Humbled... and grateful. That is how I feel right now. Because I know I could never have gotten here without the support of the people in my life… my devoted husband, also my biggest cheerleader … my family and friends … my employer, FRIM, who accommodated for my illness… and my God.
Pre-Race Prep
For months I had been slowly tapering my medications under my doctor’s supervision, while preparing for the race. When I first started training I was very weak but I faithfully put in time on my elliptical machine every evening after work, increasing from 10 minutes to an hour a day, over two months. After I signed up for the race, I started training in earnest. The week before, I had successfully completed the Hoohathlon distances: 150 m swim in my apartment pool, 10 km bike and 5 km run at the scenic Kepong Botanical Gardens in FRIM. Unfortunately, I relapsed from food poisoning two days before the race. I wasn’t sure if I should/could/would do the race at all.
Race Day
I woke up 5.30 am, felt 'okay' (as much as a relapsing person with protein and blood in the pee could feel, which in the early stages
is ‘okay’), and decided to go for it. My body was still strong from the training prior, and I would be able to complete the race at a slow pace. Plus, I reminded myself, the Hoohathlon isn’t even a ‘Race’. It is a fun, non-competitive, family and friends event. (Except in my case, none of my friends or family could be persuaded to join me, for various lame excuses offered, so I was going solo this time. My hubs would have raced with me, but he’s in the USA right now). After a quick breakfast, I began the hour-long drive to the Putra Jaya Water Sports Complex where the race would be held.
Transition Set Up
I collected my race kit (chockful with swag worth more than RM200 thanks to sponsors Brooks, Tyr, etc), put my bike together, gathered my things and toddled over to the transition area to deposit my bike and race gear. The transition area was very well organized, with large signs indicating where racers should ‘Bike Out’ (after the swim), ‘Bike In’ and ‘Run Out’ (after the ride). A reassuring-looking barricade encircled the entire transition area and race staff were posted to make sure nobody walked away with any of the nice (pricey) bikes already racked there. There was probably about RM0.5 million worth of carbon-steel–titanium alloys and rubber racked there, including some sweet racing road bikes. My el-cheapo (in comparison) mountain bike (my hubs built from scratch from E-bay parts) had freshly installed road-slicks and held its own (in my extremely biased opinion anyways) against these wheeled stallions.
Prepping at the Transition Area (Pic courtesy of Tey Eng Tiong.) |
Pre-race briefing. That's me in the blue top and black tri bottoms! (Pic courtesy of HooHa.Asia) |
The race briefing was short and to the point. We were to step on a mat before the swim, and after, so that the timing chip would record our swim times, and continue mat-stepping after each leg of the race. One useful result would be me knowing how long I took prettying up in the transition area between legs, and oh yes, my overall race time.
The Swim
The SuperMen (ages 19 to 39) were flagged off first at 8 am, followed at 8.10 am by the Wonder Women (19 to 39), Cat Women (>40 yrs) and Zorro males (>40). |
GO! The SuperMen get off to a swimming start! (Pic courtesy of HooHa.Asia) |
Enjoying the mini-spa rainshower experience after the swim leg (Pic courtesy of Tey Eng Tiong.) |
There weren’t many bikes left in the transition area, so it was easy finding my bike. I put on my glasses (blind as a bat without them), pulled on my bike shirt. Then I sat down on my towel and dried my feet before wearing my socks and shoes. Last on were my helmet and gloves and I was off! There was a drink station at transition but I had a water bottle on my bike so I skipped that.
'Go Girl'! At the start of the bike leg. (Pic courtesy of Tey Eng Tiong) |
The 10.6 km route was well marked, with marshalls at every intersection waving in friendly greeting. I cycled along at a leisurely pace. Sunday traffic was light and it was nice to not have to inhale much car exhaust. A bunch of racers passed me, including (I think) the young man who had trouble in the swim earlier. I was glad to see that he got through the swim OK. I could see the advantage of having a proper road bike – the racers who passed me were doing one cycle stroke for every three cycle strokes that I did. I kept my cadence at about 90 rpm. I only felt nervous once when a big bus came within a foot of me but held the bike steady. I am actually afraid of cycling - a throwback to past bike accidents and egg-shell bones/osteoporosis due to my meds' side-effects. My legs felt fresh at the end of that nice ride!
Bike-Run Transition
Shouts of ‘Dismount!!’ and ‘Get off your bike!!’ shook me from my happy reverie. After a brief moment of disorientation, I remembered that I had to click out of my eggbeater pedals or risk falling over in an ungraceful heap with my feet still stuck on the pedals. I ran my bike over to my spot and racked it. That I was among the last to get back was evident, because the racks were all full! I sat down on my towel and switched out to my running flats, took off my helmet and gloves, grabbed my bottle and cap and was off!
The Run
The 5 km run was along the Lake and what a beautiful run it was. It started from the transition area, 2.5 km to a dam overlooking the entire lake (spectacular views), then 2.5 km back to the Finish. I started at a slow jog, and increased my pace as I felt my running legs activate. I was glad I had my ‘Go Girl!’ shirt on, because almost everyone I passed yelled ‘Go Girl!’, probably in automatic response to reading off my shirt! It was all good and I had a huge grin plastered to my face the entire time. By that time the sun was out and families were picnicking around the lakeside. The Lake is probably one of the best kept secrets in Putra Jaya – I had not even known about it! I sipped from my bottle and didn’t need to stop at the 2.5 km water station. It was wonderful running in my thin-soled rubber shoes. Without the thick cushion of normal jogging shoes, I automatically mid-foot strike instead of heel-strike, and it has helped with my knee problems (I have arthritis as a symptom of my illness). I can’t wait till I get the Vibram Five Fingers my hubs is sending for my birthday...
Then suddenly, I was at the finish line! Finish!!!
Post-Race
The awards ceremony came soon after the last racer crossed the finish. Everyone was in good spirits, cheering and clapping for the ‘unofficial’ winners of the respective categories. Since this was a fun (non-competitive) race, there were no official winners, but the top three finishers for each category got a moment of limelight up on the awards stage and were presented with winner’s wreaths. A young WonderWoman had one of the best times, finishing at 55 minutes and beating out most if not all of the other men (I think maybe she was a pro-triathlete?). I had a great time chatting with other racers after the awards ceremony, during the BBQ Feast. There was a huge spread, plenty of food to go around – barbeque lamb, chicken, satay, shrimp kebabs, fried rice and noodles, fresh cut fruit, ‘ice kacang’ for dessert. It was inspiring hanging out with all these young folk and listening to them talk about their marathoning and ultramarathoning experiences. Ultramarathon? Running 100 km is not for the faint-hearted. I sort of like that idea. Some day maybe…
End
I’ve written plenty of race reports for my hubs (read some here), but this is my first race report for me. I look forward to getting and staying completely better and doing a ‘real’ triathlon (sprint distance) as soon as I physically can. Thanks HooHa Asia for organizing this stellar event and you can count me in for next year!
Definitely check out the amazing photos (about 1000 of them) covering every moment of the race, at Tey Eng Tiong's Facebook albums. More pics at HooHa.Asia's Photo Gallery. Also check out the Pre-race Promo Video featuring En Ahmad Azuddin b Arshad, and more about the Hoohathlon (the race guide) at HooHa Asia's webby. And here are the HOOHATHLON RACE RESULTS !
A click on any ad will put a few cents in my pocket, from the advertisers. Thanks for supporting my blog!
xo Gracie
Cool lah Grace. I remember you smiling all the way. I thought I had a big smile but must learn from you. Thanks for the mention. Thank god I wasn't rambling on (like the way I'm rambling now)....
ReplyDeleteReza
Hey Reza! Thanks for dropping by! Your Hoohathlon posts are so inspiring! However, I think when it comes to rambling, I'm the Queen Ramblinger :). See you around and keep tri-ing!
ReplyDeleteGreat job Grace! So proud of you! I'll have your road bike ready for your next race... :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by Mr Clark! Well, I know you already have my road bike ready, but it's in the US right now.... So when you comin' over?
ReplyDeleteGrace. You are brilliant lah. You've made me more determined to master the swim. I had forgotten the joy of participating until I read your post. Your joy and enthusiasm is so infectious.
ReplyDeleteWill definitely take up your offer of the swim.......
Hey Reza! I've been enjoying your blog posts too! Email me when you wanna do laps at the Templer's Park spring-fed pool ok! If health permits, I'm going to sign up for the PD tri same as you, so a couple of sea swim sessions are a must for me also!
ReplyDeleteWell Done! Love the photo of you at the showers! Nice.
ReplyDeleteThanks Yoon! I'm so glad there was a photographer (Tey Eng Siong) who took all those photos of me. A picture says a thousand words.
ReplyDelete