press release fresh from the freedom challenge support office - a summary of
the state of things at the moment




Cradock
Wednesday 23 June 2009



As bad weather sweeps across South Africa riders in the the 2009 Freedom
Challenge non-stop mountain bike race from Pietermaritzburg to
Diemersfontein Wine Estate outside Paarl are experiencing mixed fortunes.



Freedom Challenge extreme triathlete, Andrew Barnes took the lead from early
race leader Tim James of Team Squirt riding Scott when James slowed in the
Stormberg.  Barnes, who started from Pietermaritzburg 4 days ahead of James,
then found his progress from Willowmore through the Moordenaars Karoo
towards Prince Albert slowed by driving gale-force headwinds.  Worn down by
the previous day of riding through the Groot Rivier Poort and up the length
of the Baviaanskloof, Barnes battled to cover 90 kms of flat riding directly
into the wind.  After 10 hours of joy less riding he stopped for the day at
the farm Rondawel.   On Wednesday morning, with a slight break in the
weather, he rode on into Prince Albert and up the SwartbergPass.  By
nightfall he was headed towards the Gamkaskloof in the Swartberg.



James, meanwhile, appears to have recovered from his difficult day in the
Stormberg and has made good progress across the catchment of the GreatFish
River.  After stopping for the night at the farm Stuttgart on Tuesday he
rode up into the Swaershoek before taking on the Struishoek descent and
crossing into the plains of the Camdeboo. The following morning he followed
the Voelrivier down to the Toekomst support station on the banks of the
Darlington Dam in the Steytlerville District.  He left Toekomst in the late
morning.  This was 5 hours later than Barnes left there 4 days earlier. It
must now be seen whether James can maintain his current pace and take
advantage of Barnes’s slow day out of Willowmore to wipe out Barnes’s
effective 5 hour lead.



Meanwhile, further back in the field, injuries and adverse weather have
caused 20% of the riders to withdraw. Those remaining are soldiering on.
Mike Roy, who started riding with his bird book and binoculars, cannot have
seen much birdlife in the last few days.  Most sensible birds have surely
sought shelter from the current cold and cloud. He is accompanied by
crocodile fighter, Tim van Coller. Tim, who beat off a crocodile attack when
paddling alone down the length of the ZambeziRiver will surely not be
daunted by a bit of rain, wind, cold or snow.  On Wednesday they rode slowly
up the valley of the SterkspruitRiver, 2 days behind the rest of the field,
but savouring the experience.



Ahead of them “Two bike” Derrick Baard spent the night in the Rossouw police
station whilst not-so-fat Ixopo farmer, Eric Egeland, is riding with Esti du
Plessis and Andre Eksteen towards Molteno.   Fiona Coward, Doug Kennaugh and
Gregg Donnagh left their wool bales on the farm Gouevlei to ride through
Molteno and on to the next support station at Romansfontein.





Ahead of them North West mielie farmer and Freedom Challenge veteran Carl
Crous has joined forces with Namibians Louis Wessels and Pierre le Roux and
   and Mossel Bay wild man Mark Mitchell to help him hunt down his North
West riding partner Marnitz Nienaber.  Nienaber left Crous after the two had
crossed the UmkomaasRiver shortly after leaving Pietermaritzburg and, since
then, has maintained a consistent lead on Crous.



Nienaber was part of a large group that left Romansfontein on Wednesday
morning to cross the Aasvoelsberg and drop off the escarpment of the
southern Drakensberg into the FishRiver basin.  Included in the group are
Derek Hall-Jones, woman rider Estelle Labuschange, Errol Derrick who despite
the poor weather is proceeding with far greater efficiency than was the case
when taking on the race in 2008, Sean Woolnough and Brett Rheeders.   They
had joined GIANT rider Siceko Maraneni, a guide from the Maluti section of
the Freedom Challenge who set a good pace through the Stormberg before
falling back.  Presumably they have left the worst of the cold behind them.



Riding well ahead of them are Freedom Challenge veteran Francois Riekert and
the Snapper Display tandem duo of Mike Woolnough and Glenn Harrison.  The
charge of the tandem has slowed considerably in the last few days, partly as
a result of the difficulty of hauling a 40 kg bike over the mountain
portages of the Stormberg and partly as a result of the acute ITB that
Woolnough has developed.  As they move through the halfway point in the
race, Harrison must be wondering, should Woolnough withdraw, how he can
single-handedly get the tandem to the race finish at Diemersfontein outside
Paarl.



Ahead of them, early race leader Australian Dave Barr not only seems to be
benefiting from his orthopedic saddle but is relishing the sheepskin
covering subsequently provided by Stormberg farmer Jim Stretton.  Also
benefiting from the sheepskin treatment are his co-riders and fellow Extreme
Triathletes, Ugene Nel and Trevor Ball as well as big man Steve Honey.



With driving winds and more bad weather moving into the interior of the South
Africa the 2009 Freedom Challenge is proving to be a test of physical and
mental fortitude.



For more information about the 2009 Freedom Challenge visit
www.freedomchallenge.org.za.



The progress of the riders can be tracked live on the website with Netstar’s
Guardian.



http://cyclingwith.blogspot.com

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