Gobi March Blogs 2012

Tom Hill

7

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Gobi March (2012) blog posts from Tom Hill

25 June 2012 06:03 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

There was an air of anticipation in camp as competitors went about their daily routine, earlier than normal. Many discussed tactics for the run whilst others preferred to torture themselves with careful consideration of their dream comestibles come race end. 15km was all that stood between us, a great sense of achievement and pride and, for many, a burger. The final stage began at 9am, a fierce pace led us a kilometre-or-so along an unpaved, uneven trail and through a small town until we reached bitumen

Comments: Total (1) comments

Posted On: 25 Jun 2012 01:09 pm

Good times TH. Very stoked.

15 June 2012 05:20 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

Day five, The Long March, began with an earlier than normal rise and a two hour bus trip to the start line.  Sure enough, this took the stuffing out of most; none more so, it seemed, than Tim who was still far below his best carrying a knee injury which would prevent him from running a single step throughout the course.

 

The 10am (rather than 8am) start meant it was hotter than usual, making the going tough for the first 9km until CP1.  Between CP1 and 2, the canyons which plagued on stages two and three returned and slowed progress considerably.  I was overtaken by three of the more experienced climbers/descenders and found it hard to keep them within my sights.  Mercifully, the undulation eased and by the 35km/CP3 mark I'd regained two places and had joined an Austrian competitor, Jochen, for what turned out to be the final 40km of the stage. 

 

For all money, he is a relative of Arnie.  He pretty well dragged me across the Gobi, negotiating sandstorms, a 930 tornado, brutal winds and, of course, rain.  Running 80% and walking 20% we managed to cover the last 40km (30 of which was either flat or a gradual downhill) at 8-10km/hr.  With the occasional post-CP fist-pump we powered across the line in 9 hours and 17 minutes - positions 8 and 9.  Another supremely satisfying day and one which stands to vindicate the hours I spent training.

 

Tim crossed the line at 01:30 this morning, licking his wounds - 15 and a half hours after he'd begun.  Frustration, relief and acclompishment are the overriding sentiments for him.  He knows he is capable but was unlucky with how his body responded to what has been an incredibly tough week.

 

Today is a rest day, and the campsite, Kashgary, provides a fitting setting for some recovery.  Tomorrow is the final 15km, and, topography-wise a relatively easy run to The Last Old City.

 

ATB, TH 

Comments: Total (10) comments

Posted On: 17 Jun 2012 02:30 pm

Haha! the correct name of the photo is "Men's age group winners"! Had a feeling I had it wrong...

Posted On: 17 Jun 2012 02:14 pm

Hey Tom, is that really you on that photo titled "Men champions of age" (or something like that...)? That's fantastic! Congratulations Tom, you're a Champion!!! I'm so happy for you :-) So... What's your next big challenge now? Obviously this one was too easy ;-)

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 10:41 am

Animal...

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 10:05 am

So proud of you. A great achievement. Much love, Granny.

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 09:09 am

TH I am so happy for you. What an incredible job you have done. Thinking of you every step of the way, I miss you. Good luck tomorrow, with rog in your head you could make up a couple more places. Look after yourself, buddy.

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 05:52 am

Amazing work Tom, congrats on this huge effort. Last 15 will be very satisfying! Tom monaghetti..who knew?!

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 03:18 am

od so proud of you - absolutely smashed these last couple of days. you can practically smell the finish line, the great wall and some loish food from here. can't wait to see you!!

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 03:11 am

What an incredible time Tom considering the crazy landscape and weather! You must be so proud! Enjoy this well deserved rest and good luck for the final stage :-)

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 02:27 am

Hey Tom, what an amazing time! Well done and hoping that you can keep your place or do even better today. We think that you had better find a more reliable partner for the next challenge - what about Rog??!! Enjoy the celebrations and no doubt the food, drink and bed will feel like the best ever! Look out for our poor injured boy when he crosses the line ML and Ian xxx

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 02:09 am

Yeah man what an awesome final two stages you've had!!! Wooohoo

13 June 2012 08:33 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

Some housekeeping for S.Hill: the distances between checkpoints are arbitrary, ranging from 7-8km for the more unforgiving terrain to 11-13km for the flatter, gentler terrain.  As far as the revised distances go, at this stage, I don't think they will be making up the distance elsewhere.  The 250km may end up being more like 240km - the horror!

 

Day Four:  On the back of some slanderous, but nonetheless constructive, remarks from R.Hill, today I finished 9th.  Showed the Turk a clean pair heels, and really had the run of a lifetime.  We began by ascending 300m to Shipton's Arch - a natural archway the size of the Empire State Building at 2800m above sea-level.  Truly breathtaking - and that was just the altitude!!  Tim and I had vowed to make a fast start as some of the ascent to the arch was single-file climbing up ladders and staircases.  Mercifully, a few kilometres were done sans backpack - a welcome respite.  Upon retrieving our packs, we were in 15th spot and checkpoint one followed soon after.  Checkpoint one to two was a murderous 8km of 50-60m of sheer climbing followed by a short run across the ridge of the hill then a slippery, rocky descent over the other side. Between every three of these, there was a run up a hellish riverbed with the ubiquitous Gobi rocks looking to break ankles and twist knees at every step. This was repeated what seemed like countless times.  Although tough, the view at the top along each ridge was unbelievable; snow-covered (!) mountains forming the backdrop to hills and mountains which have not seen a drop of rain forever. 

    Checkpoints two to three there was more of the same, this time for only 4km.  For the next 8km it was a lonesome (Tim and I had separated between CPs 1&2) downhill trudge across the riverbed, willing on checkpoint three with every step.  I didn't see anyone for the vast majority of this stage and was concerned about my mental capacity to handle the last 14km push to home. 

Just after CP3, me and an American, who was finding his second wind, decided to 'buddy-up' and attack the final stage together.  We negotiated some river crossings, deciding to keep our shoes on, then, with sodden but soothed feet, held a nice pace (some running, some walking) until the (very welcome) revised finish 10km later.

 

While it was an incredibly satisfying day for me, Tim was frustrated with what he thinks is some ligament trouble in his right knee.  At the start of the day it was evident that we were both feeling strong and relatively fatigue-free so it is disappointing that we couldn't complete and finish the stage together.

 

Tomorrow is 'The Long March' - 75 of the sweetest kilometres.  While it would be great to consolidate my position, finishing would ultimately be the greatest success (not if you ask R.Hill, mind you). 

 

I hope everyone is well.

 

ATB, TH

Comments: Total (12) comments

Posted On: 16 Jun 2012 02:01 pm

Absolutely awesome Tom. You are a inspiration and a wonderful person. Glad to read you were able to enjoy the breathtaking views amidst your journey. Sending lots of love and hugs your way. Love Sar, Alex and Isabelle xxx

Posted On: 15 Jun 2012 10:46 pm

Awesome effort Tom , unbelievable effort to just complete this challenge let alone how well you have done , from your fan club in Japan (Megumi, Mei and Justin)

Posted On: 15 Jun 2012 02:16 pm

Amazing Tom... have I already said how amazing this is? Fantastic work, very inspirering! In fact, I'm going to train for my half marathon... Haha! sounds a bit ridiculous now ;-) A Tres Bientot xx

Posted On: 15 Jun 2012 01:26 pm

gobi march- NTFSA!!! good luck for the last part tommmy

Posted On: 15 Jun 2012 07:40 am

Well done Tom. Magnificent effort. Will

Posted On: 15 Jun 2012 01:39 am

you wrote a long post today - is that because your 9th? HELL YEAH you're 9th!! Hope you're shouting that from the mountains some crazy height above sea level. Keep it up tombo

Posted On: 14 Jun 2012 10:47 pm

Tom you're an animal, incredible long day, doing the scotch boys proud mate!

Posted On: 14 Jun 2012 02:40 pm

Very impressive - gave the 54 y o bloke a spanking and ditched your running mate at the first sign of trouble. Made your Bm proud.

Posted On: 14 Jun 2012 11:50 am

Go you good thing.

Posted On: 14 Jun 2012 08:37 am

finishing would be bloody incredible! while R Hill's inspirational comments are few and far between, you still have your loyal blog followers. thanks for clearing up a few issues for me buddy, nothing that you've said so far has made me any less convinced you're crazy

Posted On: 14 Jun 2012 06:15 am

Mate you are probably pounding your bloody stumps across Gobachell rocks right now, chipping away at the 75km Beastlord stage. In your honor i will eat 75 pieces of Gami chicken or 7.5 Leveson Parmies (EAG vs Carlton tonight). Goodluck mate!

Posted On: 14 Jun 2012 05:02 am

Good to see you put some strides in finally you big lurch. keep up the pace big man, hope those sweet 75km of fun was all its cracked up to be.

12 June 2012 04:27 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

Day three's run was billed as easy/moderate.  The lies, oh the lies.  We managed to run the first 8km before we were polaxed by kilometre after kilometre of that glorious shardy goodness, this time on an obscene slant.  Okay, some interactive blogging: in your mind, conceive the most perverse terrain you can, then multiply that by whatever you want - it doesn't matter what you come up with, it won't be close to today's landscape.  Plenty of canyon work, too. 30-50m of slippery rock down, 30-50m slippery rock up; repeat steps 1&2 ad naseum until soul destroyed.  The push for the finish line was an unrelenting 8.5km uphill - a 1200m gain to finish at 2500m above sea-level.  Less a march, more a shuffle.  Having finished day two in 31st and 32nd, we were happy, in the face of the grueling conditions to finish day three in 34th and 35th.

 

Temperatures thus far have been manageable, 35-40 degrees, with the importance of replacing salts and water ever-present.  The attrition rate of the race has been good with only four people retiring for various ailments/not meeting checkpoint cut-off times.

 

Good luck tomorrow, Lizzie Edge.

 

I hope all are well. TH

Comments: Total (4) comments

Posted On: 13 Jun 2012 03:01 pm

also is your leg ok? just noticed the bandage...

Posted On: 13 Jun 2012 02:54 pm

Finally - a photo of you two! I was beginning to think it was all a hoax. Killer shades you got on there. Keep up the good work Tommy

Posted On: 13 Jun 2012 03:20 am

keep it up Hally. very stoked for the effort you have done so far. keep on increasing that lead you have over Tim also. yew.

Posted On: 13 Jun 2012 03:04 am

Hey Tom, All this sounds both amazing and extremely painful! Luckily you very nice homemade meals waiting for you at each finish line... ;-) Hope the next stage will be a real easy one. Good luck!

11 June 2012 04:39 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

After some of Tashpushka’s famous hospitality, and our tentmate’s world-class snoring, we began day 2 – 39km.  Besides the upper-body ache from hell – backpack derived – the chassis was in reasonable nick.

 

Day 2 was a grueling day, punctuated by those pesky shardy, rocky plains which I am so very fond of.  We traversed a 2-3km section dubbed ‘Mars’; red, dusty and marsy.  Approaching checkpoint two, trail-running experience would have been spot-on as Tim and I battled down what seemed like endless rocky, shingly, heavily contoured terrain.  Having almost been broken before checkpoint three, it was no short of a miracle what greeted us nek -  hot, black bitumen, close to km of the stuff.  The first three-or-so km were up-hill but it was the next seven downhill that were the saving grace.  Deek and Monaghetti suddenly began their surge to the finish, swallowing up 12 places in the process.  All in all, after 5:40 spent on course, it was a  terrific feeling to finish.

 

Can I pleaaasseee give a big shout-out to K.Hill who turns 21 today, like an absolute bauce, no doubt.

 

ATB, TH 

Comments: Total (7) comments

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 10:52 am

Stride it our brus. Goodluck with the tripstikens. Just remember my advice...

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 04:38 am

Bloody harsh Rog! Loving the humour. Go Tommy! ML xx

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 03:36 am

Like a bauce?! You turning into Jared over there in the desert? I enjoyed reading this over smoko. PR misses you. We discuss your stages daily.

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 02:21 am

good effort by the Melbourne lad being only 2 hours behind a 54 year bloke from Turkey...... and those 6 sheilas ahead of you are probably from Mars..

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 01:49 am

nek minnit happy to see a black road! #smallthings Go tom!! Run like no ones watching.

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 01:27 am

12 places - who the f*** is asking?! Nek minnit, podium spot. See you in 5 days OD. Can't wait :)

Posted On: 12 Jun 2012 01:19 am

Wadddduuupppp. Chinks in da house!!! Yeah boy. Keep up the good work Thomas!!

10 June 2012 05:42 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

We arrived at Saturday's campsite sometime in the afternoon and were greeted by the who's who of the ultra-indie Xinjian Province music scene.  The trip to the XP proved relatively no frills aside from the escarpment cum mountain that seemed to disappear as the bus approached it exposing it's occupants to sheer mountain face.  Suffice to say, Tim and I were not alone in our trousers.

 

Gobi March 2012 was opened at 8:00am Sunday morning - a revised first day of 32km.  Tim and I started well and were strong through checkpoint one.  Between checkpoints one, a few stream crossing and a diabolic amount of shardy, rocky plains our form remained reasonable.  The last 8-10 kms was tough as the weights (13kg) of our packs caught up and caused our necks/traps grief.  Our jog slowed and soreness, fatigue, wind and a touch of nausea caused us to walk.  Despite this,Tashpushka (a small town and campsite 2) beckoned and we crossed the line 38th of 160th.

 

For something different, we'.re going running tomorrow.

 

TH   

Comments: Total (4) comments

Posted On: 11 Jun 2012 07:04 am

#timandtomftw trending on twitter now

Posted On: 11 Jun 2012 05:21 am

How's the Shepard's Pie?

Posted On: 11 Jun 2012 04:37 am

Thomas, in your next update, please explain how far between check points? Hope your body is holding up today. When they revise the distances, does that just mean you have to run further tomorrow? Atb champ

Posted On: 11 Jun 2012 01:48 am

good work lads. good read, very descriptive. i have a great idea for you on how to drop lots of weight from your pack. you should eat all the food now, and for the otehr stages just sneak into fellow competitors packs as they sleep and eat all the goodies. yes, no need to thank me. run far, run well.

07 June 2012 06:22 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

En route to Kashgar. Waiting in the plush Air China lounge watching Tim dismantle eggs boiled in tea. He explains to me how he is going to approach the removal of shell that has stuck to the white - I don't care. We have a run to do, I can't be bogged down with inanities of such things which would otherwise dominate my thoughts. See you in the Gobi.

Comments: Total (6) comments

Posted On: 10 Jun 2012 11:53 am

There's competitor in your race with the surname Lord... first name Beast?

Posted On: 10 Jun 2012 06:23 am

Ah you've started now! We're all rooting for you boys. Look forward to seeing you in a week. I'm sure walking the Great Wall will be just what you feel like

Posted On: 09 Jun 2012 09:05 am

tea-boiled eggs for the main course, Gobi for desert

Posted On: 09 Jun 2012 08:48 am

I can hear your voice while reading this. Good start to the blog, buddy. Oh god, it all starts tomorrow. Sleep well, for tomorrow you rise to Hot Cereal Start with mango. Do you need me to pick up vanilla thunder?

Posted On: 08 Jun 2012 02:52 pm

Such supreme focus entitles you to the cheesily chosen moniker "Gobi Wan Kenobi". Remember, pain is just weakness leaving the body. Take care and keep the updates coming!

Posted On: 08 Jun 2012 02:19 pm

What's the food like out in the gobi? They dishing up hound dogs to keep lurch fueled up for the little jog?