Alan Badia's team received 1st place in the
Masters 45+ Circuit Race at Lake Alfred 2009
Member of HSP Committee




Newsletter Number 10 - May - 2007
Romero's Compass Leads Team SOLE to #1


The Bike Ferry
Paul towing, Ze paddling and Karenbalancing $15,000 worth of
Hwy. 93, Milemarker 28?
Rosie's Cafe, BFE, AZ

Continuing their warm up for the World Championships in Scotland, Team SOLE joined the field of nearly 30 teams at the innaugural Kayak Lake Mead 24 hour + adventure race. Karen and Paul, along with Brasilian Ze Pupo made up the threesome that came to the startline ready to battle the heat and the brutalness of the desert landscape. "There is nothing soft out here," said Ze Pupo. "Everything I touch is hard and pokes or scratches you, the bushes are so hard they can rip you off your bike," he continued wishing for the lush ferns and grasses of Brasil.
Intense bikes from sinking to the bottom of the Colorado River.

The race began at 4:00 a.m. with a quick prerace meeting and gear check by race director Robert Finlay. "Everybody got their gear? Check!" Then the maps were handed out and teams had to plot 41 checkpoints with less than an hour to the race start. At 5:00 a.m. on the dot, Team SOLE rolled across the start line with just two other teams (the others still working on maps and gear) for a tough, sandy bike section. The navigation was tough in the desert landscape, but Paul was spot on and we never took a single pedal in the wrong direction. Our Intense 29er bikes were the bomb as we rode off trail through the desert sand dodging rocks, washouts and cactus, racing to the river before the desert sun threatened to slow our pace. By the end of the bike we had more than a one hour lead.

From the bike we coasteered a short section of the Colorado River eventually crossing the river on our rafts to pick up our kayaks. The next task was to kayak to the spot we left our bikes and somehow bring them back across the river to our crew. We tried a couple of options but ended up strapping all three bikes onto the top of one kayak, then attaching that kayak to the back of Paul's kayak with a tow line. Ze paddled the third kayak while Karen sat on the top of the kayak behind Ze and balanced the bikes so we wouldn't lose the bikes and the third kayak to the bottom of the river.

Successfully across we began the upriver kayak section where we navigated into several beautiful coves along the river and ran to find the checkpoints. We had a strong tailwind and fortunately we also brought along our Pacific Action kayak sails which moved us up the river with little effort on our part. Ze was just giddy as he used a sail for the first time.
Ahhh Sweet Success,
the bikes back on Terra Firma



Karen, Ze and Paul
ready to trek.
Photos courtesy of Adalberto Avelar and Bernardo Rodriques 
The final leg of the race was orienteering. With no moon coming up we hurried to capture as many checkpoints in the daylight as possible.The navigation in this part of the desert was technical and extremely difficult. There are many washes, ridges, and hilltops that all look the same, especially in the darkness of the desert, looking for a tiny 6" x 6" navigation flag that we often found tucked into the branches of a bush. We followed Paul's precise navigation, keeping time, checking elevation, watching our pace and scouring the landscape for checkpoints throughout the night. The trick here was to gather as many of the 18 checkpoints and return to the finish line by 9:00 a.m. We knew we'd have to collect them all to stay ahead of the clever and fast DART/Nuun who we knew was not far behind.


It was a true adventure, we ran out of water, flagged down passing cars to refuel ourselves, jumped over a 2.5 ft. Mojave Green rattlesnake, and narrowly avoided a truck that plunged off the road into a ravine where we walked just 5 minutes later. We kept it all together and the team of Paul, Karen and Ze pushed on to get all 18 points and arrive at the finish line at 7:15 a.m. 26 hours and 15 minutes of racing continuing our winning streak on the way to Scotland. A big thanks to our support crew who made us the fastest team through every transition area and kept us fueled and happy, thanks and Happy Birthday Kele, thanks Izzy, John, and Billy. And thanks to Bernardo working as the team photographer and thanks to Beto from Ensenada for helping us pre and post race and taking some great photos too. YOU GUYS ROCK!

For more information and to track the team, check out www.teamsole.com



Paul Romero - Team Sole Adventure Racing





 


Human Sports Performance®

Athletic Director
Gary Wise

Cover of this months
"On the Coast" Magazine

Gary Wise
South Walton Fire District,
Beach Safety Director,

USLA Southeast Region,
Treasurer / Certification Officer / Panhandle Representative
USLA Emerald Coast Chapter,
President


 



 
Copyright © 2007-2009 Human Sports Performance