
Like any couple, Jamie and I wanted to take a trip this summer. Like any mountain bikers, we wanted to include some good riding in any trip. So what tops a season after two Canada Cups (Jamie’s of course), solo victories at 8hrs of Gore and an awesome season on the East Coast? It had to be epic, challenging both mentally and physically, a little crazy and a lot of fun—something to check off the bucket list.

After months of anticipation, the time for our longest race has arrived – The 24 hours of Hot August Nights at Albion Hills Conservation Area. We packed the team car to its roof – including a Kona tent, all our camping stuff, all our cycling stuff, food, clothes, tools, bike stand and our bikes – and took off for Ontario on Wednesday noon-ish. The drive was unexciting; NS and NB were boring with no traffic and wide open roads and their east coast rolling terrains, while Quebec was full of construction as the land flattened out. We spent the night in Levy and kept on rolling towards the ‘promised land’ the next morning. The drive actually felt alright – way shorter that I expected it to feel. We switched driving and napping positions regularly and kept the tunes pumping.

Our first destination wasn’t Albion Hills, rather we were kindly invited to the new Kozanczyn residence in Barry to prepare for the battle. Willow kept us good company sharing stories of lost earrings and bicycles crashes, while Chris and Christa made sure we started to load up our energy reserves with home made calzones, topped off with great conversation. Thanks so much!
We arrived at Albion Hills mid afternoon on Friday. The campground was buzzing already with people looking for a sufferfest – including our Nova Scotian friend Wayne Aspinall, who’s a 24 hour mtb racing veteran. We had plenty of time to set up, pre ride the course, sign in and chill. Not too long after we showed up we met one half of the team we were sharing our campsite with – Shake & Bake.
Weeks prior when we saw their team name, we wondered about the likes of Shake and Bake. Our thoughts were confirmed multiple times throughout the race that we were sharing a spot with couple of stoners. Aside from the bad twangy music, they were harmless and let us use their fridge. We made pasta for dinner and continued setting up. There was one glitch – a hole in the air mattress! We tried some duck tape, and then more duck tape, but with no luck. Then we tried to patch it with a patch kit, but the cement was all dried up. Our last hope was crazy glue and the patch kit. It worked. Then we chilled by the campfire making jiffy popcorn. We could hear the party going on at the chalet, but resisted the urge to join the fun and decided on a good nights sleep instead. With 24 hours ahead, it wasn’t a hard decision.


We woke up to a nice sunny day, but everything was still wet from the night’s dew. We had a huge camping pre race breakfast and got all our race food out under the tent. We decided that Jamie would start – we’ve heard things could get nasty and I wasn’t too comfortable in a speedy mass start, and there was a fairly wide 1km starting loop that Jamie felt was good for passing hordes of slow people. The more he though about it, the more he was inclined on hammering out a super fast lap. An intimidation tactic, perhaps? Or, just to say CSD’s Lambinator is in da house!! After a quick warm up, Jamie was at the start line, but quite a ways back—maybe 15 rows. Wayne and I went to watch the start. It seemed faster than a 2 hours race start (!)—at least the first bunch of rows—but as the pack passed the pace dropped; the tail end of the starting pack having already assumed the same pace they would maintain for 24 hours. The course had a short loop (about 15 to 20 minutes) than returned you to the main camping/chalet area; at that point, Jamie was riding in third place! Awesome. I think Jamie finished the first lap fourth overall, but definitely first out of the tag teams. Earlier we decided to do two laps at a time – it would give us more time to eat and recover, plus allow us to maintain flow once we started riding. So, a short hour and a half later, it was my turn.

The 16km course had quite a bit of singletrack. Each section had a sign posted with its name. All I remember of those is that the ‘Speedorama’ was not so speedy, at least not for me. 99% of the trails were root-free, rock-free, uncrowded, super hard-packed, super fast trails. Well, super fast if you didn’t break for all the turns, berms and twists. I knew from our pre-ride, my biggest technical challenge would be not to brake. Two laps went by quickly. A lot of the course felt the same – nicely groomed, twisty and turney, with almost no distinguishing features. The few land marks on the course were coming back near the timing tent and the main area; the feed zone on top of a hill about half way – were there were people giving out water, accelerade, and much appreciated encouragement throughout the whole race; the 5km mark, which was soon followed by the best part of the course – the Misfit Psycles dance party tent. By ‘dance’, I think they meant dance up the sandy switchback climb, because I didn’t see anyone dance, but there was loud music pumping and a crew of peeps with horns, various noise makers, smiles and cheers. The last landmark was the 1km to go sign, which was always welcomed.
When I finished my first two laps, Chris and Willow were at our campsite, paying us a visit. Jamie went off and I started to eat, stretch and chill with our visiting fans. Another hour and half went by quickly, I suggested that Jamie do three laps the next time. On my second time out, I started to feel really bad – headache, nausea, chills. My fourth lap was probably the hardest of all of them. I forced myself to finish it, hopping not to puke along the way, thinking I might not be riding for a while. When I got off my bike, we had more visitors at our site. This couple had been cycling across the country, from Vancouver to Halifax, and they happened to stop at Albion Hills to camp for the night. They seemed somewhat taken by all the bikes and people, and somehow they ended up at our site and Jamie let them set up for the night. Unfortunately, I was not in a social mode whatsoever; I crouched in our tent holding my head until I didn’t feel like I would puke if I moved. I was a bit worried, because it was way to soon to be feeling this bad. It had been a really hot day, and I probably ate too much for my relatively short break. So, I ate less, drank more, took bunch of electrolyte tabs and couple liquid gel advil, and had a nap. I felt much better when I woke up – setting an alarm was a necessity for the night breaks.

I think it was the next change over that Jamie and I actually stopped and said more than just few words to each other for the first time since the start (that was the start of my lap 5, our 12th lap). The night laps went pretty well. It was cold and damp in the campground, but once you were riding it was warn enough and the woods stayed bone-dry. The plan was to just keep rolling throughout the night. By the time the sun came up we had lapped 2nd place.

Sunday morning flew by. I did my 9th and 10th laps in the sunshine, feeling pretty good. I was tired and sore, but that didn’t matter. By then we had a two-hour lead; riding was easier in the daylight, and we were almost done. When I got to the campsite Jamie just off to do his last two laps; I saw he had made the usual camping pre race breakfast. Well fueled with food, sunshine and the finish in sight he put in couple of fast laps—enough for me to do one more.
The last lap was really hot; my hands and legs were on the verge of cramping more than once. I knew that I had plenty of time to finish the lap (every team had to be in by 1pm), so I rolled around the course, enjoying it for the last time. The Misfit Psycles crew added a number to their fan repertoire – a dumping of cold water over a rider’s head as they passed by. I thoroughly enjoyed that in the 30 some degree weather.
We ended up doing 26 laps in 24hrs 47mins 58sec. That turns out to be 241km for Jamie and 176km for me, and that turned out to be good enough for a win by 2 laps, not only in our category, but also over the men’s tag teams.
Next year? Solo riding? A whole contingent of Atlantic riders? Let’s make it happen!
Z





















