HEY!! That's me! I'm the "carnage..." :wave:OK so this would be you stepping over the carnage.
Some Super D pics:
http://s166.photobucket.com/albums/u94/dirthippie/SR race 11-17/
![]()
So, my trail bike is an '02 Turner RFX that I used to race DH on. I changed out the 6" rockers for 5" rockers, to make it a 5"-rear/6"-front bike.
We start out the Super D at the cul-de-sac near the wall, and are told that the first part of the race would be climbing up to where the DH starts.
"You've got to be kidding me," I think to myself. I don't even want to know how many vertical feet it is.
I start off optimistic, but am soon reminded why I don't race XC. I haven't been on a course I wanted to hurl on in a long time, and while I really like "giving it all you've got," I would prefer to do so in that last 2 minutes of a race, not the first two minutes of the race. By the time I got up to the top of the DH start, I am so relieved to be there, that I forget to unlock my suspension, and essentially have about 80mm of travel for the rest of the course.
By the time I hit the Cal State section (where you see me above harvesting soil samples for my research project - ahem!), I am so exhausted and spent, I don't have the strength to wield the bike through the rocks. With Eric bearing down on me, I crash hard on the rocks, landing on my helmet and wadding in a heap amidst a swirling cloud of dust.
I moan and try to move as I hear someone coming up behind me.
"Pass me! Pass!" I yell to him.
He leaps over my body and continues his race.
I stagger to my feet, and try to stand without falling over.
"Are you OK?" I hear someone yell to me from the side of the trail.
"AAARRRRGGGGHHHH!!!!!" I roar, by way of answer. So I get a little angry when I crash. I pick up my bike and continue the race, hoping it won't be much further, and there won't be much more climbing. Like an idiot, I've come in and done this race blind, with no idea what the course lay-out is. I do not advice this as a race strategy.
Before the race is over, I manage to miss the hard right that would have avoided the lower rock section that runs along the wall. As I approach the wall just past the last set of rocks, I realize I'm off course. It's another steep climb to get back to the Super D course... (note to self: always pre-ride the course). Sigh. Oh well.
Other than crashing on my helmet and going off course, I rode really well!
Thanks for the pic!
-sunny
Laura Drexler