Ashington Sprint Triathlon Monday 1st May 2017

The forecast was windy, and easterly instead of the normal prevailing westerley. But at least the sun came out and the morning got warmer.  Ponteland Tri had 16 entered in Ashington and on the day we had 11 finishers, but some really fantastic results.  The club had Ladies Senior 2nd place for Lyndsey Curry, Ladies V60 3rd place for viv Ferrier and Mens V60 3rd place for Tony Prince so a great result for the club.

Before the race the event organisers had a race briefing explaining the route, and they also posted maps of the routes, and they had marshalls and signs at all turns, however Mark Turnbull managed to go flying straight on at the miners roundabout before realising the race had got really quiet all of a sudden and he turned back. Given the detour Mark’s bike time is very impressive given his added additional distance.

It’s worth giving a mention to Mr & Mrs Kelly both with great times and big improvements on their finish times from last year. Obviously all this training pays dividends.

Another great event hosted by Tri Northumberland, hopefully we’ll all be back next year with at least two club members I know of moving up an age category so podium places may be within grasp……

 

 

 

Results for all club members below.

Bassenwaite Tri – Sat 13th Aug

We had heard very good reports about Bassenthwaite triathlon but had never tried it before and the date was just a couple of days after a BIG birthday for Chris. He decided to do this one as his first open water triathlon in celebration of the BIG event, however he ended up doing Northumberland sprint tri in June as his first open water tri. I of course would do it too not wanting to miss out on doing a triathlon. We had been checking the weather forecast on the run up to the event and only entered one week before when we knew the weather was going to be OK. Unfortunately for Chris the standard distance was sold out so we had to do the sprint distance instead – phew!!!!

The weather forecast remained good, light wind, no rain, 16C – perfect conditions! On driving along the A66 towards Keswick however, there was rain and lots of it! The clouds were low over the mountains and it looked like it was going to be wet. I checked the weather app on my phone and it said Keswick was dry all day!! Oh dear! Unusual for the weather forecast to be wrong isn’t it?!

We drove on through to Bassenthwaite and the rain did clear up – phew. We drove round the cycle route and saw that the road to the north of the lake was very undulating so we knew to take it easy as we would also be heading west into the wind on that side of the lake. We drove the run route too and found the brutal hill that we would have to negotiate. It didn’t look so bad in the car!

We were initially a bit concerned about the swim route as there were some small sailing boats right where the start of the swim would be and also some random floating oil cans, however, they hadn’t finished setting up the swim route and the boats and oil cans were removed and replaced by the large orange buoys marking out  the swim routes. The motor boats checked the distances and drove round the sprint and standard routes so the competitors knew which way to go. Then it was time for the sprint competitors to get in the water. Now, anyone who has only ever swam in Northumberland lakes like us, it was weird to find the water clear, not completely clear but you could see people around you in comparison to Northumberland lakes where you can’t even see your own hand in front of you and of course the taste of the swam poo.  Bassenthwaite water is safe to drink and no taste J. The water was pleasantly cool, 15.9C to be precise and perfect for swimming in. The hooter went and we were off. I knew I had the swim advantage over Chris and wondered where on the bike he would catch me. The swim route completed and off into transition and out onto the bike.

The bike route initially sends you along the A66 towards Keswick with the wind behind you so we knew it would be quick. Unfortunately the road surface on that stretch was being replaced as the surface was very bad. They had taken the surface on the inside lane which meant sharing the outside lane with passing motorists. Luckily not too many motorists passed by so it was safe enough. We anticipated that when we turned to head back to the sailing club on the north side of the road would be bad, undulating and into the head wind. What we found was that it was actually quicker than expected. The route was also long for a sprint tri at 27km!

Back into transition and onto the run with the dreaded brutal hill. The route was undulating at first and we shared the road with the guys on their bike leg doing the standard tri which is always nice when you get to pass others. Richard Winter was doing the standard and did pass me on this section so I gave him a cheery shout of encouragement. The long route bike section carried on along the road while the run route turned left and there it was, the brutal hill. Head down, tiny steps, keep running, don’t look up – I kept telling myself. I saw 6 or so people ahead and everyone was walking. I would not be defeated! I did run the whole way, although slowly. That was brutal. Cresting the head of the hill it was weird on the legs to be running on the flat again and they seemed to take some encouragement to do so. We weren’t on the flat before long when we turned left to the downhill back towards the finish. The poor standard distance guys would have to turn right here and go further uphill, I felt very sorry for them! Turning downhill, again I had to encourage the legs to try and run properly downhill. I was a bit concerned about my dodgy knees on this downhill bit but they held out. Last little push to the finish line and a bit of a sprint to the line. The run route was long for a sprint tri too at 6.1km. The commentator announced my name and club as I crossed the line and mentioned it was a family day out for us! The commentator was great and created a really good atmosphere.

Bassenthwaite sailing club were hosting the event and Tri Lakeland were the organisers. We were impressed by the organisation of the event and to have the facilities on offer at the sailing club were a real pleasure; refreshments, hot and cold sandwiches, cakes, hot showers, large changing room, plenty of loos, plenty of masseurs. The organisers were very friendly and helpful and created a really lovely event. Swimming in Bassenthwaite was a pleasure.  Although Chris isn’t converted to open water tri’s yet, I think this one is definitely one we will be doing annually unless our summer holidays happen to clash with it. It would make a fantastic club trip out. We hope to see lots of Ponteland Tri there next year. Oh and did I mention the brutal hill?

Results below…

Ponteland tri at TRI Ponteland Triathlon Sun 7th Aug

Total Racing Internation run the triathlon with which we share a name, so it’s no surprise that with it being local we have a good attendance at the event. It was great to see a couple of club members picking this as their first triathlon and really enjoying the event and the opportunity to compete alongside many of the experienced club triathletes.

Sunday 7th August was windy, so not the best day to be racing out on the bike leg of a triathlon up Limestone Lane.  This didn’t deter the 17 Ponteland Tri members who all participated despite the conditions.  We heard on the day that the percentage of participants who didn’t turn up was much higher than normal, which must have been due to the wind. Apologies to Tony and Rob who we couldn’t find for the team photo opportunity at the end. Special mention to Elaine Stroud and John McGargill, with ladies vets 2nd place and male supervets 2nd place. It is a surprise to see how strong the male vets field is now with Mark Turnbull coming 8th overall and 5th in the Vets. You’d expect 8th overall to win a vets prize but triathlon is very highly contested in the vets/supervets categories.

Results below, although I am missing Rob’s results as couldn’t see them on Resultsbase.

 

Ponteland Tri – Go Tri #3 Wed 3rd August

Great to see 13 club members enjoying the Go-Tri last night, despite the rain and wind.  Well done to all, great mix of experienced triathletes and beginners and everyone looked to have fun. Transition was a touch crowded with 64 participants but the smooth organisation of our volunteer marshalls in the pool soon had the event underway. At one point we had swimmers and bikes arriving in transition, whilst bikes and runners were leaving. The marshalling between the transition and the car park was a little hectic for a short period. Classic error of the day was one of our own Ponteland Tri members about to run out of transition with his bike but without any shoes on. He’d put his towel over his bike shoes to ensure they didn’t get wet and then forgot them.  A friendly shout from a marshall of “Shoes” helped him remember.  I’ll not embarrass Paul by naming him….

The weather was really badly timed producing some heavy rain whilst many were heading down the fast part of the bike leg from High Callerton, but everyone was considerate of the rain and we didn’t have any incidents.  The marshalls all seemed to enjoy the event as much as the participants so a great evening was had by all.

I hope everyone is back next year when we plan to run another set of Go-Tri’s using the same format and routes so you can compare results.

Below is a link to download excel spreadsheet of the results, including category positions.

Ponteland Tri Go-Tri #1 Wed 22nd June

The first Go-Tri in 2016 for Ponteland Tri went off really well. We had 49 entrants, although we only got 42 on the day due to late work committments, illnesses and injuries. The marshalling from the club volunteers was brilliant and the weather couldn’t have been better.

Great to see a nice mix from experienced triathletes to beginners all enjoying the event, and this year we had a very competitive team competition between some club member families, a re-match may be required once we see the results!!

Although a low cost Go-Tri we did manage to manually log T1 and T2 times to give the participants as much of the triathlon experience as we could. This along with having race numbers written on their arms worked well in giving the full “tri” experience.

Swimmers started at 30 second intervals in the pool and in no time we had swimmers along with people in transition and bikes flying out to the mount line. With the short distances in a go-tri the event is soon in full swing and then very quickly over.  Everyone seemed to really enjoy themselves and we will upload as many photos as we can to our facebook page so look there for additional photos.

Anyway, here are the results. Well done to all and hope to see you again on Wed July 13th.

All the best from Ponteland Tri Volunteers.

QE2 Triathlon – Saturday 18th July

In an attempt to complete five triathlons in five weeks, Mark Kelly attended the QE2 Triathlon at Woodhorn Museum with Andrew Gowens and Kelly Hymer being the other representatives of Ponteland Tri. It did take a bit of cajoling from Tina when Mark got up at 6AM to be confronted by rain and high winds. The weather did improve dramatically on the short drive to Ashington and the lake was like a hot bath in comparison to the sea swim training the Kelly’s have undertaken at Tynemouth. The race was in two waves with the men being set of first, closely followed by the ladies 5 minutes later. Overall it was a very nice race (if a bit longer than the usual sprints at 750m swim, 24km ride and 6.4km run), the swim was straight forward, the bike was scenic if a bit windy and the run twice round the lake was again very scenic. Next up is the Castles Tri at Bambourgh Castle with several Ponteland Tri members intending to compete this Saturday 25th July.

Results as follows