|
Dakar: Hell on two wheels
Philippe Devos
From
Thursday's Globe and Mail Published on
Thursday, Jan. 21, 2010 12:00AM EST Last
updated on Friday, Jan. 22, 2010 3:37PM EST
There's
a reason they call it the toughest motor race on the planet: More
people reach the summit of Mount Everest each year than finish the
annual Dakar rally.
This year, there were 362 entries
at the start on New Year's Day, but barely half made it across the
finish line on Sunday. There were six Canadian efforts in 2010 -
more than anyone can ever recall but only one Canadian would finish
the rally. They each faced their own challenges, but agree on one
thing. The hardest of the 17 days came on Stage Three.
The day from Hell
It was the toughest day, in the
toughest race. After two days of relatively easy dirt tracks, the
racers had to confront the desert of Fiambala, Argentina.
Seventy-seven would drop out on this day alone. Scorching
temperatures, towering dunes, talcum sand and poor quality fuel
conspired to destroy their bodies, spirits and machines. "After
Hell, there is Fiambala," one competitor said afterward.
On paper, it was the shortest
special stage of the rally at 182 kilometres; on the clock, it was
the longest. The pro motorcycle riders did it in about six hours.
The last amateur to finish in regulation time spent 16 hours on the
bike, and others took even more time, only to be disqualified for
taking too long or missing too many checkpoints. Several vehicles
had trouble with the fuel from the last service station before the
start of the special stage, which boiled away in the tanks due to
the altitude and heat, causing engines to sputter and die.
One rider, Christina Meier from
Germany, abandoned her stalled bike and borrowed a spectator's horse
to reach her mechanic, get some advice, gallop back to the machine and
get it going again to finish the day, and eventually the rally.
Despite carrying three or more litres,
most had to rely on water from spectators and passing car competitors
- and even that wasn't enough to keep several from needing intravenous
re-hydration as temperatures were recorded as high at 59C.
What little power the bad fuel
provided the engines was zapped by the mountainous dunes of powder
fine sand, draining racers' energy to dig out and pick up fallen
machines. And with every fall, came the risk of a race-ending injury.
So many were stricken on the day, that every available helicopter was
commandeered for medical evacuation, and doctors were sent out on to
the course to advise the most weakened racers to give up or risk
death.
Over before it began
The bolts on the belt-drive system of
Lawrence Hacking's custom pickup truck sheared off en route to the
first special stage, and he and co-driver Christian Girouard, 38,
couldn't get it repaired in time to make the start, forcing their
disqualification from the race before it really began.
Hacking, 55 and a long-time enduro
motorcycle rider and race organizer from Georgetown Ont., was the
first Canadian to finish the Dakar on a bike in 2001, and he still
hopes to be the first to finish in a car - but next year. "Sure,
it's a disappointment, but this is a long-term plan," he says.
"We'll continue on."
The unluckiest man
Donald Hatton had recovered from the
injuries that nearly killed him in the 2009 Dakar. His hand had mended
from the break he'd suffered on his first training ride back on a
bike. He'd recuperated from a bout of H1N1 in October, and managed to
rescue his bike from the parking compound on the start day this year
when the one next to it went up in flames. After forgetting his time
card before the start of the first special stage, he rode 180 extra
kilometres to retrieve it and convinced race organizers to let him
start nonetheless.
He persevered through the second
stage with food poisoning that had him vomiting in his helmet and
soiling his riding suit. But, in the end, the Duncan, B.C., motorbike
shop owner couldn't overcome the poor fuel on Stage 3 that left his
KTM 690 Rally with too little power to traverse the deep sand and
steep dunes. Severely dehydrated and utterly dejected, the 51-year-old
left the race course after just 37 kilometres, made his way to the
bivouac, and was disqualified for missing too many checkpoints.
"I was really suffering."
The triathlete
Rick Hatswell knows how to push
through to the finish, having completed marathons and Iron Man
triathlons, but the sand and heat on Stage 3 had him stymied.
"I've never ridden on such soft ground," said the
34-year-old from Vancouver, who helps run the family's chain of
collision-repair centres. "Every time I'd go about 10 feet, it
felt, the bike would fall over or I'd get stuck."
More than six hours in, making little
progress in the dunes and still less than halfway to the finish, a
highway visible in the distance was just too tempting. He pulled his
KTM 525XC-W off the course and onto the road, goggles hiding the
tears. "I just thought, I don't want to be coming in at midnight
or be that guy stuck out in the desert with no water, and dying out in
the desert."
Pumped to finish
It was too late for Dirk Kessler to
avoid the rock as he came around the soft sandy corner in the dry
riverbed. It caught the 44-year-old's foot and twisted his leg back
violently. He managed to stay on his KTM 690E, but when the adrenalin
wore off, the knee gave out and the pain set in. With help from some
of the local spectators, he duct-taped his hand pump to his leg as
splint and pressed on to the first checkpoint 40 kilometres away.
There, a decision had to be made.
With pain killers from the medical staff, he tried a few times to
press on, but it hurt too much. "I'm no stranger to pain,"
says Kessler, a San Francisco software developer originally from
Vancouver, "but there was just no way to do another 80 kilometres."
The long haul
Andrew Scott, 43, couldn't be reached
for this article, but every time another competitor saw him on Stage
3, he seemed on the verge of giving up, they said. "He looked all
dazed," recalled one rider, who met him 74 kilometres and more
than six hours after the start. "He said 'I'm screwed but I'm
going to keep going.' "
Some time around three or four in the
morning he pulled into the bivouac, exhausted after more than 20 hours
on his Honda CRF450X. But he'd either taken too long, missed too many
checkpoints, or become to fatigued to continue, and was out.
Dakar addict
The other Canadians had careers,
wives and children to return to whether they finished the Dakar or
not. For Montrealer Patrick Trahan, there is only the Dakar. A chance
encounter at age 15 with a Dakar competitor had sparked a life-long
dream. Twelve years ago, he left a job in IT to pursue it.
He showed up at his first rally in
1998 - a smaller one - with only a few hours of riding experience and
a bike better suited to pizza delivery than desert racing, but somehow
he finished. In 2000, he entered his first Dakar with scarcely more
experience and didn't get far. When he wanted to try again in 2001,
his wife gave him an ultimatum. He chose the Dakar, and after another
early exit, was divorced and bankrupt. Two more Dakar attempts ended
before the start line due to lack of funds. Even this year, he didn't
have the last few thousand dollars he needed to get to Argentina until
December, when the Honda dealers in Ontario pitched in.
All this was in the back of his mind
at the 87th kilometre, less than half-way through the Third Stage,
when the 42-year-old was stuck with one leg pinned under his fallen
bike in the deep sand of a dry riverbed. He used the last of his
energy to dig himself out, but worried his Dakar was over. "I was
throwing up, and I couldn't stand I was so dizzy" from
dehydration in the extreme heat, he said.
But local spectators revived him with
food and cola and water. They brought some gas for his drained bike,
and, after a 45-minute rest, he pressed on through the last 95
kilometres of sand, finishing the day in a little over nine hours.
There were other challenges right up
to the finish. With a pinched fuel line on the final of the 14 stages,
he ran out of gas five times and had to wave down a tanker truck for a
final fill-up, but made it to the finish podium in 55th position
overall, becoming the sixth Canadian to ever finish the Dakar and
completing his 27-year journey.
|