Morgan's view from the crew
Thanks for writing this Morgan and for taking such amazing photos!
Sometimes one feels the  pull to burn through the fabric of everyday life into the deeper, visceral  reality concealed below. A few days ago, a group of four of us experienced  just that.  
The  Furnace Creek 508, a  ultradistance cycle race through the Californian desert, has become  somewhat a legend, and more recently a fixture, amongst our group of  friends. The route describes an inverted “V”, starting in the south-west  just above Los Angeles, wending through the desert to it's most northerly  point around Townes Pass into Death Valley, then heading south to Twentynine  Palms near Joshua Tree National Park. Prior to this year, two of us  had ridden the full 508 miles ride solo, four had ridden it as a relay  team together, and one was forced to abandon a solo attempt due to a  knee injury.
This year it was long-time  friend Matt's turn. This journey through the desert is to be completed  over two days and two nights; three of us would be there to travel with  him, providing sustenance and support. Setting off just after sunrise,  Matt climbed in the midst of a caravan of cyclists through the southern  Californian mountains into the clouds. Thick damp fog made it hard for  us to see him approaching as we stood waiting to pass off bottles of  water, peeled bananas and energy bars.
Gusting winds encouraged  us through the desert, past dry salt lakes, disused airplanes, huge  wind turbines, endless straight roads and expansive desert planes. Distant  glimpses of the high Sierra Nevada in the distance excited.
As the sun set, the climb  up the mythical Townes Pass was surrounded by raw blue skies and long  shadows. Townes Pass is the gateway to death valley, and it was there  that one of the three-strong support crew succumbed to travel sickness  and, after almost three hours of nausea and vomiting, was forced to  abandon ship for the night. He hitched a ride with race staff at an  oasis of light in the depths of the darkness of the valley, Furnace  Creek.
The night's journey truly  began shortly afterwards. Now there were only three of us. At night,  the race rules direct support crews to follow immediately behind their  riders, illuminating the way with their car headlights and shielding  the rider from any oncoming traffic in the desert. The two of us in  the car where in a hypnotic, focused world of admiration and logistics;  Matt was meanwhile cycling in a world of suffering, yearning and anticipation.  At least that's how it seemed -  our worlds only touched occasionally,  and briefly.  
Those worlds dissipated  with the sunrise. We stopped briefly for Matt to sleep for fifteen minutes;  I'd slept sporadically throughout the night so stayed awake to watch  the sunrise. Fifteen minutes was quickly over. We were back in southern  California and heading towards Baker where the route crosses the I-15  between Los Angeles to Las Vegas.
The second day saw Matt  trawling through darker times. Endless, horizonless climbs past lava  flows and cinder cones with a scorching sun above took it's toll, exacerbated  by an injury and an otherworldly, sleep-deprived state. We stopped to  cool Matt and to talk to him once, but for the most part Matt pressed  on doggedly.
The final climb was shorter  than we'd all remembered it and we saw Matt power up the hill. Curiously,  this had been a pattern over that second day: renewed energy when confronted  with a challenge. Matt maintained this energy through the final near-suburban  desert stretch into Twentynine Palms, city of murals and naval hairdressers.
 
A few days later, thinking back, I recall how the night made my thoughts coherent, and brought to mind the final sentences of Albert Camus' The Myth of Sisyphus. “The struggle itself towards the heights is enough to fill a man's heart”, writes Camus. “One must imagine Sisyphus happy.”






 
2 comments:
What a great quote to end that with - I haven't thought about that Camus piece in a long while, but it seems one of the perfect ways to articulate why people ride. I don't ride long distances - mostly just commuting - but there's something common to both, I think, in that embrace of a challenge, the strength that comes from that. Thanks for the reminder.
wow that sounds amazing!
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