Orienteering race 46:02 [5] **** 2.8 km (16:26 / km) +165m 12:42 / km
spiked:7/7c shoes: Yellow Falcons
Big Basin. US Nationals Long Champs. First in M70 by a wide margin. Always pleasing to win a race I don't expect to win ;-) Big Basin is tough, and I had my share of troubles, but mostly stayed on track and didn't have to do any wandering. The one really bad segment was leaving 3, trying to get down to the road. With Tom N in front of me and pulling away, foolishly abandoned my plan to get straight down to the road and instead tried to get cute by cutting diagonally to save some distance. But the plan I was executing didn't require fine navigation (just get down to the road!), so I didn't notice that the spur I cut across was not the one I thought it was, and I got my self tangled up in fight that I had a real hard time getting out of. I would have guessed that I was stuck for ten minutes, but it appears that I only lost 2.5 to 3 minutes. Still, a very foolish thing to have done.
Started at 10:30. Nice cool and foggy morning, which helped me a great deal. Ran quite a bit today (albeit some of it slowly), certainly a lot more than I had yesterday. Scramble up the hill to #3 was very unpleasant; had planned to swing wider to the left to avoid some of that nastiness, but changed my mind once I found myself a bit right of where I intend to be after the first 200m. Swinging wide left was a better idea; on the other hand, I nailed the control the way I went, and had I gone a different way, might have had trouble finding the control (as so many others did).
Tom made an entirely different error after I parted ways from him, and to my surprise, he showed up behind me as I started off to #5. We jockeyed back and forth a bit to #5, and then he maintained a few second lead all the way to the Finish. It was nice to run fast from #4 to the end as this part of the terrain was quite runnable. Still, knew I should have gone left leaving #6, but didn't want to take the time to look at the map carefully, so just ran that part the way I'd run it yesterday (had seen #6 on my route to the next to last control yesterday, and today realized that the same route as yesterday was a reasonable - though slightly suboptimal - choice.
Speaking of seeing controls from yesterday: Yesterday, during my one substantial error, I found a control in a clearing that helped me relocate. Today, as I was approaching #3, saw that same control, and, though it was where I thought I was going, I foolishly thought "can't be the one I'm looking for because that was out here yesterday." Then wasted about 10 seconds trying to figure out where I was since I wasn't where I thought I was, before realizing I WAS where I was supposed to be and that control I saw yesterday was indeed my #3 today. Ugh.
On the positive side, did a very nice job on the last hill up to #1, recognize the contour features and a little clearing, and so totally nailed it. Also, I'd recognized while going to #1 that #3 was going to make or break the race, and I was very careful on that one (after a shaky first 200m), recognized the terrace near the control, and so ran right to it.
That first 200m or so of #2 - #3 was the reverse of yesterday's #4 - #5. Yesterday, I was aiming for the little ditch and found myself on the rocky ground further east (and didn't accept that I was in fact all the way over there); today, I aimed for that rocky ground, and instead hit the ditch I was intending to hit yesterday. Go figure.
Had this been a two-day total time competition at Big Basin, I would have been 2nd American on Brown, behind only Steve T (and Paul Pacque of Australia):
1. 12030 Pacque (Australia)
2. 12120 Tarry (M65)
3. 13220 Wildfogel
4. 13452 Nolan (M65)
5. 13710 Siegenthaler
6. 13753 Tryson (M65)
7. 14112 Froyen (M65)
8. 14807 Enger (M65)
9. 15150 Hunter
10. 15839 Shahbazian (M65)
11. 15924 K.Walker
[Orienteering race]