The Art of Luxury Issue 37 2019 | Page 35

AUTOMOTIVE Many of you will have visited a circuit to experience a supercar track day - perhaps you may have left feeling like you didn’t necessarily learn a great deal. The cost of going wide can be catastrophic and the instructors know this and therefore encourage restraint, and rightly so. At the Ice Academy however, this isn’t the case. Although it’s not encouraged to leave the circuit, you couldn’t help but feel that due to the relatively small risk involved with going wide on a corner, it allowed you to push your own ability and gain confidence in a way that track driving just simply doesn’t allow. At sundown, we headed back to the hotel where JLR had their very own exclusive tepee lounge. Inside was a warm cosy fire, great company and a full evening of sharing stories, photos and reminiscing on the day gone by - not to mention bet placing on who would be the first to require the assistance of a recovery vehicle the following day. Still slightly unsure about our new-found skills, I awoke to find myself praying that whilst asleep my brain had hurriedly built new synapses to better make sense of the sensory onslaught that is becoming the new normal. Our first session was on the large circle, a perfect circle 400 meters in diameter, which was designed to easily throw the car into a drift at speed and then sustain it, lap after lap after lap. Enter the Jaguar F Type. The spiritual successor of the E-Type. This was the moment we had been waiting for. The rest of the day was a blur of speed, snow smoke and laughter while we experienced the full range of tracks and circuits available to us. Upon uploading content from this experience to various social media outlets, someone asked me “are you James Bond?”. I certainly felt like him. The F-Type was a different beast all together, with it being rear wheel drive, the importance of the throttle became all too clear. The balance between sustaining a drift and performing a pirouette as you spin on exit was a tricky thing to dial in. The slightest increase in power would only serve to remind you to stop being greedy. Smooth is slow, and slow is fast. Issue 37 2019 The Art of Luxury 35