Mount Rinjani Ultra 2015 - Here We Go Again
MRU
Year 2... geez... what the hell was I thinking?
Not-so-Fun-Facts
Apart
from the traditional MRU and RAR, Hendra has also cooked up a more sadistic Lombok
Ultra Triathlon (http://lombokultratriathlon.com/en/), which
starts a day earlier and finishes within the same MRU's cut-off time. To nudge
my crazy-adrenaline-spiked friends’ spinning, Lombok Ultra Triathlon is a 6k
swim, 300k cycling and the icing-on-the-cake is the 52K MRU!
Be rest assured you’ll get a complete Lombok experience of sea, sun and summit. So have I got your feathers ruffled, you full-time athletes, you?
Be rest assured you’ll get a complete Lombok experience of sea, sun and summit. So have I got your feathers ruffled, you full-time athletes, you?
The
MRU 2015 overall cut-off time is maintained at 22 hours, but the starting line
has been shifted from midnight, to at 22:00 hours. Published with additional
one intermediate cut-off time at 11 hours for the summit – complete bollocks!
That’s all I have to say.
Malaysian
contingent made the largest number, thanks to the overgrowing popularity in
trail running in Malaysia in particular, I mean – there are tonnes of trail
running events in Malaysia easily almost every weekend. But some say it was partly because of my blog.
Really? That’s hilarious… You meant Yim’s blog, right?
My
super incredibluos Ultra Facts
Training nowadays, apart from being completely non-existent, is indeed downright unattainable. It is a constant struggle to steal a quality 3K run when there are other more important things in life to keep it well-greased. I did not know I was gonna start running (albeit amateur-ishly) at the age of 32, or else I would have not chosen Architecture as a career. Perhaps I would choose to be a gardener instead.
Ultra may not be my best answer to weight loss – sure it proved my heightened endurance level, but my increased girth cushioned by pay-off dinners, unnecessarily carbo-loading sessions, and prolonged Zero Weeks after mid-training events has more sugar-spikes seems to suggest that.
Ultra trail events seem the only conceivable excuse to see the largely unexplored commercial territories with minimum amount of money. A quick comparison that amount I’d spend at VMM for a 4-day package (airfare included) is still cheaper than joining a local obstacle-course event this year in KL – per-kilometer. It’s madness I know, but that’s how it is. Yeah, whatever happened to RM10 for a 10K race and bottomless Milo van?
Majority of ultra trail runners are very pleasant and great travelling companion, especially whenever they carry with them a humble competitive spirit.
Investment in lightweight kits whenever affordable – there is very little room to play here and they can get quite costly – but you’ll thank them later for a healthier lower and upper back, especially when you are old like me.
Training nowadays, apart from being completely non-existent, is indeed downright unattainable. It is a constant struggle to steal a quality 3K run when there are other more important things in life to keep it well-greased. I did not know I was gonna start running (albeit amateur-ishly) at the age of 32, or else I would have not chosen Architecture as a career. Perhaps I would choose to be a gardener instead.
Ultra may not be my best answer to weight loss – sure it proved my heightened endurance level, but my increased girth cushioned by pay-off dinners, unnecessarily carbo-loading sessions, and prolonged Zero Weeks after mid-training events has more sugar-spikes seems to suggest that.
Ultra trail events seem the only conceivable excuse to see the largely unexplored commercial territories with minimum amount of money. A quick comparison that amount I’d spend at VMM for a 4-day package (airfare included) is still cheaper than joining a local obstacle-course event this year in KL – per-kilometer. It’s madness I know, but that’s how it is. Yeah, whatever happened to RM10 for a 10K race and bottomless Milo van?
Majority of ultra trail runners are very pleasant and great travelling companion, especially whenever they carry with them a humble competitive spirit.
Investment in lightweight kits whenever affordable – there is very little room to play here and they can get quite costly – but you’ll thank them later for a healthier lower and upper back, especially when you are old like me.
Well,
I flew into Lombok nowhere near physically fit and ready than the previous year
(what else is new? But honestly and truthfully, zero, so please wipe that
smirk!… as I was buried 6 feet under statutory books, by-laws and all the
boring, but extremely mandatory for my profession, literatures), if not weaker
having dragged my swollen right ankles across Kemensah, Australia and FRIM.
But
the AA flight out of KLIA2 seemed extravagant with the presence of many KL
runners heading for MRU/RAR – a stark difference from last year. The afternoon
flight was warm with many smiles and gleaming calves, but the bobbing flight
riding the air pockets cuddled me to sleep. Worth to note when picking seats en
route to Lombok is to pick the right wing (window seat even so) as Mount
Rinjani stands proud above the clouds in the late evening is a sight to behold.
No, I did not fly Garuda. Like most of the glossy pics in this entry, there were all sourced online to prevent my kind readers some anti-sleep placebo |
And it
was great to be in Lombok again all ready to run the for elusive finisher’s tee
after a month of anxiously reading race preparation and training updates from
fellow comrades. We exited the airport drama-free, into our rented car, and
stopped for dinner at Senggigi. By the time we arrived in Senaru, it was close
to midnight. 22 hours to the race!
The
next morning I woke up to fuzzy hellos and hot banana pancakes with dribble of
melted chocolate. It was a lazy morning which sets to be a lazy afternoon. By
noon, bag-drop and registration system has moved from its ‘cowboy-esque’
fashion last year in a newly built cabana overlooking the pool of the most posh lodge
in Senaru. But the ‘cowboy-esque-ship’ extends further when there was no proper
mandatory gear check or any safety check. I rub your back, you rub my back…
I
welcome the Organizer’s durable clear plastic bags in view of making sure
everything and my dropbag dry and clean, but all was made to adhere to the max
2kg weight limit (measured by feel), of which my Pocari Sweat bottles were the
only casualty.
And
that was it. I spent the next hours eating and sleeping – something I am very
good at nowadays.
Fast
forward – it was raining the whole evening and we have all been extremely
anxious on packing the right gear for the run, but in the end I stuck to the
original plan with my shorts and drifit. Both Windshell and Stormshell are
folded away with no weight whatsoever (magic!). For hydration and fuel, I was
modest by carrying only 4 gels, a pack of asamboi, a litre of pre-mixed
Gatorade (2 front bottles and a little in the bladder) to keep things light for
the first hill attack, few Mars and Snickers and Jellybeans.
I
awoke at 5.00 p.m. reluctantly rolling off my wafer-thin bed and ordered the
Bibik to heat up my accidental fried rice. The other guys have been off to do
what tourists are supposed to be doing but I know I am a completely hopeless
when I have little sleep. By then all equipments – Suunto, extra headlamp, Sony
Walkman, iPod shuffle have been fully recharged through competent negotiation
with my roommate on limited powerpoint outlet use.
It
has been almost 24-hours since I arrived in Lombok, and no sign of long toilet
break – my bowel showing signs of carbo-storage alert in anticipation of long
adventure coming up ahead – regardless what I do. Milk usually does the trick
but I am baffled at this new development – probably the thoughts of washing off
with iced-cold tap water is a factor I cannot strike off immediately as it is
damn painful!
I
finished dinner and went through the hydration pack again and satisfied myself
with the arrangement. I tested the mouthpiece of the bladder – a little bitter
aftertaste of stale Gatorade post-TNF Australia was still apparent… I looked at
my Trailroc, it still have the signs of the torturous climbs of Nellies Pass.
The
remaining hours I spent tossing around trying to harvest as much shuteyes as
possible – to no avail of course as all sorts of zoo animals are wrecking havoc
inside of me.
Finally,
after a long wait, the group huddled and was ready to move to the starting line
– about 2K away from where we stayed. 5 years ago I’d jog as my warm-up stretch
but now I am happy to ‘sweep’ behind preparing math quizzes inside my head for
the big climbs. It was humid and the road littered with stray dogs, the
starless night.
Anticipation
build-ups as the hour we were standing pointlessly at the starting line, taking
selfies – literally melt into minutes as
I spent worrying looking for the loos and even more anxious queuing in line to
get into one. And as minutes were inching closer into mere seconds, it felt
like someone was pulling a rubberband so stretched, that as the gun-off came,
and the runners disappeared into the blackhole. Immediately I lost sight of
Joll, Wan, Ben, Dendang, Israd and Alan – not to mention the 2 Salomon brothers
and Bud. Little did many realized only a handful made it back within the
cut-off time. The goddamn cut-off time!
A
few miles up the trailhead, the course expectedly started climbing steeply in a
manic fashion. I have seen this last year, so my target was to keep plugging
away as I know my sleep threshold is just 2 hours away, and I need to try to
get past WS1 before that happens so I could clear the bushes before midnight. I
think this year I maintained a good lead considering my fitness, arriving
fairly quickly at WS1. No time to spare (and no food served this year), I
quickly headed in the-then now mossy shrubs all around – the clearing is near,
and the howling wind moved above me, when all of a sudden RynaRynz came like
Jacques Villenueve in his lucky Williams back in 1998. Just like that marks the
start of the ‘Bukit Botak section as she smoked me like a deer.
It is such a evil plan to have these gorgeous landscape to be enjoyed only when returning back to Senaru, because it would have been far more palatable to run them in broad daylight |
It
was close to midnight, and what happened to me in Singapore Sundown 2009 came
back to haunt me – almost immediately and without warning, the speed waned and
zombieness took over my body. Even though the motion is still somewhat a
forward progression, I would need to stop every 50m-or-so to catch a nap. I
looked beyond me – the trail of headlamps long before me below the hills, and
snakes upward to a never-ending climbs.
My sleep-deprivation-build-up
from the previous weeks burning midnight oil (actually mostly catching up on
Masterchef Australia reruns and Grey’s Anatomy Season 9) caught up as I mostly
slogged on boulders and catching some circling lambs propped by my poles.
WS2 greeted
us with no food as I was desperately trying to stay awake, and then I grabbed a
can of Milo they handed out. There must be a weird concoction of stupidity and
delusion that was as almost immediately my bowel turned and remained at unease
for the entire journey. But I know the will be tonnes of killer descents from
that point on so I quickly sorted out the fine sand from the mild climb en
route, and started to rock’n’roll. I mean – quite literally as the there are
some terrifying drops to WS3, and I still carry some kind of trauma when I
somersaulted off the edge last year, so I was weary and second-guessed my trust
in the shoes and everything. Some amount of comfort however, came from knowing
the trail includes many runnable sections so I could gain some grounds.
True
enough, I caught on pocket-rocket Wani by the Segara Anak lake, rather relieved
to have a strong pacer. We motivated each other silently coming into WS3, and
beyond at the otherwise awe-inspiring views, it is also a mind-boggling climbs
towards WS4. Even though we were moving ahead silently, my mind played the
views I was presented with last year as the rising sun bathed the cliffs and
ridges at that particular stretch, but now since my sleep threshold over, I
need to haul myself to WS4 by 5:30 a.m.
I
knew exactly how punishing the climb is if tackled in broad daylight, so having
to do it in stark darkness is mostly welcomed.
By
the time I reached the first tent before Plawangan Sembalun, it had been eerily
quiet but this soon turned into a festive intersection as the volunteers
greeted us runners with much enthusiasm just short of fireworks! I finally caught
up with my furious TMBT night buddy, Isaac, and to my surprise – Israd!
In
what seemed like a fish market at wee hours of the morning, I located my
dropbag fairly quickly to get my stash of chips and Redbull, and as calm as a Tasmanian
Devil – put on the compression long socks, double with a base layer and a
Stormshell (it was freezing), change of fresh batteries, and refill my bladder.
Israd was kind enough to wait for the summit attack together, and I think we
were off WS4 in 5 mins – a new achievement for me. No narcissistic selfies
involved.
The remaining
8.3 miles would see continuous and monstrous climbs seemed formidable from the
get go. It was just starting to break dawn, and we were off plugging away. The
first sandy section where we met Puzi coming down very strong, was tackled
fuss-free as we hopped on more solid ground to get better traction upwards.
To
those who have attempted the summit this year would testify at the sheer beauty
of Rinjani – the crazy expanse of Lombok island, dotted farmhouses, and beyond
to Mount Agung in Bali. But make no mistake – Rinjani is a not a walk in the
park. As tempting as it was to awe at its beauty, I had to encourage Israd and
Isaac to keep moving and set achievable rest stops to achieve the strict
cut-off time, so up and up we marched, grazing our poles and donning our layers
as temperature dropped and cool breeze kicked up with fine ash particles – I was
still nursing a post-cold a week prior, am now sure as hell my nasal deposits
are all blackened similar to my toes.
From
where we stood, the Segara Anak Lake is now further minisculed from our view
but the summit is still elusive as hell.
Israd : "Tahun depan kita kasi habis MRU ikut Senaru ye!" (Israd kata, bukan saya kata) |
TMBT and MRU. Next is H100! |
This
year, my scree section start with an image of RynaRynz doing a half-hearted stationary squat intervals, and the fast boys (Ben, Joll, Wan, Ray and Bud) flying down like a
bunch of floating elves. I love it when a mountain could be comical and throw
some jokes at me.
Not
a bad way to start the eggbeater where the 4 of us rallied emotional support to
reach the summit, not without few quick breathers. But we had to keep going as
the extra minute we spent not climbing are the extra more we’d entertain our
mind’s refusal to finish it.
Needless
to say, we did arrive at the peak and did the usual things tourists do kicking
themselves silly after such gargantuan effort. Sure it warrants some degree of
jubilation, but this year I was more content to think of 2 things – calculate our
reserve hours and think if it’d be possible to make it back to Senaru (outside
cut-off time, of course), or endure the long slog out through Sembalun. So we
all started talking, and in the midst of it, we fell into a long fitful snooze.
It scared the hell out me last year thinking people would roll off the cliff,
but having done it this year I’d say the chilly temperature and piercing sun combo
was surreal and dreamlike.
Our
earlier contemplation to do a full course and out via Senaru further dissipated
as we inched closer back to Plawangan Sembalun, that I spent a good hour having
lunch and get everyone prepped up. Needless to say, we were all beat and having
to face a long slow walk out of Sembalun. I know full well the chicken exit is
not even close to be easy – if not equally long and hard!
Make
no mistake about it as this chicken exit involves a 2 hour hike to Pos 2
Sembalun, and a further 2 hours to the nearest civilization, whereupon some
mutual agreement with our fellow comrades, pay for a cold, long hours
sandwiched between our collective stench on a pickup truck. Those long hours
spent on the feet, and you cannot even extend your feet in the truck and in
constant verge to get a massive cramp is not a pretty thought, but that is the
chicken exit.
Worth
to note, thankfully that this year we grazed upon Abang Rashid of Karat Group
who took us deep into the woods and out to safety, but still with all the hikes.
And
just like that, my 2015 MRU adventure ended. The fleeting landscape we were put
to go through has not hampered my spirit at all – as the RD has upped his game
to provide marked improvement in this year’s edition. Most notably would be the
money the team could have saved on Pocari Sweats is substituted with ample plain
hydration at all water stations and fuel (chocolate muffins, lime and kuih
lepat at WS4 and WS6) and efficient crew manning the dropbag section. But hopeful
2016 runners would want to stock their own fuel plan as that seems to have gone
minimalistic this year.
As
we settled into the comfort of our rented rooms and warm meals afterwards, the
finish line stories, no matter how it ended for us, are chock full of tales of
success, redemption, and in my case, defeat. At least in the case of the
finisher’s tee. With 3K runs my new LSD in the past months, I would selflessly
commend myself for being able to go through it all with such stoicism and confidence
knowing that I could have finished it. Who knows – perhaps if I pass my professional papers this
year, I’d finally have time to actually put quality trainings in for MRU 2016,
eh… TMI? Oh…
But
the ultra running’s mortal community, not to be compared with the top crème of
professionals and heavily sponsored runners, has always felt like a tightly
knit circle of friends. As what Brendan ‘The SolarWeasel’ puts it (of H100), “an
infectious experience that draws together talent, encouragement, and curiosity,
leaving behind inspiration, gratitude, and new bonds of friendship”. The same blanket
theory seems applicable in all ultra events in my little perspective.
Overall, even the Rinjani National Park is presumably mismanaged as evident in ridiculous amount of lack of cleanliness/hygiene driven by mass tourism, nonetheless the RD and his crew are kind and accommodating with the route well-staffed and every
turn of the event is a true Lombok’s hospitality. I left Senaru with my heart
content. I also left Senaru with no added point contributed for 2017 UTMB
qualifying but that’s ok. I am still on track for UTMB 2020 to mark my 45th
year which would be enough time to get my bank account sorted.
Comments
Sempat jugak kau bahan kan aku ! hehehe siap kau Avatar ;)
regards
Rinjani Trekking
RTC