Atacama Crossing Blogs 2010

Andrea Zanghellini

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Atacama Crossing (2010) blog posts from Andrea Zanghellini

06 March 2010 03:51 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

I was going to write about how nervous we were getting with the race countdown – reading others blogs and comparing our lack of preparation in comparison. I was going to write about how over the moon I was when my mother called me to tell me that she had bought a ticket to meet me at the finish line, a fact worthy of an entire blog because my parents are quite possibly the most wonderful people on the planet (this is not my biased opinion, it is a fact shared by those who have met them) and I haven’t seen my mother, who lives in Hong Kong, in over a year - our record for time spent apart. I was going to write about my wonderful new RTP friends - Sam, Daniel and Matt from Australia who I finally met in real life and confirmed for me that the most wonderful thing about this race is the friendships that we’ll make.

And then there was the earthquake, and I didn’t really know quite what to say.

I was lucky enough to have escaped to San Pedro a week before. Here we felt absolutely nothing.  We were fast asleep when at 5am we received a phone call from the hotel reception telling us to phone home as there had been a major earthquake. In a half asleep daze I couldn’t figure out if it was all a crazy dream. All the phone lines were dead. I thought about my grandparents, and my grandma who is terrified of earthquakes alone in their house. I thought about Nico in our apartment and whether or not these relatively new buildings would pass the test of their first quake. About his parents and all of my friends and relatives, and about my new Australian friends and how scared they must’ve been.

As the day progressed we frantically tried to get more information. Phone calls wouldn’t go through, desperate messages were posted on facebook looking for relatives, google searches made for towns and surnames, trying to evaluate the damage from a distance. News received on the whole was positive. Loved ones were alive, things were broken.

San Pedro was so quiet, and our days here so peaceful, that it was almost like watching a disaster on tv in a far off land. The only difference was that the ones affected were our friends and family. We were so disconnected that I couldn’t quite wrap my head around it all. It was only with the passing of the following days that more news started to trickle in and it really started to hit home.

Family missing, family found, homes lost, walls crumbling, lack of water, electricity and food.

The race was really the farthest thing from my mind. And it was only today seeing fellow competitors walking around San Pedro that I really remembered why we were here.

The other day I was asked how I could be running when my country was falling apart. To be honest, it’s been a hard question to answer. I know that I have felt guilty being here instead of heading south to help. But pulling out and cancelling the race isn’t going to help us either. I think it’s positive to continue on and show the world that despite it all, Chile stood up incredibly well to the massive quake, that it is still a safe country to visit, and that we can still make a difference without being in the thick of the mess.

This week we can make an effort to draw more attention to the help we need on an international platform. We need people to keep coming, we need people to keep reading about us, we can do everything we can now to raise funds for those in need.  The hard work won’t all be done in a week. Houses and lives will take time to rebuild. The hard work will come in maintaining momentum after the initial shock has passed. Disasters tend to be forgotten quickly and we can’t afford to have short-term memory when it comes to charity. There will still be time to do hands on work in the weeks and months to come.

So, I am going to run. I am going to run thinking of my loved ones and my country and proudly representing Chile alongside my teammates.

Comments: Total (12) comments

Posted On: 05 Apr 2010 11:10 am

Well done dearest Andrea, we heard you had run and completed the race, we are all so proud of you, especially at such difficult time. So glad Marisol was there to see you too. Lots of love from all of us in Sydney, Julie and family xx

Posted On: 15 Mar 2010 11:07 pm

Tan bonito y tanta razon beso Bert

Posted On: 12 Mar 2010 07:38 am

dearest Andrea, yesterday was your birthday, feliz cumpleaños! I am sure you had a very impressed birthday during this race. You are really superwoman!!! And very brave! Yes, RUN for your country, it's so meaningful and it's such a positive way to help your country. thanks GOD for giving/ matching you with very good partners at the end. I am so glad for you that you've got biggest reward from this race already -- Friendships! The feeling of encountering problems together and supporting each other towards the finish line must be very warm and great, and nothing can be replaced. I checked that you have been doing very great in the competition, and I am very confident that you and your teammates will finish the whole competition with a good time, 2 more days to go only!!! I can imagine how great the time it will be when you see your lovely MAMMY at the finish line! Yes, you are very right that your parents are really the best people in the world, and so that you are the most lucky person in the world! Really feeling proud of you, supergirl! lots of love from Hong Kong, Queenie+John+Baby

Posted On: 12 Mar 2010 04:23 am

Feliz cumple, Andrea!!! Te quiero. besos gordos. K

Posted On: 11 Mar 2010 04:38 pm

Andre! no se de que otra forma contactarte, así que te dejo por acá un abrazo y saludo de feliz cumpleaños!! Ojalá todo esté resultando bien Cariños

Posted On: 10 Mar 2010 12:11 pm

Andreita!! Sigue corriendo con esa fuerza y convencimiento. La vida sigue y Chile se est´´a levantando, puede ser que demoremos en cicatrizar heridas, pero sólo si mantenemos el espiritu y la fuerza lo vamos a lograr. Sigue adelante terminando lo que empezaste con más fuerza que antes, no te lo cuestiones porque como bien dices tenemos que demostrarnos a nosotros mismos y a los demás que somos un país que se levanta y no se paraliza. Haber abortado habría sido precisamente eso. Te mando un gran abrazo, me he acordado mucho de tí y te mando toda la fuerza y el apoyo que necesitas para seguir!!! Adelante por Chile!!!

Posted On: 10 Mar 2010 09:28 am

Muy lindo Andrea, lindo lo que piensas y lo que estás haciendo. Chile demorará mucho en levantarse, ya tendrás la oportunidad de ayudar, ahora lo haces de esta forma, poniendo nuestro país en la conciencia del mundo entero,muy bien. Te mando todo mi cariño y fuerzas. Te quiero mucho!!! (Tu tía que te sigue de lejos).

Posted On: 10 Mar 2010 04:53 am

Andrea , you took the right decision . Race for your country and for yourself !!! You can still help after the race ! You are doing wonderfully well ! Keep going girls ! I follow you with great pride. I wish I could be with yr mum at the Finish Line ! Courage to you all ! Lots of love and Besos Geraldine & Family

Posted On: 09 Mar 2010 05:32 pm

Hi Andrea, I hope you enjoyed the first day of the race. I saw you finished in a good time. Well done! I met your parents recently and found out you were doing this race. I think it is just fantastic and I wish you and your team mates the best of luck. I will be following you on the RTP site in the next few days. Cheers Joelle P.S. I agree with you, your parents are wonderful people!

Posted On: 09 Mar 2010 05:27 pm

if you have some energy left, after each day race, keep us informed. We want to hear more. Suerte y fuerza

Posted On: 09 Mar 2010 03:35 pm

Is your mom still coming??

Posted On: 08 Mar 2010 10:14 pm

I found your blog by accident and I am going to follow you each and every day. I am NOT a runner and question your sanity but so admire your determination. I think you are correct in going on with the race, earthquake damage will be there for a long tim. good luck, will check in every day.

17 December 2009 05:44 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

When it rains it pours.

 

Weeks of poor running, work trips, injuries, I sadly admit that I´ve gone straight past the famed ´plateau´ to more of a constant downhill as far as training and mood is concerned, something that has worried those used to seeing smiley andie. But the final and hardest blow by far came a few weeks back when after months of consciously ignoring the fact that Caro probably wouldn´t be able to race due to several personal issues including a training-time consuming injury, she made the difficult decision to step down.

 

While in the back of our minds we all knew that this could possibly happen, it took a very long time to accept (hence the lack of blog writing) and in a subconscious rebellion of the fact we let the weeks pass without making a concerted effort to replace her. Boy was it hard when we did start the search.

 

Do you have any idea what it takes to find a female, CHILEAN, ultramarathoner who is friendly, team oriented, has the time and willingness to train for one of the hardest endurance event sin the world with only 3 months notice? Through work I happened to go to a motivational talk by an esteemed Chilean explorer and mountaineer and during his account of an Antarctic expedition he took part in he quoted the famous ad Shackleton placed in the paper when looking for crew for his expedition:

 

"MEN WANTED FOR HAZARDOUS JOURNEY. SMALL WAGES, BITTER COLD, LONG MONTHS OF COMPLETE DARKNESS,CONSTANT DANGER, SAFE RETURN DOUBTFUL. HONOR AND RECOGNITION IN CASE OF SUCCESS."

 

I remembered having read it before and it struck me as equally suitable for trying to recruit team members for Racing the Planet events…

 

¨Chilean woman wanted for hazardous journey, no wages, extreme heat, bitter cold, long days of extreme hardship, returning home in one piece doubtful, honor and recognition in case of success.¨

 

Well bizarrely enough, it turns out that there are other people who find this sort of thing appealing.

 

While we had many male friends offer to dress up as girls in order to join us on our crusade should the female recruitment process go awry, we thankfully came across a new teammate through the tight knit network that is ultramarathoners in Chile. Alejandra Hiriart, Team Andesgear´s newest member is a super athlete who we are hoping will volunteer to pull us along on bungee cords for extended periods of time as we make our way across Atacama. An experienced ultrarunner we are over the moon that she has willingly joined us on this epic journey contributing some much needed experience.

 

As for Caro, all I can say is that she is and will always be a part of this team and that she better be ready to join us as we cross the finish line in march.

 

WE LOVE YOU DEARLY and aren´t letting you off the hook. There are many other Racing The Planet events awaiting us in the months and years to come!

Comments: Total (7) comments

Posted On: 11 Mar 2010 08:20 am

FELIZ CUMPLEAÑOS ANDRE, QUE TENGAS UN LINDO DÍA.....SUERTE Y UN GRAN ABRAZO. Besitos de tu tía de Suecia.

Posted On: 07 Mar 2010 03:33 pm

Buena Andy, estamos atentos a sus movimientos y espero verlas en la meta.

Posted On: 16 Feb 2010 08:36 am

Good luck Andrea.!!!! No te imaginas lo orgullosa que estoy. I will follow this space. Besitos.

Posted On: 11 Feb 2010 11:19 pm

Hello my love, this looks amazing, what a toughie you are! Good luck with your race, and love from us all in Manly, we'll be watching this space.

Posted On: 12 Jan 2010 10:54 am

That's the spirit, Angel! Glad to hear the Andesgear Team has regrouped. Now back to training --- there's competition out there.

Posted On: 18 Dec 2009 08:07 am

Mucha Suerte ! Nos vemos en Atacama !

Posted On: 17 Dec 2009 05:15 pm

I love the recruitment ad. I feel the same way about a race I want to do. A friend and I want to compete in The Race Across America on a 4 person cycling team. The only problem is we can't seem to find anyone who is interested in racing 3,000 miles across the U.S. in 6-8 days. I can't figure out why ^^) Glad you found a new team mate...see you out there!

10 October 2009 03:50 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

By far the most rewarding and challenging aspect of preparing for this race so far has been working as a team and so it is about time that I talk a little about who will be accompanying me on this tremendous journey. Coca Lyon, Caro Emhart and I will make up the first female Chilean team to compete in a Racing The Planet event (no pressure of course!), so how did this team come to be?

Coca and I met while working as hiking and horseriding guides in Torres del Paine, Patagonia. After the guiding gig ended, I eventually moved back to Santiago where the slow transformation into becoming a 'runner' began. To help me on this endeavor I built up a support network inviting anyone and everyone who showed even the slightest interest to join me on my training sessions. The little running group (which included Coca who by this point had also returned to Santiago) grew and flourished until one day I mentioned the idea of training for the Santiago Half Marathon after which attendance dwindled down to three - Coca, Dani Koch and I.

Happy to have found a small but reliable team of girls with similar goals and ability levels, the three of us trained religiously until one day I arrived at the park where we always met to start our runs and found Dani dressed in street clothes instead of the usual sweats. We were only weeks away from the race we had been training for, depending on each other for support and motivation. I felt a little uneasy seeing Dani in the wrong outfit. What could be wrong? Did she forget her workout gear? Was she planning to run in high heels and a dress just to switch it up a little? Was my dear running partner injured? Was this why had she been skipping training sessions lately? Was she sick of us? I walked closer and saw that she was glowing, smiling ear to ear, and that's when I realized. She was pregnant. While I was absolutely thrilled for her (we will be buying baby's first pair of running shoes!) I was also a little sad to lose such a good running partner, at least for a few months. 1 more down. Only 2 of us left.

Coca and I finished the 21km together and after a brief post race rest period accepted that we couldn't live without running and without our therapeutic team training sessions. At some point as we discussed setting the next race goal I brought up the idea of Racing the Planet thinking I would get shot down immediately, after all, the half marathon had been a big step for us. To my surprise, Coca agreed to join in without batting an eyelid. It was only later that I found out that she actually had no idea what it was all about when she initially agreed to the race. When she finally learnt about RTP and what she had gotten herself into she simply looked at me and asked - Can mere mortals do this? Can we do this? A simple yes was all she needed and with my monosyllabic answer ('Si!'), she shrugged her shoulders, smiled and bravely followed me into whatever insanity I proposed next. Coca is the perfect partner to have when testing your limits - I don't think there is any adventure that she would turn down no matter how outrageous.

Caro's husband Manuel Barros is a Racing the Planet alum having run as part of the Team Chile trio in 2007 along with my boyfriend Nicolas Gordon and their schoolmate Felipe Infante. Caro is a ball (a very fit, thin ball) of energy, an alpha type minus the arrogance. I nicknamed her superwoman when training began - I should mention that Caro, aside from taking on this massive challenge, is a mother of two (her second child was born only 3 months before we started training!), an experienced adventure racer and one of the managers of a very successful Chilean company. She is level headed and positive and exactly the sort of person you want by your side when you are struggling up sand dunes and across salt flats in the world's driest desert. I first met Caro in the same way that I met most of Nico's friends, at the dinner table at a wedding, as this was the only type of occasion that would merit an escape from Patagonia for us. I was immediately impressed by the strength and positivity she radiated and while we got along great, it wasn't until Racing the Planet 07, as we anxiously followed the progress made by our guys across the desert that we really became good friends. When the opportunity to form the Chilean women's team presented itself, Caro was an obvious choice and so, during a bachelorette weekend getaway party in Valparaiso, I mentioned the idea to her. Awesome! Definitely! Sign me up! Just like Coca, there was absolutely no hesitation in her reply. So that was it, Team Chile 2010 was set.

Luckily for me, the two girls hit it off straight away and by the second team training session it felt like we had been friends for years. I've found that sports has always been an incredible base upon which to build strong friendships. There is nothing like a 3 hour run to break the ice. Having hours to kill with mindless chatter leads to much soul baring and in the few months we have been a part of this team we have gotten to know eachother perhaps even better than we know those from much longer established friendships. We have lived through some tense moments and learnt how to get over ourselves and laugh it off and I love and respect these girls with all my heart. I am truly grateful that they were chemically imbalanced enough to agree to this great adventure. I'm sure that the week of the race will see us through our highest and lowest points yet but I can't imagine two greater people to have by my side when the going gets tough.

We are not super athletes. We are not Nike ad sports goddesses. We are three somewhat normal girls who like the many others who will be joining us in Atacama decided to do an extraordinary thing. I hope that our experience will motivate more women in this country to find it within themselves to commit to goals that may seem impossible from a distance. Even if it is just a first jog around the park. After all, who knows where that first jog will lead you ;)

Comments: Total (6) comments

Posted On: 30 Oct 2009 02:57 am

Thanks everyone!..lunch at the ritz sounds great Mary! Maybe I'll make reservations now :) Sadly I'm already thinking about what I want to eat at the finish line Marilena & Bert, con muchas ganas de conocerlos en Marzo! Suerte con el entrenamiento y un gran abrazo.

Posted On: 10 Oct 2009 06:08 pm

Go Andrea Go!

Posted On: 09 Oct 2009 01:48 pm

Clearly a team made in heaven, Angel. The earlier Chilean men\'s teams have always made a great impression and been terrific ambassadors for Chile. I have no doubt the first Chilean ladies\' team will be equally inspirational. One pink flag at a time and you\'ll be in San Pedro before you know it.

Posted On: 08 Oct 2009 10:44 pm

Hola Andrea, que tal, como va el entrenamiento? Vivi en Santiago por cuatro anos y es una de mis ciudades favoritas. Por eso es que quise hacer el Atacama crossing primero. Dios me lleve todo el camino y lo pueda terminar. Nos vemos alla.

Posted On: 08 Oct 2009 01:53 pm

Guias en Torres del Paine?? Espero tener la fuerza de hablar con vosotras despues una de las etapas en Atacama 2010! Hasta pronto y suerte con las preparaciones Bert POFFE

Posted On: 08 Oct 2009 02:53 am

Very exciting, Andrea. I am glad to have already completed the Atacama Crossing. What kept me going was thinking about a nice lunch in the Ritz Carlton post event. We made reservations in the salt flats!

10 October 2009 03:50 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

So, first things first, in case anyone noticed I did indeed steal the main title of my blog from the facebook group created by my friends from the Atacama Crossing 07. Quite frankly I couldn’t think of any other phrase to better describe all this nonsense, so thanks guys for the name!

Now onto other news. A mere week after writing the first blog I had my first official Racing The Planet nightmare, surely a rite of passage of sorts.

We were at the starting line on day one, all geared up and ready to go, RTP flags waving in the wind when suddenly I realize I don’t have my trekking poles with me and I completely freak out.  The countdown begins …3…2…1…everyone takes off running, and I take off running in the opposite direction desperately looking for an outdoor gear store of some sort.

Funnily enough (as tends to happen in dreams/nightmares) I did manage to find one conveniently located only a few kilometers from camp in the middle of the desert (they even had Luna bars!) but the brief feeling of relief upon finding this oasis was quickly replaced by utter disappointment when I realized that I had no money on me to pay for the poles.

Heartbreak.

I begged and cried and pleaded with the lady to give them to me (‘I swear! I will run back the whole 250km in a week to pay you!’) but the heartless (blank) was impervious to my pleas and I was left alone and trekking-poleless in the desert.

It was at this point that I woke up, shaking, sweating, tears and matted hair plastered on my face, mostly relieved that it was all just a dream and equally perplexed at discovering this bizarre subconscious fear…TREKKING POLES?!?! Is that really what I am most worried about? The funny thing is, I haven’t even reached the point of thinking about whether or not to take them (most likely not).

The weeks have passed and I’ve yet to decipher my dream. I’m pretty sure it’s not the poles. Could it reflect my slight obsession with gear? I admit I’m a little OCD when it comes to researching outdoor clothing and gadgets and such, but this early on, shouldn’t I be more worried about training? Finishing? Sinking in salt flats? Surviving perhaps?

Comments: Total (2) comments

Posted On: 09 Oct 2009 01:08 pm

That trekking poles dream is something else - it made me start to get nervous for you!! Great read Andrea, I admire your dedication and courage, and know you'll shine though this. Mucha suerte!

Posted On: 24 Aug 2009 08:58 am

Get a grip, Angel! You don't need to worry about trekking poles; you've hiked for miles in Patagonia with a backpack as large as yourself. Concentrate on the technique for freeze-drying empanadas. Charlie

10 October 2009 03:48 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago

YAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAYYYYY!!!!!!!  Sheer elation, that was my first reaction to receiving the official reply that I would be participating in the next Atacama Crossing. And while a week later, I am still feeling mostly overjoyed, I must admit experiencing a few brief moments of sheer terror which I've rapidly pushed out of mind by entering a zen like trance, a self defense mechanism I've perfected over the years to confront similar panic inducing situations.

I can’t exactly pinpoint the moment when I first seriously considered participating in this craziness.  I remember the thought briefly crossing my mind when working as a staff member of the Atacama Crossing 07, although these initial flirtations were more of a ‘that would be a fun thing to be able to do’ than a 'sign me up now!'

To be fair, at this point in time I was by no means officially a ‘runner’ (when do you cross that line and join the secret club?). The actual running started about 6 months later when, after finally accepting that I would not be able to dragon boat or outrigger canoe while living in Santiago, and that yes, I would eventually have to find a new sport if I wanted to be a healthy, happy and emotionally balanced person, I signed up for my first 5k and decided to give this running thing, which had quite frankly always scared the shit out of me, a shot.

I suffered though that first race, but passing the finish line gave me the confidence to at least consider running a 10k which I did, a knee injury and a few months of therapy later.

Finishing the 10k was it. As far as I was concerned, if I could run 10k when only a few months earlier I could barely consider running three, I could do anything. And it must have been at this point that I seriously started toying with the idea of marathons and all this running-across-the-world’s-most-hostile-deserts insanity.  At first it was just a glimmer of a thought that would pop up occasionally only to be rapidly shot down to ‘a fun thing to consider’ status. But then I ran, and thoroughly enjoyed, the Santiago half marathon in March after which the next logical (?) jump was to set myself the goal of running Atacama.

So here I am, announcing my crazy intentions to the world and there is no turning back…

Comments: Total (5) comments

Posted On: 10 Aug 2009 03:15 pm

Hi Andrea, I started much the same way you did; a couple of years ago I could not even run a 5k. But I slowly worked my way up and soon found myself trudging 250K across the Gobi Desert, and loving every second of it. Atacama is going to be awesome, looking forward to meeting you there.

Posted On: 03 Jul 2009 09:13 pm

Thanks for the support guys!!And Charlie, I will have to memorize that mantra for the race!

Posted On: 03 Jul 2009 11:03 am

Great first blog Andrea. From 5k to 250km is fantastic - although many competitors have never actually run 5km!

Posted On: 02 Jul 2009 05:13 pm

Said beautifully by Charlie above - you will be a star, if I can complete it I know you can! Will be following you all the way!! xxx

Posted On: 01 Jul 2009 01:45 pm

Angels don't get blisters; angels don't sink into saltflats; angels walk on water. You should be fine!