The
Cold Country, OOPS, make that the Gold Country 50 ride.
The
1998 Gold country ride was a ride that was both a royal pain in the butt and
certainly one of my best rides ever.
What a combination. It all
started when Judy and I decided to drive out to the ride on Friday afternoon
after taking a half-day off. It's
about a three-hour drive to Georgetown on any normal day. Who but a pair of idiots would leave on
Friday afternoon during the height of commute traffic? That's right- we did. Very dumb. We left late anyway since we didn't even
load up or put the camper on the truck until Friday afternoon. We sat in enough traffic to make even
the most normal person go nuts. The
fact we forgot the directions to the ride and had to go back didn't help
anything either. After a slow and
very miserable seven-hour drive we rolled into camp in the mountains right at 8
p.m., right at the start of the ride meeting. Judy jumped out and attended the
meeting while I tried to find a place to park. Not an easy chore in the woods at
dark. A wonderful ride worker came
to my aid and gave up a space next to her rig. That was so nice. I unloaded the boys and got camp set up
in the dark. Judy returned and
helped me finish getting set up after giving me a ride briefing. We prepared for the ride, pounded down
some dinner and went right to bed.
Not the best start for a ride.
At least the weather was nice enough when we went to bed. We would have
to vet in early before the ride- the last time we did this ride we had to do
that and were in the vet line when the ride started.
The
weather was fine until the morning.
I got up to some lightly spitting clouds and wondered about the
possibility of rain. No, it was
supposed to be nice and sunny.
Okay- the light jacket was just right. We got ready for the ride and left
just about in time- me at five minutes after seven and Judy at about fifteen
after. I saw Jennifer Laymen
and her "Shatta junior" horse heading for the start. He looked a little on the anxious side
but sure looked good. He looked
like a show horse with his head tucked down under his neck like a knight in a
chess set. Like I said before I
have a soft spot for nice looking chestnuts. Shatta and I headed out down the trail
alone for about one minute until we caught up to the long single file line of
horses moving down the single-track trail.
The conditions were incredible at the start- nice and cool, perfect,
moist but not wet, single track trails.
The first couple of miles are really neat. We crossed a couple of slippery road
crossings without problems since ride workers were there making us go so
slow. I caught up to Val
Christensen and said "Hi" as we motored on by- Shatta was feeling great and was
flying. We started passing horse
after horse without really trying.
We caught up to Linda Cowles on her new boy Gavlin who looked real nice
cantering down the roads. She was
riding with Kathy Ruiz on her very own nice Chestnut Fire Alaarm, or more
commonly known in the high-end endurance circles as AAlarm Clock. (just wind him up and watch him go-
tick, tick, tick, RIINNNGGGG!)
Kathy and I have a special problem- we have been trying to do a whole
ride together for as long as I have known her and it just never seems to be in
the cards. Shatta just boogied on
by as he headed for the front of the pack.
The
weather started to get little strange as a light mist began to fall. No problem yet so we just kept on
trotting on the nice trails. Until
the beginning of the most irritating problem I think I have ever dealt with in
my life on horses. I'm not one to
complain about minor things but I have to grump about the damn tree
branches! After I smacked into
about a hundred with every part of my body I started to get tired of hitting
them. After hitting the thousandth
branch I was really getting peeved.
After leaving various parts of my face and neck on just about every tree
branch in the Sierra I was really sick of hitting them. No one had done any
trail clearing and it was obvious.
I was so mad at hitting branches I didn't realize the rain had started
falling. Little rain at first, then
a lot. It was enough rain to soak
you through to your skin but not enough to make the trail muddy. That was a good
thing. It didn't help when
you smacked a huge branch with your face when it was raining- double
whammy. Pain and then a nice
soaking from the water on the branch.
Great fun.
About
that time I caught up with Gary Fend and rode along with him and his gray mare
Cinabon. Okay, her name is Cinabar
but I like calling her Cinabon after the gooey cinnamon rolls you can buy in the
mall. We moved along at a nice pace
all the way to the first check at 12 miles- a trot by we both went right
through. After that the trail kept
wondering through the forest on nice trails with some rocks beginning to
show. We got to a river crossing
that provided a nice drink for the horses then went up the first really nasty
hill. Very rocky and very steep,
but only for a quarter of a mile or so.
At the top was the first real check- it was just a pulse down then go
stop. I tried to get Shatta to
drink but he wouldn't, so we went to the P&R people. He was way down. Neat! I rode out without Gary and Cinabon who
left a whole 30 seconds behind me.
We were on a series of nice fast roads but the rain was coming down big
time. As long as you were riding it
didn't seem so bad. Until you
stopped. We showed up at the lunch
stop for an hour hold and were treated to some superb service from the ride
workers. If only they could have
controlled the weather. It was as
cold as I have been in a ride in a long time. It turned out we were up at the back of
the top ten which I could not believe.
It was really cold and miserable and of course idiot that I am, I
neglected to send a blanket to the check.
I bummed one from Nancy Elliot
(Thanks Nancy!) and kept my horse warm by moving around. He ate and drank but without crew I was
unable to do much for myself. Until
Nancy and Kathy's crew volunteered to hold him while I got warm. Okay! There were a few dirt bikers camping
there that had a big fire going. It
became the official endurance fire!
Gary, Nancy, Kathy, Linda, me and a bunch of others just stood around
that fire trying to warm up. Then
the ride workers appear with hot chocolate and cider! Oh boyoboy! Sometimes a lunch hour is too short-
today it was too long.
Once we
got back underway it was bearable although we were all still soaking wet. I ran into Judy coming into the check
with Warpaint just as I was leaving.
We headed down a long, long series of downhills that eventually led to
some more nice trails and flat roads.
Gary and I and the guy we were riding with (can't remember his name) kept
up our nice pace as we worked our way through the rain. On we went, smacking
into tree branches that doused us with water each and every time. At least the rain was beginning to let
up a little. We got to a long, long
road that led to a water stop at about 43 miles or so. We were told that we were in 7th, 8th
and 9th places. Holy cow! We headed out towards the last check
that was only 2 miles from the finish.
I had been leading the trio quite a bit and followed 3 other riders up a
single track trail. Gary and our
friend swear they shouted at me I was going the wrong way but I didn't hear
them. They thought I did hear them,
so they rode on down the correct trail, leaving me behind. All alone, lost for hours in the forest,
never to see the trail or the daylight again....... Okay, so it wasn't that bad. I figured out after 2 minutes that they
were not behind me and I better go back when I realized the three women in front
of me, on horseback, were pleasure riders, and were not even in the ride. I went back (Shatta wasn't so sure I was
right) and found the trail with no sign of Gary. Shatta seemed to know what had just
happened and took off at a neat canter down the trail. We flew along for only a couple of
minutes until we rounded the corner and ended up in the check. I missed the sign! There were Gary and our friend finishing
with the vet when I came in. After
I Tackled Gary and threw him to the ground for leaving me out there to die
(right- the guy's bigger than me!
Actually it was kind of funny.
He says "What? You didn't hear me call?" and grins) I took Shatta to the water with him
still breathing kind of hard. A P&R guy comes up and holds the
magic disc under Shatta's arm and listens while he's drinking. "20, 19, 18, 17,
16, good lord, 15." Shatta
came down in about 90 seconds after hurrying in. I love this horse. We walk over to the vet and had to wait
an uncomfortable couple of minutes while she was working on a 30 mile
horse. I'm sitting there waiting,
looking at my watch, thinking "come on!
I'm on the 50!" A nice
ride worker came up and told me they would not let any other 50 out in front of
me because she thought the delay was not so good. It didn't matter, though. The vet looked at my horse and
sent us on our way. I hopped on and
scurried out of the check for the final 2 miles to the finish. We cantered the last couple of miles
with the horse feeling just great.
Ninth place! His first
official top ten. Only 35 or so
minutes behind the winner, and most importantly, only a minute behind Gary. Man, I was proud of him. (Okay, I was proud of Gary, too)
I
cleaned Shatta up and took him to his first ever BC judging. Gary and our friend were there, waiting
for Nancy Elliot to finish with the vet.
It wasn't much of a BC evaluation but heck, it was fun. Except for the
rain that started up in a big way. It poured harder than it had all day. The road we were standing on became a
small creek. We were soaked all over again. Gary and Cinabon sloshed up the
road, spraying water all over everyone in the vicinity. Oh well- the camper was close. At this point I don't know who got
BC. Shatta looked great and
had a lot of energy but his hydration was a B or a C.
Judy
and Warpaint finished in the downpour.
Kathy and Linda made it in just as wet. It was raining so hard no one
seemed to even care. We went to the
BBQ and were treated to I think the best ride meal I've ever had. They had burgers! Such a nice change from the same old
cooked-meat thing. The finishing
awards were folding chairs- everyone got them. We were impressed.
It was
a neat ride with the exception of the rain and the branches. I'd be willing to donate an extra 2
bucks on the entry fee to buy the club a chain saw.
Nick
Warhol
Hayward, Ca