Gobi March Blogs 2007

Dan Stake

19

Posts

Gobi March (2007) blog posts from Dan Stake

10 January 2008 06:17 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

Fantastic! Incredible! Mile after mile of stunning vistas. Snow-capped peaks in the distance, sheer rock walls on either side of boiling rapids, razor-thin passages in places, local people cheering us on, wonderful weather. After getting off to my usual slow start I quickly throttled back to a more sustainable pace. No blisters, to loose toenails, only slightly sore knees. The are only slightly sore because I was able to soak them in the ice-cold water of the river we have been following when I got to camp. It is a wonderful campsite, with hot tea being delivered directly to our tents and hot water available just outside our tent door. There are others waiting to e-mail and blog, so I’ll stop now. I am feeling great and looking forward to Stage 2. Terri – in your next e-mail to me, please send your e-mail address. I wrote it down but left it in my suitcase. Love to all

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10 September 2007 12:34 pm (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

I leave Oklahoma City for Chicago at about 0600. tomorrow. I will arrive in Chicago about 1000 and, after a 4 hour layover, it's off to Beijing. Non-stop, 13 hours 25 minutes. Arriving Beijing at 1500 local time Wednesday.. Spend the night in Beijing, hop on the 0845 to Urumqi, arrive their about noon, do some site-seeing there during the nearly 8 hour layover, jump on another plane and finally arrive in Kashgar at about 2200 Friday night. Hopefully, we'll be able to to the pre-race check-in that night (Tamas says that might happen). That would be nice.

At some as yet unspecified time on Saturday, we will commence our bus ride to Camp One. I'm thinking that by the time I get there, I will feel like I have just finished the Long March. A good night's sleep will remedy that.

I have decided to place the fate of all of my gear to the baggage handlers. I could tote my fully-loaded backpack on and off the airplanes, but I'm not going to. I have traveled a bit during my life and have only had a checked bag not arrive with me one time. I figure the odds of my bag not being on the same flights with me are very, very slim indeed. No matter what, I'd have to check at least one bag because they won't let me carry my trekking poles onto the airplane. So, if I arrive in Kashgar with no gear, I'll just "go commando" until it catches up to me.

At this point in time, there is nothing left to do but do it.

And that what I intend to do. No matter what.

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11 June 2007 10:04 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

In all honesty, my only goal is to finish what I start. Top 10? No way. Top 25? Keep dreaming. Top half? Maybe. Middle of the pack? Very doable. Back of the pack? Good enough for me.

I stop to "take it all in" too often to worry about final results. I stop too often to take pictures and shoot video to worry about final results. A lot of people back home will experience the race vicariously through my stories, pictures and video. They don't care about final results.

I wasn't worried about final results when I walked the entire second stage of the Atacama Crossing with Lucy Watkins-Ball , who "bonked" on the first day and had no confidence in her ability to finish any stage. I wasn't worried about final results when I walked the entire 50-mile stage of the Sahara Race with Derek Kwik because Derek had a nerve inflammation in both legs and couldn't run a step. It was the least I could do for him - he had waited for me to catch-up at a check-point for over an hour during the 50-mile stage of the Atacama Crossing. The sun was setting and he said he didn't want me to have to go it alone in the dark.

Examples of selfless camaraderie abound during events like these. And why is that so? In my opinion, it is because so few people are actually concerned about final results. They mostly are intent upon finishing what they started and will help others do the same.

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Posted On: 12 Jun 2007 12:10 pm

Your "finishing what we start" blog was excellent and I am sure inspirational to those who worry about the competitive side of this event. See you in the Gobi Martyn

Posted On: 11 Jun 2007 10:19 pm

My name is Rob Roy and I will be racing at Gobi as well. I am currently in Hong Kong and on the way up to Kashgar on Wed. I was reading your blog and was very impressed by your recovery from lung cancer. But what really caught my eye was that I have been thru Kingfisher many times on the way out to my wife's family who live in Loyal and Hitchcock. All the best, I will see you in a few days!

Posted On: 11 Jun 2007 06:32 pm

Good for you ;)

10 June 2007 02:09 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

I run alone. Almost always without an iPod or mp3 player or anything like that. People ask me if I get bored spending hour after hour running to and fro out in the country all by myself. The answer is "no".

I started going on long runs as part of my recovery from having the upper right lobe of my lungs removed because it had a tumor in it that was killing me. That is a very good reason to have it removed. Having been told that even with the surgery I could expect to live only a few more years (because I also had non-Hodgkins lymphoma), I wanted to make the most of that time. so when I ran, I ran alone. I listened to nothing but the sounds of nature and my own breathing. The only other impediments to filling my senses with all that the world around me had to offer were my own thoughts. You know, the constant mental "chatter" that goes in inside our heads.

After a time, during some of those long runs, I found that by focusing on my breathing (it is not hard to focus on breathing when you have had part of your lungs removed) and the steady rhythm of my pace I could "tune-out" the mental "chatter" and experience the world around me without having it filtered through the gauze of distracting thoughts. Just me and the world around me. How wonderful.

Good doctors and prayers answered have kept me alive far longer than was expected, and it looks like I'll be around for quite some time. I still run alone and almost always with no iPod or mp3 player. I can still "tune-out" the chatter and I still marvel at how wonderful it is to be out in the middle of nowhere with absolutely nothing on my mind.

Nothing boring about that.

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10 June 2007 01:46 am (GMT+08:00) Beijing, Chongqing, Hong Kong, Urumqi

I was just about home from my last serious training run early last week and was walking through my neighbor's back yard when I heard a very weak and mournful "meow" coming from under a bush near the house. Being a life-long cat lover and knowing my neighbor wouldn't mind me wandering around in his yard, I went to check it out. Sure enough, there lay a very small, very thin, very nearly dead black kitten. It's eyes were nearly matted shut and it could hardly make any sound at all due to extreme dehydration. Being so close to home, I thought it best to go there, dump my gear (I was in full "Gobi battle dress") and return. And so I did, with wife and daughter forming the balance of a three-person rescue team. We gathered up the tiny kitten, took it home and set up a feline intensive care unit in the bathroom. Terri (wife) cleaned him up while Danielle (daughter) got out the electric heating pad and an old towel. I mixed up a small amount of my special "bring 'em back from the brink of death" feline elixir of life to feed the little fellow. It all worked and now, several days later, our new kitten is up and running and gaining weight and acting like a kitten should act.

We named him Gobi.

This story has little or nothing to do with the Gobi March. Or maybe it does.

In our quest to do something that will make a difference, to accomplish something good, we sometimes find it necessary to travel half-way around the world. But sometimes we need look no further than our neighbor's back yard.

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31 May 2007 02:43 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

While in London I was supposed to meet Steve Partridge yesterday at 09:30 at the Royal Exchange on Wednesday morning. I had planned to do so until about 04:30 Wednesday morning. That's when all hell broke loose in my intestinal tract. Something I ate? Or drank? Or something else altogether? No matter. It's gone now and I am a couple of kilos lighter on my feet than before. However, it did keep me from leaving my hotel room until about noon and there was no way to let Steve know in advance that I would not be meeting him.

Prior to Wednesday, I was able to get in some nice runs early in the mornings on Monday and Tuesday. Monday morning it was

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Posted On: 01 Jun 2007 07:28 am

Hi Dan, get well. See you soon! You are in C10: The Tatars.

25 May 2007 01:59 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

I'm leaving for London tomorrow and will be there a week. I plan on doing some running in and around Regent's Park, Hampstead Heath, Kensington Gardens, Hyde Park and along the Thames. I think "interval training" is in order: run from one pub to the next, with an ale-drinking interval at each. Gotta have those carbs!

Last week was a washout in terms of training. After being so careful to avoid training-related injuries I strained my lower back moving an old, large color television for my parents. The week of rest might have been a good thing because I had dead legs for days before being bested by the ancient Magnavox. Now, my legs are fresh and my energy level is better.

Bent, but not broken: resiliency is good.

Cheerio!
Dan

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Posted On: 28 May 2007 04:02 pm

Hi Dan, Have fun in London - my hometown. If you want to get some good maps of the parks for your runs, go to www.royalparks.gov.uk If you go round St James Park, The Green Park, Hyde Park and then Kensingston Gardens in a big loop it's about 10 miles I think. The Serpentine Running Club has a good route with distances on their website - www.serpentine.org.uk/routes If you have a chance to get a bit further out, you can't beat Richmond Park for beautiful surroundings. There are toilets on each gate, a cafe, and nice trail surface (The Tamsin Trail). One complete lap of Tamsin Trail is exactly 7 miles. Wimbledon Common nearby is also fantastic, with woodland and hills. Enjoy! Catherine

25 May 2007 01:47 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

Five things you will most likely NOT hear anyone say during the Gobi March:

1) "It took a few days, but I'm really acquiring a taste for warm bottled water".

2) "Electrolytes? What are those?"

3) "I don't mind having a little sand blow into my freeze-dried meal. It's like extra fiber."

4) "Can I sleep in your tent? No one snores in my tent and I need the noise to help me sleep."

5) "Does anyone have a cork screw?"

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05 May 2007 08:53 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

The motivation/desire/need to train for the Gobi March has been slowly evolving into an obsession to avoid injury. With only six weeks to go, the natural instinct is to squeeze in as much quality training as possible and be ready to start the race in the best possible shape. However, it has been my experience that pushing hard this close to the start invites injuries that require a significant reduction in training in order to recover, or which cannot be recovered from prior to the start.

The truth of the matter is that I'm in good enough shape right now to finish the race. I can, and will be in better shape in six weeks, but it won't be because I have pushed myself to the limit. I'll sacrifice a bit of conditioning for being healthy and resilient at the beginning of the race. I like that word "resilient". It doesn't mean invincible or indestructible, but suggests flexibility and the ability to absorb shock. And resiliency, I believe, will be the key to coping with whatever comes my way during the race. "Bulletproof" vests do not work on the principle of deflecting projectiles, they work on the principle of absorbing the energy of a projectile before it can do serious injury. Perhaps I will not be totally "bulletproof" at the start of the race, but I will have done all I could to prepare my body to absorb the "Gobi bullet" that is headed its way in 43 days.

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Posted On: 18 May 2007 10:50 pm

Dan-I'm so excited for you! Other than Antarctica (where you'll be next year for sure), Gobi was my favorite! Keep it steady man - and we'll be checking in daily and cheering for you from the Windy City. You might even hear us in China. Go get 'em! You are a constant source of inspiration for all of us!

03 May 2007 08:28 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

Twenty years ago, give or take a few days, I had been home from the hospital for a few weeks recovering from having the upper right lobe of my lungs removed (along with the the golf-ball sized carcinoid tumor that had taken up residence therein). I could walk about

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01 May 2007 02:02 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

The Power of Team is a book about three special people who joined together to become the first team to finish all of the races in racingtheplanet's Four Deserts series. I first met Nancy, Joel and Dave at the Atacama Crossing and once again enjoyed being in their company at the Sahara Race. There are no finer people on planet earth and I encourage everyone to read their incredible story. It is available through their website: www.fireandicemedia.com.

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30 April 2007 02:12 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

My wife (Terri) and I left home at 04:30, headed for downtown Oklahoma City. Pre-race activities would begin at 05:30, with the race starting at 06:30. We arrived at 05:30 and there were already hundreds of people milling about. It was breezy and cool. by 06:00 the crowd had swelled to thousands. A little after 06:00 I pulled off the warm clothes, put on the pack (7Kg/16lbs) and made my way to the starting area. When the gun went off, it took me almost five minutes just to get to the actual starting line, but with chip-timing, that's not a big deal.

My goal was to chug along at 11:00 - 12:00 min./mile and finish in about five hours. That's a pretty slow marathon by any standard, but speed was not my objective. At 13 miles I was right on schedule, but my right hamstring was starting to "twitch". I called Terri to let her know that I was at the half-way point and to add about half an hour to my expected finish time because I would be doing some walking and would be stopping as needed to stretch my hamstring. As it turned out, I called her just as the winner of the marathon was crossing the finish line. He was done and I had at least 2 1/2 hours to go.

I cruised (if you can call 12 min./mile "cruising") to the finish, stopping to stretch and walk every now and then. I finished at about noon, way at the back of the pack, but I finished with no torn muscles, no torn ligaments and no blisters.

Not a bad way to start the day.

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Posted On: 01 May 2007 09:14 pm

Thanks, Rob. The front pack in the photo is the same one I will be using for the Gobi March. It was made by a company called Moletracks, which I believe is no longer in business. The backpack I will be using is an older version of the Salomon Revo 30 (I think it was called the Raid 300). I added some straps and buckles to accomodate the front pack. The backpack I have on in the photo is a smaller pack that I made similar modifications to for the Desert R.A.T.S., which is similar in format to RTP's races but supports competitors by providing meals. My "rig" for the Gobi will be set up just like the one in the photo except that I will have bottles hanging on both shoulder straps.

Posted On: 01 May 2007 05:47 pm

Nice work Dan. No injuries - that is key. Question: What pack are you racing with (is it the same as your photo)? Cheers, Rob

26 April 2007 08:33 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

Go to the Gobi March website and browse through the pictures, daily reports and competitors' blogs from GM06. for the moment, enjoy vicariously the experiences of the competitors in that race and get fired up to do it yourself. I particularly enjoyed once again following the progress of people I met at previous races (Sandy McCallum, Spencer Surenkok-White, Theresa Schneider, Louise Cooper, James Pethigal, Marta Oblander, Lizzy Palmer-Smith).

We will be in a different location for GM07, but the environment will be much the same and the opportunity to make new friends and create life-long memories will be the same. If you have never done a race like this before, you have something special waiting for you. Those of us who have already done a race like this know that we have another special experience waiting for us.

I am looking forward to some quality time around the campfire. And yes, I am fired up.

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26 April 2007 06:20 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

I have acquired virtually everything that I will need for the race. It's all in my "Gobi box" waiting to be sorted and organized and packed and re-packed until everything fits "just right". My sleeping bag will be in a stuff-sack strapped to the bottom of my pack. My sleeping pad will be strapped to the back of the pack. My small digital still and video cameras will be in a front pouch, which will also has side pockets for water bottles and will hold my daily supply of electrolytes and trail food. Everything else will be in clear, sealable bags inside the pack. Towards the end of the week I might be able to stuff the sleeping bag inside the pack to take up the space previously occupied by food.

This weekend I will be doing the Oklahoma City Memorial Marathon with a "light" load in my pack (approx. 7Kg). I'm planning on maintaining a steady pace of 12 min./mile and finishing in about five hours. We'll see how it goes.

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14 April 2007 09:11 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

With just a little over nine weeks to go, I have two primary training objectives: don't over-train and avoid injuries. I have a decent base of long runs so getting in a long run each week will be enough. Since the entire race will be at altitudes exceeding 1600 meters and I live at an altitude of 335 meters, I do need to do what I can to prepare for the thin air. So, at least every other day I will spend 45-60 minutes on the treadmill maintaining a heart rate of between 125 and 135, which is 75-80% of the maximum training heart rate recommended for someone my age (51). Based on research I have done, I believe that to be the most effective thing I can do (other than shack up with Will Laughlin for a few weeks at Boulder, Colorado prior to the race).

Avoiding injury and not over-training is a serious issue. With only two months to go, the natural instinct is to ramp-up the training in order to be in better shape at the start of the race. However, that strategy would most likely result in starting the race with less resiliency and could result in injuries that could not be resolved prior to the start of the race.

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14 April 2007 09:05 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

This post is primarily for those who are already signed up to participate in an RtP event, or are thinking about doing so, but have never participated in an RtP race or anything like them. You can look forward to an experience that will create memories that will last a lifetime. Here are a few of my favorites:

My first siting of the Southern Cross during the Atacama Crossing. It was at about midnight at Camp 1 on the eve of the start of the race. I wandered away from camp a ways to "de-hydrate", looked up, and there it was. Easily seen in the midst of thousands of stars in the clear, dry air. I had seen pictures of the Southern Cross, read stories in which it was mentioned and dreamed of seeing with my own eyes since I was a little boy. I was not disappointed.

Finishing Stage 1 of the Atacama Crossing. The bad news was that Stage 1 started at an altitude of over 10,000', The good news was that it was all downhill from there. Since all of my training had been done at an altitude of 1,100', the air seemed mighty thin (which, in fact, it was). The fact that I have only four instead of five lung lobes (lost one to a lung tumor years ago) was also a hindrance. I had no choice but to move at a pace slow enough to enable me to keep my breathing under control and maintain a decent level of blood oxygenation. Passing out on a narrow stretch of Inca Trail high above the river was simply not acceptable. It was a long, long day and a very challenging start to a fantastic experience.

Camp at the Valle del Muerte during the Atacama Crossing. This was the camp at the end of the 80K stage. It was a beautiful day, providing everyone with an opportunity to relax outside the tents, tend to their wounds and swap stories. With only the short final stage to do the next day, everyone was in a very upbeat mood. In our tent, all of the food anyone had left was piled up in the middle of the tent and you could help yourself to whatever you wanted. Watching Charlie Engle "surf" down the side of the huge sand dune next to camp on a sandboard was the highlight of the day. I videotaped the whole thing.

Walking the entire 80K stage of the Sahara Race with Derek Kwik. Derek had a nerve inflammation (or something like that) in both of his lower legs and could not run. His only option was to walk the whole thing or DNF. DNF was not an option because Derek's goal was to be an official finisher of the Sahara Race in order to qualify for The Last Desert in Antartica. Derek and I had become good friends while trekking about half of the Atacama Crossing together the year before, so I told him I would walk the whole thing with him. We swapped mp3 players, discussed theology and politics, spent hours in total silence, shared food (I am now addicted to marinated, hard-boiled quail eggs), shared taking the lead into sometimes vicious winds, talked each other out of believing that our hallucinations were real, took short naps leaning against each other back-to-back in the middle of nowhere, hit the last CP just before dawn and made it to camp by mid-morning. It was the most enjoyable 50 mile hike imaginable.

Not waving the "surrender flag". The Sahara Race was all about surviving the incredible heat. At one point during the race four or five of us were huddled in a sliver of shade created by a small rock ledge in the White Desert. I had a small white hand towel that we were getting wet and waving back and forth on the end of one of my trekking poles so the evaporation would cool the cloth. We had done that a few times when someone in the group notice a cloud of dust some distance away. It was impossible to tell what was causing it. In a minute or so, it was obvious that the dust cloud was caused by a vehicle headed our way fast. It drove right up in front of us and out jumped one of the race officials. He asked what the problem was and we told him that there was no problem, we were just trying to cool off. I asked him why he thought there was a problem. He said he had seen the white flag waving from his observation point and took it as a sign of surrender by one of the competitors. I told him that none of us were about to surrender and we all had a good laugh.

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Posted On: 14 Apr 2007 01:24 am

Dan -- great memories. I can't believe how time flies by.

14 April 2007 09:05 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

A while ago I finished an hour of what I call a "yo-yo" workout on the treadmill.
I call it that because for the whole hour I am adjusting the incline of the
treadmill to cause my heart rate to go up and down. I do this wearing ankle
weights, a weight belt and hand weights. Altogether, the extra weight is about 34 lbs.
(15.5Kg). There is no running involved, just walking at between 3.6 and 4.4 mph.
I do this 3-4 times per week, along my other training (long runs, weight training).

After a brief warm-up at 4 mph, I incline the treadmill to the max., and monitor my
heart rate. When it hits 140 I start backing off the speed so I can keep the HR
between 140 and 145 and sustain that pace for 2-3 minutes. Then I drop the incline
and "recover" to an HR of 105 - 110, which I maintain for 2-3 minutes and then
start the process all over again. The target heart rates are based on my age (51),
resting HR (48) and overall level of fitness, and would vary from person to person.

What I have found over time is that it takes longer and longer for my HR to get
to the 140-145 level and the recovery to the 105-110 range takes less and less time.
Consequently, I with each workout, I spend more time at an HR in my target range of 125-140.

I realize that what I do is just a particular kind of interval training, but I thought I'd share
the concept.

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14 April 2007 09:05 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

The longest day of the year (summer solstice) will occur during GM07. Based upon Kashgar's lattitude and longitude (approx. 37N,76E) and time zone (GMT+8), sunrise will be at about 0730 each morning with sunset at about 2225 each evening. I'm pretty sure I have the coordinates and timezone correct. If not, let me know I will run another calculation (easily done at http://aa.usno.navy.mil/data/docs/RS_OneYear.html#formb).

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29 March 2007 11:42 am (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time(US & Canada)

This is the third year in a row that I have registered to compete in the Gobi March. I had to cancel the first two times, but not this year. Registration fees have been paid, flights have been booked, a visa has been obtained and my "Gobi Box" is starting to fill up with mandatory and optional gear. Having done the Sahara Race, the Atacama Crossing and the Marathon des Sables, I have a pretty good idea of what to pack and what to leave behind.

My training has been fairly consistent over that past several months. However, I intend to do even more in April and May and then taper during the two weeks prior to the start.

Being a realist, my only goal for GM07 is to finish. I stop to shoot video and take pictures way too often to worry about who is ahead or behind me. Oh, I should also mention that I am slow to start with.

More later.


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Posted On: 04 Apr 2007 01:35 pm

Dan- I know you will get to the Gobi and have a great race. We know you must be training hard right about now, and we are all sending you our positive energy. We miss you! Train hard and go be in the Gobi! One more hot desert to go! Team Illinois

Posted On: 29 Mar 2007 11:08 am

Good luck in the Gobi March, Dan. You have almost completed the series!