10th of May
10th of May was a special day for team Mergeo.com: 3 our teams participated in ARs in Nevada and British Columbia. Brook Nunn, Chriss Nunn, Matt Hayes and Aaron VanderWaal raced in MOMAR, while Yumay Chang, Roger Michel (team Mergeo.com/Swiss Miss), Kimberly Shavender, Miles Ohlrich, Murray Maitland and Dave Russell swam, kayaked and ran in Desert Wind AR.
MOMAR
MOMAR resulted in winning the 4 co-ed team division, being second for co-ed teams and 24th overall. Our friendly Colinoba PPF took the 8th place in 2 person co-ed division, while Commandoughs were a bit behind.
Matt says: It was a good race - great trails and terrain, organization, and fast competition. The race went great except when I got us lost on the flagged section of the course.
Aaron writes: Chris, Brook, Matt and I had a great time representing the team at the MOMAR in Squamish. The course was very challenging and it took its toll on all the teams. The race went well for the team, and besides a 20 minute mechanical stop that saw Chris snap one of his seat post bolts, the team took top honors in the 4-person coed division.
I do not have discipline lengths, but the legs were as follows:
Total time was around 5:53 with 5500+' of total ascent.
I will try to post some pictures on my blog in the next couple of days. Here are some shots from the race photographer, especially these: one, two, three, four, five, six and seven.
Desert Winds
Desert Winds was a much longer race: more than 24+ hours of real hard adventure racing! It was dominated by the DART teams while our 4 person one took the fifth place. See some pictures here! Course map: here.
Miles says: The AR was a blast. It was in a three part format with lots of optional checkpoints, rogaine-like formats, non-trivial navigation and route choices, plotting using bearing and distance, some off-the-map travel for bonus CPs, all in a beautiful desert canyon environment. The swimming/coasteering along the shoreline of Lake Mead was new and exciting, and the low lake level changed the topology of the shoreline immensely compared with what was on the maps, giving the navigation an extra level of complexity.
Dave, Murray, Kimberly and I had an eventful race. We finished in 5th place, which was a slight disappointment, as we thought we could have done a bit better. Both DART teams, however, seemed untouchable in this race as they cruised to a 1st place tie. After a slow start (we spent a long time looking for the first checkpoint - apparently a burro had eaten it) and a couple navigational setbacks, we skipped a few optional checkpoints in order to leave time for mandatory checkpoints in the last leg. Afterwards, we really started to gel as a team, our pace improved, and we ended up finishing a couple hours ahead of the cutoff.
Notable events:
The weather was excellent and the night especially was sublime as we travelled through canyons and coves under starlit skies.
Dave: Desert Winds was a very cool race! The terrain was very bizarre. Once a desert, then the Hoover Dam flooded vast areas of land - and now it's turning back into a desert.
The race director is a very savvy guy who put together quite the brain puzzle of a course. He started the race with verbal instructions to head on a bearing of 286 for 2.5k. There you will find the maps on a small island. We had to swim out, find the maps and plot in the field.
A burro had eaten the first checkpoint, so everyone wandered around for quite awhile before giving up on it. I was a bit too stubborn and probably looked for too long. There was a short trek that included coasteering where we used our small inflatable rafts and fins. Two of the checkpoints were along shorelines and underwater about 6'! We skipped one of the 1st optional points because of time wasted on the burro thing. Then, it was back to the TA and into the kayaks.
From there it was a 15k paddle along a crazy complex shoreline that was hard to read on the map - because the water line in lake mead is about 60' below normal. There were only two mandatory Kayak CPs. The rest were rogaine style with 13 optional CP's. You could trek/kayak/swim to get them in any order. It was a very interesting nav puzzle that involved kayaking to a pullout, treking to a group of CPs, then moving on to the next section. Several of the CPs were "off map" and involved following written directions only. One section had a really nice slot canyon (in the dark). We ran past a buzzing rattler & almost put a hand on a poised scorpion.
All the CP's on the third trek section were mandatory, so you had to calculate your rate of travel while doing section 2 and leave the rogaine with enough time left to make sure you could get section 3 done before the noon cutoff.
Back to the TA around midnight, we took off again on a short kayak to the next section. These CP's were all given in bearing/distance format from the previous CP. So, if you plotted one wrong, the rest would be wrong too. We took care plotting. But, in the dark I managed to get us into the wrong cove anyway, so we had to trek a bit further and do some rock scrambling.
After about 5 hrs of trekking in the dark thru washes, gulleys, ridges and scrub, we got the sunrise and ran around the desert for a few more hours. Leaving CP-5, a minor course deviation that led us into a wash became a major error when plunged deeper and deeper and led us down the wrong drainage, which nearly cost the CP.
Finishing up the trek, there was about 4k of swimming with the rafts, with the last CP on a very dramatic tiny island with a spire on one end - which Miles climbed in his slippery neoprene socks. Then a final kayak to the finish. Turns out we could have been more clever about managing the kayak/swim choices to avoid the long swim. But, frankly, it was really nice being in the water that morning.
There were lots of creative ways to solve this course. We left about 5 markers on the table because of the time cutoff - so totaled about 26.5 hrs on course. That got us 5th place. I know our team expectation was higher, but it wasn't my finest hour navigating and I made a bunch of mistakes.
The course was very cool and the company great. So all and all it was a really fun race.
