Porkies XC
- erniebearskin
- Columnist
- Posts: 533
- Joined: Mon May 30, 2011 10:20 am
Porkies XC
Hello RMDRA'ers, I am planning on trying my first XC this weekend at Porkies. This will also be my first CMRC event, where can I get details, on sign in, directions, times etc.
Also would love to hear from fello racers on what to expect at this race technically, loops, fuelling etc etc. I completed two CMA Hare Scrambles last year and had a blast, looking forward to the challenge of a 100kM race! I am a novice racer and have entered 30B for CMRC
Thanks in advance.
Also would love to hear from fello racers on what to expect at this race technically, loops, fuelling etc etc. I completed two CMA Hare Scrambles last year and had a blast, looking forward to the challenge of a 100kM race! I am a novice racer and have entered 30B for CMRC
Thanks in advance.
Bikeless....
Re: Porkies XC
Being a rookie racer myself, I believe you can find most info on their webpage... (google CMRC)
Otherwise at the rider meeting you can probably get the info on loop length, gas stops, etc. I believe the 'Bergs have big tanks so you're better suited than those without. From what I heard Porkies appears to be one of the more fun races of the year.
I may be lining up beside you in the 30B class as well.
Otherwise at the rider meeting you can probably get the info on loop length, gas stops, etc. I believe the 'Bergs have big tanks so you're better suited than those without. From what I heard Porkies appears to be one of the more fun races of the year.
I may be lining up beside you in the 30B class as well.
- erniebearskin
- Columnist
- Posts: 533
- Joined: Mon May 30, 2011 10:20 am
Re: Porkies XC
Cool.
I'm on the website and cant find anything re directions, sign in times etc.
I'm on the website and cant find anything re directions, sign in times etc.
Bikeless....
Re: Porkies XC
If you go onto the Alberta Motorsports Association website you will find the info your looking for.
- erniebearskin
- Columnist
- Posts: 533
- Joined: Mon May 30, 2011 10:20 am
Re: Porkies XC
Wicked, thanks.
Anyone have any pointers for a rookie attempting his first xc? Other than bring lots of water and start hydrating the night before.
Anyone have any pointers for a rookie attempting his first xc? Other than bring lots of water and start hydrating the night before.
Bikeless....
Re: Porkies XC
erniebearskin wrote:Wicked, thanks.
Anyone have any pointers for a rookie attempting his first xc? Other than bring lots of water and start hydrating the night before.
Without being a seasoned racer, I could point out the obvious and say pace yourself. Plenty of guys can be fast, but being fast through all sections and without stopping will get you much, much further ahead. I'm sure you'll see guys who whip by you only to see them wrapped around a tree a few minutes later.
From the few races Ive done, keep an eye on the ribbons. I've made my fair share of wrong turns, or missed turns.
- Dakota_c69
- 2024 RMDRA Member
- Posts: 778
- Joined: Thu Feb 10, 2005 2:49 pm
- Location: Buying more Dilly Bars!
Re: Porkies XC
I really wanted to give this one a go with the new 450, but I am in the midst of a house move and will be packing furniture that weekend ... yay.
_______
Glenn.
2024 KTM 300 XC-W
2018 KTM 250 XC
"Never run out of real estate, traction & ideas at the same time"
Glenn.
2024 KTM 300 XC-W
2018 KTM 250 XC
"Never run out of real estate, traction & ideas at the same time"
- thirtyseven
- 2024 RMDRA Member
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- Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 3:59 pm
- Location: Cochrane
Re: Porkies XC
Ernie pacing yourself is the key. 100k through Alberta bush can be energy sapping. Ride at a pace that keeps you awake but always having a lot of "reserve". Part of the trick with long technical races is making sure you don't waste "stupid" energy. Having to pick up your bike up is dumb on a long race that challenges you. Having to heave your bike out of the bush is dumb on a long race.
In otherwords if you have any doubt about any section of trail, stop and think your way through it or around it. You will be much farther ahead if you clean stuff but only ride at 80% than if you ride at 100% but don't clean stuff.
XCs in Alberta is, in my opinion the purest form of motorcycle racing there is. It makes demands of your body, your bike, your skill, your psyche, but most of all your mind. Its a mixture of you against others with you against the world.
Have a great time
In otherwords if you have any doubt about any section of trail, stop and think your way through it or around it. You will be much farther ahead if you clean stuff but only ride at 80% than if you ride at 100% but don't clean stuff.
XCs in Alberta is, in my opinion the purest form of motorcycle racing there is. It makes demands of your body, your bike, your skill, your psyche, but most of all your mind. Its a mixture of you against others with you against the world.
Have a great time
PRESIDENT-YAMAHA ANONYMOUS
- axel99
- 2024 RMDRA Member
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- Joined: Fri May 26, 2006 9:06 am
- Location: Scouting 2017 Dirtier Moose
Re: Porkies XC
If you are first time XC racer, Its a long race so pace your self you are not going to win, you are going to have fun and feel good about finishing and getting a T-shirt. Start hydrating 5 days before the race and pack a energy bar and eat it at the gas stop.
#Z3B
Re: Porkies XC
Anyone seen the updated forecast ?? Bring the roll offs... Will make for a long 100 K !!!
- malcolmzilla
- 2024 RMDRA Member
- Posts: 879
- Joined: Fri Jun 26, 2009 11:14 am
Re: Porkies XC
Rookie, 2 races last year here, missing out on this one due to a separated AC.
Ride at 80%, try to get the best start you can, passing in the tight later can be tough, lots of water, and the ability to repair a flat tire!
Good luck.
Ride at 80%, try to get the best start you can, passing in the tight later can be tough, lots of water, and the ability to repair a flat tire!
Good luck.
Re: Porkies XC
As has been said, find a comfortable pace and stick with it. Enjoy the day. I think my experiences with this race illustrate the importance of this mindset.
1st year (my first real race)-Got a good start and took off like a banshee. At bottlenecks (inevitable) I had no patience and made my own line. This didn't work as I ended up off course and back at the start after 1/2hr, effectively making me last overall by about 1/2hr. Went back out like a banshee, crashing, gettting stuck and going off course. Didn't make the cut off for the second loop, was dead tired and really didn't enjoy myself.
2nd year-Got a good start and took off like a banshee. Learned my lesson on the bottlenecks and waited (sort of-sorry again Hendrix13). But once I was clear of bottlenecks it was banshee mode again. Spent the day crashing, getting stuck and going off course. Made the cutoff for the second loop, but didn't go out because I was groggy and dead tired. Really didn't enjoy my ride again.
3rd year-Got a crappy start and went into banshee mode to make up for it. A few minutes in, trying to make an impatient pass I rode into a barbed wire fence. Spent 15min digging wire out of my wheels and gathering myself. At this point being last overall for the 2nd time in 3yrs, I gave up on racing and decided to go for a nice long trail ride by myself. Guess what happened, I stayed mostly on course, kept it mostly on two wheels, didn't get stuck and finished both loops. At the finish, I had a ton of energy left and found out I was 3rd in my class after having thoroughly enjoyed my ride.
1st year (my first real race)-Got a good start and took off like a banshee. At bottlenecks (inevitable) I had no patience and made my own line. This didn't work as I ended up off course and back at the start after 1/2hr, effectively making me last overall by about 1/2hr. Went back out like a banshee, crashing, gettting stuck and going off course. Didn't make the cut off for the second loop, was dead tired and really didn't enjoy myself.
2nd year-Got a good start and took off like a banshee. Learned my lesson on the bottlenecks and waited (sort of-sorry again Hendrix13). But once I was clear of bottlenecks it was banshee mode again. Spent the day crashing, getting stuck and going off course. Made the cutoff for the second loop, but didn't go out because I was groggy and dead tired. Really didn't enjoy my ride again.
3rd year-Got a crappy start and went into banshee mode to make up for it. A few minutes in, trying to make an impatient pass I rode into a barbed wire fence. Spent 15min digging wire out of my wheels and gathering myself. At this point being last overall for the 2nd time in 3yrs, I gave up on racing and decided to go for a nice long trail ride by myself. Guess what happened, I stayed mostly on course, kept it mostly on two wheels, didn't get stuck and finished both loops. At the finish, I had a ton of energy left and found out I was 3rd in my class after having thoroughly enjoyed my ride.
Scott
Apprentice Court Jester
2017 450XC-F
2015 450XC-F
2013 450XC-F
Apprentice Court Jester
2017 450XC-F
2015 450XC-F
2013 450XC-F
Re: Porkies XC
If it's wet, expect a different race for Porkies ( different soil type and really greasy when raining). Also, the Porkies area has many, many, many trails, that will cross the actual race loop. Pay very close attention to the ribbons. Just about everybody I know that has raced Porkies has lost the race course at one time or another. It's easy to do there, if you are in a class that starts further back it can be tough as the pros and faster guys often shred ribbons off the trees ( cause they are going so fast ). So it gets tricky to stay on the actual loop. It's part of racing. The Porkies area is fantastic and always a great race
996
Re: Porkies XC
That was a great ride last year Scott! I've got some sweet helmet cam footage of you hung up in that fence.350scott wrote:
3rd year-Got a crappy start and went into banshee mode to make up for it. A few minutes in, trying to make an impatient pass I rode into a barbed wire fence. Spent 15min digging wire out of my wheels and gathering myself. At this point being last overall for the 2nd time in 3yrs, I gave up on racing and decided to go for a nice long trail ride by myself. Guess what happened, I stayed mostly on course, kept it mostly on two wheels, didn't get stuck and finished both loops. At the finish, I had a ton of energy left and found out I was 3rd in my class after having thoroughly enjoyed my ride.
I couldn't believe you got third after being that far back. You passed me like a banshee about 30 minutes later and must have kept that pace up the rest of the way. Thanks again for pushing me the last hundred yards to the finish line after I ran out of gas.
Let it rain, let it rain, let it rain....