What’s the biggest ordeal you’ve had to face in these 12 years of competing and how did you handle it?
Every year we’ve had something or other go wrong (falls, breakdowns, tummy upsets, going off-route and getting lost in the desert, etc.) But the worst was last year when at the start of the fifth stage I started losing air from one tyre. This was at around 16 or 17 kilometres of the 145 we had to do. It was the first of many punctures I had that day: the inner tube I’d installed didn’t last more than 15 or 20 km. I was pumping up the tyre to try to get to the second feed station (70 kilometres along the route) where there was a repair site. It was a nightmare getting there, having to stop and pump the tyre every five minutes. My legs and head weren’t working properly. I finally got to the feed station, took the wheel off and the tyre was full of thorns. I pull them out, put a new inner tube on and there was an immediate hissing sound. As fast as I would inflate it the tyre would deflate, and my spirits along with it. I couldn’t carry on. Getting there had taken it out of me and I was exhausted. I didn’t have any more inner tubes on me, not to mention a new tyre. I couldn’t get any help so I sat down in the shade, wolfed down a sandwich I’d made in the morning and just lay there for a while. I was so tired I fell asleep and was snoring away in the shade. Meanwhile the other cyclists were filing past and there were only the stragglers left to go.
It was about two hours later when a group that had got lost turned up, including ironman and adventurer Valentí Sanjuan. That really brought it home….what on earth was I doing there just lying around? Why’d I thrown the towel in so soon instead of fighting to the end? But what could I do? While all that was going through my mind the group left and another cyclist turned up who was also exhausted and ready to give up on the whole thing. I asked him whether he had any spare inner tubes and he gave me one. He was physically exhausted, while I had mechanical problems. So we got on our bikes and started to ride. Unfortunately that inner tube didn’t last long, either, and I had to stop every 10 or 15 km to pump up the tyre. The headwind didn’t help. But the further we went the stronger I felt. There were about 30 km to go, my colleague had had it and my tyre was about to give out. I needed a new inner tube or I was done for. My colleague didn’t have any left and we didn’t know whether there were any other people behind us. Time was running out. So I had to take the wheel off again, find the holes and patch them up.
Luckily, the conditions changed: the wind was in our favour and it was also all downhill. My spirits and energy were rising. The tyre was giving me grief again but under those conditions I only had to pump it up another eight or 10 times. In the end we crossed the finishing line in 11 hours and 20 minutes, with 40 minutes to go. I’d done it! There was just one short stage left before I could say I’d finished another competition. It was a great feeling to have pulled it off and finished the race, it was a real physical and mental boost. Every year I come back with renewed energy.