When you are at 6500 feet of elevation and headed to over 10,000 feet on the day, you have mixed feelings about going down hill. Yes, the downhills are a welcome reprieve from the ascents, especially when the oxygen becomes more and more rarified, but you can't help think that it just means more climbing.....because it does.
Good morning from Utah!!
We pulled in last night into Flagstaff after an absolutely epic ride through Prescott and Sedona. My goodness the climb up the canyon into Flagstaff was beautiful. After 12 hours on the road (half hour on, 90 minutes off), the RV looked very welcoming. Shift exchanges are absolutely nuts, I hope that Jesse gets one of them on film. The vans have to be completely cleaned out and supplies: tires, tubes, drinks, food, a new driver and navigator, and new riders need to be added.
We had a chance to stop at a campground and get a shower. I can't describe properly how great that felt. Next, sleep. Yes it was on the floor of the RV, but sleep (at least sleep at RAAM) is sleep. Sleep on RAAM comes in two flavors, about 2 hours of sleep in a parking lot when you try to get comfortable and wind down your heart rate, and then sleep in the RV maxing out the speed limit which trying to catch up to the other shift.
When we woke up this morning we were gifted with the scenery that rivaled, if not surpassed, Sedona. Monument Valley in southern Utah is breathtaking, and at sunrise even more so.
Spirits are high, we are well out of last place (10th out of 13), and within an hour of three other teams. Most importantly, we are proud to represent Durham as a whole and 18 awesome charities in particular. Please give. Please volunteer. Please encourage your friends to do the same. Thanks for reading!
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