Race Report

Fat Pursuit Workshop and Race Report: No excuses

Fat Pursuit is far more than an ultra endurance winter fat bike race in Idaho, in its 12th year. It’s a platform constructed by Jay Petervary to challenge everyone who arrives at the start line due to its length (119 miles), need to carry (and for most, use) sleeping gear, and be able to boil water to ensure survival in a snow-covered, harsh, remote winter environment. It draws people who love fat bike riding, who love big adventures, and those who want to stretch themselves, learn, and grow in the ways each person desires.

Racers at the start waiting for Jay to signal the start of what will be the longest, hardest race for many. Photo: Rob Vandermark.

45 hours on course leave a number of stories to be told. While I was determined to get to the finish line since I didn’t make it there 2 years ago, crossing the line didn’t come with the expected endorphin rush. I relished the experience and at no point did I wish it would be over, including at the finish. The small wins along the way have added up to a major victory and this is only a start, not a finish, to anything.

My first 200k Fat Pursuit was two years ago and a 33.5 hour race that ended at mile 75 when I didn’t feel I could continue. I’ve learned a lot since that race and having watched others finish at all hours that year, it was clear that it is possible for anyone who is properly prepared. Figuring out how to finish has been a journey of learning and digging in deep to discover exactly what it means to tap into mental strength. Having Fat Pursuit as a continual goal since taking on the 60km Covid edition of the race in 2021 has been a guiding light in my cycling life.

Around mile 77 coming out of checkpoint 2.

Fat Pursuit Workshop - a Game Changer

This year I made the best decision to attend the Fat Pursuit Workshop which was held Monday through Wednesday prior to Fat Pursuit which started Friday. This workshop had been recommended to me by serious athletes who have done nearly everything difficult that the sport offers. I have never been in such an environment where every single session was full of content, absolutely zero fluff (unless we were actually talking about the fill in a sleeping bag, ha), and hands-on. Fortunately, the temp got to -9 degrees Tuesday night when we had the opportunity to sleep under the stars somewhere far from home base. Such a treat. Besides having five instructors with deep knowledge of both Fat Pursuit and winter ultra endurance experience, 14 attendees all came from very different backgrounds with a lot of great knowledge and thoughtful questions.

Students and instructors on a ride Tuesday to get a little fresh air, boil water, and the scenery was outstanding! Photo by Jay Petervary.

Jay Petervary led the workshop, guided many of the conversations, but let each of the other instructors have the floor and share their expertise. Each session was deeply informative. Jay added what has worked for him that he’s learned over many years of testing, refining, racing, and teaching what works and why - and he started before anyone else was doing it. The workshop was a perfect balance of knowledge sharing and understanding why what works when and they encouraged questions. They explained the “whys” and what it means to “do your work.”

Jay Petervary, image from a video Jay took overlooking workshop students airing up all of our tires so we could feel various tire pressures and how those worked/didn’t on the snow.

I feel cold faster than most everyone and I’m afraid of being cold. My toes are cold as I’m writing this in my 70 degree home. FWIW: My toes didn’t get cold once during Fat Pursuit. I never want anyone to look at me and say anything about how I’m somehow tougher than others since the opposite is more likely true. To say I’m tough or special is simply an “out” for anyone who uses this as an excuse that I can do this but they cannot. Nothing we learned had anything to do with being tougher or stronger. Instruction focused on implementing systems to work for each of us as individuals. Turns out we’re not all that different. I can sleep comfortably at -9 degrees with the bivvy bag under my sleeping bag!

Photo by Perry Jewett, first night prepping camp and made some food. I learned it’s a good idea to eat before bivvying since calories = body heat!

The workshop started at 9am Monday and ended at 12pm on Wednesday, 2 days before Fat Pursuit. With sleeping outside being part of the workshop, it was continual instruction and practice for all of these hours. Focusing 100% without outside distraction means so much more learning and being fully present is a skill in itself.

Everyone had whatever fitness we already had, meaning that what we got out of the workshop was knowledge and tools for the mind. No one got stronger or more acclimatized to the cold in those 3 days. Knowledge is power. Knowledge is confidence. It all adds up to safety and more fun too.

Instructor Jason Hanson reviewed the stuff I would be bringing with me for Fat Pursuit and we talked through each piece of gear as to its usefulness and what should not make the trip. He has a great perspective from a normal person who chose to get into this winter endurance world even though he lives in Arizona!

One of the sessions dealt directly with the mental side of winter ultra racing. Jacob Hora, a 19-year-old ultra endurance athlete led this one. He has more endurance cycling experience and worldly perspective than most people 3x his age. This was a valuable session with a lot of interesting advice I’d not heard before and I used a lot of it during my Fat Pursuit race. I think people give the idea of mental strength a lot of lip service but don’t really take it to heart. I know I haven’t taken it seriously in the past. It’s one thing to think positive thoughts and another to completely believe those thoughts. One bit of advice they offered is to develop a mantra to use during the race.

The mantra that came to me early on in the race was “no excuses.” I hear a lot of excuses from people in the course of my work life and in leading group rides. I hope that after completing this, it’s proof that someone who has average fitness (I ride less than many of you reading this), but a sincere desire to take on a huge ride, can get into the right mindset to do the work, practice, practice, practice, and take it on!

The Race

The 60km race rollout is the same as the 200km, photo by Rob V.

The long Fat Pursuit course is 120 miles in length on wide snowmobile trails in the Yellowstone ecosystem and it’s a gorgeous route that offers a lot for the eyes to feast on. There is a 60km race for those who want a good taste of the event.

The route goes up a lot and when it’s going down, it's still often necessary to pedal to keep going. Snow conditions change a lot from hour to hour. Cold snow is fast. Warm, snowmobile-churned snow is usually a hike-a-bike. This year temps were in the 10-17 degree area most of the time and for only a few hours were ~27-28 degrees.

The start was at 7am, in pitch dark Island Park.

I was very deliberate to keep my heart rate low and in zone 2 (talking pace) for as much of the race as possible. This meant almost everyone was ahead right at the start. The effects of high altitude are far worse with an elevated heart rate. I had enough on my mind to manage without worrying about actually racing and trying to beat others. I am naturally competitive so I am thinking back now and wondering had I done this differently or that more efficiently, how would the results have turned out. These are thoughts I’ll use to fuel the next ultra effort, but I am not going to suggest that I could have been faster because that would have hurt me in other ways that could have led to not finishing.

The road leading over to Two Top is one of my favorite parts of the route. It’s beautiful and fun to ride. Usually there are others around on this road with whom to share the views and joy of being there.

Two Top mountain was raw with vicious winds and hardly any visibility. Snowmobile traffic was quite low the whole race, very pleasant! One snowmobiler stopped to tell me that “conditions are tricky” on Two Top before I got there. Nice to get this warning! I stopped, wrapped up my face, ate and drank, since this might not possible a few feet further up.

I was glad to get the Two Top experience since I’ve heard how windy and rough it can be, I wanted to see what that was all about. I was wondering what everyone else thought about that section. It’s a bit intimidating, but knowing others were out there in the same conditions was comforting.

Heading down Two Top, it didn’t take too long before getting nestled back into trees, the wind died down and it was a lovely day with perfect snow under the tires again.

This is when I met Ellen, the foot participant, who ended up taking the fastest time for everyone (men and women) in that category. I saw her quite often out there, keeping great time with very little mechanical advantage (sleds can sled down hills, but there were so few downhills on the course), otherwise, it’s walking/running for 119 miles. She was smiling the entire race.

The snow was perfect to ride. It was cold, fast, just fluffy enough to offer that addictive “first snow” feel. Of course, this area has many feet of snow on the ground at this point. The snow in this area is all dry powder.

Party at Checkpoint 1, Mile 28, ~2pm Friday

One of my favorite features of the course is that there’s an out and back to checkpoint 1 allowing riders heading in to CP1 and those headed out (hours ahead of those coming in often times) to see each other.

I like checkpoint 1 so much, I figured out how to spend something close to 2.5 hours there. Luckily, there was cell coverage so I could shoot off an “I’m okay” message to my parents who would be worried at this kind of a delay.

All participants can pack a 2-gallon bag full of food that the organizers take to the checkpoint so that everyone can get a selection of calories to take with them for the next stretch which is 50 miles. It’s a long stretch with a 24-hour cut-off time so it’s good to have a gazillion calories on the bike. I estimated I’d need 6,000 calories (more than I can eat). Sometimes it’s nice to have some variety since what one feels like eating can change. Somehow, my bag of food didn’t make it to this checkpoint. Thankfully, lots of nice people at the checkpoint (Mike, Joe, random people) donated their food to me. Billy is a mainstay volunteer of CP1 (I saw him there 2 years ago), he made sure I had all of the fried peanut butter and jelly sandwiches I needed (those things are magic), water, soup, etc. There was a good crew working this checkpoint, but Billy is who I’d remembered fondly from my last Fat Pursuit and he hustles to take care of every rider.

I was worried since my stomach can get touchy with food hours into a ride and Skratch High-Carb powder definitely works…except Skratch didn’t seem to be part of people’s diets out there. Oh well, time to learn new foods! I know I need to work on eating more every ride and getting my stomach acclimated to various foods. It’s one of the hundreds of skills that are important for this race. It’s entirely on me that my stomach is as sensitive as it is. What do bikepackers do? One certainly doesn’t find fancy food in gas stations. Fat Pursuit teaches us about survival and even allowing food bags is a kind thing for them to do though shouldn’t be necessary.

When hydration goes badly

I’d taken two hydration bladders with me, one filled with 2L of water with LMNT salt and a 3L with 2.5 liters of Skratch High-Carb powder in it to start the race. Each pack had its own hose. I like the idea of redundancy and the option to drink one or the other. Really early on in the race, both hoses froze so I rearranged them, got them tucked beneath my base layers and was able to thaw the one to my 3L pack. Once that ran out, I just moved the hose over to the 2L and then drank it. Both were gone by the time I got to CP1. I was proud of myself for listening to to my Garmin alarm: every 15 minutes take a drink. Altitude sickness comes with dehydration and I think my teeth get sensitive with dehydration as well. Dehydration is bad for everything in a race!

I filled both bladders with warm water, loaded my USWE hydration pack with both, then figured I’d take a moment in the heated tent prior to heading back out on my bike. I’d only been there a few moments when I felt my backside get warm. Then my legs… The 2L hydration pouch had failed out the bottom spilling all 2L of water all over me! I was wearing a short sleeve base layer, long sleeve base layer, full-zip fleece, wind jacket, bib shorts, and 45NRTH heavier shell pants. Every single thing I was wearing was soaked. Why did it fail? I have some theories. I’ll be doing some testing in the coming days to see what I learn. Obviously, this will be something I’ll be paranoid about for the rest of my life.

Fortunately, the heated tent is heated via propane and forceful hot jets. I stood there and dried out the pants, fleece, and jacket until everything was almost dry. I left my wool base layers and soaked chamois alone. I debated whether it was smart to ride into the night with wet chamois, but figured it would be more risky to try all of those miles without it since I always ride with bib shorts. It was a good call, it didn’t bother me. Had this happened without the heated tent, I can’t say I know what I would have done. I instantly regretted not bringing my rain pants and rain jacket. Those paired with my (still dry) wool long underwear could have allowed me to ride out the wet pants and give them time to dry without causing me problems.

Finally, I got back on the bike and on the way out of CP1. Only 1 more person was due to arrive to the checkpoint (who knew he was going to scratch) so I was the last rider on course. This did not send me into a panic, it was fine. I knew I had plenty of time until the cut offs. This kind of setback would have sent me into a panic had this been 2 years ago with the mindset and lack of perspective I had back then.

Riding into the night

I love night riding so much! Add snow and this is my absolute favorite kind of riding. Night focuses one’s attention, it’s impossible to get distracted by anything so it’s time to think, get into a zone, simply ride the bike. And that’s what I did. It was snowing some so the fastest-ever conditions were becoming not-quite-as-fast and this section is a long, steady climb, but still it felt great.

I found Emma and Brian, shown above, on the ride out of the checkpoint. We got to know each other in the Fat Pursuit workshop, and being from Seattle, pretty new to fat bike riding with heavy bikes, they had additional challenges. Emma is effervescent, has a beautiful Italian accent, and she was always, always positive, pleasant, and warm. We’d ridden together earlier Friday in the race as well. This blog post is dedicated to her since she enjoyed the blog I’d posted from my first Fat Pursuit attempt and the morning of this race, she told me she’d read it all again. I know people enjoy reading too-long race reports, but hearing that it affected someone means A LOT.

After a little while, I parted ways with them, and wished them well. I thought about them for the rest of my race, hoping they would keep going no matter what.

I was following a bike track laid down by a rider in front of me. I hoped to find this person to say thank you for laying it down since he was riding on the fastest part of the trail and it made it easier. I finally found him, it was Joe, fellow Fat Pursuit workshop alum. We rode together for quite awhile.

Finally Joe found a nice place to bivvy (above photo) and he was wanting some serious sleep. I bid him farewell and kept riding.

Since I’d had what I thought to be altitude issues at the last Fat Pursuit, I wanted to get to the top of the climb and then descend from there prior to sleeping. I was feeling good and was keeping a nice rhythm. Once in such a place, it’s not good to stop!

On this climb during the last Fat Pursuit, I’d gotten in a dark place and called Rob, devoted husband, who was out there taking photos and generally being there to support me wherever “there” was (it’s not possible for someone in a car to get close to the course until checkpoint 2). This time, I was good. Part of being good had to do with knowing the climb and what to expect. I’ve replayed that climb so many times in my head it’s a comfortable place for me now.

It’s nice to pass people who are asleep in their bivvies and tents along the way. Just seeing signs of life is beneficial. They’re hours ahead of me, yet I’m riding past them. Love this kind of a “race.” !!

There was a skier up ahead moving very well. Turns out it was Mike (of Nan and Mike - everyone out there knows them), our hosts! I’d seen Nan hours before and figured she was ~3 hours ahead of me. Mike had never skied more than 30 miles prior to Fat Pursuit. Nevermind that both Nan and Mike spent tons of energy hosting, throwing social gatherings, and helping others all the way up until late the night before Fat Pursuit. They are both incredible athletes and the nicest ever people. I chatted with Mike for a few and decided that’s where I’d get some sleep. He continued on. I learned later that Nan was sleeping really close by! Dani was really close, too, and she told me she’d seen me at my camp & I remember seeing her pass by after she described when she went through.

Sleeping in the snow, 18 degrees, 3:30am-ish

To bivvy is a verb. I have learned to put the bivvy sack under my sleeping bag as that’s perfectly warm enough and far easier without the feeling of suffocation that I’ve felt a number of times when sleeping inside the bivvy. The concept of bivvying has been nearly life changing for me since I learned to do it at the last Fat Pursuit. Sleep anywhere! Or just stay safe. Once zipped up in that little bag, it can be -50 degrees outside and you’re safe and warm inside. It’ll all be okay. It’s light and easy to manage. Take it and a sleeping bag and now the entire world of cycling is available to you, no humans or infrastructure required.

I camped in deep snow under a tree. It took a fair amount of work to drag the bike through the snow to get to the spot I liked. A bit of stomping around and the hole for the sleeping pad was big enough. Took off my boots and liners, it wasn’t that cold so I figured my feet would be fine without the extra layers and complication of pulling the liners out of the boots.

I set the phone alarm for 90 minutes of sleep for one complete sleep cycle, figuring it’d take about 30 seconds to doze off. After hitting snooze a couple of times, I woke up refreshed and ready for the day. I was low on water so I melted enough snow to fill my 3L pack and finished up by boiling water for a pourover. I had pre-ground the beans, but this was something I had been looking forward to for awhile!

There is snow everywhere, it looks cold outside and the mug is obviously cold, yet the coffee was as hot as boiling water in the double-walled mug. I very successfully burned by tongue. It still hurts as I write this. Weirdly though, I didn’t realize I’d burned my tongue until many hours later.

Of all of the things I expected to hurt post-race, it was not my tongue. Earlier Friday, I’d let my lips get chapped (maybe on Two Top with the howling winds?) So between my lips and tongue, they take the win for damaged body parts. Everything else is fine. My legs are tired (not that I’m using them) and nothing else hurts. The USWE hydration pack was super comfy where other running vests I’ve tried have been a little lighter but they have cut off circulation to my hands with 3+ liters of water and stuff in them.

Saturday Morning

While it didn’t feel like it took a long time to melt water and make coffee, time was moving by quickly. Time has a different meaning out there. If something is going to take 2 hours, no big deal. But it can take this much time to move 5 miles. The sun was coming up when I pulled out of camp ready to set off for the day.

It took a little while to settle into moving again. The rhythm I’d been in the previous night was no longer. I’d take a few pedal strokes and remember I needed to do something. Put Dematone on face. Check. Rearrange hydration hose. Check. EAT gosh darn it! It’s breakfast time!! Check. Oooh it’s pretty, take photos. Check.

It was only another 10-mile stretch to get to checkpoint 2 so I didn’t need all of that water I’d made, but it was comforting to be able to drink without worrying about running out so I drank a lot and enjoyed the ride to the second checkpoint where pancakes and coffee awaited. I loved this part of the route. It was beautiful and fun riding. This was the part of the ride at the last Fat Pursuit where I was hurting badly and I didn’t feel I could go on. It felt great to know that I would be passing through checkpoint 2 with no concern about continuing.

It snowed 3” or more overnight which meant riding was harder now. Slower riders get to go even slower! I heard that people behind me had a lot more bike pushing. The fluff on flat terrain was okay, no complaints here!

Breakfast at Checkpoint 2, Mi 77, 11am - Still morning!

Nicki (sp?) runs checkpoint 2 and Jacob, Fat Pursuit Workshop instructor, was helping out there with riders and making sure the CP2 workers weren’t going to overdose on pancakes or pizza. Gotta keep the volunteers fed and cared for too!

Rob was able to drive to this checkpoint so I got to see him there! Sounds like he and Jacob had a lot of time to chat and Rob was having a good time seeing the racers. It was fun to hear from him what was going on with everyone else. Apparently he was driving all over and taking photos of riders all night. People told me he slept less than I did.

CP2 near Harriman State Park was a terrific stop. Nicki is a super pro with pulling people’s food bags when she sees them coming in and making pancakes (I ate 3) and when I put Skratch in my water (now that I had my checkpoint 2 bag of food) & it had clumps, she took that hydration pack and massaged out every single clump with vigor. Jacob was offering up coffee and hot chocolate, so naturally, I had a mocha. Yum!

I saw two foot participants there, Ellen, who was still smiling and doing really well and (I think) Gavin was looking good and seemed to be having a great race. Ellen is unmissable with her smile and pink tape and sometimes pink coat.

Mental Game

The next many miles are a blur. The riding was good, harder than Friday with the soft, new snow. Even though the course looked flat in spots or even down, it felt like this whole stretch was some kind of climb. The last big climb of the race hit at mile 85 and the top was around mile 89. This climb was hard to ride so pushing the bike was nearly as fast and felt like a good choice much of it. Snowmobiles had messed up the surface as well so it’s slow snow.

This was a new part of the course that I haven’t seen before. I started hearing my breath loudly, and it felt a lot like what I’d experienced last Fat Pursuit, when I was sure I had altitude sickness.

I had a very serious conversation with myself. It’s a new part of the course, but there is nothing scary about it, it’s the same as the first part of the course. It’s fine. The top will come soon enough, it’s okay. It worked! My breathing changed back to how it’d been before, and I felt fine again. All that I had been experiencing was anxiety at the newness of the terrain. The sun was dropping in the sky and preparing for a second night is intimidating especially on a part of new-to-me-course.

An hour or two later, my friend from Boston who came out for Fat Pursuit, Brian, sent me a Garmin In-Reach message on this climb. It was a positive “you got this” message. I am new at the Garmin In-Reach but was able to figure out how to send a pre-programmed message back. I told him “I’m having a great time.” Which wasn’t exactly true at that moment. But I set my mind to find all of the ways in which I really was having a great time. This advice came straight from Jacob’s session at the FP workshop. A positive mental disposition is extremely important. It’s one thing to talk positively to self and a whole other to actually believe what you say to yourself. I worked on it until I believed what I was saying.

Made it to the top of the last climb!

The top of this climb was beautiful and the sun was setting. I saw Ellen for the last time here and was elated she got to see this same scene at the perfect time. The fast people didn’t get this sunset. Of course, they did get a pretty sunrise with nice conditions on Two Top, so there’s that.

The descent was slow with the powder tossing me off the bike from time to time. It was a tree-filled mountain, really nice. Soon it was pitch black, I was still surrounded by trees and enjoying the ride. Hallucinations of elves in the trees started in this area. They weren’t too numerous and they were all of friendly creatures Lord of the Rings style. Totally fine. This comes with sleep deprivation and is not frightening.

The course meandered along and then it goes around Island Park Reservoir and parallels a river for miles and many hours of pedaling. The trees disappear and then there’s nothing on both sides of the course. The moon was bright and it was snowing for awhile - yes, even with the bright moon! Sometimes there was thick fog, that was a bit eerie. Off to the right looked to be mountains in the distance.

I heard howling of either coyotes or wolves coming from the mountains. They were loud and many of them were out there. Then I had a hallucination of some creature that was in front of me, also right out of a fantasy book, that was ready to pounce. Jay would not put us on a course where animals will eat us I kept thinking. The creature ended up being snow and shadows from my light in the snow. It was fine! Continuing on.

Eventually, the trail turned into a snow-covered paved road that was passing by massive ranches. I was still in the middle of nowhere, but I was making progress to checkpoint 3 (an unmanned trailer).

How to make a long ride much longer

After getting on the paved road, my loooow tire pressure was making everything quite a bit slower than it needed to be. I considered the risk of adding air and causing problems. Something I shouldn’t do, I thought. But then, I succumbed to the allure of a faster ride and tried to add air into my back tire. The cold pump which had worked fine all day Friday for adding air, was too cold for the seals to work and it was useless. I flatted my tire in the process. Was it really that cold? Back-up time! I had CO2 cartridges and an inflator. I put the inflator next to the Hot Hands chemical hand warmers I’d had in my gloves to warm it up. Alas, I didn’t do it long enough, the CO2 air went everywhere except in the tire, the on/off valve simply didn’t work at all.

Rob had been waiting for me near checkpoint 3 to take a good night shot of me riding by. After waiting for me for awhile and wondering why my dot had stopped, he showed up on this dark road in the middle of nowhere in the rental vehicle. Naturally, I was alarmed at this stranger and got on the bike, riding it with the flat to not look like a damsel in distress. Finally, he said something and came over and I realized it was him. Thank goodness! He tried to offer good advice for the flat and to just ride it, it should be okay. I rode the bike slowly while warming the pump in my jacket and then tried adding air after a few minutes. The pump was back to life and I got a lot of air in there! Now I was flying!

…except the rear tire went flat again. Oh no! I spiraled to believing the tire had a big problem and it was going to be flat forever so I’d be walking the rest of the time. When I went to add air, I realized I hadn’t tightened the valve stem. Do I know better? Of course. This is what happens when the brain is tired.

So I added air yet again and the valve core came off with the pump. All of the air escaped. It takes a lot of pumps to get a fat tire full! Did it once again after tightening the valve core in there, and this time it held just fine. Whew! It wasn’t far to the trailer and CP 3 at this point so I didn’t have far enough to get warm again.

The trailer had big water containers and it was time for more water. I filled my bladder with about 3/4 L of what I thought was water but it came out milky yellow…hmmm. Bone broth! Then I found what was actually water and filled the rest of the bladder with that. I haven’t ever had bone broth on a ride and it’s my new favorite food. I don’t eat meat but I have no problem with this savory, nutrient-rich, creamy substance. Oh and it was warm!

Pulling out of the trailer, it felt like a cold, dark, still night. There’s no bivvying allowed after this since the last 11 miles of the race are called “a victory lap.” 11 miles sounds like nothing until one is sleep deprived and the body is beyond being out there for too long. My lights and everything with a battery started to suffer. It’s weird since the AAA lithium batteries aren’t supposed to be affected by sub zero temps, but my small flashing front light died. My headlamp did, too, but it was fine once I put it in my pocket and warmed it up. The rechargeable headlight showed signs of being close to the end of its life so I turned it to pulsing rather than low to save it as much as possible. It’s annoying to ride to a pulsing light! After it died ~45 minutes later, I rode by the light of the moon for awhile. It was bright enough to see just well enough. Finally, I pulled out another small backup light that I’d been warming in my jacket and put that on, set to pulsing since it was the very last one that I had. (I couldn’t remember where I stashed the last battery for my powerful headlight and was worried I had forgotten to bring it.)

The last section was really fun terrain and I liked it! I wish I could have been there in the daylight.

My derailleur stopped shifting. I was sure it was just too cold to work. Again, tired brain talking here. I had another full backup battery which I knew was with me and ready to go, but it didn’t occur to me to try it out. I just saw the snowy rear derailleur and decided it had frozen up. This is crazy to think since my bike worked absolutely fine at -9 degrees after a night of sleeping outside with me so of course at 6 to 9 degrees, the battery is going to be fine. So there I was stuck in my 42 tooth cog paired with the 26t chainring for the rest of the race on a course that had almost no climbs left. I really enjoy finishing races strong, coming in fast (er, relatively fast) so the super spinning I was doing didn’t cut it and I couldn’t speed to the finish line even though my legs told me they still had something left to give. How much? Will never know!

For those who are thinking I’m not so smart for having an electronic shifting bike, I saw plenty of people have issues with mechanical shifting bikes when things freeze in both the shifter and derailleur so all systems will have issues in the cold. I was just too tired to do the logical thing that I would have advised any group rider to do on a typical ride.

It was about two hours prior to the finish (43 hours in) that I started to feel pressure on my saddle, my shoulders got sore from the weight of the hydration pack, and knees felt a bit creaky. Going this long without any physical discomfort was a major win. Everything is much more dialed now than 2 years ago.

The finish (4:05am Sunday) was the best! Rob was there taking photos and there to welcome me back. I am so lucky he was there, his presence and support means the world.

Jay and a volunteer were there to proctor the water boil test and it looked like they had been out there for the entire night. Jay was there for every single finisher. And because he had the water boil at the end, that meant he interacted and had conversations with everyone who had energy left to chat. It was the best way to end the race and be able to say THANK YOU to Jay.

No excuses

Throughout the race, I was repeating and reviewing this mantra. I came up with others as well surrounding the concept of being prepared and never needing to end a ride if one brings the right stuff. No excuses. One makes one’s own luck. Things go wrong, it’s just a matter of managing whatever it is with a clear head, leaning on experience. Preparation and practice lead to efficiency and speed in all facets of this race or any endeavor one takes on.

There are countless reasons why getting to the starting line is impossible. Another thousand or so why getting to the finish line is impossible.

Crossing the finish is not a finish, it’s a mark in time. Photo above: water boil test just prior to the finish line. The learning of the past week will stay with me forever, as will the memories of the people, the conversations, the smiles, the hugs, and high fives. There is so much more to be learned, but the foundation is solidly in place to build on and I intend to attempt to impart what I have gained with everyone with whom I ride and interact.

I left my fear of cold behind. I learned how to talk myself out of dangerous breathing. I feel capable of taking on anything. I want to keep improving, be more efficient, do my work more quickly and proactively on the bike, constantly being on top of doing the right stuff at every moment on every ride.

Thank you

Thank yous can’t be properly expressed in words for the experiences I’ve had this past week. The instructors at Fat Pursuit camp: Perry Jewett, Jason Hanson, Jennifer Hanson, Jacob Hora, Jay Petervary were each fantastic. Jay for being the visionary behind it all and for being truly interested in growing each person who comes out to both the workshop and race. He does it for important reasons so far beyond “just” wanting to run a race. Tracey Petervary does a ton of organization and heavy lifting to make everything run smoothly while also managing all of the pre-race logistics. She is a force making so much happen that is not obvious. ALL of the volunteers, photo below, who support the racers at Fat Pursuit tirelessly and still have these smiles to share at the 12:00pm toast on Sunday.

Hosts Nan and Mike who made sure Rob and I had the full community experience the whole time and made sure we ate well and offered advice and guidance throughout. Friend Brian who came out from Boston for Fat Pursuit and who was so enthusiastic about it, that helped me stay on it where it came to training and proper prep prior to heading out to Idaho. Rob who supports me and the things I want to do in all of the ways, and his presence was good for other riders also.

Everyone who watched my dot and sent encouraging messages along in email, social media, txt, etc: your notes meant the world to me! I felt you watching me out there and it felt incredible to get “congrats” notes after I finished before I had even woken up in the morning after finishing!

The value of people near and far is highlighted in special ways with an event like Fat Pursuit. This is a world-class race that has reached “holiday week” status for many, and it’s run exceptionally well with riders’ safety a top priority. I recommend it to everyone, especially to those whose first reaction is to call it “crazy.”

Open the door to having Fat Pursuit as a goal for next year, and enjoy the journey that lies ahead.

What it's like to race the MOAT Mountain 24 Hours of Great Glen and why you should go next year

24-hour mountain bike races are few and far between and are some of the most special events out there. They aren’t well known so if you’re hearing about it for the first time here, you’re in the vast majority. 24 hour races involve a full weekend of being a tight-knit community living together in a pop-up tent city next to the course. Families and friends of racers come join in the weekend festivities to support and be part of the party, and there is a huge crew of volunteers and staff who make this whole little city run smoothly for the whole weekend. People start arriving the minute organizers say that the camping areas are open so as to stake out their space, pitch tents, assemble complicated outdoor kitchens for their team.

Before I dive into this event and the details that I can remember, first a massive THANK YOU to the promoters of the MOAT Mountain 24 Hours of Great Glen, (#24HOGG), the volunteers, and every single person who had a kind word to say. I’m leaving out some special moments and people in this post, but it’s already too long and I can’t remember everything right now. Every single person made the difference out there throughout the weekend! It was the best of cycling community and positive vibe from the very beginning until we rolled out of the field we’d called home for the weekend.

NEER’s home base was comfortable with lots of tents, tables, trees, and lights around a pop-up for night time hanging out. The big, red van was hiding behind its large awning. We wanted to be ready for both the sun and rain, and we really hoped predicted thunderstorms didn’t materialize (they didn’t).

Starting at 12pm noon on Saturday, racers battle the course, the conditions, the heat of the day, the dark of night, the wet of the rain, and all of the challenges together. Everyone shares the same course no matter one’s race category, men and women, junior racers to seasoned racing veterans. I love being part of a mixed field of people. Racing is not the reason I’m there, yet this aspect played into my overall good feelings of the weekend which I’ll get into later. The top organized race events of my life have all been an everyone-races-together scenario. Great examples: Unbound and Fat Pursuit. Every group ride I ever do falls into this category too, but right now, I’m talking about racing.


There are a lot of rules and interesting things that surround what a 24-hour race is and how it’s run. I’ll highlight some in this race report. Most racers participate on a team of 2 people, 4 or 5 people. In this race, 72 out of the 456 entrants were 24-hour solo racers. There are 12-hour categories as well. Some multi-person categories are women-only categories, some delineated by age, others are mixed so men and women can be on the same team. For the teams, one team member races at a time, then at the end of the lap, that person taps out to the next team member who races the next lap of the course. The promoters keep track of all of the data surrounding each lap for each person and team. It’s an impressive task to keep track of everyone’s timing, what lap each racer is on, who is on which team, all of that good stuff.

It’s certainly fun to see the stats afterward: how many laps were done at night, what the fastest lap was, who had the most overtakes, the statistics are endless.

I went with a group of people who are part of the New England Expedition Riders AKA NEER. My original intent was to be on a team of 4 others for the shared experience. To make a very long story short, we ended up with 5 people wanting to be on the team so I kicked myself off of it, electing for a solo 24-hour category a couple of weeks ago. This is something I had never, ever considered doing. But once I did it, I couldn’t not get excited about the prospect of racing for 24 hours. Besides, I need to be training for Fat Pursuit and this is ideal.

NEER friends Ben, Mike and I did a course recon ride on Friday evening to see what we’d be in store for during the race. Our other NEER teammate, arrived later at camp so she wasn’t there for the pre-ride.

20 years ago, I attended the 24 Hours at Moab mountain bike race only as a volunteer. It’s one of the first things I ever did as a new cyclist and it introduced me to good friends who I then got into road cycling with. When I was in Moab, I saw pro-level men crack in the middle of the night and quit. My impression was that 24 hours of mountain bike racing is impossible. Fortunately, there’s no rule that you can’t stop at any time, you still get to be in the results. Some 24 hour races have different rules about being on the course near the end, this one didn’t have anything like that.

It’s taken me 20 years to do my first 24-hour race and this is my second mountain bike race ever. Never too late to start. I highly recommend volunteering for one of these races because the camaraderie and community vibe is so great, much of the fun simply has to do with being part of the whole thing.

 

This is Heidi, she and I happened to sit next to each other at the racer meeting held just before race time. She and I were in the same category, it was fun to meet her and chat with her before the meeting started. She last raced here solo 16 years ago! It was neat to see her on course and know the person behind the helmet.

 

On the podium with Jessica Nankman and Lauri Webber. All fresh as daisies at least in this moment for the camera!

Winning the race: my top secret strategy

Work has been out-of-control bonkers with lots of new bikes being ordered (and tax-free weekend is coming up in a few days!) I didn’t have a plan hashed out and hadn’t thought much about the race itself. I was more worried over the logistics surrounding the organization of the 4-person team.


I won my age group (women 41 and over) and was 2nd overall woman. I logged 16 laps. To add credibility to this result (there aren’t a lot of women participants but those who were there took it seriously), the 6th place man under 41 yrs old logged 16 laps as did the 4th place man 41+ years old. In case it’s not obvious from my other race reports (where I’ve come in mid-pack or further back), doing well here had absolutely nothing to do with the experience and my happiness at having done it. But it’s a fun story to tell!


My strategy: go steady and just keep moving. My transitions (time in between laps) could have been faster, but they were a lot faster than I thought they would be. Originally, I thought there would be time to get back to the team campsite, make a sandwich, fill a water bottle, change into a clean/dry jersey and bibs, mosey back to course every other lap. My husband, Rob, was there and he was a saint to meet me at the race tent after every single lap to give me a full water bottle of High Carb Skratch mix (400 calories per bottle), a 1/2 bottle of plain water, and whatever else I might need. He may have slept for 40 minutes total all night. That’s much harder than racing.


I knew I didn’t want to sleep, that was something I wanted to avoid if at all possible. I think I may have shut my eyes for 5-10 minutes during one transition break while sitting up in a chair, but I don’t know if I actually fell asleep during the full almost 25 hours of the race. Yeah, I made a long race longer. Keep reading.


The idea of going back to camp even once flew out the window the moment the gun went off and I realized that this is a race and the competitive part of my brain turned on and I had to at least try to race, and give it my best.

NEER friends Mike, Ben, and I at camp Friday evening. I wondered what was happening here when I was out racing and knew if I returned, I’d never leave to continue racing.

I’m not a technical mountain biker, and I knew other people would beat me in the techy parts of the course. My level of mountain bike riding confidence went up from the pre-ride to the end of the race but I’m still not going to race on boardwalks or wet rocks. I know I have the ability to ride for hours and climb reasonably well so I made sure to take advantage of the carriage road portions, get off of the brakes on descents, and move as quickly through the parts that were above my ability level either by riding slowly or getting off of the bike and walking over/around whatever it was.


Seeing other people out there walking their bikes in places was comforting. No one is doing this thing perfectly, everyone is having their difficulties, and no one seemed to be judging anyone else. All I saw all day and night were kind people being nice to each other and fast guys saying “thank you” when I’d move out of their way so they could keep moving. The fast guys were really fast, it was fun to see them fly. There were fast women and some very strong junior girls out there passing me, too, riding with tremendous confidence.


I watch pro mountain bike racing all of the time on tv. They show the top few riders the whole time, the difficulties people have, even at the top of the sport, rarely get shown on tv. Those courses are so much more gnarly than this course. I think others would agree this ~9.1 mile course was really well designed with a perfect mix of elements and fun spots, whoop-dee-doos, let-er-rip descents. The climbs were hard, the course required nearly constant attention and both hands on the handlebars, thus not many opportunities to take a drink. It was also very beautiful. I have no pictures from the course. This is one time I put my phone away and didn’t look at it for over 24 hours. It was like being on another planet.


Race bike setup FTW

I raced my Seven Cycles Treeline fat bike with 27.5 / 2.8” tires which is also my winter fat bike with a different set of wheels and fork swap. I got compliments on the bike during the race from guys who wished they weren’t hauling the weight of their dual suspension bikes. I doubt any of them could tell I was on a fat bike since the bike doesn’t look fat when mountain bike wheels are on it. The course was ideal for a titanium hardtail since there weren’t any jumps or huge features that favor a dual suspension bike, but staying planted on the wet roots, rocks, and boardwalks was important which the titanium participates in beautifully. With a little over 1,030 feet of climbing per lap, having a light bike that transfers all of my energy into the forward motion of the bike was important. Being in a perfect position and protected by the smoothness of the titanium added to my comfort. I didn’t have any pain from being on the bike for a total rolling time of 21.5 hours. My thumb got sore from shifting the electronic shifter since I was shifting so much. Imagine if it were mechanical shifting! And one of my toes got sore. I have no idea where that came from. No saddle pain, back pain, or any of the other pains showed up that are likely causes of people hanging up their mountain bike for the day.

Race bike set up with its 29” wheels. I took off the extra mount on the handlebars where I usually keep the 360 camera because the steep hills require getting close to the bars to stay balanced. Chompy, the adventurous dinosaur joined in on every lap in my handlebar feedbag.

Gearing: 30t chainring, 10-52 cassette. SRAM Eagle AXS. I was in the 30-52 low gear plenty, especially on Blueberry Hill. That hill is long, steep and the sun baked riders on it since it’s paved. Cruelty. But another reason to love the night laps!

I had debated 29” wheels and 27.5” wheels and decided that since I’ve spent more time on the plumper 27.5”/2.8” tires, those would be my race setup. The 29” wheels are great and very light, but they were new to me 2 days before the race and riding unfamiliar wheels on unfamiliar terrain isn’t smart.

Two of my NEER friends who were at the race have very similar bike setups: Seven Cycles Treeline bikes that are designed for dual wheelsets and both fat tires and this kind of mountain bike riding. Versatility and easy-to-manage bikes that do this kind of thing very well, offer balanced control, confidence, and comfort with all necessary speed. If it weren’t for the confidence my bike gives me, I would not be mountain bike riding, it’s that simple.

Gaining a new identity: Number 9

With my big yellow number, everyone knew I was a solo rider. The whole race I heard “great job solo rider!” And that was so nice to have this constant encouragement and positive vibe from all of these other racers and spectators out there. Most of the other racers were faster than me and they were being so darn nice. I exchanged stories and a few broken sentences with a number of people.

Best story: I met a woman who was doing the race with her husband as a 2-person team. They were trading laps and caring for their 1-year-old! LOVE these stories! I hope that worked out for both of them and their kiddo.

I was still clean on the first lap. This and the other pro photos taken by Rob Vandermark.

There’s so much camaraderie out there across all riders, and there’s even more shared by solo riders. The amount of camaraderie seemed to increase as the race went on as well. At the beginning, I didn’t trust I could do it or that I would want to go past 2 laps. A compliment from someone early on wasn’t anything I felt I deserved because anyone can register for a big ride. I’d just laugh and say, “Let’s just see where I’m at tomorrow morning.” After getting through enough laps, at some point, I could accept that I’d taken on a challenge that wasn’t too big or scary.


One of the volunteers told me really nice things when I passed through the tent in the middle of the night: “You’re having a great race, Number 9.” The way he delivered his messages, he made me feel like I was doing something special. I wish I could have said “thank you” to him at the end of the race. Words matter and in the middle of the night, there aren’t many of them. All of the volunteers were nice and many were part-time cheerleaders too. Number 9 was my name throughout the race and I loved it.


How the race began: Making mountain bikers run!

I’m not a runner. But here we gooooo!!

Many 24-hour races start by having the first person from each team run to their bike. It’s called a Le Mans start. This keeps the start safer since everyone runs at a different pace and bikes are placed at various positions. We are cyclists NOT necessarily runners. I don’t know how to run in my bike shoes! The solo racers plodded their way to their bikes and though it’s been basically forever since I’ve gone on a real run, I felt like it got my whole body moving nicely, blood flowing, nerves shook out on this little run that was probably all of 5 minutes or less to lap the pond and grab the bike.

Racers ran past their bikes, around the lake, then back to where the bike is sitting and then it’s time to find the bike and ride!

The lap blow by blow

I’m not going to bore you with details of every lap. Mostly because it’s a blur now. Here are the highlights of what I can remember:

Lap 1 - 12:00 PM - 1:15 PM

  • Trying to suss out who’s who in the field as we were standing around waiting for the starting cannon to go off. There are too many racers to see all of the women in my field and figure out who looks serious.

  • Once we started on the bike, I saw some go ahead of me, and I saw plenty of 24-hour solo men going around my pace. I was very careful to stay steady, smooth, resist any temptation to go hard. I watched my heart rate trying to stay in zone 2 (endurance, talking pace) as much as is possible without falling over on a climb.

  • The first trail section started and people got jammed up. Lots of people hadn’t pre-ridden the course so it was a surprise to them. Most people were patient with the traffic jam.

  • The course was warm, dry in most places, and sketchy descents were a little better since there had been some rain overnight.

Lap 2 - 1:23 PM - 2:38 PM

  • The fastest laps of the day for me. Dry trails, confidence, freshness.

  • At one point, I was trying to get off my bike and instead slipped and fell. Immediately I got two very serious cramps, one in each leg and I couldn’t move. Two guys (solo riders I think) were there and wanted to help. I explained that all was well, I just needed to get the cramps to go away. I’ve never cramped on the bike before so that was a little unnerving, but after pulling my feet back, the cramps went away and I got back on the bike. All of that drama must not have taken much time given the speed of this lap compared with my others! 1 hour 14 minutes for those of you wondering. And no, this is not fast compared with the fastest lap of the day which was sub 40 minutes. The fastest solo man had a 45 minute fastest lap and 1 hour 7 minute slowest lap. He did 25 total laps. Fastest lap for any woman solo 24-hr was 1 hour 5 minutes.

Lap 3 - 2:47 PM - 4:08 PM

  • I think this is when I got up the nerve to ride the floating bridge. The entrance to the bridge is a bit intimidating and I was certain I’d ride right into the pond which, with the high temps and humidity, would not have been unwelcome. As I started onto the bridge, I heard someone encouraging me to just roll onto it. Turns out it was NEER friend Dave who was also doing a 24-hour solo race riding right behind me!

Riding the bridge makes for great photos. Only problem is that photographer and my super supporter husband couldn’t do both things since the start/finish and bridge are too close together. I was glad he figured out how to capture this crossing!

Lap 4-5 - 4:09 PM - 5:24 PM & 5:42 PM - 6:57 PM

Feast of tortilla and nutella. Great combo except my stomach started refusing food not all that long after this was taken.

  • No memory of these laps except that at the end of lap 5, I felt like I really needed to eat something and few things sounded digestible. Skratch Labs in my bottles and Honey Stingers gummy chews were all I could eat. I tried some fake chicken salad and it went down easily. I think there were some pickles in it. I was craving pickles but hadn’t thought to pack any. DOH!

  • The sun went down somewhere in this time, all racers are required to have 2 headlights starting at 7pm. It’s racer’s choice as to when they are turned on. It’s dark early in the woods!

Lap 6 - 7:11 PM - 8:31 PM

  • Got into the transition area with no problem, got bottles, drank, the usual.

  • Made it about 200 yards into lap 6 when I felt like I was going to vomit. Got off the bike and quickly dispensed of all stomach contents next to the pond. No more fake chicken salad in stomach. But I needed those calories in there. A nice guy who was camping on the course near where I was getting sick came over to offer water and anything I needed. He must be a dad, he asked me if I felt better or worse. The answer was “I think better.” Except I knew I would miss the calories and wondered if my race was over.

  • Found I could continue to drink the Skratch bottle and plain water tasted much better. So I fueled the lap and made it to lap 7.

At dusk it was still bright enough out but under the trees, bright lights were necessary to see anything.

Laps 7-10 - 8:42 PM - 3:18 AM

Eating half of a s’more and staring at the fire. Good scene at Temptation corner!

  • All night laps, all good. I loved the quiet of night, that there were fewer racers on course because the 12-hour racers were done by 1:15am, and so many people were sleeping. The race tent that had been buzzing with activity was quite and subdued in the middle of the night with many fewer racers coming in and out.

  • This was my chance to make up for time lost, I was in 2nd place with 3rd and 4th places not far behind. And it looked like they might be sleeping. It was hard to know. Just keep moving.

  • At some point, it started to rain, I think that might be lap 8 around midnight? (Memory is so foggy). The temps cooled when the sun went down and the rain felt great. Everything got slipperier and the mucky, previously slimy sections got slimier.

  • I just kept thinking about how much I love night riding and was remembering some of the many pleasant times I’ve had on Full Moon rides and other night rides with friends. I find trails easier to ride at night and no, I don’t ride faster (everyone goes slower), but lights focus your attention on the trail, there are no distractions, it’s quiet and peaceful.

  • From 7pm-11pm the promoters had a fire on the far side of the course, and were serving up bacon and s’mores. Rob met me here for a s’more. I ate half and couldn’t get down the rest. At least I tried!

Lap 11-12 - 3:30 AM - 5:06 AM & 5:55 AM - 7:19 AM

  • At this point, I was getting ahead of the others in my race probably because they were sleeping. They probably figured I would, too. Technically, if everyone else is cracked, then I could stop here and get a finish time that ends up with a podium spot. Sounds good to me. I got tired and with the rain, it was chilly after stopping for too long. I was shivering (even with a jacket), and I closed my eyes. Not sure if there was sleep there, but those few minutes of closed eyes was good. I was stopped for 49 minutes and that was almost too much. Rob told me it was time to either go back to the tent to sleep or go back to the race. I knew if I laid down on the (very comfy) air mattress in the tent, I would never wake up. Time to race!

  • Dawn started at the beginning of lap 12 and I never felt even a wink of tiredness after that point.

Lap 13 - 7:25:29 AM - 8:48:55 AM

  • I think I told the judges I hoped this would be the last lap. I’d know when I returned if the other women had woken up and started racing again or if they were done.

  • Not long into this lap (I think it was this lap!), I spied a woman with a yellow number passing me when I was dealing with stuffing my rain jacket into my pocket for too much time. I didn’t know what lap she was on or anything, I just knew that it was close between me and at least 2 others so I couldn’t mess around any longer.

  • Game ON!

Lap 14 - 8:55:28 AM - 10:13:48 AM

  • Up to this point, I was mostly riding to see how long I could stay on the bike and try to make it to noon Sunday. Suddenly, the feeling of racing started, the feeling of chasing and being chased. What a great feeling! What’s going to happen, how will this play out? Time to shift mindset from finishing to how to finish, how to win this thing, if that’s possible.

  • Everyone is awake and racing, maybe they’re fresh, maybe they’re dealing with what I saw in some of the men: 2-hour sleeps are brutal. Wake up to feel worse than before the sleep.

  • I’m trying to do the math on how to make this work. The rule is this: if you come through the finish line before 12pm, you can do another lap. The race ends at 12pm so if you arrive just after this time, that’s your lap count. If competitors have the same lap count, the fastest time wins the race. If you leave for your last lap prior to 12pm, you have to finish before 1:15pm or that lap doesn’t count.

  • With my lap times right around 1 hr 15 minutes, I’d need to get through the next lap with enough time before 12pm to give me time for yet another lap. Not that I wanted to do two more laps, but there was a race happening now and I am here to race!

Lap 15 - 8:55 AM - 10:13 AM

  • Gotta keep moving! Rain stopped somewhere before this I think. Hopefully the sun stays away. The sun was absolutely brutal Saturday and I didn’t want to try to reapply sunscreen.

  • I saw another woman with a yellow number on her bike across the course on the first half of this lap. My heart jumped, I was certain this was the woman who was in 2nd who would be hunting me down. I couldn’t see her number, I just knew the chances were good I was going to have to stay ahead of her in this section since she would get me on the technical portions of the technical part of the lap a little later on. Also, if I saw her at this point, we couldn’t have been that far away from each other on the course. YIKES! RACE!

  • Now I’m trying to move faster and I’m passing by people who are on their last lap and happy to be done. The fast guys were really fast (just like at night) and the slower guys were getting chatty. It was sweet, but I was now trying to race and I was running out of energy to talk in general. Funny change in things from a bit earlier when I was more in that chatty mode.

  • Doing the math figuring out if I’d need to do another lap or not. I didn’t drink my full Skratch bottle since I figured it’d need to last 2 laps. Rob wouldn’t necessarily have more clarity than me on the situation and I’d need to make the next transition very fast.

  • This lap was within seconds of my fastest lap of the day. By playing it safe all of this time, I had more to give to this race…

This is Jessica Nankman from PA on her first lap. Turns out (thanks to Google that I am just now employing to learn who everyone was out there), she is an experienced 24-hour and endurance mtb racer. I’m sure she gambled that I would sleep and that would have made the difference. The odds were in her favor. Rob got this great photo of her that I’m just now seeing! Now that I see this photo, I think I may have seen her on course. One of the people who you look at and you know they have it all together.

Lap 16 - 11:32 AM - 12:49 PM

  • I thought I’d be passing through the tent later than 11:30am, but this timing allowed me a much longer last lap to still get credit for completing this last lap before 1:15pm, the race time cut off.

  • The problem with not doing a last lap is that if the woman who I am sure is right on my heels chasing me crosses the line before 12pm, she gets 1 more lap. That would put us on the same lap and in an actual race during the entire lap for the win. Again, I am pretty sure she’s faster than me, so I can’t let this happen.

  • I have a 46 second transition, I don’t try to find Rob, hope he’s not too confused as to why I didn’t come find him in the race tent like on every other lap, and I take off on this last lap with zest. I’m still sure I’m being chased and am not sticking around to find out the details. I debate whether I’ll pick up my phone if he calls me. He could be calling to say she didn’t make the 12pm time cut so I could stop racing and come back.

  • This last lap is 1 hr 16 minutes, so not far off from my fastest lap. I inquired (without being too annoying or hoped this to be the case) with people I saw on course. as to whether they’d just passed a woman with yellow number. No one had seen anyone. Still, not leaving things to chance, I completed the lap and finished feeling great. And yes, this is how a 24-hour race stretched to almost 25 hours.

The Finish

I was smiling at everyone standing at the end cheering, so nice to see a bunch of people there at the end!!! I felt good and was satisfied with the effort and my race.

The end of the story is that the woman, Jessica, who was the actual person who was chasing was just far enough back that she wasn’t able to take the last lap. Thus, I didn’t have to ride that last lap after all. I don’t remember seeing her out there once the whole race, same with the woman who came in third. So all of the people who were freaking me out who I thought were chasing weren’t the ones to worry about! But having them there and feeling that “being chased” feeling added to the fun.

Jessica was super friendly and said a few things on the podium about the time she slept and I really wanted to spend a whole lot more time digging into the details with her and Lauri who took 3rd to hear their stories of what they’d been through, how long they’d slept, what their races had involved. Pretty sure I wasn’t capable of conversation now being hours since eating anything and a total of 31 hours since sleeping. It was time to rest.

Everyone scattered post-podium and I headed straight for that air mattress for a good, long 2-3 hour nap before breaking down camp and heading home.

Moments after the race, I took a few deep breaths then joined NEER friend Ben in the river just a few yards away to clean up and feel like a new person for the awards ceremony at 2pm. There wasn’t much time to decompress and I didn’t eat anything though I knew food was necessary, it just wasn’t going to happen yet. Cold seltzer water did go down and hit the spot!

What I learned & what I hope you take from this

  • 24 hour races are for EVERYONE. Racers, people who ride mountain bikes but don’t consider themselves “racers,” non-riders, young and old. Sign up for the races, they’re not expensive when you consider it’s a full weekend of camping (10am Friday until 10am Monday), well organized, there’s a t-shirt… it costs promoters a LOT to run something like this on this scale. Keep them in business! Volunteer if you’re not a racer. Take your kids to the kids’ race and kids activities.

  • I felt I had an advantage with my age (46 at the time of the race, 47 at the time of this writing) and experience of being a cyclist despite my major lack of mountain bike-specific experience. I knew how to keep my heart rate low. I don’t know that younger people can tolerate the lack of sleep as well. The point is to race your strengths, give yourself grace on your weaknesses, and just keep moving forward. Everyone is having some trouble out there, you’re never alone.

  • Fuel the ride and go in with a plan and back-up plan with your team/support people & communicate. Practice eating on long rides and make sure to keep the calories coming in however you can tolerate them. I should have had ice cream and pickles at the ready since these foods work well for me when I’m deep into a ride. Next time.

  • Having a bucket of ice to just put on my skin or wash off with would have felt great. If it’s feasible, that’s a treat in between laps.

  • Get to the venue as soon as they say it’s open. Getting in late doesn’t give you enough time to prep everything and get decent sleep prior to the race start. 12pm is EARLY, it is not as late as it sounds given the amount of pre-race prep is necessary.

  • Pre-ride the course before the race so you know what to expect and have a chance to practice anything you’re not certain of prior to needing to race it.

  • Twist your friends’ arms, it’s a good time to spend together. Like the promoters of this race said: Tell your employer you’ll be sick Monday after the race. Truth. It was nearly impossible to think enough to get any work done today. Take time to recover, replenish, and reflect on the event. A whole heck of a lot happens in that 24 hours as well as the many days before it starts.

Savor the experience, grow from it, realize just how much more you’re capable of than you ever thought possible, and make plans to return the following year!