I wasn’t planning on competing in the No Sleep race. Frankly, the last couple years I have fell into a slump and haven’t wanted to race much. I heard that TeamBOR was fielding a 2 person coed with Dave Beattie and Jessie Brown and a 4 person coed with David Cortivo, Robert Bart, Amy Crews, and Steve Fuller. I asked my daughter if she wanted to sign up for the 8 hour and she told me no. I am still hoping my daughters will race someday, but anyway my hopes of racing were dashed until I saw a post that Amy needed to drop out. I quickly said I wanted in. Next I heard that Steve needed to drop out and we gathered up Alane Wolins.
SKETCHY VIDEO GAMING |
TEAM BOR LOST SOULS |
I somehow bullied my way into being navigator, or I had pulled the shortest straw unknowingly. We left St. Louis around 1pm and drove to Shawnee National Forest and incorrectly set up camp (the biggest damn tent vacation home ever) at the race start.
VACATION HOME OF THE GODS |
We ate dinner and attended the pre-race meeting. I always find the meetings long winded and I really just want the map so we can get back early to plot and sleep, but it never seems to go like that.
PROPER RESPONSE TO TEAM NOAH SITTING BY YOU |
TEAM KUAT |
The race started by having everyone remove a shoe and the volunteers threw our shoes out into the field. We had to run, find our shoe, get it back on and run to the canoes. We then carried our canoes to the water and launched. Friday night we had planned to go either clockwise or counter-clockwise around the lake depending on wind direction, but since at race start they told us we had to cross the lake to the swimming beach, beach the boat, and pick one person to swim to the platform to get our passport, we threw that plan out the window. We hadn’t picked a person to get wet as we were told the night before, because we really didn’t know what to expect, so as we hit the beach I decided to just go for it. I dropped the map, compass, and my hat, and hit the water. I ran first, then walked to the first set of buoys. After that I had to swim to the platform. I first noticed that I had my sunglasses on and couldn’t put my face in the water. I then noticed that my shoes were sinking my legs, but luckily they made us wear life jackets. I climbed the platform, grabbed the passport, and zipped it up in my pocket against the director’s instructions to put it in my mouth. I jumped back in and thought, “Why the hell isn’t Robert doing this, he is the swimmer?” I swam and rolled on my back to kick my shoes off, but then decided it was really important to keep my shoes, so I rolled back over and swam back to the first set of buoys and walked in exhausted.
DROWNED RAT |
We then canoed back to the start, which was the TA, dropped the canoe and switched to trek. We thought we had a solid plan to CP5, but after taking the trail to the first gate, we failed to find the second gate mainly because we followed the herd. I said we are going the wrong way a few times, and then said we overshot a few times, while we walked a creek forever, but Dave wanted to keep following and told me a few times it was, “just around the bend, just one more bend, just one more bend, just one more bend.” I had no idea where we were anymore because the map didn’t match the topography at all. I told Dave we had to go back to the gate and shoot a bearing. We walked back up stream and I looked for a side stream we had investigated earlier. Not finding the side stream I felt doomed that we were so far off we were going to get lost. Dave said he could take me to the gate. Walking back to the gate I was very skeptical and told him if he was 100% sure I would trust him, but I thought he was guessing. He pointed out the gate way down the field and I still wanted to go back to it and see if the road we took in was there, but I trusted him and we shot a bearing and went back to the creek. I noticed we walked off bearing and called “bullshit,” but when we compared all three compasses it seemed one out of three was always swinging. We chalked it up to iron in the soil and aliens (Klingons on Uranus aliens). We walked into the creek and I really felt it was the wrong way again, so I stopped us and asked both Robert and Dave to compare the map to the land topography and we all agreed to turn around and found it. We lost around an hour looking for it, but I needed it to shoot to CP6.
I gave Alane a very quick pace counting tutorial and read the bearing to Dave and Robert. We followed three compasses and every time one person veered off we followed the two that agreed. Alane counted and I estimated the distance and kept track of meters traveled with my ranger beads (I said RANGER BEADS!). We found CP6 exactly as expected and very quickly after crossing a few barb wire fences. We also found Team Noah and hugged and humped some. Alane re-set and I had her count down the reentrant to the creek and again we were spot on where I wanted to be. I had her re-set again and we traveled by creek in the direction of CP7, but she gave me a count that passed the CP and I had only moved one bead so I knew somehow her count got off. Just in case we back tracked and checked for it. I re-estimated and had her start over and we found it almost perfectly again. Dave and Robert had a nice break from following the bearings and I know personally that counting gets tiring, but I wanted her to count to CP8. We followed the trail and found the CP exactly on her count. Team Noah cheated and followed us most the way, but I tricked them with a sneak attack “orange Gatorade” that was actually Fireball! Kevin and Mickey smelled a trap, but didn’t warn poor Larry and he fell victim to my sinister plot. They past us, but we heard later that the Fireball slowed and angered Chief Larry Firewater. On the other hand, our team work of me reading the map, giving a bearing, and an estimated distance, Dave and Robert keeping the bearing, and Alane counting, really paid off. There is a few things we could do to even get better at this, but that is some secret shit we are not gonna tell you freaks. We then traveled to the bike TA watching Team Noah and some other 24 hour teams lolly gagging along like they had all the time in the world.
On the bikes my legs were a little grumpy at first and we slowly made it to a “road,” I use that term loosely, that took us right to CP9. When we got back to the real road to go to CP10 we met up with a trio of beautiful young Sirens that missed CP9, but they tricked Dave into revealing its location. I stopped us where I thought CP10 was, but quickly changed my mind and wanted to go down the road farther, but Robert had traveled at least 10 miles down the reentrant looking for it. The Sirens caught us and realized it was farther down the road and left us. Robert traveled at least 20 miles back to the road and we caught the Sirens as they were leaving the CP and they were nice enough to return the favor and reveal its location. We started climbing hills and Dave needed a little tow, so he attached his bike to my tow and I stood and climbed past the Sirens walking their what appeared to be straight out of Walmart bikes (NO OFFENSE). We then had to find a point in the road where it turned sharply, which marked the point that we would bike whack to the trail, but when we got there the whacking looked too long and hard (no pun intended). We decided to find the secret road to the trail that Dave heard stories of, but we tried every one we saw and they were all dead ends. Luckily I knew where we were, and we decided to go back and look for the secret road again. We finally found it and it led us to the trail. I then asked Robert to investigate a rock face to see if it was a short bypass trail, but his Tricorder malfunctioned and he told me, “No.” We therefore rode down this terrible stupid trail that headed in the exactly opposite direction and finally found Tamara and Joe at the turn around. I said a whole lot of cusswords and then prayed we would find the correct trail. We then rode the lower section of trail along the bluffs, and although they were beautiful I hated them for making us go around and lose more time, so I cussed them too and thanked the Lord for their beauty, but told Him that it would be great if He could move them out of the way. As we left that trail I pointed out the bypass to Robert and scorned him for not calibrating his equipment better. We took the trail system past CP19 to the TA and dropped the bikes with no mechanicals, minus some intense frame rub on Robert’s bike.
We then had only 40 minutes out and 40 minutes back to complete the race and we knew there was no way we could clear. I figured we could get one or two more CPs. We shot for CP13 and took the wrong road the first time, and then the wrong trail the second time, but got to see the guy that got impaled and also got to see the lovely Sirens again (I'm really hoping for a team invite). Those tricky devils navigated past us probably when we were searching for the secret trail. A solo racer gave us a hand by putting us on the correct trail and we had to run up the hill to CP13. We then ran back and I thought about CP11, but Dave said he was done. We went back to the TA and Alane said we should bike to CP19 since we knew where it was, but I said, “No Dave is done,” and we finished with 50 minutes to spare. Tamara snuck off and got CP19 and beat us. Joe slammed that down Dave’s throat as he grinned ear to ear. I actually was pretty happy for Joe.
Minton photobombing TeamBOR Lost Souls |
METROPOLIS |
PIGGY THE BOAR |
After a few shots of whisky and a few beers, we watched the sun set and listened to Cortivo Radio Live.
He spun tales so tall that the only one that believed him was me; well because 90% of the stories involved me and I was there. We fell asleep spooning like the Three Stooges; wait that’s a lie. We fell asleep individually and were awoken at 3ish AM by the dreadfull sound of Mickey’s voice, which sounds like a young boy kicked in the nads, while scrapping his nails on a chalkboard. He wanted a bike since Chief Firewater had broken his derailleur in a mad Fireball rager. Dave fell out of his hammock, Robert jumped out of his shuttle craft, and I leapt to my feet on the portico, tripped over the tent rope, and took the map board and tow off my bike. Alane stayed silently in her reading room. We checked on vomiting Kevin and made sure they had fluids, and food. Chief Firewater yelled at me a few times that he didn’t like my orange Gatorade and they disappeared into the darkness. You could hear a high pitched boy yelling demands, vomiting, and a crazed Feather not Dot Indian (Native American) screaming Fireball fading into the distance.
We asked the race director about TeamBOR’s location and they said, “they are here.” I thought that is us, and asked about Team Virtus as we were concerned about losing Chuck and losing his whiskey for future rides.
TEAM VIRTUS |
They said they hadn’t checked in yet because SuperKate made a detour to Metropolis (Something about a mandatory meeting).
I asked about our other TeamBOR and I got a funny look and they said, “they are here.” I asked for clarification and they said, “they have been here for an hour.” We looked around confused and then Jessie literally walked right between all of us like a zombie making a b-line for the human fecal troughs, aka pooping facility. We yelled at her and asked where was FN Dave Beattie? She said that she had no idea and thought that she was gonna quit. We told her to go to the bathroom and wake up. Apparently, Dave told her that he was going to change his shoes and snuck off for a nap and she fell asleep in her trunk waiting on him. We went looking for Dave and found him in the parking lot. We got the two back together and made sure they were ok and gave Dave a smack in the butt and they were back out racing.
TEAM BOR |
We made a caravan of cars home,
we past Chief Firewater’s tribe riding slow and in war formation as I ducked down behind Beattie, and the rest is just a memory. – Ahab.
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