one stop berg was being called off, they were planning to trip the last bit
today.

fiona and doug should be in by now.

sean and derik sleeping in trouthaven tonight, going throught stettyns and
to the finish tomorrow.

estelle and errol should finish on monday evening.

so after that finally i should be able to concentrate on my work again :)

i copy mike's final blog below ... from the little bit that i got to know
him, he is one amazing guy with a wonderful sense of humour. couldn't help
to feel proud that i know the person who wrote this. glen, the
tandem-partner, is the guy who build all those awesome tracks in boven. he
truely is a great guy with a great sense of humour, and the combination of
mike & glen would have been magical. then again - all the people that i've
met in the preparations for, and during the 6 days en route to rhodes, were
quite cool people .... like the D&D crowd :)

below mike's blog-entry of last night:

July 8, 2009, 1:56 am
Today all we had to do was get through Stettynskloof and then make our way
through to Wellington to cross the finish line. For those of you who are not
familiar with the Stettynskloof portage, it is a completely natural 7 km
rocky valley where there is no activity except the occasional team who come
through to remove the alien Hakea that have invaded the valley. The natural
vegetation includes millions of proteas, river reeds and a whole host of
fynbos varieties. It looks beautiful until you start moving through it.
There is an ill defined path that runs about half way up, after that you are
on your own. The bush is so thick in places that it can take 20 minutes to
cover 20 or 30 metres. We got off to a bad start when the rocky terrain
disagreed with my gammy leg. I had barely covered 500 metres before being
reduced to a whimp. Glenn did an amazing job today. He basically moved the
tandem through the kloof on his own. He alternated between pushing it and
carrying it on his shoulders while I limped along behind. Hauling it up the
steep final climb was an awesome feat.
While in the valley we detoured to have a look at the Shackleton air crash
site. To see all the debris scattered about is a bit eerie. People died here
and the mangled remains of something built to fly lying in a remote valley
is sad.
We exited the 7 km valley in about 8 hours 30 mins and took another 3 hours
to the finish where David said a few kind words and Earle Wakeford ( I rode
with him in 2007) presented up with our finishers blanket.
The race is over and a tandem record set. The job is done. We rode it a few
days slower than we should have but perhaps that is better as the bar has
been set low enough to entice the next pair to have a crack at beating it.
Glenn has been a great riding partner. It takes a special combination for
two people to slog away at a race like this for 21 days. In our case it
worked well as not a single word was uttered in irritation or anger over the
whole race. They say that if you can ride a tandem in a race and remain
friends afterwards then you are truely friends. After a 21 day race of this
nature that makes your friendship really special. Thank you Glenn for making
this possible.

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