THEN IT RAINED
Apparently, it rains in the desert, as weird as that may sound. Perhaps that’s the reason there are actually plants out here, even though they look past dead. But rain it did, a buttload actually. It sent the builders and their quads and 4x4s into a mad scramble to exit the venue yesterday afternoon. The wind and the lightning and the big fat wet drops ended a long hard day in the dust. Build crews, riders and event organizers awoke the following morning to showers that continued right through until noon.
Which is a bit of a catch-22. Sure, there is a whole lot of work left to be done, especially for athletes still crafting lines for the finals. Losing a day is huge in that regard. At the same time, water will make a very dry and dusty course that much more tacky - hero dirt they call it. In fact, half the work over the past two days has been hoofing gallons of water up to take-offs and landings while clinging to the side of mega burl.
So, in a nutshell, a down day could be a really good day when it comes to the next three days, which look like they’ll be sunny and relatively warm. It also gives beaten and battered athletes, blown from a long season of riding, a chance to heal a little. Because the organizers wisely decided to close the venue (the road alone would have been a rental truck gong show), nature got to play its part in this year’s Red Bull Rampage. The dirt will be sweeter, the riders stronger, and tomorrow it is so on.
PS: It was just a joke. Ease up Cpt. Serious.
EDIT: A compulsory google search supports your statement. So I did learn something.
#2 rule