The
Big Day arrives.......
Up
at about 04:00 and out of the apartment by 05:00, to drive to
Albertville for the start of the Étape.
It was dark and wet when we left, and the drive over the mountain
passes was 'interesting'. I got as close to the Parc
Olympique (starting
point of the Étape)
as I could and dropped David and Tony off.
Yes,
it was that dark and wet just before the 06:45 start! That's the van in the background.
I
struggled to get away from the Parc
as there were thousands of cyclists coming the other way using both
sides of the road. The Étape
had about 10,000 participants, and they all seemed to be coming down
a street towards me at the same time! I eventually got out of town
and found an off road area where I could stop and managed a couple of
hours sleep in the van (extremely uncomfortable!)
Once
the nearby supermarket opened, I went in to buy some breakfast (had
no time that morning), and headed south to La
Toussuire-Les Sybelles,
where the Étape
would finish. The weather was clearing up, and it became quite sunny
as I headed down the road avoiding the Autoroute. At one point, the
Étape
route went over a bridge over the road I was on and there was a
constant 'string' of riders.
The
'main' road into La Toussuire was closed due to being part of the
course, so traffic was diverted up what was probably the windiest,
tightest, and narrowest road I've ever driven on. Challenging (and
scenic) enough on a bike, but a bit of a struggle in a van.
Eventually, I got to within 1km of the finish, where one of the
organisers got me to turn round and park. As this was on a very
narrow road with an unfenced sheer drop at one side, I had to do
about a 17 point turn and put a lot of faith in his directions!!
By
this point, the sun had come out and it was unbelievably hot (c. 30
degrees?). It was bad enough just walking about, so I can't imagine
what it would have been like cycling uphill.
I
had a few hours to kill until David and Tony were expected to finish,
so I had a wander round the town, and had a good look at all the
stuff set up in the town centre for the event.
Saw
this wandering jazz band entertaining the crowd, inexplicably dressed
in tabards printed to look like fruit!
There
was also a huge television screen set up that was showing live
coverage of the Tour de France, and I also saw that wheel
manufacturer Mavic had a couple of 'support bikes' carrying wheels to
competitors.
Eventually
the commentators announced the immediate arrival of the first rider
and a huge roar went up from the crowd. After that there was a steady
stream of arrivals, and I walked down the course to watch riders of
the last couple of climbs and hairpin bends. The last km or so was
lined in spectators who cheered and clapped as every competitor
passed to encourage them. Some random pictures of riders near the
finish:
The
commentator then announce the immanent arrival of the first woman,
mentioning that she had finished second the previous year, but had
won the year before. As she approached, the crowd let up a huge roar
and she sprinted
towards the line with a wide grin on her face – she knew she had
won!
By
this time there was a steady stream of finishers, and it was
heartening to see riders who had obviously ridden together, join
hands as they crossed the line. I saw one rider, an older
man, wobbling about 50 metres from the finish line, not looking as if
he could go any further. Suddenly another rider came up from behind,
grabbed his seat post, and pushed him over the line. I thought that
the line in Kraftwerk's 'Tour de France - 'Camarades
et amitie ' -
('Comrades and
friendship'), was
neatly summed up in that gesture.
Eventually
David finished despite losing a contact lens (which slowed his
descents due to difficulty judging distance), a broken saddle (the
titanium baseplate had snapped forcing him to stand on the pedals),
and a seriously painful knee (he could hardly bend it when he
stopped), but he had made it.
I
also saw a one armed man finishing (image how difficult it would be
for him holding the handlebars when standing, let alone using brakes
and gears), and later a one legged
man! He didn't have a
prosthetic leg, so rode entirely using one pedal. He must have had
someone to help him start and stop, as I can't work out how he could
do that by himself.
They
had the presentation of prizes for both men and women:
David
got a phone call from Tony saying that he had run out of time at the
bottom of the last climb and would be collected by the 'broom wagon'.
We found out later that only about 40% of the participants had
finished, so about 6,000 people and their bikes had to be collected
from the route and taken to La Toussuire in a fleet of buses and
trucks. Needless to say, this took some time, but I'm more surprised
that a feat like this could be done at all.
This
route is the hardest in this year's Tour, and this is the one that
the professionals will be doing today. (Watch for it on television to
see how difficult it is). This coupled with the very hot weather
explains why so many riders ran out of time. David also reported
seeing an unusually high number of people suffering punctures, which
in turn would have cost riders time.
Eventually
we were all reunited, loaded into the van, and headed back to the
apartment. For some reason, we had all underestimated how long this
would take (nearly 3 hours!) which meant that we got back about
00:30. I went to bed, but David stayed up to about 02:00 packing his
bike and luggage back into the van, as we had an early start to get
to the airport..........
David finished the course in 7 hours, 16 minutes, 27 seconds, an average speed of 14.5 km/h. He's posted some photos here.
Congrats to you and your riders for making it through...it really is amazing the amount of organization and work to pull off an event like that. I've helped a friend several times in his
ReplyDelete"Eppie's great Race" participations. {a biking/running/kayaking marathon). It's a lot of work. (The link took me to FB, but no pics at present time.)
I read your blog and i would say anybody can afford atomotive product at discount in online stores.
ReplyDeleteindustrial tire & caster wheel manufacturers