Eastside Triathlon
June 29, 2008
Baytown, Texas
500 Yard Swim-16 Mile
Bike-3 Mile Run
This was a small race for a
good cause. The little transition area
was more than adequate. Good talking to
folks in a sort of laid-back atmosphere that you get sometimes with the smaller
events. The swim was in two –what I
call- ponds. Oh, they were large enough
for the 600-meter swim.\
We all had to go down to the lake (pond) to begin the swim. The water vegetation was thick, and the disturbed vegetation and the swimmers wading in the mud roiled the water to the color of chocolate milk. Bam! We went off, slinging weeds and trying not to put our heads down in the muddy water near the shore. Finally, out a bit, and the water cleared, and we looked for the first buoy. The course was a sort of serpentine affair back to the boat launch and transition area. However, the struggle through the weeds had dislodged my timing chip strap on my ankle. The loose end flaying in the water with every kick made me worry about losing the timing chip, having to pay for the thing, and messing up my event time. Stopping, I reached down to my ankle. That slight touch freed the strap, and it came off my ankle. By some miracle, it fell in my hand. Grasping the strap and chip in my tightly clenched fist, I made my way through the course. Swimming with one open hand and one clenched fist was not my choice of swim form, but it was all I could do at the time. During all this chip grabbing, I lost my bearing on the course and ended up cutting the course without realizing it. When I did see what had happened, I swam back and made the course correction. This was a rocky start, right then. Finally, I made it to the boat launch, and a volunteer helped me up the slippery boat ramp. The timing mat was right there on the slope and I told the volunteer to get me clocked in and tried to hand him the chip with my free hand. He was lost. Finally, he got it and waved the chip over the mat and it made that telltale “beep”. Ah, thank God, I got the swim. That was touch-and-go for a while.
After all that, I wanted to
make up time on the bike. Hurriedly through transition, get my bike to get on
the road. My brake was dragging. What
else? I got the brake aligned right and
moved through the transition area with my bike toward the exit. There was my Pat at the exit, patting her head
vigorously. What? I could not imagine why she was doing those weird head-patting movements. My helmet! I did not have my helmet on! I was about to
leave on the bike without my helmet. I
would have been disqualified for that stupidity. Back to my transition spot, get the helmet.
Ok, what now? Am I dressed?
My Pat was laughing as I left
on the bike. Standing, I built speed immediately. I was ready to get on the road. Everyone was getting passed. I was on the
move.
Then this young lady in her thirties came by
on a quick pass. As the bike leg wore
on, I continued to pass folks and then up ahead was the young lady who had
passed me so vigorously earlier. I
passed. She passed back. Speed built. I passed. She passed back. Every time I passed, I would say something to
the effect that she wasn’t going to let an old man pass her up, was she? That usually did it. I would soon be passed. It was fun. Near transition, she made the final pass and
we ran our bikes together into transition.
I came out first and later saw her on the out and back course. She was done.
She won an award for her age division.
It was a great effort on her part.
I finished well and got
second in my age group which was five years younger than the age group I should
have been in. It was just that I was the
oldest man at the event and rather than putting me in my age group by myself,
they put me in with some younger guys.
It was a lot of fun despite
the early troubles, and I smile when I think about this day.