Jago Takes a Ribbing in Wales

16 10 2010

Hi Dakar24 followers

Have I got some news for you! Not one but two rallies to update you on and the second is live as you read this! (If you’re reading this on Monday morning at least, besides ‘nearly live’ doesn’t have the same ring! ;-) )

I haven’t been biking since August so have been off my target of ‘at least’ one event a month, but with good reason as my last -the 2 day Brecon Beacons Rally, was a cracking event if you exscuse the pun!

But let’s reverse a bit, as some of you may know, August was due to be a busy month due to a mid week evening ‘planning session’ early in August with Toby, Patsy and Clive of Desert Rose Racing at their headquarters (Patsy’s house!) Which resulted in a packed plan of events (as well as a nice meal and tales of their previous evening entertaining friend and near neighbor Roger Daltry from The Who!). In order to step up our Dakar training we planned the following:

  • Brecon Beacons 2 day Rally on the 14th/15th in Llandovery Wales
  • The solo 24hr Dawn to Dusk on the 28th at Walters Arena (the ‘BMW’ Off road training school ground, North of Neath)
  • Toby would then do a week’s training in Morocco in September and then do the 5 day Morocco Rally in October.
  • I would try and do the 10 day Heroes Legend Rally (original Paris to Dakar route) in October, pending finances and the sale of our flat…

So lots of riding planned which lead us to another trip in Toby’s truck up the M4 late on a Friday night to find the Desert Rose Racing crew camp set up in a wet and rainy Rugby club (well this was Wales so a dry football club would never do!) Patsy and Clive had some pop up awening/gazebos up though so after sitting around chatting for half an hour it was off to our sleeping bags in our individual pop up tents.

 

 

Team Desert Rose Breacon Rally Camp

The next day (after struggling to get dressed in a coffin like 2 ‘person’ tent – calling it 2 ‘man’ tent would be generous!) and a welcome full fry up in the team Desert Rose field kitchen we kitted up and the Desert Rose Team rode out about 12 strong! Up to the rally start (with Clive taking the truck and a gazebo to provide pit assistance).

Pics here.

Day 1 was tough enough with the weather but the rain was mercifully not too heavy (more the usual constant Welsh drizzle) and the course was great with 2 well paced ‘special test’ which were only timed after the first lap. As it turned out the timecards (the set times you’re meant to start and complete each section) weren’t being rigidly enforced so although the specials were timed, you could go at your own pace and not worry too much about the sections between.

I had several falls and a few high speed slide outs on the special test fire track gravel roads but I felt pretty good and kept pushing hard to finish the day strong with lower overall lap times despite my special test times still suffering from crashes!

That night we all adjourned to the rugby club for a hog roast and a pub quiz in which we managed to win a couple of rounds!

The next day was drier and faster! The course was also reversed and we were joined by some more one day riders (some on vintage machines). I saw Tamsin Jones (2010 Dakar finisher) with her Dakar bike. She was there to join one of her sponsors around the course (a septargenarian who rode her big rally bike!) I was having a good day and feeling fit and fast and wanted to push for a good result. On the last lap I lined up with Tamsin (on the smaller enduro bike whilst her sponsor was off on the rally bike) we said hi and that we’d go off for the last lap together.

I though ‘this might be interesting’! As Tamsin is a Dakar vet and a BMW Off Road Skills instructor so she’s not only fast but knows what she’s doing! We started off at a quick rate and I followed Tamsin and hit some slower traffic that we overtook, one of whom later overtook us again as we came to a bunch going quite quickly but not at our (or at least my!j pumped-up-last-lap pace, but they were more tricky to pass on the narrowish track. Tamsin was jockeying for position looking for a gap. I didn’t want to push past but the gaps were slim and the track we were on wouldn’t last for too long before we’d be in tighter woods sections again and stuck behind for a long time. So I took a creative line off the track (burning up the grass verge/ditch ;-) )to overtake 3 or 4 ikes and pull into the clear to chase the other guy already gone.

Tamsin got past and I was now catching up and battling the other guy who I recognised as someone I had overtaken and swapped positions with on this part of the course during previous laps. Eventually I let him go and waited for Tamsin who told me he was another BMW ORS instructor!

I was really enjoying the ride with a good fast pace and the fun of riding together, swapping between leading and following is much better than riding alone. Tamsin also asked why I didn’t go for the next Dakar as I was fast enough! So that made my day ;-)

But after overtaking 2 bikes and chasing Tamsin just before the first special test I got cross rutted (front wheel in 1 rut + back wheel in another = stack!) Thrown down hard I was a bit winded (and probably more bruised or injured than I realised). It turned out I had just overtaken Vince (Dakar24 subscriber and Desert Rose’s Special Attache) and another guy who pulled up asking if I was OK. Not pausing, I jumped straight up with a “That’s what I get for trying to keep up with Tamsin!” comment. Tamsin was half a minute away at the start of the special test. She and Vince went before me and I went tearing off in my minute time slot trying to catch them. As I was behind they didn’t see me go down hard on the same side as I just crashed on a few minutes ago. There was no jumping straight back up this time though – I knew I was hurt as I felt liquid seeping around my back and side and wondered if I was bleeding externally or internally……

Until I realised the cap had come off my camelbak water container and I was loosing precious drink! I then tried to jump up and had a soaring pain in my ribs and sides and knew I had probably cracked or broken them. Trying to lift the bike up was a killer but I wanted to finish the lap and the rally as it had been going well up until then. But riding was a big (and painful) effort now and I could forget about a good time on this test at least so I cruised to the end where Tamsin and Vince were waiting and before heading off to the next special.

At the next special test Tamsin let me go first and told me to go for it, So roaring with pain over the bumps and evertime I jolted, stood up or sat down! (Pretty much all the time off road) I was determined to give it some, for the 6 or 7 minutes on the special test but was screaming into my helmet at certain points! I did well considering my condition and the fact I briefly went the wrong way and dropped the bike turning around – AAAaargh – literally and figuratively) but I got to the end of the special.

After the special I limped back to finish the lap and took it nice and slow helping Tamsin escort her sponsor back. I even had to turn down a ride on her Dakar bike as I was afraid I’d drop it because of the pain and being only just able to ride my smaller lightdr and more familiar bike.

The rest of the afternoon and evening was a struggle – I managed a shower back at camp but was little use packing up. Toby gave me (and Alaistair) a lift back to battersea and I got a taxi home around 11.30pm.

The next week was painful in more ways than one as I was alaso due to do the 24hr Dawn to Dusk two weeks after the Brecon. For one moment (through the haze of pain killers probably) I thought I was improving fast enought to do it. But the small injuries unit confirmed they were broken or fractured (they don’t even X-ray now as it doesn’t help) and movement (especially sudden movements and jolts like those you get riding) remained painful for a few weeks so I had to give the D2D a miss :-( . Toby, Patsy and Zippy did very well though all being top 5 finishers so congrats to them!

So the last couple of months or so I have been off the bike and off the exercise as I couldn’t even bike to work (although I did start again in October and got a few runs in too). But the time has been productive as I joined Lucy on an extreme (for me) diet. It’s a low calorie diet with sachets and shakes and an evening meal etc. But we’ve both done quiet well in about 5 weeks Lucy lost about a stone and I lost a stone and a half!

All of which is handy as I jumped to get a last minute place on the Maroc Rally!! The original plan of the Heroes Legend Paris Dakar Rally didn’t come off as it’s too expensive but I managed to scrap enough for a last minute place (signed up on the final day) on the Maroc Rally! So I’m actually this from in the palm tree shade of a hotel terrace in Zagora in South East Morocco (about an 8hour drive from Marrakesh).

Toby and I flew out yesterday and arrived at midnight after the long car drive (450km of mountain roads for 8 hours in a taxi for €225!) We have spent today sorting out the bikes that Martin and Colin our Team Desert Rose mechanics trailored out this week. There are 5 of us on the team and we start the circus/pandemonium that is registration tomorrow, before the rally racing begins on Monday. So from Monday log on to www.npo.fr click the Maroc Rally (Oil d’Libya) link then the Union Jack for English and you should find a link (it’s usually only posted once the race starts) to track me on line in real time as I race across the desert!

I’ll try and blog a few times this week so look out for some short twitteresque like updates…

Thanks and have a good week (I know I will!)

Pics from Brecaon Beacons Rally below…

Team Talk from the manager

 

Brecon Beacons start line

 

A hot cuppa at the Team HQ

Dirty and tired after day 1 -and that's just the bike!

Some of the guys on the team

 

Tamsin on her Dakar bike with her sponsor Charles

 

Patsy always makes sure Team Desert Rose are well presented!





Pickering’s Podium Place!

15 06 2010

 Hi folks  

It’s been a while since I’ve had a chance to update you all but now I have some stories to tell!  

After the disaster of the last outing (blowing up tyres on the A3! see the previous post below) I thought I was going to lose out on riding in May but luckily there was a convenient race on the following week – Sunday the 24th with Chiltern Hills Enduro Club (CHEC) at Tunbridge,  Kent. It was an eventful day – crashes, tactics, racing Dakar and my best race result result so far!  

Jumping Jago - Plenty of Bulk to Balence!

Jumping Jago- getting the (hefty) weight back over the larger jumps!

 Toby very kindly picked me up bright and early Sunday morning and after loading up his truck with the bikes we made our way down to Kent in nice sunny weather having arranged to meet The Desert Rose crew (Patsy, Zippy and Vince) at the course. We arrived at the course to find that it was the same place that Toby, Patsy and Zippy had been practising at the week before (but in reverse). After catching up with Patsy, Zippy and Vince we got down to registering and sorting the bikes and kitted up ready for the 10am off. 

  

Instead of a single 3hour race CHEC events are 2 hours long then break for an hour before the final 2 hours. This is good and bad! They say it decreases accidents due to fatigue in the last hour, gives everyone time for lunch and then 2 hours more riding. Which is good as you get more riding in, but bad as you have to race longer! (And as I found out that’s not easy after an hours break). You are also penalised if you come in later than the 2hours each race (so you have to make a call whether to go for that last lap!) 

“>

Jago keeping it low

Rather than the fun but frantic mass starts, we were called to the starting line in groups of 10, in order of registration number, which meant that Patsy and Zippy were off a few minutes in front of me (and I turn a few minutes in front of Toby) so unfortunately we wouldn’t get to race each other directly (well not until I tried to stay with Zippy for half a lap when he passed me near the end of both the first and second races! The course is  described on the CHEC site as a novice friendly, easy going course which was accurate as none of it was too challenging. It was a mixture of open fields and several woodland sections with a couple of boggy, rutted and muddy sections in the woods, interspearsed with tight single track and some very dusty open trails. One of which was so dusty and loose that it was similar to a desert conditions making passing very difficult. Desert training in Kent! (all we need is a few camels!) 

  

Getting past these guys (and the quads) was a challenge! They kicked up a lot of dust on the fast tracks and are pretty wide through the trees!

I had a good first race apart from the third lap by choosing one rut in a muddy wooded section that immediately gulped down the front wheel up to the forks and threw me off! I tried pushing , heaving and revving the bike through the rut with no luck. The rut was a glue pit that would not let go of the bike! Panting like some weekend-warrior-dad-of-three and going red enough to attract the attention of a kindly marshall who helped me heave it out, I lost quite a few minutes on the lap. Otherwise I was going well, passing a lot of people and getting fairly consistent lap times around 15minutes. Unfortunately getting stuck stopped me from doing 8 laps as I finshed my 7th with about only 4 minutes left so it wasn’t worth trying for another. 

  

Dusty Riders Right Hand Turn - Not the dustiest of places but shows how dry it was!

The hour break was spent resting, refueling and trying to eat something (an unusal job for me as I didn’t really have any appetite, but know I needed to). |Then we were back out for punishment/fun! Now familiar with the course Race 2 was more about endurance. After an hour I began to cramp up badly – getting dangerously cramped hands (trigger thumb preventing me holding the bars and sometimes cramped fingers refusing to brake or pull the clutch is not what you want whilst approaching a 90 degree right hand bend after a flat out straight!) Trying to drink often from my camelback I was getting excruciating pains in my legs that wasn’t just cramp but actually a stinging pain (I presume similar to hitting ‘the wall’ of lactic acid overload or something similar in a Marathon?) My trainer Tim has given me some advice and stretches etc that I will post up on the fitness page soon. 

But Race 2 went well with good consistent lap times of mostly under 15minutes (apart from the slow 4th lap!) and a flying last lap of 10minutes helped make it  8 laps. I thought it had gone well becaue I only saw a few people pass me (including Zippy again- grrr ;-) but I was surprised how well as it meant - leading to a very pleasing SECOND PLACE RESULT! ! !!! :-P   (Second in Clubman Class out of 65 and 6th Overall out of 140 riders is my best result to date! :-P   ) It seems it as a good race for all as Zippy came 2nd overall (and 2nd in the Expert Class) and Toby was also in the top 20 Clubman. Patsy may have come first in the ladies (hooraa!) due to being the only entrant! (Aha) but unfortuately her thirsty two stroke run out of petrol in the first race costing her lots of penalty point placing her 105th overall (aaah!) All the stats and lap times are here if anyone wants them (or for proof! ;-) )

  

Toby getting air

 So  look out for the next installement shortly as the following week I took Lucy and the kids to Wheeldon Farm in Devon for some family motor bike training, some one to one tuition on their indoor motocross track and hit the Devon (green) lanes!  

As ever feel free to comment with any advice, feedback questions or suggestions! (on biking, dakar or the blog instalements!) 

Cheers – Jago 

Jago 'pin-ing it' to second place!





Planning with the Pros

30 04 2010

Hi all 

Had a great weekend – of Dakar planning, riding and partying! It was busy travelling around the country but worth it as things are hotting up on the 24 Step Dakar Plan! 

Lucy and I dropped the kids off at her parents in the New Forest where we met Toby and all went off to meet Patsy and Zippy aka the Desert Rose support team. We had a good chat about the Dakar, our plans, what we should be doing and where to concentrate on until 2012. We had a few difficult questions to determine how much we want it  and I think a quote from Simon Pavey (multi Dakar vet and BMW/ Off Road Skills fame) about crawling over broken glass was used!  It’s obvious we have a lot of work to do and a lot of fitness and riding time is required but the good news is that we have started early enough and I think (given the right preparation) Patsy and Zippy believe we can do it too! 

Desert Rose Adventure Riding Academy 

One thing that came out, I half suspected (but was pleased to hear) was that our bike training should include play biking and messing around! All these Hare and Hound events are good for fitness and some technique but you don’t learn new things too often in a race environment! You are concentrating on getting round as quick as possible and that means choosing smooth safe lines, not being ambitious and sticking to what you know. Play biking is almost the opposite – you can try new things and be adventurous to see what works and what doesn’t (and of course you can keep practising till it does!) We also identified a few bigger events and practise sessions, like desert riding and road book training in Morocco and the Tuareg Rally in March 2011 that would be good for Toby and I. 

Toby and I have had a few email exchanges this week too with some exciting ideas and rethinking others that maybe too time intensive ( like setting up a charity!) 

So check out the updated The 24 Step Plan as I have updated the events and timescales and rationalised/re-prioritised a few ideas! 

 

The next day Toby and I unloaded my bike from the trailer and put it on his truck (which I was quite impressed with and took a shine to – I keep trying to persuade Lucy that a 5th wheel trailer (like an articulated hitched caravan!) would be an ideal holiday/bike base addition for the family but I’m not sure she’s buying :-) We went down to Somerley Park near the Matchams motocross track in Ringwood Hampshire where Desert Rose Adventure Riding Academy run their courses on a private estate. The place is really nice - hundreds of acres od deer park used for all sorts of things from horse events, 4X4 driving and paintballing (not with the deers obviously!) Toby and I had secured rides/assistant/dogsbody places on a KTM60 Try Out Day for riders to try out a KTM690 (duh!) Numbers were diminished due to the ash cloud causing a few cancellations but we were joined by Rob and Bob (who I’d met previously on an Ady Smith KTM course) and Vince who was in Malaga with us and had since completed the Tuareg Rally that Toby and I are now scheduled to do. 

The not posed-at-all loading shot

Loading Up

 

The day was great – a relaxed pace for Toby and I but just what was needed to practise a few techniques and play around a little at the back of the group! We were mostly just trail riding around but Zippy did introduce a few little technique sessions to keep it interesting and make sure we all got something out of the day! From jumps to dead engine descents and a little special Dakar type training for me alone with Zippy sending me on an impossible ride up a hill through a maze of dense rhodendrum bushes!  (Toby was lucky he was on the 690 and not the slightly lighter 400 like me!)  From the fact you couldn’t see any of the path from 20 metres from the bottom of the hill I was obviously being set up  – “easy just follow the path round to the right” – I as up for it! So of after getting stuck near the top and hefting and heaving the bike up the top of the hill I came to a dead end by a thick tangle of bushes with no way out! After exploring a lot of dead end paths on foot for 5 minutes I did find a way out – although it was tight and involved a bit of bike throwing to get it through! Zippy reckons that’s the type of Dakar training you can’t get on regular rides or down the gym! 

 But it was a great day and I think everyone enjoyed it. I know from my ride in Malaga that the 690′s are great and I think Toby liked them too – especially after they reset the fuel mapping switch to ‘beast’ and let the power rip off road! 

Toby getting Air on the 690

Toby getting Air on the 690

 

After a nice supper at Lucy’s parent’s Toby drove back to London and Lucy and I drove a couple of hours to Didmarton near Tetbury for our mate Ceri’s 40th birthday party which was good with a bit of dancing and Singstar (karaoke) on the PS3! Lucy and I had a leisurely morning without the kids and a pub lunch on the way back to the New Forest which was great for us and made a nice change! So after a walk in the forest (to try and expel a bit more energy from the kids ;-) we hooked up the trailer and drove back to London to get back about 10pm! 

I know Toby and I both want to get more bike time and there is a Midwest event on the 16th (back at Tetbury!) but he is laid up for a few weeks as he had a knee op on Tuesday so we’ll see – we do have Wheeldon Farm (the Suzuki training school) booked for the end of May where the kids are going to have a go too! 

I’ll try and update the blog before then so I’ll be in touch soon! 

Cheers 

Jago








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