Start: nr Upper Mangatawhiri Dam (670.5km)
Finish: nr Huntly (738km)
Distance for the day: 67.5km
Cumulative distance: 738km
Today was
hard (I might as well leave that opening sentence in every day). The trail well
and truly had me on my knees today (well, hands on knees, bent double), mainly
because of dehydration, but also a bit of frustration from the underfoot
conditions. More on that later.
The important
thing is, I have another 67km in the bank and I remain firmly on track.
I set off in
good spirits after a very peaceful overnight stay in the heart of the Hununa
Ranges. The initial section was tough; another steep forest climb up to a
ridge, following the ridge for a good hour – up and down, meandering around -
and then a steep descent. Forest running is never fast on the Te Araroa; tree
roots and general density of the undergrowth dictates that. The vines were
particularly troublesome today, and they really do get in the way, don’t budge
and certainly don’t break when you catch one with a foot. Anyway, I remained
patient and negotiated that tough initial section within about 3 and a half
hours.
The remainder
of the day involved running across the plains on the flat where I hoped to
catch time and distance up after my slow start, but the running was far from
straight forward. On the Te Araroa trail, fields often mean cattle and cattle
often mean rutted tracks/ fields; particularly challenging when the ruts are
baked hard from the sun and are therefore very unforgiving. My feet certainly
weren’t loving the ruts, and I was more than frustrated on several occasions.
Riverbank running with Mark - down the Waikato River |
I had 30km
under the belt by lunchtime (sausage pasta and milkshake), and remained positive
about a fast and high mileage afternoon. Errr, no. Mark joined me a few
kilometers into the afternoon session, starting from where the route hugs the
shoulder of Highway 1 - not the nicest section of running but needs must - but
then we were straight into long stretches of chest high grass and rutted
tracks. Despite taking on plenty of fluids at lunch, I was feeling parched
within an hour or so, our pace was desperately slow and the temperature/
humidity high. There was no access point for the support guys to get to us
quickly, so we were forced to grind it out before getting the cold fizzy drink
I desperately craved. Through a combination of frustration from the difficult
terrain and dehydration, I had some pretty low moments on that stretch, and if
Mark hadn’t been alongside, I suspect I would have been very emotional. He
certainly witnessed some challenging Te Araroa terrain, and me going through my
biggest low spell yet.
Re-hydrating after my rough spell |
These lows
are inevitable with a challenge like this, so the important thing is to control
and manage the ‘moments’ as best as possible. Easier said than done when you’re
feeling so low. Once we had made it back to the meeting place/ motorhome I was
soon back together after some load of sugar-loaded drinks and rehydration
powder, and feeling ready to go again for the final section. It was a 7.30pm
finish in the end, but I certainly with a positive feeling after negotiating
all the challenges the trail threw at me today.
Is it really
three days for Christmas….? Well Christmas has now come to the van courtesy of
James – I will get him to post some photos tomorrow.
A few people
have asked about the kit I’ve been carrying. My approach is obviously fast and
light, particularly given that I have a crew to meet me several times a day,
but despite that there is a huge amount of remote terrain so basic safety
equipment is vital. Below is a quick shot of my daypack and setup with the
contents listed:
Daypack setup |
- TNF pack vest
- Compressport quad and calf guards. Particularly good for leg protection in long grass/ overgrowth/ forests.
- TNF Strormy Trail FL jacket
- Garmin Oregon 450t GPS
- Paper maps and compass
- Petzl emergency head torch
- Waterproof matches
- Steri pen
- Visor and shades
- L/S baselayer
- Garmin Fenix watch
- Drinks powers
- Food
- iPhone and SPOT tracking device
- Emergency bivvy bag
All waterproofed.
6 comments:
Hi Jez, it's great following your reports. If you listen hard on those tough sections you should hear cheers of encouragement from the UK. Best regards,
Iain
Hi Jez. Really enjoying reading your blog once a day. Well done on what you have achieved so far. Keep it going ... On day t a time. John
fantastic report of today jez, really from the heart. made me cry!
keep it up- you are doing amazing.
miss gem xx
Dig in, it's pishing down in the UK so we're craving dry rutted tracks!
John M
Jez your doing great mate, keep pushing, we're all thinking of you and sending best wishes Dan, Sarah and Josie x
Keep positive Jez, your progress is amazing and you are clicking off lots of kms even if sometimes slower than you'd like. Merry Christmas out on the trail!
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