• Home
  • Races
    • 2007 Adventure Racing
    • 2007 24-hours @ 7Springs
    • 2007 Pittsburgh Triathlon
    • 2006 24-hours @ 7Springs
    • 200x 24-hours of Snowshoe
  • Rides
    • 60 miles on YRT
    • Reunion at Quebec Run
    • Photo-Documented
  • Riders
    • Andy Wulfkuhle
    • Jon McCune
    • Josh Mullen
    • Kat Wulfkuhle
    • Kathleen Dingus
    • Lenny Lucas
  • Routes

Grassroots Sprint Adventure Race Series
CHAMPIONS

2007 GrassRoots Adventure Racing

Rewind to 2006. Resident teammate Jon McCune suggests to Lenny Lucas to mountain bike with him while staying in Pittsburgh for the summer. This lead to a whole summer devoted to mountain biking, and an eventual reunion with the Wulfkuhles at the 2006 24-Hour Subaru Champion Challenge at 7Springs. Big Lead Pipes was back.

Fast forward to 2007. Lenny returns for another summer. This summer the duo again does the 24-Hour Champion Challenge with the Wulfkuhle's and Jon's fiance Kathleen in the 5-person sport class, 125-175 years division. Armed with our two extremely talented and willingwomen, Andy on the rigid single-speed, and Jon and Lenny on full-suspension bikes, the team pulls out a third place podium finish in a special-ordered gorgeous-weather weekend.

This particular story highlights the summer around the 24-hour race. Early in the summer, Jon and Lenny decide on races to compete in, anticipating the 24-hour race to be the apex of the racing season. They begin by signing up for an adventure race in Frick Park, encouragingly named AFAR, "A Frick'n Adventure Race". This was one of a few summer races organized by Grassroots Racing (GRR), a relatively new promoter of adventure racing in the southwest PA region.

AFAR proved to be a learning experience in both adventure racing and teammate interaction. The experiences began with the anticipation of the flow of the race and the course. A signature of GRR- as we would experience time and time again- was a conscious confidentiality of the course until race start. The staff at GRR intended the racers to use their skills at following directions, navigating, and communication to realize and execute the course. The race began at the ass-crack of dawn, with a kayak prologue upstream then back downstream the Monongahela just south of Frick Park. Jon and Lenny wholeheartedly expected to do quite well with their rowing experience, but hey, kayaking is completely different from rowing. The kayak would not stay straight, and they meandered their way to the pier at the turnaround, calling out power three's to get the boat straight, over and over again as each power stroke overcompensated. The paddling finally notched into a steady straight course, but it was too late. They managed to almost DFL out of the three heats in the prologue.


Photo taken by Chuck Kozora, www.chuckphotography.com

The next portion of the race started two hours later. Here they were told they would be running along a marked course, biking along a navigated course, then running the first course backwards. They started the run near the end of the line because of the prologue disaster. But first they were tied at the hands and had to shimmy through a 1.5'x4'x20' box to begin the run course. In and out the box, cut the rope, and off they went. They held a solid pace and were passing teams like they were cold product. Another hazard at the end of the run- climb over an elevated truss without falling. A stop at the TA to get the bikes and consume energy, then back through the box with our bikes. With front wheels off quickly, the box was no match for BLP. Off onto the bike course where Jon was embarassingly familiar with shortcuts and trails marked to gather our checkpoints. The checkpoints came along smoothyl except for a short distance navigational checkpoint that took BLP ten minutes to search for in vain. Losing this checkpoint cost BLP ten minutes of time. Would this matter? It was too much time to waste looking any further. The technical red biking course was followed by a lengthy but easily navigatable blue course. After both courses were finished, they learned they had gained almost 29 positions out of 36 teams from 32nd to 3rd. This left the last run. The stream running and steep downhills on the first run leg proved more difficult in the subsequent backwards run leg where the steep uphills required Lenny to pull a faiguing Jon up the grades. Towards the end of the run, Lenny felt the fatigue, but the duo held together for a spectacular finish under 4 hours and in third place. The ten minute penalty pushed them back to fourth, and second in the all-male division. SUCCESS for BLP!

Here BLP learned of the adventure racing series GRR organized. Interests were piqued to continue the race series at the Moraine Adventure Dash (MAD).

MAD required the majority of a weekend's time and a support crew (Kathleen). The pre-race meeting the night before the race introduced BLP to the use of UTM coordinates, a way of plotting points on a map like on a grid. The course was divulged expectedly little. No maps, no clue. Camp was set up at Bear Run campgrounds, chicken sandwiches were distributed for proper pre-race energy, and BLP set to get a good night's 6 hours of sleep. At 3:55am, BLP woke up, cleaned up camp and headed for the start line. After setting up TA, BLP had 10 minutes until the the prologue start at 6:18am. With a BLP shout-out, they jettisoned onto the 2-mile prologue run course. With teams ahead, navigating the checkpoints off of the main trail was easy- as Frank would say we were gaining and using information. If the run wasn't completed in 20 minutes, teams would be docked a point for every minute. BLP managed to finish in 19:16, safely gaining a point for being under the time limit.

The bike course began with fastest teams from the prologue, BLP being third to go. Jon remained at the start while Lenny was shuttled to an unknown location along the course. Jon would make a determined pass of the before reaching Lenny about 3/4 mile away. Jon was to collect Lenny's bike from the brush on the trail to Lenny further up the hill. With an amazing push before the crowd of shuttled teammates, Jon rolled the bike the distance to Lenny, saving seconds in transport, gaining gaining points in cool. With one team ahead, the duo raced feverishly to pass, and upon a clearing, did so with authority. This would be team Snot Rockets, a veritable competitor particularly in this race. With the technical 7-mile bike course ahead, Jon and Lenny hammered the rocks and logs and hills to come out a few minutes ahead of the pack. A quick mathematical hazard at the TA slowed the team up - the directions read to use you team number for the next leg, but instead went through all the math that lead to the same number. Knowing the number to use, they searched the clotheslines of numbered baggies for the packet to be used on the Rogaine section, taking advantage of Jon's height and a ladder to get Lenny to grab the packet. After recovering one and heading towards the TA, they learned two baggies were needed. So off they went to recover the second. Jon made a spectacular leap to get the second.


Photo taken by Chuck Kozora, www.chuckphotography.com

At the TA, the packets required BLP to plot UTM coordinates on a topo map, with an option to climb into a monolith to retrieve possible information. Jon ploppedi nto both holes into the monolith and discovered a colored trail map that would prove to be much more useful than the topo map. Off they went in first place. With a steady run leg, the two held the lead until the second to last checkpoint where Snot Rockets shot past. The sounds of them ahead would help lead BLP to pinpoint the next checkpoint, on the edge of Lake Arthur. Faced with the option to swim the cove or run around it, and Snot Rockets having decided to swim, they opted to follow. The first minutes in the water were dedicated to deciding the best wat to swim with a lifejacket and baggies full of information. Eventually backstroke superceded all strokes and Jon motorboated onto the other side of the cove. The next checkpoint would require the same decision. Not knowing the path of Snot Rockets here, they forged the run around this cove. When the trail started to stray from the cove and doubt surfaced, a trail down the next checkpoint emerged, and Snot Rockets reappeared. The route back to TA was spent with Snot Rockets. With no hazard before the last biking leg, BLP hammered the road part of the course and pulled ahead for good. Dedicating a steady pace to prevent cramps from overcoming them, BLP managed to set a grueling pace for Snot Rockets to follow and pulled into the finish with a ten minute lead on them. BLP was victorious! With this win came somce recognition from the Tribune Review, with both an article and video of the race.

Hats off to BLP- but now the remaining series races gleamed with opportunity to take the series points lead. This charged Lenny to change his travel plans to go back to school a week later. Would it prove worthwhile, especially considering the makeup race in South-Side, The Urban Race for Fifty (TURFF) needed to be done to recover points from the SONAR race BLP missed?

TURFF was more of a triathlon than an off-road race, but the Rogaine, kayaking, and pedestrians ensured it remained an adventure. The race began at 8am sharp with a cool morning and cool hazards to be done at any time. Any part of this course could be done at any time. Since the kayaks were limited, many raced towards the docks at 18th Street. Team BLP reached the docks in time to get the third kayak and did much less struggling than in AFAR. With a higher cadence and straightened course, BLP held its position. The search for checkpoints continued through Greater Pittsburgh with checkpoints at the Point, Heinz Field, the Strip District, and the South Side.

Before the last checkpoint, BLP attacked the monolith with checkpoints in each monolith and a checkpoint hanging high in between. Lenny threw Jon up into the first monolith, and ran and jumped into the other. Luckily for Lenny Jon was able to make it out on his own and get the hanging checkpoint in time to pull short Lenny out of the tall monolith. Drafting each other on the bikes to the last biking checkpoint allowed for speeds on the flat averaging 23mph. BLP manhandled the teeter-totter hazard by sitting and slowly inching forward patiently.


Photo taken by Chuck Kozora, www.chuckphotography.com

With only the run left, BLP felt good, but knew there were hills to be conquered on the South Side slopes. Luckily the first checkpoint, though being all uphill, was a bee-line from TA onto a lengthy city staircase. It was a few miles until the next checkpoint in Mt. Washington, so BLP took the high and relatively flat route through Arlington and Allentown. This guaranteed BLP wasn't going to be running and dying up Sycamore Street. Once the checkpoint on Sycamore was reached, BLP realized extra points were atop Mt. Washington, and had to retrace 1/4 mile of Sycamore. Once up to Grandview Avenue, the checkpoints rolled in. With only half an hour to finish that part, Jon opted to rest while Lenny forged ahead to the remaining checkpoints while feeling peppy. luckily this part of the course allowed for teammate separation. This proved worthwhile since both Jon and Lenny felt fatigued on the run back into TA. Even though the South Side flats felt like terrible uphills, BLP made it to REI to complete the rock wall. Jon took the difficult side because lanky people make climbing easy. Fatigued, both did the wall flawlessly, and bolted to the finish. Second place to a blazing fast Team Blaze was quite the accomplishment, and the series points totals saw BLP, Team Blaze, and Snot Rockets all within three points of each other. The Nemacolin Season Finale (NSF) would mean having to beat both of these teams to succeed.

NSF anticipation mounted early, with multiple training sessions of mountain biking and running. They knew what had to be done, they were ready - they needed to execute. Focusing on these two areas payed off as the NSF had the most minimal water time. The teams lined up according to time, but to their dismay, all teams started at once, with series leaders up front. Hoping to be spread out from the start, they knew immediately they had to abandon their steady pace for the first run. Under the hot afternoon sun and minimal warming up, BLP stayed near the front without burning out. The field quickly came back in, and before they knew it, BLP had overtaken all other teams on the Arden biking course, happy to be familiar with it by riding it weeks earlier. The second half of this bike leg threw them for a curve as the route back to the TA was not marked. Knowing the way back was slightly longer than taking roads, BLP opted for the same route back for the guarantee of knowing it would lead them back safely. Luckily other teams followed this maneuver and the lead remained intact. Fearing being passed on the run, BLP would be happy to get to the next biking leg a few minutes behind the leaders. The heat had different plans as the teams behind BLP drifted further back in the heat. BLP were the fastest on this run leg! Coming back to TA with 20 miles of biking ahead, BLP felt confident about remaining in the lead for the rest of the race.

This however is where the team would stumble. After taking much time to gain information from the maps, Lenny neglected to notice the flat tire on his bike. This cost the lead as Team Blaze exited the TA before them. This woul dbe the first of many disheartening events throughout the evening. The first checkpoint was relatively easy to get to, but the maps had to come out several times. This would be the case for the next five checkpoints. Luckily BLP hammered it on DinnerBell Road to catch Blaze and pass them and even leave their sight after getting the second checkpoint. Hopes were back up but so was the heat. The uphills on the dirt roads to follow were degrading and sucked up lots of energy. In a major navigational error on Lenny's part, checkpoint three appeared to be at a Y-intersection of two roads, but the description on the punch card did not exactly match this. If they would have check the topo map and distances on the google road map, it would have been painfully clear where checkpoint 3 was, but BLP kept going out another 1.5 miles, pulled out the maps, became frustrated, and turned around. Seeing Team Snot Rockets, they all decided the checkpoint was behind. If Lenny had been more vigilant in looking down his side of the trail, the checkpoint would have stared him in the face but indecisiveness and previous blunders rendered him unsure and he assumed it would not have been in the woods that far. After BLP and Snot Rockets decided to scope out the next checkpoint together, BLP immediately pulled ahead and had to leave Snot Rockets behind in the name of racing.

Here BLP started to get back on track. Though no one was around to guage our progress, they knew they were making ground on Blaze. After luckily turning their heads to spot a checkpoint, the navigation improved until the duo found Blaze and Batty Boys at checkpoint six, where by unanimous decision was to skip checkpoint seven and try ot make it back to the TA in time to do the important hazards. Hopes went back up, and for the third time, BLP would pass Blaze. With steep downhills and road riding back to the TA, BLP gained a lead on the pack. With Batty Boys just behind and Blaze further back, BLP anticipated a solid hazards and final run execution with Batty Boys being the points buffer between BLP and Blaze. Again these plans would be washed away. Once at the hazards, BLP only failed at archery, but succeeded in everything else. Thinking the race would end soon and being ahead of their main competitors, GRR's time restricitons on the race would give them an opportunity to finish early and retain their lead in the race and series. Unfortunately for their tired bodies, the race would be extended to 9pm, making it a full 8-hour race.

Now BLP had to fanangle as many points as possible on the run course. In doing so, Blaze skipped the teeter-totter and went ahead in the run. Here BLP would run into Blaze often in an attempt to keep up with points. In learning that Blaze got archery points and BLP did not, BLP needed to get every check point that Blaze did minus a buffer of 3 points, but there were checkpoints out there with 4 points. The last checkpoint that BLP attempted was at a swimming pool out in the woods which became precarious and too dark to navigate. This was another disappointment, but hopes were still up in the fact that the race would finally be over and that Blaze was not able to get multiple checkpoints beyond what BLP had attained. Snot Rockets was no where to be seen and this scared both teams, but they encountered issues with hazards closing down and slipped out of points contention. After having checked in, Blaze pulled in no more than two minutes afterwards. Not knowing the points spread, it was anxious times. When the awards ceremony began, the series points were anounced for each sex division. Blaze came through with 248, and BLP with 251. Excitement overwhelmed them as they realized they had won. It all came down to the two minutes between them and Blaze as the points total was the same.

In four races and in one eight hour race, the series was one by a two minute margin. This was the finsh that GRR could have only dreamed of. Team Spang actually came home with the NSF win and pulled ahead of Snot Rockets to get third in the series behind Blaze and BLP. It was an epic battle with all four of these teams each winning a race and contending for the final series points win.

With the win came picture frames of the winning teams in action, medals, and a set of jerseys for BLP for being series champs. Not to mention that BLP on the male division in NSF, so a small prize was at hand to pick from. Relying on energy gels throughout the race, BLP chose the Hammer Gel bottles for sustained race energy.

Updated: November 13, 2007 | ljlucas_at_caltech.edu