RACE INFO

RACE INFO
Atacama Crossing Blogs 2014
8
PostsAtacama Crossing (2014) blog posts from Jonty Cowan
13 October 2014 01:54 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
10 October 2014 02:59 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
I had a great day. I started a little more conservatively than I had the last few days and ran with a few others to CP1. Thankfully they had to cut out a lake crossing at the start so we didn’t get wet feet, and it also shortened the stage by 2km. shortly after CP1 I was running with one other guy in 4th, but from about 7km I was on my own in 3rd. We had more of the salt crust to run on (imagine trying to run on frozen broccoli) but it was more runnable yesterday thankfully. The frozen broccoli turned to a dirt track from CP2, which went on to CP3 at approx. 30km. It was shortly after this that Felix caught me again, which I was grateful for. The shuffling along was starting to hurt and my adductor was tightening, so I needed the company.
We ran the rest of the day together getting each other through. The scenery was varied once more, with monster sand dunes to climb, rocky jeep tracks to follow, mine fields to pass (no kabooms heard thankfully!) and then a final sting in the tail, climbing a pass through ‘Moon Valley’. The tourists there were slightly bemused by the site of two dirty, sweaty, tired runners shuffling along. Hopefully the pictures they took are the highlights of their holiday photo albums!
Coming into camp after 10hr 11mins of running was a great feeling. I had expected to finish in the dark after about 12 hours, so to finish in the light was great. It was great to finish with Felix and to also help him keep 4th place overall. It has made a great difference running with Felix as he pushed me on.
Today I will mostly be eating. Then tomorrow we have the final stage. We are waiting to hear the distance and if it will be timed. Most people just want to walk it together, me included, but we will see.
Pizza and beer will greet us at the finish line, which will be very welcome. Sweet stuff and expedition foods are not very palatable now. Many conversations in camp centre around the foods that will be eaten (steak and chips is on my mind…) and how nice a shower will be.
This has been a long journey for me which is finally coming to an end. I first signed up for MDS2013 in 2011. That was postponed for a year to 2014 when we lost the twins, and I had to withdraw from MDS2014 due to injury. To have finally completed the dream after 3 ½ years is amazing, but to have had such s great week and achieve far more than I could ever have imagined had blown me away. This chapter of my life is done.
Thanks for each and every comment and message this week. It is pretty surreal sitting at a computer in a desert laughing, smiling and occasionally shedding a tear, but it has made the experience that much more special knowing the support that I have had back at home.
Thanks too for the donations to SANDS. It means a lot for me to give something back to them following the loss of our twins 2 years ago. (And if you haven’t donated yet, why not go to justgiving and search for ‘Jonty Cowan’…)
What next? Family J I owe them big time (and have majorly negative brownie points). Amanda, Emma and Noah have been amazingly supportive, putting up with early morning runs, obscene amounts of kit to wash, obsessions over gear weights and the number of calories in food and much more besides. I simply could not have done this without them.
Comments: Total (12) comments
Katarina Zajacova
Posted On: 12 Oct 2014 07:22 pm
Katarina Zajacova
Posted On: 12 Oct 2014 07:22 pm
Katarina Zajacova
Posted On: 12 Oct 2014 07:16 pm
Chris Garratty
Posted On: 12 Oct 2014 02:43 pm
Tom, Louise, Daisy and Baby Ava
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 08:40 pm
Tom Robertson
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 07:41 pm
Tony Ostersen
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 06:39 pm
peter parmenter
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 04:35 pm
Nicola Bonnell
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 12:24 pm
Brian Reynolds
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 09:41 am
Poul and Kirsten Ostersen
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 08:02 am
Tony Ostersen
Posted On: 11 Oct 2014 06:30 am
08 October 2014 02:53 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
Day 4 is in the bag with another third place. I started strong as we slogged up sandy, rocky dunes and then down some huge dunes. Going down the steepest ones feels like snowboarding as you have to zig zag down and almost jump to turn. At CP1 Felix caught me up again but I was glad for the company as the next 13km were across a sandy, rocky plain which went on and on. Towards CP2 I pushed on and built a gap again, but then we hit the salt flats. Whilst it was easier going than yesterday, I seem to struggle more than Felix and he caught me again. We ran (and walked) through the 14km of flats up to CP3. From here it was a flat 6.6km along a decent trail. Despite feeling the heat (again in the 40s) and some soreness in the legs, I told myself that all I had to do was run the equivalent as going to Stoke Park and doing 2 laps. So I did. I have never run a tougher 6.6km before, but I managed to gain a 2min gap on Felix by the time I hit the line. It is great fun running with Felix, but we also enjoy the competitive side of this too.
All in it was probably an easier day than yesterday, but we have the big day tomorrow
Comments: Total (29) comments
Rita Whitfield-Coups
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:57 pm
Janet Cowan
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 04:21 pm
Angela Garrathy
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 10:29 am
Angela Garrathy
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 10:29 am
Bob Cowan
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 09:52 am
Per Christian Berg
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 09:36 am
Peter Parmenter
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 08:12 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Colin Barnes
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 07:33 am
Nicola Bonnell
Posted On: 10 Oct 2014 02:17 am
Matthew, Sona and Flora
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 09:56 pm
Mari Graves
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 09:39 pm
Rita Whitfield-Coups
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 08:31 pm
Tom Robertson
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 06:36 pm
4R Ostersen
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 12:29 pm
brian reynolds
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 11:20 am
Howard Dawson
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 10:28 am
Howard Dawson
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 10:20 am
Chris Garratty
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 10:09 am
Bob Cowan
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 09:14 am
Simon Bill
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 06:16 am
07 October 2014 02:22 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
Wow. That is the hardest day of running I have ever managed. Although it is fair to say that there was more walking than running today.
We started across some hideous terrain
Comments: Total (10) comments
felix allen
Posted On: 14 Oct 2014 11:18 pm
Nici Bonnell
Posted On: 09 Oct 2014 12:03 am
Brian Reynolds
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 10:54 pm
Tom, Louise, Daisy and baby Ava
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 09:57 pm
Matthew, Sona and Flora
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 09:17 pm
Chris Garratty
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 04:21 pm
Matt Barnes
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 03:27 pm
Hervé ROCHE
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 01:23 pm
4R Ostersen
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 12:30 pm
Bob Cowan
Posted On: 08 Oct 2014 09:40 am
06 October 2014 04:59 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
That was a brutal stage today. We started running about 10km through a canyon with numerous sections through a freezing river. Not nice when it hit the crown jewels but at least the numb toes stopped the blisters hurting! We then had a long climb of about 700 metres before an amazingly fun run down a massive sand dune. The trails then flattened out as the heat notched up for Kms 20-40. I reverted to my run walk strategy which seems to work well and allows me to catch and pass people. The last 4 km was along a road and I could see the guy behind me catching up. So I set myself a slightly more run orientated schedule with more running than walking. That helped and I stayedm5 mins in front of the next guy (felix, another brit).
In the end I managed to finish first Brit again and so have 20 mins on Felix (2nd placed Brit). But he lost the trail today snd did 1.5km extra so tomorrow I expect him to beat me tomorrow.
Overall I managed to go one better and finished 2nd J I have moved up to 2nd overall across the 2 days. Before anyone suggest it, the leader is about 1hr 45 ahead and so there is no chance of me going one better again
Comments: Total (9) comments
Amanda Cowan
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 08:36 pm
Tom Robertson
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 08:00 pm
Brian Reynolds
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 06:33 pm
Maja Ostersen
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 05:35 pm
Bob Cowan
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 10:05 am
Poul Ostersen
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 09:49 am
Rita Whitfield-Coups
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 09:42 am
4R Ostersen
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 07:51 am
Per Christian Berg
Posted On: 07 Oct 2014 07:39 am
05 October 2014 02:29 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
Stage 1 is done. I had good day and was pleased with how I coped with the stage. We had a variety of terrain
Comments: Total (14) comments
Tom, Louise, Daisy and baby Ava
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 11:26 pm
Brian Reynolds
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 09:55 pm
Liesl Dommisse
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 08:57 pm
Per Christian Berg
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 05:13 pm
Jacqui Cahill
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 02:00 pm
Nicola Bonnell
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 01:18 pm
Rita Whitfield-Coups
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 12:44 pm
peter parmenter
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 12:42 pm
Tom, Louise, Daisy and baby Ava
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 12:03 pm
Janet Cowan
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 10:00 am
Bob and Janet Cowan
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 09:55 am
Matthew, Sona and Flora
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 08:12 am
4R Ostersen
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 07:47 am
Hervé ROCHE
Posted On: 06 Oct 2014 07:32 am
04 October 2014 04:11 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
Comments: Total (6) comments
Bob Cowan
Posted On: 05 Oct 2014 10:01 pm
Brian Reynolds
Posted On: 05 Oct 2014 07:59 pm
Nici Bonnell
Posted On: 05 Oct 2014 03:41 pm
Katarina Zajacova
Posted On: 05 Oct 2014 02:48 pm
Tony Ostersen
Posted On: 05 Oct 2014 01:21 pm
Tony Ostersen
Posted On: 05 Oct 2014 08:23 am
28 September 2014 11:39 am (GMT-04:00) Santiago
Many people have asked me how I feel about it. I have many feeling. I am nervous, scared and excited all at the same time about venturing into the unkown and what is in store for me. I am looking forward to the adventure, and feel I have prepared as well as I could have done for everything this race will throw at me (altitiude, heat, distance, being self sufficient etc etc), which should hopefully mean that the nerves wont be too bad for this one. I am most concerned about my feet as the chances of getting blisters are high, which will inevitably make the event harder to complete.
No doubt the next two weeks will be a rollercoaster for me, and tomorrow I step on board...
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Comments: Total (7) comments
Matthew, Sona and Flora
Posted On: 14 Oct 2014 09:34 pm
Willy NotReallyAnonymous
Posted On: 14 Oct 2014 03:29 pm
Rita Whitfield Coups
Posted On: 13 Oct 2014 09:08 pm
Hervé ROCHE
Posted On: 13 Oct 2014 04:13 pm
Howard Dawson
Posted On: 13 Oct 2014 09:07 am
Chris Garratty
Posted On: 13 Oct 2014 08:26 am
Brian Reynolds
Posted On: 13 Oct 2014 06:10 am