|
Caroline
Ashby - you are an Ironman!
5 Dec 2009
On Dec 5th 2009, daughter no.4, Caroline, capped
off 2009 with another notch on her belt — completing
her first Ironman at beautiful Busselton, WA. Just earlier
in the year, in May, she completed her first
Half Ironman, also at Busselton. How fast she progressed,
once she caught the Ironman bug!
It's an extreme event, pushing your limits both physically
and mentally, but ask any Ironman: the hard work is
done way before you line up before the gun. The gruelling
training; the rigorous schedules; the dedication needed
just to you get to that start line. Now try doing all
this when you live and work in the heat and dust of
outback WA, and this is what Caroline had to contend
with.
Caroline followed a training program created by coach
John Hill, backed up with lots of talking to big sister
Alice, a veteran of 7 Ironmans, who had lots of Ironman
experience, hints and tips that she could draw on. Swim
training was in the dam as the local pool was not open.
Rides were on the stationary wind trainer (and anyone
who's been on one will tell you it can become brain-numbing
very quickly!) If she was lucky, a friend who had holiday
house on the coast more than 50km away, would keep her
company on her long rides on the weekends. All training
had to be done very early so she was back before husband
Nick went to work.
Going
into the race, Caroline was a bit unsure. She was confident
in that she had done the hard yards in training, however
she was carrying an injury which she sustained just
2 weeks before - a pulled muscle in her hip and bottom
during her last long run. She fought the niggling doubts
— could she finish the race? — and decided
to simply take each leg as it came. Her hip started
hurting in the swim which did not forebode well! Even
more acute pain on the bike, and when it came time for
the run, her hip muscle gave out after the first 2km.
In an ironic stroke of luck, her other hip gave out
at 6km so she was balanced! She knew she just had to
keep going to get to the end and kept chucking ice down
her running shorts - a little trick Alice taught her
to keep cool!
Even
with her injuries, she still ran the 42.2km marathon
leg in 3hrs 44min; a feat many a runner would love to
accomplish, let alone one who had done a 3.8km swim
and a 180km bike ride just beforehand! Coming into the
race, Caroline had not expected to finish anywhere near
Alice, because of her injury and the fact that Alice
was a veteran of 7 Ironmans, while this was Caroline's
first. All she wanted to concentrate on was her own
race and her own race alone. With Alice's help, she
came into this race thoroughly prepared - nutrition
wise and race ready. Alice taught her every trick in
the book and, as Caroline ran past her in the run leg,
Alice was probably questioning the sensibility behind
that move! But, ever the supportive big sister, she
called out encouragement to Caroline, telling her she
was "smashin' it"!
The
last 2kms were killers. Caroline felt fine right up
until then, but with everyone telling her she was "almost
there", she said it felt like 200kms! She picked
up the pace over the last few hundred metres but once
over the finish line, her mind finally succumbed to
the exhaustion that the rest of her body was feeling
and she had to be helped off to the recovery tent. Caroline
reckoned she downed three 750ml bottles of water in
3secs!!! 2 hours later, she met up with Nick and
Alice, and headed back home. Enroute was a stop at Red
Rooster to satisfy a sudden craving for some hot, VERY
salty chips. She never eats hot chips but wolfed these
down. After all, she had just done an Ironman, one of
the toughest multisport events on the planet!
Caroline was keen to get back to the kids, who were
at home on the farm, babysat by Nick's mum. All her
friends and family back in Eneabba were tracking her
progress online and were very proud of her achievements.
Eldest daughter Charli wants to do her first triathlon
this year. Who knows? Maybe we're looking at the next
generation McClure-Ashby Ironman girl in the family!
| Leg |
Time |
Gender
Pos. |
Cat.
Pos. |
| Swim |
01:05:32 |
57 |
11 |
| Cycle |
05:48:40 |
49 |
10 |
| Run |
03:44:20 |
13 |
4 |
| Total |
10:38:33 |
20 |
5 |
|