did I mention that the race is unsupported? Yep, that’s
right, you have to have your own support, food, mechanical stuff, all of that. (It
turns out there were two aid stops available only to solo riders, but more
about that later.) And it’s a point to point race, so somehow you have to get
back from Alaska, meaning, you need a vehicle at the end of the course. Anyway,
it’s a long complicated story that I won’t bore you with, but my dad and his
wife, being great community-minded-long time-all-sorts-of-running-race
participants, signed up as race volunteers. Not a problem when I wasn’t in the
race too, but suddenly I couldn’t do support the whole way so it led to some
juggling of cars, our son, and support duties in order to have me at my start
early and still have the guys supported for the last 65 kms. It was made more
complicated by the fact that they were going to be passing by (notice I said
passing by and not going through, again, more on that later) the checkpoint where
I would start before my team would get there, so I was going to have to wait a
while (little did we know how long).
They guys getting ready to start |
The race: We got up before 5, after a bit of an unsettled
night – pre-race nerves are bad enough, but the lack of darkness in the north (it was almost
the longest day of the year, which was cool to experience) made it even harder to sleep. We left the house in
Whitehorse by 5:30 and were in Haines Junction by 7, leaving plenty of time to make
a bathroom stop, get the guys dropped of, set up and ready to ride. Then me, my dad's wife, and the kiddo headed
up the road.
My guy before the race - hadn't met the wind yet |
The guys were starting at 8:20 with the other solo riders and the first
riders from the 2-person teams. The highway was closed to traffic for a few kms
near the start to make the race-start safer for the riders. We drove around a
bit looking for the rest of my team so I could introduce myself (they were said
to be parked somewhere near where the road re-opened) but we didn’t find them,
so we drove up a bit, found a good place by the side of the road to pull over
and park to wait for the guys to go by. While we were waiting we heard some
ravens calling to each other. One would call, then another would answer, back
forth several times. It was so cool to hear.
Then we could see riders in the distance, and before long, a
big, fast group whipped by. Our two riders weren’t there, but they were in the
next group which went by about 30 secs later. We cheered, and quickly hopped
back into the car, waited for a good sized break in riders on the road so we
could get back on the go to leapfrog up the highway. We drove for about 5
minutes, found another good pullover spot, and got ready to ring the cowbell
and cheer again. Then back in the car and up the road to wait again. This time
I think we went a bit further as we waited longer. The difference between the
front and second groups was staying pretty stable, although by now a few riders
had been spit out the back of the front group, including one of the women who
had gone out out front. I thought that left another women up front (it did as it turns out), but we lost
track of the front riders pretty soon. We did that one more time I think before
‘supporting’ began.
Waiting at the side of the road - my bike on the roof |
Part of the group - and someone's pre-race campsite in the background |
One of the guys wanted a new water bottle, so I had to
learn how to do a moving hand-off. I had figured a flat spot was good, downhill
they’re going too fast, uphill and they might lost some rhythm and momentum. So
now, not only did I have to find a place where I could pull over off as far off
the road as possible (as in, off the shoulder too), but it had to be flat.
Found it, did the hand off, it went OK, and was asked for a gel, but next time on a hill (guess I was wrong about the flat - I may be an old dog, but I can still learn new tricks). And
so it went for the next few hours: gels, bananas, a sandwich, Nuun water, salt
tablets (that was a fun one to figure out, they were loose…) other snacks.
Waiting with the requested bottle |
Practice makes perfect |
They’d
go by yell what they wanted, and we’d find the next good stopping point (now on
an uphill), get the stuff ready for them and wait for them to go by, get what
they wanted ready (if anything at that point), collect any bottles they chucked
off, and they’d let us know about anything they wanted for the next pass by.
We quickly got to recognize some of the other support vehicles
who were stopping at about the same increments as we were as well as others
that we kept driving by as they were waiting. I had a lot of fun doing all of
this, I felt really involved in the race and got to help keep the guys going. The
7 year old stayed in the car, watching videos and doing sticker books, and my
dad’s wife helped get food and drink ready and took lots of photos. (She took all of these. Thanks PK!)
The kiddo - oblivious to the race |
Other supporters waiting for their riders |
The scenery really was spectacular - made the waiting stints enjoyable (if you ignored the wind) |
There were two check points that had supplies available for the solo riders only (provided by one of the bike shops in Whiteshorse), and there had been some discussion of the guys stopping to top up at one or both of them. But watching the race so far, I had a feeling those stops were not going to happen – they were in a group and needed to stay with it to keep up their speed. Not to mention that it was super windy which made the group even more important. So we stopped at the first aid station, watch them fly by, and then went and asked if we could fill up their water bottles. We were allowed, since they were for two of the solo riders, so we topped up, jumped back into the car and off we went to find our next pull over spot.
J pulling again (he seemed to be up front a lot) |
Still pulling - is he 'asking' for a spell-off in this one? |
By this time the front group had pulled ahead enough that we
were no longer pulling in front of them too, but they were still shedding
riders, and we watched some of them form small groups. A few riders looked like
they had extra bikes, but some of the extra bikes could have been the bikes of
the second riders in the two-person teams. We did see a few riders with
mechanical issues, reinforcing the need for a support vehicle (one of them was
spotted getting help at the solo-rider aid station so there was at least a
little neutral help). What had been the second group was managing to stay
together pretty well from what we saw, although we heard later that they too
lost a few riders. They just looked like they stayed together because they
picked up a few riders who had been dropped by the front group and so had stayed
the same size overall.
More scenery, and yes there is a woman in the group |
We kept doing the support thing, and stocked up again on
water and a few nutrition items for the guys at checkpoint 5, the other aid
station. The women working it said pretty much none of the riders at the front
were stopping, although they expected some of the slower solos to stop later.
The groups were just too valuable for riders near the front to leave.
We did a bit more support stuff, including letting the guys
know that I was leaving the car soon, and that my dad’s wife would be taking
over the handoffs. She was being a great sport about the whole thing, but was
not as comfortable as me standing there handing things off to people flying by
on bikes. (The original plan hadn’t called for her doing any of the active
assistance, but she had seen how dependent the guys were on our help and so realized
that her support would be greatly appreciated after I left the car). We got
them as stocked up as possible and sped off to checkpoint 6 where I was to
start my ride at some point later in the day. I got all set, everyone used the
loo, double checked passports, and then my kid and his grandma were off with the permission-to-cross-the-boarder-without-a-parent letter (lots of things to think about for this race!), as the
guys had sped past the checkpoint towards the border, which was only a few kms
away and so they needed to hit the road.
Waiting to do a handoff (salt tabs?) |
This one's mostly for the scenery, but you can see the husband off to the side getting ready for the handoff. |
And then I waited. And waited. And waited. The race started
in waves - solos and doubles at 8:20, the first riders for the 4-person teams at
8:40, and then the first riders for the teams of 8 at 9. I was riding for a
4-woman team, but for various reasons the team started with the 8s. I knew
this, so I knew that they were starting 40 mins after the guys. And I thought
the guys would be somewhat faster, so I figured I’d be there about an hour,
maybe an hour and a half. In the end I was waiting for almost 3 hours. Partly it was just
that the two guys are actually pretty decent riders. But partly it was because
they were in a group. This is a race where the solos actually have a big
advantage, mostly because they all start at the same time and so can decide to
stick together with people who are about the same speed/fitness level. The
relay riders are a motley bunch, some pretty good, others not so much (this is
part of the charm of the race) and so mostly end up riding alone by the second
rider anyway. This slows you down a lot, and makes the whole enterprise harder,
as you don’t get to benefit from any drafting.
Me all set with my bike (yes, I know the numbers are on in strange places, that's where they ask for them to be put) |
But my time waiting was not wasted, in any way. I got to
meet lots of other riders. Some from Alaska, like the man who was part of a relay
team that beat the solo riders one year, not just in terms of total time, but
actually crossed the finish line first. That was a great story, he had ridden
it one year, and decided that the next he wanted to win, so he got together
with some friends, they held try outs for the team, and put together multiple 4
person teams that would stick together. That way they had fresher legs and the
benefit of riding with other people. It worked, and they won. Now he just rode
it for fun with his family. Then there was the guy from North Van who had come
up north on a temporary work gig and fallen in love with the place and was
going to stay for a while longer than expected. His team was also slower than
expected so we got to chat a lot. (And it turns out that his team was
associated with another team that was the one I had originally had a chance to
ride for but said no to.) I heard about the guy riding with rhubarb on his
back (who showed up in a news story about the race) - everyone was talking about where they had passed him, and saw people getting lessons on how to ride with clipless peddles as
the team chip was passed to them along with the team bike (no joke, this
happened more than once). People were getting on bikes for the first time in
years, and in one case, possibly ever. People were comparing notes on legs,
which ones they were riding this year, which they had done in years past,
asking whether mutual friends had been seen yet, etc. And several people fell
over at the finish. I figured it was just not enough time spent clipped in. The
costumes were great, the atmosphere was pure fun and enjoyment (OK, maybe not
pure fun and enjoyment – there were plenty of sore legs, bums, and other parts
being moaned about too, but even the moaners seemed to be enjoying themselves).
The view was incredible and the community spirit palpable. The local community really gets into the race, you can see it at every point in the race.
I think it was at that check point, waiting for hours, that I realized that I had fallen in love with the north. I know, it was summer, the bugs weren’t too bad, I was seeing it at it’s best, but I think people live there for it’s best, and endure the worst to get to the best. Vancouver’s like that too in some ways, you put up with the rain and the grey to make it to the summer, when it’s the best place on earth to live.
Anyway, as far as I can tell, the 8s are the crazies who often don’t ride much (and most of the costumes were worn by 8s), while the 4s are a little more serious. And I was under the impression that my team was serious enough. In some sense they had to be, as they so wanted to ride it (again) that they signed up someone they’d never met, who they were trusting to show up at a checkpoint and somehow identify themselves, to ride two legs at whatever pace she could (I warned them I’m not that good) just so that they could finish; it meant enough to them to do that.
I think it was at that check point, waiting for hours, that I realized that I had fallen in love with the north. I know, it was summer, the bugs weren’t too bad, I was seeing it at it’s best, but I think people live there for it’s best, and endure the worst to get to the best. Vancouver’s like that too in some ways, you put up with the rain and the grey to make it to the summer, when it’s the best place on earth to live.
Anyway, as far as I can tell, the 8s are the crazies who often don’t ride much (and most of the costumes were worn by 8s), while the 4s are a little more serious. And I was under the impression that my team was serious enough. In some sense they had to be, as they so wanted to ride it (again) that they signed up someone they’d never met, who they were trusting to show up at a checkpoint and somehow identify themselves, to ride two legs at whatever pace she could (I warned them I’m not that good) just so that they could finish; it meant enough to them to do that.
The team’s second rider came to the checkpoint at some point
and found me, as did the husband of the third rider, the woman I was waiting
for. They were both very nice, and offered to be support for me, as I didn’t
have a car since ours had left hours before to take care of the guys. It was a
good thing rider 3’s husband was there, because they had missed our rider 3
when she went by the pre-checkpoint lookout (who was radioing in the relay team
numbers so the next riders could be notified to get ready to take over) so I didn't know she was close. But her
husband spotted her coming round the bend and jumped up and down pointing me
out to her. I got ready in the chute, the timing thingy was passed along,
and off I rode, down the hill. For a nice easy 65 kms, or so I thought. Clearly I hadn't been paying attention to the wind the whole way. Or at least, I hadn't thought about what it meant.
I had agreed to ride partly (maybe mostly) because of the
nature of the legs I was being asked to fill in, legs 7 and 8. They are the
last two legs, 7 being the leg where you cross the border. The boarder
crossing was mostly fine. They tell you to please have your docs out. You cross
on foot and the USBP has an extra officer or 2 on for the race to keep things
moving. The person who rolled in just before me had to take off her backpack
and go digging around for a bit. Eventually they waived me around her, but it
turns out the extra few moments wasn’t going to make a damn bit of difference
to my time.
If you look at the profile of my 2 legs, it’s mostly downhill
and flat. It looked pretty easy. It would have been, if it hadn’t been for the
wind. It was brutal! A relentless headwind that occasionally went a bit
sideways too just to make you feel extra wobbly. There were a few moments where
it died down and in those moments I felt like I was flying, I was going so fast
with so little effort. But mostly it was a hard hard slog. And I was riding
alone, absolutely alone. My team mates were leapfrogging me in the car to make
sure I was OK, they were cheering and asking me if I needed anything, which was
great and helped motivate me, but what I eally needed was something they couldn’t
provide - a peleton. There were times I was going downhill on a slope of about
3-4%, so nothing big, but still, downhill, peddling super hard, just to go 21
kms an hour! My regular pace on my own on the flat is faster than that - I
figured I’d be going about 25-27 km an hour. I was sooooo wrong. I struggled to
keep it at 20 kms an hour on the flats. I had 2 gels with me which should have
been enough for that distance, but given the workload, was not. But I had to
keep going. I knew that eventually I’d make it. After 1.5 hours my butt hurt,
as I knew it would (I was still having saddle issues, which thankfully I seem
to have resolved in time for my fondo next weekend) and by 2 hours it was getting really bad. By 2.5 hours my
butt was beginning to scream in pain. I kept changing position, standing for a
bit, etc., to make it bearable for just a few more moments. But I persevered. I
powered up the hills as best I could (thanks to my course I was
riding hills better and stronger than before). I was passing 8s with much fresher legs (and costumes), and got passed by a few
guys who were much younger than me (making it sting less). But all in all I was in the positive, passing more than getting passed. I spotted a couple of women ahead of me at
one point at around 50 kms in who were riding together and looked like they
knew what they were doing, so I pushed it to get to them, but they were going
so much slower than me that it wasn’t worth staying with them, yes, I would
conserve energy, but I would get to the finish line much later with them than
without them, so I pushed on.
Finish area in the distance |
After about 2.5 hours a friendly face appeared in my view:
my husband had ridden back looking for me. He knew how bad the wind was, and
saw all the relay riders coming in alone and figured I might like/need some
help. I just about cried when I saw him. That was true love - after riding 240
kms at quite a clip, he had ridden some more to help me get in. He pulled me in the
rest of the way. Mostly I was appreciative, as it did make the rest of the ride
easier (although it didn’t fix my screaming sit bones), but I also felt a
little cheated – I was thinking to myself "I was going to make it in just fine on my own thank you very
much, and he took that away from me". Then I cam back around to being really really grateful. He took it away from me by giving me what he had had, help riding.
Which was great. (I never for a moment thought about telling him to leave and
let me do it myself. I might think toddler-like thoughts, but I’m old enough to
know better than to express them. Well, let’s be honest, most of the time I
know better.) He peeled off as I got closer to the finish line so I
could have my moment. (He really is wonderful.)
My coming into the finish area waving to my dad, my wonderful husband in the background, and I have a big smile of relief on my face. |
In this race, as a relay rider, you have to dismount before a dismount line, and run/walk your bike to an electronic timer thing that you stick your timing chip stick into to register your arrival at that station. Solos only do it at the end (meaning that times get a bit longer for people who are waiting to chip in), 2s at the mid point, 4s every 2nd checkpoint, etc. I am used to dismount lines from triathlon. But when I got to the line I found that my legs were not cooperative. They were quite happy to keep going around and around, but not to move in any other direction, to clip out for instance. I just about fell over and suddenly understood why I had seen so many people tipping when I was waiting to start.
Me headed toward the finish |
At the finish with my team members. Husband is in the background. How can he be smiling after so much riding?!? |
Then I got to hear about our guys’ races. Husband was
farther back in the border line and got left behind by most of the group they'd been riding with. He
hooked up with another rider from their group who was also near the back of the
border line, and they hoofed it to catch up with their group. They made it to
the group, and finished together. But because of the timing stick thingy,
everyone gets different times. The husband thought that our friend was in the
group he was trying to catch, as he had been near the front of the line at the border
crossing. But the friend had a passport issue (needed a visa) and so lost a few
minutes inside the station. So he got left behind by the husband (who didn't know he was inside). But luckily he
found someone to ride with too, and so didn’t have to do the last 60 kms or so
alone in the wind. (The guy he teamed up with lucked out too, as he was
unsupported and out of anything to drink, so our friend shared some of his, and
got topped up by our support vehicle later. So my dad's wife made a difference for 3 riders in the last bit of the course.) Anyway, the husband officially
finished in 7:49:25 which was 14th solo overall, 13th solo
man, and our friend was 3 spots behind in 17th solo/16th solo
man. The guy who finished first is a local former pro mountain biker, the woman
who finished in front of them (woo-hoo!) is a pro from VI (who they’ve raced
against before in a local cyclocross race as it turns out). All in all, not a bad finish for
two middle aged weekend warrior riders! I’m not telling much of their story as
a) this is my blog and so it’s about my story, and b) the husband may at some
point do his own write up, and I can’t do his story justice (for instance, I
didn’t see a bear…). After all, I only had to ride 65 kms, he did 240, plus
another 20 or so to get to me and then to pull me in.
The husband waiting for me anxiously by the finish line |
Turns out my dad thought he had seen me riding when he was
driving to the finish line to meet up with us hours before, and thought that I
was taking a really really really long time to finish. But dad had seen someone
else (didn’t know what I was wearing), and since no one knew how long I had
waited at the checkpoint for my start (no way to communicate with anyone), they were worried about me. Note to anyone
thinking about doing this, there is no cell service along the route, so there
is no way to communicate with people. We had some complicated logistics going
on, 2 solo riders, one relay rider, two volunteers, one of whom was at two
stations, a kid, a dog, and two vehicles, so it's a miracle it went as smoothly as it did. The three riders and the kid stayed
in Haines for the night, but my dad and his wife drove back to Whitehorse that
evening. They were, understandably, anxious to get on the road to head back,
but stayed and waited for me to cross the finish line, which I appreciated a great deal. The big congrats hug from my dad was worth battling the wind for.
I have a sneaking suspicion that we will head up there to do
the race again sometime. Next time, maybe we will go as two families, and both
women will ride too. I will never do the whole thing, but maybe we can do it as
a 2 woman team. Unfortunately, my dad is moving back down south again soon, so
he and his wife won’t be up there to drive support/help out/give me a big hug
at the finish line (but we are very happy they will be closer soon, so it’s not
really unfortunate). That will make it all more complicated – we had vehicles,
a place to stay that was comfortable and homey, a place to put the bikes back
together (their garage) and a friendly team dog there this time. But it is a race worth
making the trek for. The website says next year's race is June 17th, 2017, and registration opens on March 15. Just in case you're thinking about it...
The dog |
And in case you're not yet convinced, here's a link to a video someone made at the race this year.
Carla-this is fantastic! I'm so glad you had a great time. The pictures are amazing. It's good to know about needing your own support vehicles, I'd never be able to a ride without aid stations since I'm always on my own.
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