Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn, a Day of Extremes

Feb 28, 2016 at 2:56
by Yeti TransNZ Enduro  
Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

The second annual Yeti Trans NZ greeted 120 racers with unparalleled kiwi conditions on February 28, 2016 - sunny skies, temps in the 80’s (26°C), and a quintessential combination of rocky terrain paired with loamy, grippy, root infested trails. Quite the contrast to last year’s deluge on Day 1, which shortened the day and deprived racers of experiencing the finest of Craigieburn Forest Park’s trails.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes
Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

Today was a whole lot bigger than last year with a good mixture, even within each stage,” said Zac Williams (Dunedin, NZL), currently sitting 8th in Open Men. “We had a mixture of three to eight minutes in length on the timed stages, and liaisons between 15 minutes and an hour and a half. The start of the Trans NZ was definitely a whole lot better, getting to see the terrain for what it really can be. Simply amazing.

Adjacent to the eastern flanks of the Southern Alps, Craigieburn is an environment of extremes - alpine trails crisscross through eroding scree fields, tussock grasslands, and rugged mountain peaks looking down from 2300m, and dive down into the dense mountain beech forests on the lower slopes.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

I have always wanted to come to New Zealand, and I love stage racing to begin with, so I figure an enduro stage race would be a really fun way to see the South Island, and try a new discipline,” said Sonya Looney (Kelowna, CAN), Open Women. “I like how the landscape is really dramatic, and everyone’s so chill and having a great time.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

Straight out of the gate, it was a fast and furious start with the most technical bit within the first 100m of Luge Trail. Race organizer, Megan Rose forewarned everyone not to “blow their gasket” whereas her counterpart Ted Morton, assistant event manager, left riders with the advice at last night’s briefing “when in doubt, throttle it out.” It became a game of pacing on the transitions, and letting it hang out on the timed descents, as the day unfolded over 27km, 1200m of untimed climbs, and equal part timed descending.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes
Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

Stage 3 was a favorite among racers. Widely known as Cheeseman DH, this stage presented many opportunities for racers to show off their style on the drifty motocross turns before the track dipped below treeline and in alignment with the fall line.

Any stage that makes your legs burn when you’re not pedaling is a good stage,” said Luke Sheehan (Camborough, AUS), Master 40+ Men.

Stage 3 - Cheeseman DH
  Stage 3 - Cheeseman DH

Stages characteristically finished on the opposite side of a stream crossing. A chicken wire bridge was a luxury, however, three out of the five stages concluded with a scramble through a flowing stream to find the control station and scan in. Afterwards, water bottles were refilled with a quick dip in the creek to enjoy pure (giardia free) New Zealand water.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

Stage 5 ended on the Hogs Back, dropping into Castle Hill Village. No water fording was necessary to beep in, but for those who wanted to keep their journey consistent, a ground level water slide was available immediately after the finish line to cool off after 4 to 6 hours in the intense sun. Less ozone, less pollution and closer proximity to sun means 7 percent more UV radiation than the northern hemisphere in the summer.

waterslide at end of day 5
  A wonderfull waterslide at end of day 5.

The Open fields are already heating up with 74 men and 13 women vying for the top spots (and rightly so, bragging rights). The range of mountain bike discipline backgrounds is impressive— a former Olympian, 24 Hour World Champion, several accomplished enduro champions, and downhill retirees from across the pond, all here to battle it out with local knowledge. Carl Jones (Rotorua, NZL) is leading the Pro Men with only a 28 second lead on Aaron Bradford (Seattle, USA). Bradford had quite the finale on the last stage about seven seconds from the finish line.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes
carnage
  Carnage does happen.

I lawn darted onto the only concrete in the stage pretty sensationally, and got my money’s worth and left some skin out there. We’re looking at a couple stitches. I’ve got quite the gaping wound. I actually can’t see it, but I see everyone’s reaction and that says more than enough,” Bradford said. “This whole ordeal cuts into the caving and swimming I had planned for this afternoon. But that’s okay, we’ll keep charging.”

Deborah Motsch (Annecy, FRA) leads the open women with a comfortable gap of a minute over the rest of the field. “It’s my first enduro stage race, and it’s new for me to race five days straight. So we have to manage every day— mechanically and physically. It’s a great experience to discover this kind of race, and meet people from all around the world.

stage 3

The vibe is already at an all-time high with competitors converging at Flock Hill Station for cold beers, farm fresh food, and a relaxing atmosphere to swap stories, work on bikes, and prepare for Day 2 which will round out the full experience of Craigieburn Forest Park with four stages before this enduro village heads to a world-renowned mecca of mountain biking, over 500km away.

Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes
Images for - Welcome to the Yeti Trans NZ Day 1 - Craigieburn a Day of Extremes

The Trans NZ will be posting regular updates on Facebook and Instagram throughout the week and daily video recaps on Vimeo. Hashtag your photos #transnzenduro to make their way into the live stream of the Trans NZ’s Media HQ. For more information email megan@ridingbc.com or visit www.transnz.com.

DAY 1: OPEN MEN
Carl Jones 24:22
Aaron Bradford 24:50
Flynn George 25:01

DAY 1: OPEN WOMEN
Deborah Motsch 29:20
Katie Oneill 30:20
Sarah Rawley 30:45

Visit www.transnz.com for full Day 1 Results.

Video from day 1:
Views: 490    Faves: 2    Comments: 0


About Megan Rose:
Megan has been riding and racing bikes all over the world for 13 years and organizing bike events for the past six years. She splits her time between British Columbia, Canada, and New Zealand, running the BC Enduro Series and the new Trans BC for 2016, and running the Trans NZ race. Over the past two years, Megan has personally races in over 24 enduro races, timed over 58 days worth of enduro races, and personally organized 22 enduro races. Megan and her team look forward to bringing you the best of the best from all of these perspectives.

Author Info:
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17 Comments
  • 27 1
 "“Any stage that makes your legs burn when you’re not pedaling is a good stage,” said Luke Sheehan (Camborough, AUS), Master 40+ Men."

Did you mean Canberra?
  • 1 0
 Hahaha... Maybe we should submit a spelling change proposal for our capital city to the government.
  • 18 1
 First aid 101. Elevate and hydrate.
  • 13 1
 Arron Bradford?... You must mean the BARON RADFORD!
  • 5 2
 #bleedblackdieevilf*ckyeah
  • 1 0
 hahaha....his nick name has been Aaron Baron since a toddler by me
  • 4 1
 Yeah FLYNN!!! Get Radical!
  • 1 0
 Good thing she was wearing the helmet and pads on that water slide, they're damn dangerous!
  • 1 0
 Look at them all in their short sleeves! Makes me sick!!
  • 4 4
 Love to see all these cheesy 3/4 no vents helmets and googles in the heat! Buy kids, buy!
  • 3 3
 Wasn't this race supposed to be on "super gnarly terrain"? Looks like the kids event at a local XC race in Wisconsin.
  • 1 0
 The trails there are of moderate difficulty, definitely trails not DH courses apart from one section of Cheeseman which isn't shown in the photos. Cheeseman and Luge are pretty intense at race pace. I used to have a DHX air and it would be a pogo stick by the bottom of Luge, and very hot to the touch.
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