Photo by John Tonin
THE FIRST WOMEN鈥橲 C2 - Momentary Lapse of Reason are the first women鈥檚 tandem canoe to reach Carmacks on Thursday.
Photo by John Tonin
THE FIRST WOMEN鈥橲 C2 - Momentary Lapse of Reason are the first women鈥檚 tandem canoe to reach Carmacks on Thursday.
Photo by John Tonin
THE FIRST TO ARRIVE - Team #wepaddletogether ease into the dock at the Carmacks checkpoint on Thursday. They were the first team to arrive after a windy paddle across Lake Laberge.
All was calm on the water as time ticked away toward 8 a.m. Thursday.
CARMACKS 鈥 All was calm on the water as time ticked away toward 8 a.m. Thursday. The sun glimmered off the water, and rumblings began that the first Yukon River Quest boat was due to reach the Carmacks checkpoint.
The checkpoint marks the place where the paddlers must take a mandatory seven-hour break before continuing on to Dawson City. Carmacks sits just under halfway.
The River Quest volunteers began to gather on the dock where the boats get pulled out of the water. The shoreline at the Coal Mine Campground began to fill with handlers and fans of the race. The first boat was near.
Then, from around a bend in the river they, the men鈥檚 tandem canoe team, #wepaddletogher, became visible paddling strong toward the flag that marked their time.
Ivan English and Mark Vincent, both from Saskatchewan, were pulled to the dock by the volunteers. Their legs were shaky after a long paddle which had begun at noon Wednesday from Rotary Peace Park in Whitehorse.
Lake Laberge, which had been calm during the early afternoon, was hit by a thunderstorm which caused the water to turn and the waves to become high.
Because of their boat, English said, they were able to navigate through the choppy water better than the voyageur canoes which had been leading when the lead group entered the lake.
鈥淥n Lake Laberge, it whipped up before the narrows,鈥 said English.
鈥淲e were just trying to hold on and we had a couple boats nearby swamped or dumped. We were pretty happy to just be able to get through it.
Vincent noted that Lake Laberge is known for rough water.
鈥淎ll the books you read, it says it is notoriously unpredictable,鈥 said Vincent.
The duo was surprised they were the first to reach Carmacks, saying it might be because the big boats, the voyageurs, had trouble on the lake.
鈥淭he big boats travel faster but they had a lot of trouble, and just didn鈥檛 catch back up,鈥 said Vincent.
鈥淲e are really happy,鈥 said English. 鈥淲e were able to handle the bad conditions on Lake Laberge a little bit easier.
鈥淭he smaller boats kind of bounce like a cork and the bigger boats dive through the waves and fill up,鈥 added Vincent.
The pair looked really strong coming into Carmacks, but English said he was feeling dead, and that it was time to rest.
The #wepaddletogther reached Carmacks at 8:12:56 a.m. Thursday.
The crowd which had gathered to watch the first boat in lingered about; the second boat was an estimated 20 minutes away.
As they became visible, the cries of 鈥渂oat!鈥 echoed through the campground as the people rushed to the banks to cheer them on their last push before a much-needed break.
The voyageur team C6 Heave Paddlesports, a team from across the U.K., passed the flag marking their time at 8:32:04 a.m.
Thor Harley said they were able to manage the rocky water better than the voyageur canoes ahead of them and were able to get passed.
鈥淭he waves were getting up to maybe four- or five-foot,鈥 said Harley. 鈥淭he two crews in front of us swamped, and Yukon Wide looked uncomfortable.
鈥淲e had to pull in as well because we were starting to swamp. We managed, but it was very tricky.鈥
Harley said it was a pleasant surprise to reach Carmacks second.
鈥淲e are very happy; it was a little unexpected,鈥 said Harley. 鈥淲e thought we would be chasing the other two voyageurs down the river, but we were lucky to pass them during the storm.鈥
Harley and the C6 Heave Paddlesports team said they were happy Lake Laberge was now behind them.
鈥淭hat is by far the worst part,鈥 said Harley. 鈥(Today) will be tough because we are tired, but Laberge is by far the worst part.鈥
Harley said he was feeling tired and hungry, and stressed the importance of the seven hours of mandatory rest.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how you could make it without it,鈥 he said.
It didn鈥檛 take long before the third- and fourth-place boats could be seen making their final strokes to the end.
The Hatchet Lake Voyagers voyageur boat and the mixed tandem kayak team The Kiwis both rounded the corner together.
It was The Kiwis who were able to find the faster water and reach the checkpoint at 8:55:03 only 18 seconds ahead of Hatchet Lake.
The Kiwis got out of their boat with shaky legs. They were taken to get something to eat and get some much-needed rest.
Joseph Dzeylion of Hatchet Lake Voyagers talked about the team鈥檚 experience flipping over.
鈥淚t is not scary, it is cold, and lots of water in the boat,鈥 said Dzeylion. 鈥淭he water started rocking side-by-side and rolling over. It was very windy.鈥
Dzeylion said the team is pleased with their placement and that they were feeling strong and ready for the final push to Dawson.
The Hatchet Lake team, which hails from Wollaston Lake, Sask., had the largest cheering section of the arriving boats. As they became visible from the campground, their supporters began to beat their drums and sing.
鈥淚t is really cool,鈥 said Dzeylion about having such a boisterous fan section.
The 2017 and 2018 overall Yukon River Quest winning team, Yukon Wide Adventure, also had their troubles on the lake. They were the sixth boat to reach Carmacks at 9:03 a.m. Thursday.
鈥淲e got the thunderstorm and we got three, four feet of waves,鈥 said team captain Thomas de Jager. 鈥淕us (Oliveira, who sits at the front), he got baptized because the waves were rolling over us. We had to pull over five or six times to bail it out.
鈥淥ur boat is not made for waves. I was pretty much bracing in the back. The team was awesome. Luckily we made it and did not flip. We lost our good position in the front.鈥
De Jager estimated that the team lost about two hours during the storm.
Although it dropped back in position, de Jager said the team is still going for it.
鈥淲e are going to go and maybe they are good and they are better and that鈥檚 just what it is sometimes,鈥 said de Jager. 鈥淲e haven鈥檛 given up yet, so watch out! We are still coming. We know the river.鈥
The women鈥檚 tandem canoe Momentary Lapse of Reason was the first women in their class to reach Carmacks. When told that by their handlers, they were overjoyed.
鈥淲e were in disbelief,鈥 said Sandra Luken. 鈥淲e thought there was another boat in front of us.鈥
鈥淲e knew the local boats were pretty strong and we hadn鈥檛 seen them all race, so we figured they were in front of us,鈥 said Sophie Coupal.
The women鈥檚 tandem canoe has eight teams in the class and Luken said they hope they all finish.
鈥淚t is such a strong field, and it鈥檚 the largest C2 women鈥檚 field ever and I hope everyone finishes,鈥 said Luken. 鈥淲e are running our race plan and it is working.鈥
The pair was stuck in the storm on Laberge, but Coupal said it was a situation they have been in before.
鈥淚t slowed us down a lot and it was pretty choppy, but we鈥檝e been in that situation before where the lake is ridiculous,鈥 said Coupal. 鈥淥ur speed slows down, but we push through.鈥
Moving ahead in the race, Luken said they will continue to race their own race and take care of themselves.
The prospects of winning their class has them excited, but they aren鈥檛 looking too far ahead because 鈥渢here is a lot of racing to go.鈥
The first standup paddleboarder into Carmacks was the three-time champion, Bart de Zwart. Compared to his other years, he said it was more difficult.
鈥淭he leg was hard it was a lot of wind and a lot of chop,鈥 said de Zwart. 鈥淚t just slows you down. On a SUP, you catch all the wind and you don鈥檛 cut through the waves.鈥
Although he said his time is much slower than years previous, he said he was happy with his placement once he learned that the next SUP racer was two hours behind.
鈥淚 pushed hard this whole time,鈥 said de Zwart. 鈥淚 really pushed, especially in the beginning, and (Wednesday) night, it worked.鈥
Physically, he said he is feeling fine, and the rest of the way, he planned to keep with what is working.
As the boats continued to roll in through the day, the sun shone high in the sky over the river, making it nice and hot.
The enthusiasm of the volunteers and the fans remained consistent from the first boat that arrived to the last.
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Comments (2)
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Yukon Salami on Jul 5, 2019 at 7:40 am
Hey, this is the 'Yukon River Quest' so let's have a little less whining if you please.
No, just kidding, great job participants one and all plus support crews.
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France Côté on Jul 1, 2019 at 4:22 am
Allo Sophie!
F茅licitations 脿 l鈥櫭﹒uipe du tonnerre que vous faites!
Vous avez toute mon admiration!
Quel d茅passement de Soi vous avez r茅alis茅!!!
Je suis tr猫s fi猫re de toi Sophie et La MMFS l鈥檈st aussi!
Tu es une personne d鈥檈xception mille fois BRAVO et bonne r茅cup茅ration!