The Red Shield Ride 2017 pedals to its last stop in Elizabeth St Mall with (LtoR) Scott Haas, Craig Exon, me, Shieldy, Stuart Foster and Joshua Snead. |
In three years, I've only succeeded once in making the last day of the Red Shield Ride relax and dare I say, a little easier than the rest of the event: It wasn't this year!
Somehow, today's alarm went off earlier than any of the other four days of riding. I simply wasn't willing to get up at 5:45am as my phone chirped into life in order to get me to do the same. With the bus feeling surprisingly full, we picked up Stuart walking down the hill to my place and headed into the city to collect Ultra106Five's Scott Haas who would be joining us for the final day.
Hounville - Final Start for 2017 |
After a quick shower before sunrise (crazy hey? Sunrise!) the clouds started to lift slowly as we headed south towards Huonville. Things were looking great until we pulled into town and the fog settled; damp and cold. I didn't even want to get out of the bus to get ready to ride - I was think about how good it would be to get ready in the bus and ride straight out the back like David Hasselhoff used to do in Knight Rider. It was cold.
Now the idea was; we've got about 80km to go. So start early and give ourselves plenty of time; we can ride at a fairly easy pace maybe even stop for a bite to eat. No worries!?
The pace was very easy; the ups were tougher than they should have been, but I figured it was cold and once the sun came up - things would get better. It took a while, but things did get better.
Josh leading Craig up Nicholls Rivulet |
Craig looked as strong as ever and Josh didn't give a hint of struggle at all. Cygnet came and went with some great views of the Huon Valley. The days biggest climb over Nicholls Rivulet started well for some and become tough; for others it was the other way around. I sat with whoever was hindmost to encourage them on keeping one eye on the clock and regularly recalculating our E.T.A into Hobart. It was the same last year too; regardless of how well or not we rode at any point, the minutes tick by with constant regularity.
A rare shot of all five of us |
As we hit the Channel Hwy south of Snug, I told the guys we needed to lift the average a bit - still hoping to stop for a bite to eat, and maybe a decent coffee for Craig.
On we went, sometimes struggling, other times zooming along.
The ace I'd kept up my sleeve for today was a short cut that would avoid a couple of good climbs and shorten the road by 10km should we need it for any reason.
As we pressed on towards the point at which the two ways split, it was becoming clear to me that while the pace had picked up, we were going to be putting ourselves under a lot more (too much for my mind) pressure if we stuck to the original route - we'd take the short cut, time was starting to press on.
Me and Scott Haas from Ultra106Five radio |
Not long after we passed the turn off for the original longer road Scott broken a spoke on his rear wheel. He'd been through a lull and was finding his legs again when his bike started making noises that said things weren't good. I had just begun to think "we're back on track!"
No sooner had Craig and I done a quick fix and set off again and my rear tyre went flat! I pulled over and told everyone to head on; Bonnet Hill was still in front. The last thing I wanted today was to have to race up Bonnet Hill. Thankfully, the tyre change went well and quick and I was off again in no time catching the guys fairly low on the hill.
Pit Stop |
I was just thinking, we're back on track; we're going to be able to get that stop in when a second spoke on Scott's rear wheel went 'ping'. Nearly at the top, it wasn't easier to sit on Scott's wheel and watch it start to inevitably develop a buckle. A couple of phone calls on the up side had got the rest of the guys ahead of us to pull up at a cafe just over the other side of the hill. So we all pulled in for about 20minutes for a bite to eat and a drink. It was actually really good to relax and talk for a little while.
More conscious of Scott's wheel slowing us down more than anything else, we set off again for our final leg. I wasn't convinced the wheel would hold up, but it did. In the end, we arrived into the Mall 5minutes early and that was that.
The sun shone as we rode into Hobart; a great Autumn day!
Welcome Home |
This really I upped the ante on the challenge and it was tough. We've ridden over 600km and climbed up some pretty awesome hills. The ride has come to an end, but the fundraising hasn't. The Red Shield Neighbourhood Appeal is on this weekend right across the country. As far as the Red Shield Ride is concerned, we're not yet at our goal for fundraising and would love it dearly if you'd be willing to sponsor. The website will remain open for a while, but it would be magnificent if the total could go up. Josh and I still need to reach our goals, as too does Scott.
Please take a couple of minutes now to head over to the website by clicking here to make a donation to a great cause.