WLM WLM Fall 2014 | Page 31

WLM of drafting), and Marina and I watched her bounce her right hip and elbow off the road. Calmly, she stood up and pulled the med kit out of her pack. I felt my eyes widen when I saw the chunk of Karla’s elbow that was no longer there. Patiently, she rinsed her own wound, cleaned it, and wrapped it. We quietly re-mounted our bikes, our arrival in Riverton more pressing now. points (“When I worked here ….”) along the shore. We were almost to camp at the north end of Boysen when the infamous Wyoming wind kicked up, pushing us to the east shore we had been paralleling. We fought until the wind and waves beached us rather rudely right next to a family’s camper. They welcomed us into their backyard with offers of Gatorade and beer while we regrouped. Upon reaching town, we learned the medical team had already moved to the next checkpoint at the southern end of Boysen Reservoir. Karla’s steadfast focus and reassurance in response our concern moved us to toss our tomahawks (a skill we weren’t surprised to learn Shad had honed in his youth) and bike on. We caught up with the med team at the reservoir, and they cleaned and assessed our stoic team member’s elbow carefully, methodically. We waited anxiously. “Our race is over,” I thought, and it echoed with an almost silent, embarrassing, sense of relief. Shad had told us repeatedly since the wreck that Karla was tough, that she wouldn’t be stopped by this, that he’d seen her bounce back before. He was right. She decided to go the ER in Riverton for sutures and meet us at the end-of-day checkpoint. Though our finish would be unofficial as a result, it would be at the finish line, not here. Karla loaded into a car and we hefted two canoes to the shore. For 18 miles, Shad paddled his canoe solo, not only keeping pace with the canoe Marina and I shared, but also finding check- That familiar Wyoming hospitality negated the impact of the hostile Wyoming wind We clambered back into the canoes, this time paddling straight into the wind with a plan. As we slipped through the water, bouncing over waves, an optimistic smile made its way across my face. My eyes drifted up from the water directly ahead to the sky. Gold began to paint the heavens, then the water directly in front of us, and the molten lava of the sun started to melt behind the mountain. Calm washed over me even as the waves washed over the bow and onto my toes. The three of us had come together as a team, and our fourth would surely be waiting on the beach. We turned to the right and let the wind push us to her. | adventure Karla was indeed waiting for us, the embodiment of “cowboy tough.” We even set out to retrieve a few optional checkpoints but found the emotional drain of the day proved quicksand to our decision making and opted for a few more hours of sleep instead. Sleep on an adventure race isn’t sound. It may be deep, it may come quickly, but it is interrupted as racers arrive, set up their sleeping bags, and stuff dinner into their tired faces under the guiding glare of headlamps. It’s disrupted by thoughts like “is the wind blowing my hat away or just drying it out?” It’s cut short by an alarm set for 5 a.m., then one set for 5:02, but not before your competitors’ alarms start going off. We left camp at our familiar “trot” down Wind River Canyon to the rafts that awaited us. I had only ever driven Wind River Canyon between Shoshoni and Thermopolis. It’s always a pull between taking in as many of the striking views as possible and focusing on staying on my side of the yellow line. That morning’s float down the river left me torn between watching the paddle in front of me to stay in sync and taking in this intimate perspective of the colorful canyon. A few hours later, we disembarked from our raft to transition back to those bikes. Marina had borrowed, at the last minute, Shad’s wife’s bike; I had borrowed, not-so-last-minute, Karla’s old bike. We got very familiar with these foster bikes over the 90 sweeping miles between us and our sleeping bags. The ride started in red dirt sprouting purple thistles as tall as me and bright green grasses. As we rolled east toward Lysite, the terrain got more brown, the www.wyolifestyle.com 31