RACE INFO

RACE INFO
Gobi March Blogs 2013
5
PostsGobi March (2013) blog posts from Michael Gray
07 June 2013 08:25 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
04 June 2013 09:14 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Bizarrely you get into a routine pretty quickly out here with everyone asleep by 9pm and despite the cold (yes COLD! In the desert) sno one surfaced until 7am. The general idea is to then force down a freeze dried porridge with strawberry’s, strap yourself up and then get to the start line. I’ve found myself another power walker and today finished in just over 7hrs. Not what was intended at the start of this event but without running a step in anger I have been told by veterans than 7hrs is a decent time.
Today’s course was the most scenic so far but also the most challenging, We motored through the first 20km in just under 3hrs and whilst the mountains have been to our right for the last day or so they became a brutal reality as we turned into one of the valleys. I guess the faces of the support team at checkpoint 2 were a mixture of a knowing smile and sympathy but you could more than see why. We turned the corner to enter one of the most stunning parks I have ever been to, we walked directly up the river which has all but dried up with harsh mountainside on both sides. We descended further into the valley and came across a couple of rope bridges, which I can imagine would be good fun if you could see the sheer face we had to climb up. Our good progress came to pretty much a standstill moving at 1km/hr at best. I have borrowed a set of poles which made the climb a bit easier but even so it took 45 mins to get to the top, unfortunately my words cannot describe the view at the top and hopefully some of the photos can do this place justice.
The next 5km would be a dream if you were able to run but unfortunately due to the knee it was a poor mans version of hopscotch. Me and my partner spent the next 30 minutes or so F’ing and blinding, I’m not sure the parents would be particularly proud but it got us through.
Final stage was only 6.5km so we power walked our way to the finish line and a drummer who is still managing to stay enthusiastic. The team out hear never fail to be supportive and in my head we’re over the halfway mark. Another 40km tomorrow, 75km on Friday and the 14km on Saturday doesn’t count, I’ll crawl that bit if I have to.
I’m currently a patchwork of various bandages but I came here to finish this so les see how it goes.
Mike
Comments: Total (26) comments
Ed Gray
Posted On: 08 Jun 2013 08:55 am
Anne Gamblin
Posted On: 07 Jun 2013 09:33 pm
Lynn Muthu
Posted On: 07 Jun 2013 02:08 pm
Susan Baker
Posted On: 07 Jun 2013 02:00 pm
Lynn Muthu
Posted On: 07 Jun 2013 12:36 pm
Kirstie Bell
Posted On: 06 Jun 2013 07:02 pm
Gloria Middleton
Posted On: 06 Jun 2013 09:53 am
Baron Wainwright
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 10:39 pm
Susan Girven
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 10:38 pm
Ed Gray
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 08:43 pm
lynn muthu
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 07:23 pm
Lyyn Muthu
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 02:17 pm
Kim Gray
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 10:30 am
Anne Gamblin
Posted On: 05 Jun 2013 09:23 am
Ali Thomas
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 09:55 pm
Ed Gray
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 09:14 pm
Kamil Farage
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 09:02 pm
lynn Muthu
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 08:35 pm
carole davison
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 08:33 pm
Jonny Lees
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 07:36 pm
Chris Wilson
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 07:23 pm
Rob Wilkes
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 01:31 pm
susan Girven
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 01:03 pm
James Walters
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 12:58 pm
Hsin-Yu Wang
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 11:59 am
Lynn Muthu
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 09:32 am
03 June 2013 07:56 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Aside from having a serious dislike of tents the sleeping really isn’t too bad. There is the obvious moving around you get from 170 people in one camp but apart from the odd person deciding 2am is the time to go to the toilet I woke up feeling okay. Its absolutely amazing the backgrounds of people, there are 40 different nationalities being represented here and ages ranging from 20 to 60-ish?! (maybe older). I continue to be impressed by the stamina of some people running most of the day and then staying up until 12 only to get up again at 4am despite the event not starting until 8am. You just see headlights bobbing around and eventually you just have to get out of bed. (If anyone is ever thinking of doing this do not get freeze dried breakfast, find something light and something you actually like the taste of)
So, onto the running/walking, unfortunately after a promising day 1 my race is pretty much run. Turns out I was 22nd day one but unless something miraculous happens that’ll be the highest I’m going to finish. my body has not even begun to recover from Brighton and I’m now carrying a plethora of injuries. The sprained ankle hasn’t recovered, my right knee has now gone due to persistent impact and as a result of changing the way I move my left shin is now aching. I have genuinely tried to run in patches but unfortunately this is not possible. Don’t worry I’m not planning on quitting the event, I will finish this thing but at this stage it appears that is all it will be. The 39km stage was supposed to be one of the easier ones but I came in 71st and in about 7 hrs. gutted doesn’t cover it but once I’d finished moaning to myself and pretty much anyone that would listen I’ve started to lift my head and notice what an amazing place this is. When you look beyond the Chinese authorities that are watching us very closely we are in a stunning part of the world. We spent the bulk of today alongside a mountain range which I can only imagine we will be walking through at some point at the course gets towards 2,800metres.
Another 40km tomorrow and who knows maybe the walking will allow a few of the ailments a little bit of time to recover although there are worse ways to spend a week walking through a part of the world very few people have been to.
Lets see what tomorrow brings
MG
Comments: Total (3) comments
lynne dent
Posted On: 07 Jun 2013 09:36 pm
Lynn Muthu
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 08:32 am
Lynn Muthu
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 08:14 am
02 June 2013 03:07 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Comments: Total (8) comments
The Beast
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 07:27 am
Gary D
Posted On: 04 Jun 2013 06:15 am
Anne Gamblin
Posted On: 03 Jun 2013 08:25 pm
Rebecca Gray
Posted On: 03 Jun 2013 08:11 pm
Emily Gasche
Posted On: 03 Jun 2013 07:47 pm
Al Sayce
Posted On: 03 Jun 2013 03:21 pm
Lynn Muthu
Posted On: 03 Jun 2013 08:52 am
David D'Netto
Posted On: 03 Jun 2013 08:24 am
17 May 2013 04:25 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi
Well i can definitely say the fear has well and truely set in. My trainers don't hurt, i've bought most of the equipment, i've trained pretty hard, my visa is done, the flights are booked so what is the problem?! Ah yes................250km across a country i have never been to.
Due to poor time management and an inability to say no to challenges, particularly after a couple of beers i'm actually running 100km from London to Brighton the weekend before so maybe finishing this in a respectable time will allay some of the fears.
Bizarrely a chap i went to school with completed the Attacama event in March and he's still smiling so it must one hell of an experience. Everyone who has competed in at least one event says the same thing so not matter how hard it is it's not going to be something you forget too quickly.
I'm not overly sure how many people use or read these but if we could start a trail on obvious things not to bother with and what not to forget that would be amazing. I've already been advised to treat hot spots and potential blisters early but there must be others? How many calories are people catering for even 3,000 seems a little light for me, currently i'm packed for 4,000 but that is based on very little knowledge.
Thanks
Mike
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Comments: Total (1) comments
lynn muthu
Posted On: 08 Jun 2013 09:21 pm