Showing posts with label chiru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chiru. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

188 / Huangshan MTB Festival















In Chinese racing, there must be few luckier numbers to pin to your jersey than 188- maybe 088 is better? But 188 should be a passage to good fortune and plentiful riches. 

















Lying on the deck, having been side swiped by a kamikaze Chinese bicycle pilot who came hurtling out of nowhere to try and undertake on a cobbled corner by using his body and bike as a brake sliding across the floor, I wasn't so sure. Holding back the urge to hit him with my mini pump, a clearer mind may have deduced Chinese lucky numbers don't apply to Westerners...


















Our crack Team Chiru of Pierre, Aron, Mark and I had come to Huangshan for the weekend to check out one of the biggest mountain bike races in China where we would ride the 100km marathon event. We also wanted to see a fairly remote area apparently very popular with mainland tourists, especially since the filming of crouching tiger hidden monkey, where some of the scenes were shot. Of course, the locals are pretty tuned into taxing the tourists, but look past the tat and the fake new pretending to be old and there were some pretty genuine looking old pagodas that would make for some pretty cool 'bikesandbuildings' backdrops, not to mention some lovely landscapes that provide the backdrops for many of the rather more famous classic Chinese ink paintings. Prints are of course available...


















The beauty of this town and it's landscape was dulled somewhat on our arrival by the pouring rain that preceded. And we soon discovered on our late afternoon test lap that, what would no doubt be an awesome 20km XC course in the dry, had also been rather destroyed by the few hundred riders churning through there on Saturday morning's races in the heavy rain. Think mud bath so deep in places that the closest reference point I have is the cyclocross and winter cross country races held in the winter I rode as a teenager in south west England. It might have been warmer than a Gloucestershire field in January, but this uniquely claggy gloop made many climbs unrideable and the descents a bit more than sketchy. I don't mind the latter, but a nice bout of chain suck whenever I attempted to use the mud infested inner ring of my otherwise excellent Chiru Pulse was a cruel blow on the semi rideable climbs. With 400m climbing per lap including a fair bit of pushing up gloopy grassy knolls, I've ridden more convincing big ring race courses! 





























On the upside there were some great sections through bamboo forest and little villages where the locals had come out to cheer "Gai-Ao" (it means 'fill up' or 'go on' for the uninitiated). 















Waking on Sunday to a beautiful day and looking from the balcony of our rather charming looking new / made to look old hotel in the middle of Hongcun town, our sprints were lifted and the mood was optimistic. I should probably add that this hotel's charm was lost somewhat when you hit the hole in the ground squat loo and passed through muddy cyclist detritus on the floor. But we weren't here to luxe it up in fancy hotels, we were here to race! 





And race we did, to rather varying degrees of success... The drivetrain toll was heavy enough to destroy Mr Leeper's rear dérailleur on lap 1. My fortunes weren't much better with that stupid crash right outside said hotel at the end of lap 1. A subsequent bent disc rotor and gear hanger rather slowed me down for lap 2, after which I retired to take a quick cruise around the town to see some sights rather than keep on listening to my scraping brake. Aron also pulled out at the end of this lap, opting for an early hotel shower next to the squat loo before our mini bus trip back to hangzhou airport. 
















Speaking of which, a journey time miscalculation combined with the slower course meant that we would miss our evening flight if any of us three finished this one, so the early retirements were going to happen anyway.














Meanwhile, our superstar Pierre (who wasn't flying home till the next day) was flying on the bike. With the least mechanical troubles and the best handling skills to steer through the gloop, Pierre was having a good day. Working his way up through the field as those around him started to fall (myself included!), we got news on the bus that the 'leisurely antelope' (as google translate would later christen) had battled through to a fine 5th place finish. Chapeau to the Frenchman!














A cruel twist of fate came in the form of some equally epic flight delays, which were more than the extra leeway we needed to finish the race and come home the same evening given the 5 1/2 drive back to the airport, but such is life. 

















Story of the weekend came from our Chiru Shanghai representative - Kay, who told us the story of a Chinese construction worker who drowned in a rather larger communal squat hole on site, having lost his footing around said hole. There's ways to go and there's ways to go.... One must always be thankful even if the little things (like getting home at 5.30am on a Monday morning) don't always work out exactly as you hope!















So, a fun weekend in a surprisingly pleasant part of China- thanks are due to Pierre, Kay and the rest of the Chiru team for their hard work in arranging these things. The racing luck and travel logistics may not have quite worked out as hoped for all, but still good to visit these places before they get too Disney'fied. Next time I'll take number 177 and a Monday flight please.















For further amusement, turn on the google translate on the below:
http://www.biketo.com/racing/internal/17386.html

Friday, March 28, 2014

CMWing





A sunny late afternoon Chi Ma Wan test ride on the Chiru Pulse this weekend past with Pierre. All set for this weekend at the Huanshan Mountain Bike Festival in deepest China!

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Hong Kong's Trail Blazer






"If you can ride a mountain bike in Hong Kong, you can ride anywhere". Some very cool footage of my man Pierre on Chi Ma Wan in this Chiru / HKTDC production.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Action Asia MTB Festival 2013















As our diet of MTB racing seems to get more and more limited each year it becomes more and more important to support the excellent Action Asia race series. It may only be once a year now, but it is certainly the best race we have in HK. Yet as the races get fewer and far between, the popularity of this event seems to grow each year, and so the standard rises also.















This year Thai superstar Jay Kiangchaipaiphana set new course records on Tai Lam Chung and Chi Ma Wan, also setting the record straight on the whole wheel size debate- it's not about the size of your wheels, it's generally about the size of your legs, lungs and having the balls / technical skill to match. So yea, 26" hard tails still do the business with the right pilot.
















Meanwhile, on team Chiru, Pierre, Aron & I all lined up for Saturday's Tai Lam Chung speed fest, with some scorching times over the first lap- Pierre in a 40:29 and a 41:45 for me. Without the benefit of drafting on the tarmac the second lap is always a bit slower, but I still made up a place or two for 8th on the day. Pierre was evergreen in 6th, whilst Aron was fairly unique in that he went faster on the 2nd lap to come home in 23rd. Given I was riding a bike I'd only ridden twice in advance of the race and my summer mountain biking has been extremely limited, this was not a bad day's racing at all for me, and, Mr Leeper aside, everyone seemed pretty happy with their performances.
















Chi Ma Wan was a new day, with rain greeting our arrival by ferry. I decided to take a zero risk approach to the day, keen to avoid a fall ahead of Trailwalker the following weekend. This turned out to be a sensible approach given the medical tent queue at the end of the race- no shortage of scrapes & tumbles, though nothing too serious.















Overall, the time I lost by bailing the tricky stuff meant I dropped a place to 9th (2nd in Age Cat), whilst Pierre's excellent knowledge of the course and MTB skills moved him up to an impressive 4th overall. Aron's technical let him down even more on Chi Ma Wan's tricky rocks, but he was still happy with the day, as were we all. Bring on 2014!



Friday, July 12, 2013

Genghis Khan Challenge, Inner Mongolia, July 2013















When Genghis Khan was the most feared warrior on Earth, leading an army of Mongol soldiers to all conquering pan-Asian domination, he could little have imagined that one day Inner Mongolia would not only be ruled and largely populated by Han Chinese, but that this hard landscape from which so many tough warriors had been bred, wold host an event where people would traverse these hills for fun on 2 wheels, not 4 legs, travelling from locations as far away and diverse as London, Stockholm, Beijing, Taipei and, of course Hong Kong.

















On the flight from Hong Kong alongside me we had Aron, our resident Swede, and Pierre, our French 'patron', whose Chiru bike brand we were racing under, and whose excellent Pulse 29ers we were riding. We were also teaming up with Tugu, the Mongolian national champion who had travelled down from Ulaanbaatar by car with his Dad, as well as Antoine (another Frenchman) and Fraser (USA), both living in Taipei. Together we would be taking on a field some 170 riders strong, including 2 Mongolian national teams on the vast rolling grassland in a race to see who has the toughest Mongol spirit.

















The first challenge to overcome was actually making it to the somewhat remote location. Flying to Beijing was the easy bit, navigating to an overnight hotel at midnight and answering the next day's 4.30am alarm clock was tougher still. Another 1hr internal flight up to Xilinhot, a 2.5hr bus journey up to Xiwuqi and we arrived at Electricity hotel- a curious namesake.... But not our base- we were down the road in Unknown hotel, a fine 6 star locale with Michelin star dining downstairs. Ok, maybe that is overstating it a little, but after an excellent lunch with Tugu and his Dad, we took a quick pre- race day spin. In true rural Chinese style the town is apparently only around 20 years old with big long straight 8 lane roads (that are fair game for crossing on foot) for no reason whatsoever, but it is small and you are quickly out amongst the grasslands and the big blue sky. Coming from a Hong Kong summer it feels incredibly dry and refreshing being outside. More like a nice hot summer's day in the Lake District than the tropics- perfect!











Day 1 saw us line up in the midday sun for a 2pm start out of the very random stadium built just out of town more for wrestling and horse competitions than biking but still an excellent spot to trade some hats with Chinese police ladies in white boots and begin the photo frenzy that is a white face in this part of the world. Babies & children are of course the most important faces to capture next to gwuilo man, but we can return the gesture with podium girls...

















The racing itself was fast and furious off the line with everyone battling to try and get near the front. Predictably, a Mongol based super selection was made on the first climb, where I couldn't quite make it into the first group. However, soon enough my Chiru teammate Fraser, another Mongol national team rider and I formed a chase group going at what I thought was warp speed, but still not fast enough to close the gap to the lead pack. With tactics (and speeds!) more like a road race than your usual mountain bike race, the Mongol dropped back from us leaving Fraser & I working well together and covering the first 30 of the day's 63km in around an hour.















I was thinking these speeds were completely unsustainable until a newly reformed Mongol team time trial train came hooning past us on the descent. We were doing around 45kph, but it seems 50 is more de rigour around here! I worked my big 29er wheels hard to get on the Mongol train and succeeded where Fraser (who'd arrived at the hotel at 6am that morning) had held back and all of a sudden I was sat on the crazy bus enjoying the crazy speeds. Less enjoyable was the 18 year old style of suddenly crashing in front of you over a ditch, but I was lucky enough to stay upright. In that enthusiastic way you only have at that age they might crash but they're straight back up with seemingly no damage done.















My mentalist Mongol train caught some stragglers from the lead pack with around 15 km to go and actually I had my chance to drop them all when they missed a turn, but hopefully I gained some honour in calling them to go the right way. Strange to direct the locals. Anyway, it all split up in the remaining kilometers and we made our own ways suffering up the energy sapping granny ring grassy climb into the headwind. A few more crashes for good measure and all of a sudden it was a tarmac road with the finish line arch in site. I could feel my legs almost cramping, having struggled to drink enough fluid on what turned into a scorcher of a day going at those speeds so I held off any all out sprint which cost me a few places, but I'm aware it's a 3 day race not 1, and legs will be required in the next two days. Coming in 11th place on a time of 2.05 secured fastest full time working gwuilo, for which there is no prize, but judging by some of the equipment the warp speed Mongols were riding that is more than fair enough. It's fair to say this is the first time I've covered that sort of distance at 30kph average off road over proper terrain, but at least I have equipment to match...















Our team mate Tugu (95)won the KOM / sprint prize but managed to crash after 25km and break his handle bar at the shifter position. Despite this he still finished a remarkable 2nd place. He requested a bigger chain ring for tmr's stage... Fraser was around a minute behind me in 13th having paced himself remarkably well on his own and Pierre & Aron finished a few minutes further back having worked well together rounding out the top 15. An amazing start to an amazing race and when i had a chance to look up there were some amazing landscapes on a beautiful cloudless day. With mutton based recovery products in the evening lets hope there is still some energy in the legs for the next 2 days.

















Day 2 turned out to be the polar opposite to day 1 in terms of tactics and speed with a bad day for Fraser and I. It began with me head butting the gravel in the first 5km out of town having clipped wheels with the ladies yellow jersey as Tugu made his first attack on the lead group. Anticipating the surge and at the back of the group (never the place to be in such situations) I stood up to accelerate but somehow I was soon lying on the floor. Somewhat ruffled, not to mention rather bruised and battered I was now chasing a full pace lead mtb peloton all racing for the first cannonball sprint prize, into a headwind with a minute or so ever increasing disadvantage.































Luckily for me, Aron, having lost some time yesterday, was kind enough to wait for me and so we began our Mongol-less 2 man MTB team time trial across the grassland for the next 40km. Aron was a real super hero, especially in the final Kms where it finally flattened and we had a tail wind where his TT skills could be put to maximum use trying to limit our losses. However, I still conceded around 5 minutes on most of the Mongols I had been eyeing on GC after yesterday's stage in order to try and move up to the top 10.















Less fortunate still was Fraser, who, having ridden well to catch the back of the Mongol train suffered a split side wall halfway through- patching a tire with an energy gel wrapper and a tube takes some time, as does riding solo into a crazy grassland headwind. Coming in 10 minutes after Aron & I, Fraser's GC hopes were now well gone bar a miracle tomorrow. That left renaissance man Pierre as our best gwuilo finisher of the day just outside the top 10. Of course our real super hero Tugu was another story, winning the stage in a sprint, but not gaining any time on his rival for the overall. Antonine, on the other hand, was now Go Pro'd up having given up overall ambitions sitting in the 20s.



















Arriving in the artificial yurt village it was time for me to seek out the first aid tent and assess the damage to body and bike. Visually the worst was my right knee followed by minor gravel rash to the shoulder and a bit to the forehead, but nothing too drastic- I've certainly had much worse and it's part and parcel of racing bikes. More mysterious and much more painful were my even more sausage shaped than usual 2&3rd fingers on the right hand that sent shock waves of pain down my arm over the rough ground. At least it helps distract from the pain in the legs! Kit wise my ZeroRH+ helmet had some good product testing and passed with flying colours. Bike wise the Chiru held up very well- I had done a little manual straightening to the mech hanger after the crash and some more work would be needed in the evening on the rear disc rotor (handy excuse!) in the evening but nothing too major.

















My journey back from the fake yurt village to our race hotel was another excellent experience typical of the incredibly friendly and honest people in the region. I waved down a Mongol team van that had a spare seat and enough room for a bike in the back who were kind enough to let me take a ride ahead of the official race transport. Inside luckily enough there was 1 guy out of 7 who spoke some English and we proceeded to try and make some small talk. Aside from being too scared to travel on the dangerous high speed Chinese rail, it turns out that despite being quite good at writing English as part of his job, my friend had never spoken to anyone in English before. Tourism is an emerging market in this part of the world.

















Another hot pot mutton fuelled dinner and a new arrival on the scene of Xiwuqi was a desert like storm blowing sand in our faces on the way back to our hotel. Midway through the ladies Wimbledon final we were also to discover why the Electricity hotel was called as such- it's a marketing tool for when you experience a power cut in the second set at the rival establishment.















Waking up to day 3 the super sand storm appeared to have subsided and the winds were down. So was the power in our hotel kitchen. This led to an impromptu breakfast from our new friends at the local one stop convenience store, not so ideal for the hardest stage of the race- a 100km ride into the still strong Mongol winds. Given the length of the stage and the propensity the younger Mongols had shown for fading as the race gets longer, we decided to play the long game and try not to get too caught up in the temptation to blow a gasket in the first 10km.















And so the race would play out as Fraser, Pierre, a Taiwanese guy & I formed a good chase group slowly picking up more and more Mongols as the KMs ticked over. I was hurting on not just the climbs trying to hold Fraser's pace, but also the descents as my sausage fingers formed a death grip swelling over the rough ground. By the last water station our group had also swelled to around 8 and the war of attrition had begun. Pierre was starting to cramp having lost a water bottle and the Mongols, presumably fuelled by fermented horse milk (not electrolytes) were showing clear signs of suffering. Digging in that much deeper Fraser and I managed to get a small gap over a short sharp granny ring climb with around 15km to go, pulling out the attack on the descent. We were joined by the Taiwanese guy and quickly established a trio to work together and try to solidify the gap.















The classic Asian 'Im knackered and couldn't possibly do any work before I beat you in a sprint' bluff appeared to be in full force, but with 10km to go our Taiwanese friend did genuinely blow a gasket and wasn't seen again. Fraser, having done the lions share of shielding the winds for the day, was now starting to suffer also, and it was my turn to try and tow us to the line. That was until my nemesis double groin cramps kicked in and I was left stranded trying to shake out convulsing legs. Having suffered through the day with my sausage fingers I wasn't going to let this ruin my race and slowly but surely I got things going again and managed to solo on into the town for 7th place on the day. Fraser, whose surname is now Voight in my head, was around 30 seconds ahead in 6th and slumped over the bars at the finish it was a rather painful handshake (my 2 fingers now a strange shade of purple) and the unfulfilling chink of plastic water bottles. But what a day- epic is not the word. With or without injuries that will go down as a day of extreme pain and suffering made worthwhile for both the beauty of it all as well as Fraser & I's best results of the race.

















The time I'd made up today was also enough to bring me into the top 10, my goal for the race, making 9th overall. Pierre, as the most consistent rider on 'full time job' team Chiru, was not far behind in 9th for the day giving him 10th overall and champion in the over 40s category. Aron had his turn of bad luck also, having missed our group over the first climb he then sheared his granny ring bolts before getting lost in the final 10km and doing an extra 5 for good measure. He would roll in a good half hour down on us but as ever he was in good spirits and eager to chat up the local ladies.



















At the real business end of the race Tugu won the stage once more attacking solo at 20km. However, he couldn't gain more than a minute, with his rival's Mongolian National team mates providing a better job at protecting their lead rider than us. Despite being the strongest rider over the 3 days Tugu's snapped handlebar on day 1 cost him dearly and the yellow jersey eluded him. But such are the pitfalls of racing at such speeds over this terrain.

















No one said this race is easy and it certainly isn't. A unique event in so many ways that will be as much remembered for the people and their landscape than the racing itself. It's a bit tough to miss the first Brit to win Wimbledon since the Stone Age, and a 12hr delay in Beijing Terminal 3 hardly made the journey home a piece of cake but I think it was worth it!

1 Altansukh Altanzul MGL Mongolia CCN
2 Tuguldur Tuulkhangai MGL Team Chiru-WTB
3 Myagmarsuren Baasankhuu MGL Team Attila
4 Hu Hao 胡浩 CHN Team Specialized
5 Khangarid Naran MGL Team Attila
6 Erdenesuren Munkhtulga MGL Mongolia CCN
7 Jambaljamts Sainbayar MGL Team Attila
8 Ulziibaatar Jamsran MGL Mongolia CCN
9 Edward Cluer GBR Team Chiru-WTB
10 Pierre-Arnaud Le Magnan FRA Team Chiru-WTB
11 Liu Shuming 刘書銘 TPE Team Enervit
12 Fraser Young CAN Team Chiru-WTB
13 Enkhtaivan Bolor-Erdene MGL Team Attila
14 Daniel Carruthers NZL Team WTB

15 Aron Akesson SWE Team Chiru-WTB

Full results up here 

More photos up here

http://www.genghiskhanmtbadventure.com/