Whitney Allison of Colorado and Griffin Easter of Utah emerged victorious on the eight-day Transcordilleras Colombia Rally, profitable the self-supported girls’s and males’s classes. The race started August 11 on the jap facet of Colombia in Paipa and lined 985km throughout three ranges of the Andes mountains, ending in Santa Fé de Antioquia, simply north of Medellín, on August 18.
Allison racked up seven stage wins throughout the eight days, whereas Easter used his consistency with per week of second-place stage finishes to safe his total title. 2022 Huge Sugar Gravel males’s winner Russell Finsterwald was a favorite within the males’s division, however pulled out as a result of sickness on stage 5.
Allison spoke to Cyclingnews earlier than her journey, and mentioned the endurance occasion an addition to her schedule as a strategy to “flip my world the other way up somewhat”.
“I have been racing professionally since 2013, on the highway initially, after which moved over to gravel after the pandemic, like all people else. This simply appeared like a superb alternative that’d be one thing completely completely different, studying one thing new about myself,” she mentioned.
Allison, who has been a part of the Life Time Grand Prix and completed second total in final 12 months’s Belgian Waffle Trip Quadrupel Crown, went into the excessive altitude, backpacking journey along with her husband Zachary Allison and anticipated the challenges of a standard gravel race. The tough terrain and excessive altitudes have been there, nevertheless it was the acute warmth and ample sunshine from the proximity to the Equator which turned the race into “a “each day survival march to the end every day”.
“The programs have been so climby/descendy/rocky that there actually wasn’t a lot drafting and after Zack overheated sufficient to cease sweating on day 1 with no water for a pair hours, I don’t assume both of us have been comfy ditching one another with so many unknowns,” Whitney Allison described in a social media submit throughout an in a single day cease.
“I believe most Coloradoans respect the mountains and the wild emergency temperature swings they will have, so it was a bit unusual to be so excessive up and nonetheless have it’s heat. I want I had packed somewhat extra prompt espresso and ibuprofen…the steep climbs have been back-breaking.”
Moreover the large 23,650 metres of elevation acquire throughout the week, Allison discovered that hydration and solar safety have been the largest beasts associated to the mountainous terrain simply north of the Equator.
“We burned by means of what we thought was eight days of sunscreen in three days. I believe I used to be reapplying 3x on most phases. The solar is so intense right here and you may really feel your pores and skin simply boiling,” the Colorado native mentioned.
“Water was the problem, not meals. It’s straightforward to hold hundreds of energy if you wish to however you possibly can’t carry as a lot water. Having a filter got here in helpful just a few instances.”
By stage 5, the queen stage of 161km and 4,054 metres of elevation acquire in Antioquia, she was making an attempt to recuperate from a warmth rash and simply flip the pedals to complete the day.
“My physique is deeply fatigued and I didn’t recuperate nicely. I had a complete breakdown on the primary 13-mile filth climb, uncertain I may make it. Bike math helped…realizing what number of miles every sector was, after I would cease subsequent, % accomplished, % climbed. And actually 9 hours of driving later,” she wrote on Instagram.
“Personally I’m now fully lined in warmth rash…between that and the sunburns I’m only a sizzling mess. The final three phases allegedly are much less harsh and have been positively stepping into extra populated areas. Simply making an attempt to hold on.”
By the penultimate stage she allowed herself to loosen up considerably, realizing she had the GC locked up for the ladies’s division, ‘minus a disaster’, and he or she may lastly go searching and benefit from the sights of cacao and occasional farms, rainforests and luxurious valleys.
The 2 made it by means of, often solely 30 seconds to a number of minutes between them on the end line. The eight days of driving, plus stopping alongside the phases, added as much as 59 hours, 41 minutes.
It was per week of struggling. The self-supported riders have been supplied navigation units with dwell monitoring and simply wanted to get to pre-arranged in a single day lodging every evening. All private provides needed to be carried by every rider, from clothes, vitamin and hydration to provides required for bike repairs.
“A win is at all times a improbable strategy to begin off the season and every stage was hard-earned. I’m impressed by what our our bodies are capable of do when wanted and every rider needed to work their tail off to seek out the end line every day, particularly with a number of days of phenomenal warmth and gradual gravel,” Allison posted to social.
“Including the complexity of an unfamiliar tradition and nation with a language you communicate on the stage of a toddler of, it was difficult on many extra ranges.”
Allison instructed Cyclingnews she was keen to make use of the psychological and bodily conditioning from Colombia for the beginning of her ‘common’ season, which begins March 3 at Belgian Waffle Trip Arizona after which strikes to Nebraska for The Mid South on March 16.
“So for me, it is also serving as a second coaching camp. Nearly all of my season is comprised of one-day gravel races. They switched it up for BWRs, like spring Classics, and all of the races fall inside a six or seven-week interval. They match fairly properly into the calendar.”