Thursday, 20 March 2014

Chapter 6 - Triathlon Training Camp Part 2 - Happy Campers

The TriCamp fellow guests.....


To say I was nervous about meeting the other TriCampers would be an understatement. I was worried I was going to let them down and they would be continually waiting for the crying fuckwit to catch up. Would they be so dull that I would be retiring to bed early every night just to get away from them? Would they see through my shiny new TriBag (only available in green) and my Garmin watch always "Searching for Satellite" signal? I had deliberated at the airport whether to ditch the Grazia magazine I'd bought as reading matter, thinking I would appear too frivolous and not like minded.(I should have brought it along) .Trouble is I've watched too many Big Brother episodes and I know that by "Dey 3 in the big broother hoose" the housemates all start fighting and crying in the diary room.
Essential Nutrition and Motivational Reading at Airport

Every Demographic Represented.

Week 1 TriCampers in the Snug
When I worked in the marketing department for Brighton Council we were very PC, we were continually producing information leaflets with people featured on the front cover that didn't alienate any demographic of the population and basically covered all bases. The group at TriCamp could have featured on the front cover of one of these environmental services leaflets we were all ages - me being the 45 year old housewife.  Check.


Careless Talk.

And a lovelier group of people you couldn't wish to meet. All of them. You think I'm just saying that - yes I am, there's always one. So here are some edited comic moments with the group ....


Some people get up your nose
One slight faux pas on my part on the very first night ably assisted by fellow camper Simon. My close friends know I'm not one for putting my foot in it - ahem much!. If there is something I shouldn't mention I will come out and say it. Not maliciously but my brain just freezes and out it blurts. I have over shared on many an occasion. So Simon and I were discussing my recent visit to Paris where I commented on the number of Russians over there. Simon looked around the table "No Russians here I presume?" - No we both agreed. And then I proceeded to tell the story about the Russian woman who kept staring at me in a restaurant in Paris rather unnervingly and we commented on their lack of personal awareness and their exuberant fashion sense. Simon equally had tales to tell.  When we had quite finished - Coach Nick casually turned to one of the other TriCamp guests further down the table and said..... "So Artem do you get to train much in Moscow?" Gulp! Simon and I exchanged sheepish glances. Shut Up Catherine. Luckily Artem's command of English was limited.  I made it up to him later in the week when I very helpfully located the thermostat in the house for him.....he actually wanted a thermometer - we won't ask where he was going to stick it! I didn't hang around to find out.


My Roomie.


Pollenca Steps 365 of them 
Catherine "I'm not running up there!" 




And so while I had been slightly unnerved by the Chris Hoy autobiography left on the bed of my room mate. Little Scottish Katrina was also lovely.  A fell runner who considered TriCamp to be a holiday! but then she is a nurse by day so maybe that puts that into perspective. I should have known her profession her bed was always beautifully turned down in the morning. A strip of a girl who looked like there was nothing to her but she made everything look so effortless as she glided by on her bike, or ran past you up a hill - barely breaking a sweat. And the fastest person to have been recorded by TriCamp to run up Pollenca steps all 365 of them. And that was AFTER we had done running drills and hill reps! They had obviously matched room mates by selecting athletes of equal calibre - cough cough! 


Triathletes Knit = Fact

I had joked with my Yarn Birds Knitting Group Twickenham branch (selection of snoods and scarves available on request) that I should take my knitting with me in case I got bored.  Yeah that would go down well at Tricamp! Ha Ha we laughed.  But who'd have thought I'd meet an Ironman knitter, lets call him Steve, who before long I was comparing knitting projects with? Who said Ironmen don't knit. Oooo I feel a T-shirt coming on. Introducing Patience the Cat. So cute. 

Patience the Cat Knitted by Steve

Facebook friend request - Confirm or Not Now!

Clare, Stephanie and Charlie had all known each other a while and their mums were neighbours. In fact at times it felt like their mums had come on TriCamp too. Particularly one night when Charlie and Stephanie's mum decided to send Facebook Friend Requests to various members of TriCamp much to their mortification. Various shouts in the sitting room of  "Who is this Jan woman?" ..... Stephanie and Charlie "Oh No that's our mum just ignore her!".
The Puppy.
Mrs Robinson

And then there was Ali the handsome 20 year old medical student - who we nicknamed the Puppy, very enthusiastic. Who rather unnervingly used to refer to me as "The hot mama" as he followed me up the stairs! Made me feel good so I'll be taking that as a compliment thank you. And I wasn't even wearing my wetsuit with high heels at the time.
The Slipper Competition.
Some winning slippers...

Some NOT so winning slippers!
Lots of bitching about dried out felt pens and smudgy glittery sticks. I'm sorry Steve your map of the island was a great idea but it left a lot to be desired in the execution and it's no use moaning about smudgy pens.  One sole read "Camp" with lots of gold glitter - we both agreed that it summed everything up perfectly. And whilst everyone made a great effort, they didn't know who they were messing with.  I won the slipper competition.  Did I mention I won ?!! I had at last come first in something at Triathlon camp! Mmmmmm.


Top Triathlon tip:- be prepared always take a sewing machine to Triathlon Training Camp.








So thank you to everyone who was there that week, you were all a great bunch of people, and I really enjoyed your company. Big shout out to all the TriCamp crew Nick (more of him in the next chapter), the shy and retiring Heather, who can be found at Pollenca Sunday Market selling slippers!, the lovely Mike, Claire, Steve and Lou the chef. Oh and good luck to the very lovely Faye who starts work with them this week. What a great bunch you make a wonderful team.


Good Luck in the new job Faye!
But I digress, back to the training..... 

Next Chapter:- Bastard Swimming, compression tights and don't go up Sa Calobra Catherine.

All content strictly copyright Catherine Jevans 2014.

Friday, 14 March 2014

Chapter 5 - Triathlon Training Camp Part 1. I fall in love.

Triatholon 220 Show

The Saturday before my training camp trip out to Mallorca with TriCamp the family and I go to The Triathlon Show at Sandown Park, porn for Triathletes. What is the first stand we see? TriCamp. They seem friendly enough I laugh and chatter nervously AT them, I think they think I'm a nutter, they may have been warned by Clare and Heather who took my booking. They thrust a free TriCamp water bottle at the children. Great now I have a memento that can permanently remind me of the hell in front of me.  The kids partake of all the free energy bar samples, as I know nothing of these nutritional aids I didn't realise they contain caffeine. The kids REALLY loved the Triathlon Show they were buzzing by the end of it and to be fair could probably have run home quite quickly! They didn't sleep much that night...ooooppps. 


There is caffeine in Energy Bars
2 sports bra's (much to my son's humilation), a box of "energy fuel" and a swanky new Triathlon bag with change mat and we're done. Not since NCT days (National Childbirth Trust for those who don't know) had I had a bag with a change mat. Hopefully it won't be needed for a similar purpose. Glossing over. I'm afraid I couldn't resist asking the Tri-Bag man if it came in other colours, as soon as the words came out of my mouth I regretted it. What an amateur. 



Tricks of the Trade - blending in

A few school boy errors have been pointed out to me during my training camp preparation.

1. Reflectors - Big No No.

Bike Bitch Pottsy comes around to take my pedals off and offers some words of advice.  "Get those reflectors off your wheels now, no respectable cyclist is seen dead with these on" he rips them off and chucks them in the bin. OK.

2. Garmin Watch

New watch with satellite & everything

Bike Bitch Pottsy gives me his old Garmin watch to time my running, mostly so I don't shock him with a 29min 10k run again. But also to blend in amongst the other athletes. The first time I take it out I return from a very fast 10k run only to stop the watch and the message "Locating Satellite!" to come up. It hadn't been switched on. So we'll never know if I beat Paula Radcliffe's record now. FYI I probably did.












3. Bike Helmet
Our friend Dave advises me to "Take THAT off" on seeing my bike helmet. 
Me "What the visor ?" 
Dave "Yes only mountain bikers wear those".
"Mountain Bikers" it would seem is a swear word in cycling circles. I hastily pop it off and shove it in my new backpack. See point 5.
Catch net made from tights?

4. Saddle Bags Rule#29
I am reliably informed by Dave that "Big Saddle Bags" (as in can fit a lipstick and 1 energy bar in) are purely for people going fishing for their fishing tackle. Another No No apparently, Rule#29 I believe.





5. Cycling Jerseys and Back Packs

I didn't have a cycling top with pockets in the back, so I took my new stringy back pack with me. It became known as my "comfort blanket" by the other TriCampers. And TriCamp Nick and Heather kept asking me every single bloody time we went on a bike ride  "What's in the back pack Catherine?" So to clarify:-  I have 2 children, I am used to carrying shit around for other people. Tissue's, Suncream, Snacks, Lipsalve. Sesame Bars. Phone. Oyster Card. Sunglasses. Purse. Autograph Book. Clean Pants. No spanners, no spare inner tubes, no puncture repair kit or anything remotely related to cycling accidents. I'm a girl, my theory is someone else will carry that shit and can assist a damsel in distress.  At 45 I may be pushing the batting of the eyelids technique somewhat and may have to actually rethink this strategy. 




I suspect the wearing of the back pack on every bike ride may also have been a loud and clear signal to other cyclists that I was a complete amateur. A bit like L plates for learner drivers. You spot them - you immediately tense and want to overtake at high speed forgetting all the rules of the highway code, and also the fact that you too were once a learner driver.  It might also explain why I was given such a wide bearth by all overtaking cyclists.

So far I'm blending in nicely ...... or am I ?
Essential triathlon items
bought at airport


Hi ho hi ho it's off to TriCamp Mallorca we go...

I now have all the relevant equipment to easily blend in with the other Triathletes (rather infers that I have completed a triathlon and done the 3 activities consecutively and simultaneously, which I haven't yet). I deliberated long and hard about my holiday book of choice - Bradley Wiggins autobiography?, Nick Dunn founder of TriCamp autobiography "I Dunn it My Way", slightly brown nosing. But settled for 12 Years a Slave - I reasoned whatever torture TriCamp was going to be it would pale into insignificance compared to the trials endured by Solomon Northup. 





Catherine looking years younger after TriCamp


Lots of well wishers before I set off.  And some not so pleasant remarks. Was I secretly off to have plastic surgery for a week? Harsh. At times liposuction has seemed a preferable option to what I was about to embark on. Many hurdles to overcome, .... Yes I am aware there are no hurdles in a triathlon. Sometimes I think I'd happily swap swimming for hurdles. So.......


The Bike Garage - Don't go up there Catherine!


I've never ridden a road bike before, so I'm slightly nervous and hoping for a test drive before the camp starts. Our friend Dave from Sunvelo arrives with my bike for the week, a lovely Ridley Orion. But it seems that the seat is not low enough for me, so very technically Dave has to go away with the post to saw it off with a hack saw. It seems a hack saw was not any of the other Tricampers “favourite tools” either. He must be cursing me he has a busy week. He arrives later with a smaller framed bike, a comfy saddle, a saddle bag and some digital display thingy-me-jig. Having failed with the Garmin watch I can't begin to start working out what that thing does. I don't even know how to work the bloody brakes at this stage.


As everyone in the bike garage is reassembling their bikes with their "favourite tools", Dave is teaching me about the gears. And the big cog and little cog, cassette, reel, derailer - FUCK FUCK FUCK! A few sideways glances in my direction, as it becomes blatantly obvious what my precise level of road cycling experience is. I think the coaches were also beginning to realise they had a fuckwit on their hands. Whilst my fellow Tricampers were making a mental note to avoid me at all costs.



Think Dave's regretting helping me out too. Not only am I of hobbit like proportions apparently but he also seems to think I may have one leg longer than the other - yeah very funny I'd be limping surely. Casually Dave asks Mike one of the Tricamp coaches where he'll be taking us on our bike rides. "Sa Calobra" says Mike. Dave's eyes nearly pop out of his head and he whispers to me "When they go on THAT ride, don't go up there. No I mean it don’t go". Thanks for that comforting advice - I just want to be able to use the damn bike let alone take it anywhere scary.  Dave goes off into the night - chuckling to himself and giving Mike a look that says "Good Luck with her - you'll need it".

It's like riding a bike



I am feeling very apprehensive now as I haven't actually ridden my sexy road bike yet.  The 16 of us gather around for our first team briefing.  
Nick head coach "We'll be going on a 50k bike ride tomorrow - anyone not ridden in a group before?".  There are 3 things in this statement that scare the shit out of me 1) Bike ride 2) 50k 3) Group. One hand goes up, yes it's mine, I look around hopefully for another amateur - "That'll be me then" I say. My fellow Tricampers make their second mental note of the evening to avoid the fuckwit. Nick "Anyone not ridden up a mountain before?" ...reassuringly a few more hands go up.  I don't sleep very well the first night.

In the morning my first outing on the road bike is off to the local swimming pool in Puerto Pollenca a mere 5km bike ride to get there. Never has a 5km bike ride filled me with such terror let alone 50km. TriCamp Mike says we'll be riding in pairs keep tight and ride up close to the person in fronts tyres. Fuck That! I have not a clue how the braking and gearing system works I am not about to crash into the person in front of me. Like a learner driver I may need to do an emergency stop at any given moment. Cleats ? they are now the least of my worries. There becomes a big gap in our "Cycling Group" where I am avoiding the people at the front and the people at the back are avoiding me. Although there are 16 of us - an even number suitable for dividing into pairs I believe, I can't help but notice I don't seem to be in a pair! 


Liza Minnelli a keen cyclist


We use a secret code of hand signals not covered by Cycling Proficiency circa 1978. Car Back, Car Front, slowing etc I thought I was doing beautifully until fellow Tricamper IronMan Steve mentions 3 days later that my signals always looked like jazz hands! I'm sure Liza Minnelli was a very good road cyclist in her day - thank you very much.




As we approach the first roundabout - the group at the front starts the chant "Slowing Down" "Slowing Down" "Slowing Down".  Panic sets in as I try to brake - "My brakes don't work" I squawk "My brakes don't work" - Oh there they are "Yes they do, Yes they do". Phew I think I'm really getting the hang of this now.


First ever 50k Bike Ride Ever - did I mention ever?


The words "Let's cycle up to the garage and back" may not sound like much, but never has a ride up to the garage to get a pint of milk been such hard work. Several things become apparent to me on this little day trip to the garage. A lot of people talking about nutrition some more annoyingly than others. I'd stuffed some silver foiled bars in my trusty backpack, no idea when to use them or how.  And it's a good job because I can't actually physically ride a bike, unzip my jacket pocket, and unwrap the damn things.  I think on this first ride, I managed to unwrap a small complimentary boiled sweet, whilst riding one handed. The other bars were in my "comfort blanket" back pack which without stopping I couldn't actually get to. Lesson learned I need a cycling top.

And dehydration - think I may have been on the verge of it several times. My tongue did stick to the roof of my mouth on occasions but I was pretty determined not to stop.  My lovely water bottle in it's cage (technical term), was just in arms reach.....if I could physically reach down. But that would mean taking my eyes off the road, rendering my arms redundant for jazz hands for deadly pot holes and dead crows. The act of tipping water into one's mouth was not a manoeuvre covered in my Cycling Proficiency Test circa 1982.
At THE garage all bike rides lead to THE garage!

But I made it to the garage and in a respectable time and I became in tune with the gears - after several people got fed up with the crunching sound and pointed out what I should be doing. And then something magic happened, I went down a hill and fell in love.  The feeling of coming down that hill, on a beautiful bike, with the view and the speed, and my trusty comfort blanket on my back - was pure magic.  I got it - I understood what all those middle aged men had been getting excited about.  It was a fantastic feeling. And it made me realise.....Yes......I have to confess.....I want.... no need....a road bike.


So I had survived Day 1 !!!- what other revelations were in store for me that hadn’t been covered by my Cycling Proficiency test circa 1992…..I’m a lot younger than you think you know especially after the plastic surgery.



Next Chapter….Sa Calobra, Gay Knitters, Slippers and Doggy Paddle.

All content strictly copyright Catherine Jevans 2014.