Red Bull Rampage Diary 2: A Changing Soundtrack

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Yesterday’s percussive accompaniment of the slapping of shovels picked up a different rhythm today at Red Bull Rampage, for the second day of practice. As I walked up the lower section of the women’s hill, dig teams were still accompanied by their bluetooth tunes of choice, but as I worked my way up to where the women were continuing to guinea their features, the speakers were quieted. Behind that final showtime run you see on competition day, there’s a lot of waiting around. Not so much an adrenaline rush as a drip drip drip of deliberation.

There was still plenty of digging going on, though in many cases it was the refinement of lines following yesterday’s practice. These two were busy refining this super steep chute. And just to remind of you the scale…

On the lower part of the hill, Casey Brown was starting to link together a couple of features, first rolling through one chute then coming to a halt, before heading back up to carry on through into the next feature.

And then into the next one, and out into the heat of the sun as it worked its way down the hill.

It can’t be understated how difficult it is getting bikes up the hill. It’s epic enough just walking with a camera in your pack – though today even I was starting to acclimatise. If you look at just the ground in front of you, and try and forget what the little trod you’re following is actually attached to, it doesn’t seem so bad. But I’m sticking to the relatively well worn path between the layers of features – the riders are not. Here’s Vaea Verbeeck using her bike as a sort of ice axe.

The judges were also out on the hill, learning the riders’ lines. Here’s Josh Bender passing under one of the jumps at the spaghetti bowl. Notice the two rocks, marking the point the rider wants to hit.

All up the hill are event staff, managing the flow of people on the hill, making sure no one kicks rocks down onto someone’s head, or stands in a riders’ line. They’re out there whenever there is a rider out there, which makes for one heck of a long and hot day. And with consequences high, there’s no time to tune out and switch off. Props to these folks for making it happen.

As someone decides they’re ready to drop in and try a section, shouts go up and down the hill, with crackles on the radio. How far is the rider planning to go? Which features are they waiting to hit? Is it clear of people? Photographers wait for the call to let them know the rider is dropping in. Riders wait to hear back that the landing is clear of any rock fall from other dig crews or people moving around on the hill. Everything on the hillside is loose, gravity taking hold given the slightest chance. But the processes are tight. Everyone is alive to what is going on around them.

The tension turns up a notch as the hillside goes quiet. Digging stops to prevent any loose stones making their way onto the line that’s about to be tested. The rider gets into position, and there’s a round of ‘Go Vaea!’, or ‘You got this!’ before silence falls. Breathe. Hold the camera, steady the drone, watch the windsock. Breathe. And then, with a shift of feet on pedals, the rider rolls in, calling out to let everyone know they’re making the move.

Whoops go up as the rider completes the feature, and instantly phones and cameras are being checked. It’s not all about the ‘gram though – they’re looking at where the rider rode, their body position, did they hit the feature where it was intended? Was the speed right? Did that take off need more pop, or a lip?

You can never be sure what someone is going to do. Here’s Robin Goomes on a jump that I also saw her backflip (but didn’t capture on camera). It was one of the most incredible things I’ve ever seen. She just flew in down the steep chute, then appeared to be sending it into nowhere. From where I stood on the ridge, it didn’t seem like there was enough hillside there for there to even be a lander on the other side. If she pulls that move on competition day and fits it into a top to bottom run, it’s surely got to be hard to beat.

As Vaea and Robin moved on to check off other features, Vero Sandler and Georgia Astle were still working on part of their line. The entrance into the steep berm off the Spaghetti Bowl wasn’t working for them yesterday, so they were chipping and scraping away at it, apparently on the edge of the earth, reshaping it to their liking.

There was also work to be done on the berm that links their chutes from the layer above into the Spaghetti Bowl. By this time, it was nearly midday, and the sun was eating up the last of the shadows on the hill, plunging everyone into baking white heat. Everywhere you looked, people were tucking themselves into the tiniest of shadows, trying to get even part of their body out of the heat.

It’s a constant balance of effort against reward, time against energy. You’re up the hill, you want to ride a section, but it’s going to take a bunch of effort to get up there, so you want to make it count. Equally, lunch, shade and hydration are at the bottom. Stay out too long and you’re too cooked to do anything well.

Eventually, Vero and Georgia put the tools down and started pulling on riding gear.

With cliffs to climb, riders wear their helmets so as to have hands free.

There’s a lot of stopping to look and think on the way. You don’t want to blow the attempt and have to do the climb all over again, this time with a bike too. Here’s Georgia staring into a chute through a cloud of dust.

With Vero and Georgia sharing parts of the line, Vero was going first. But finding a point to start from wasn’t easy.

Georgia waited up top, while Sam Hodgson helped Vero figure out how to start. There seemed to be a whole lot of back and forth, with Vero sounding uncharacteristically stressed, perhaps scared even, and Sam talking her down and giving her the confidence to get settled on the pedals while he held her back wheel.

After a false start and slide out, Vero swooped through the berm and into the jump at the Spaghetti Bowl.

A bit more waiting, while Georgia decided she was going to run through all the features to the Spaghetti Bowl, instead of just doing the top, and she was off…

…off the wooden drop of the start ramp…

…into the chute…

… and then not quite into the left turn tight enough for the next piece of the line.

… and then, zap. Camera overheated, battery zapped. Right at the final moment. More digging and waiting, while I cursed. No longer in it for the shot, I was now invested in seeing Georgia complete the run. But FML, what a shot that could have been – here’s the phone version.

And then my phone also shut down, overheated, moments after taking this photo. Georgia looked pretty happy about ticking off that section.

And then, the last riders off the hill, the diggers with work to do recommenced their thwacking of shovels and chink of picks. Bluetooth speakers back on, while the rest of us retreated from the hottest part of the day, seeking out shade and water in the event compound. Unfortunately, there’s another sound that no one wants to hear, that came to accompany our lunch break: air ambulance. With Clemens Kaudela having had a nasty crash in an awkward location, the medivac had to wait while a second helicopter, equipped with a winch, came to hoist him out of a high spot up in a canyon. There’s no official word on his injuries yet, though we did hear he was awake and talking after the crash. Healing vibes to him, and let’s hope that’s the last we hear from the thrum of the medivac.

Enter our competition to win an Abus HiDrop helmet.

2024 Red Bull Rampage Women’s Roster

  1. Robin Goomes (NZL) 
  2. Casey Brown (CAN) 
  3. Vinny Armstrong (NZL)  
  4. Georgia Astle (CAN) 
  5. Vero Sandler (UK) 
  6. Vaea Verbeeck (CAN) 
  7. Chelsea Kimball (USA) 
  8. Camila Nogueira (ARG) 

2024 Red Bull Rampage Men’s Roster

  1. Cam Zink (USA)
  2. Tom Van Steenbergen (CAN) 
  3. Carson Storch (USA)
  4. Brendan Fairclough (GBR)
  5. Talus Turk (USA)
  6. Kyle Strait (USA)
  7. Ethan Nell (USA)
  8. Bienvenido Aguado Alba (SPA)
  9. Adolf Silva (SPA)
  10. Brandon Semenuk (CAN)
  11. Clemens Kaudela (AUT)
  12. Kurt Sorge (CAN)
  13. Luke Whitlock (USA)
  14. Reed Boggs (USA)
  15. Szymon Godziek (POL)
  16. Thomas Genon (BEL)
  17. Tom Isted (GBR)
  18. Tyler McCaul (USA)

Thanks to ABUS for contributing to Hannah’s travel expenses.


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Hannah Dobson

Managing Editor

I came to Singletrack having decided there must be more to life than meetings. I like all bikes, but especially unusual ones. More than bikes, I like what bikes do. I think that they link people and places; that cycling creates a connection between us and our environment; bikes create communities; deliver freedom; bring joy; and improve fitness. They're environmentally friendly and create friendly environments. I try to write about all these things in the hope that others might discover the joy of bikes too.

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Home Forums Red Bull Rampage Diary 2: A Changing Soundtrack

Viewing 26 posts - 1 through 26 (of 26 total)
  • Red Bull Rampage Diary 2: A Changing Soundtrack
  • willard
    Full Member

    Wow. Excellent write-up of the day, thank you (despite the camera shenanigans)!

    Can’t wait for the next day’s reporting.

    identitizombie
    Full Member

    Really enjoying these diaries, Hannah!

    Some really cool insights and things we don’t often get to see!

    1
    kayak23
    Full Member

    Great write up Hannah. Really cool stuff and awesome photos.

    Loving it. 🙂

    ossify
    Full Member

    If it’s hot enough to make both your camera and phone overheat, it makes me curious how they manage this with the main cameras for the live feed. Presumably they are much bigger and use more power (therefore more likely to overheat?) plus they are sitting in the open all day. What stops them from melting?

    1
    steamtb
    Full Member

    Cami went big and very deep, thankfully relatively ok, broken nose and cleared to participate apparently, although with that much energy I’m surprised concussion isn’t a concern:

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DA2QcbQp1x8/?igsh=MW9nYWI0amVqamJodw==

    squirrelking
    Free Member

    Nobody mentioning Clemens Kaudela being airlifted to hospital after a similar crash to last year?


    @steamtb
    don’t worry, nobody’s forcing them and anyway, they make their own lines and know what they’re doing. </s>

    3
    stwhannah
    Full Member

    @steamtb I think it is a concern among the riders. There is some chat that she should be pulled, rather than left to make the choice, because it was such a hit to the head but there’s obviously going to be a huge desire to take part. Her team was still digging, but she wasn’t on the hill when I was there today. Will try and find out more about the protocol from the organisers’ perspective.


    @squirrelking
    I’ve mentioned it at the end but didn’t have any more to say at the point of writing – hoping to hear more info today. Will keep you posted with what I can find out.

    steamtb
    Full Member

    Riders also need to be capable of making the decision and they often are not after that kind of accident. It’s up to the medical professionals there to make the right decision and occasionally they don’t… I just hope all the riders stay as safe as they can, no one wants life changing injuries. Sad to hear about Clemens Kaudela  🙁

    1
    zowoods
    Full Member

    Loving the writing Hannah! So descriptive and emotive. Cannot wait to see the gals runs goosebumps thinking about it and what year for women with slopestyle at Crankworx and Rampage – the future looks good for women in freeride

    chrismac
    Full Member

    I don’t like this event. It just seems the levels of risk are so high, just to provide entertainment. I fully accept that riders want to do it and I wouldnt stop them.  I just hope everyone rides away and no one has a career ending or life changing accident.

    weeksy
    Full Member

    But then, just a few days ago

    Jess Blewitt Broke T1 Transverse Process & T12 Vertebrae in Semi-Finals Crash – Mont-Sainte-Anne DH World Cup 2024

    It’s all pretty unsafe, it’s fast, dangerous and crazy. But that’s how the sport works

    2
    stwhannah
    Full Member

    IMG_1256 @chrismac it doesn’t feel like entertainment, or doing it for entertainment. It’s more like ‘what can I achieve’. The big show you see on tv is kinda the byproduct of it all, perhaps the means to make the rest of it possible. I’ll probably try and get into the motivation stuff in another article, it needs more thought than I can muster here (on a shuttle on the way to the site!)

    FunkyDunc
    Free Member

    With Clemens Kaudela having had a nasty crash in an awkward location, the medivac had to wait while a second helicopter, equipped with a winch, came to hoist him out of a high spot up in a canyon

    Thats one of the things I find worrying about this event (and others) is that an organisation is making profit out of people putting their physical health on the line, but they haven’t put sensible safety measures in in advance ie the ability to extract people off the hillside if needed. Just make sure you only crash at the bottom….

    Good to see the womens event happening though !

    I’ll probably try and get into the motivation stuff in another article,

    That would be great if you can. I used to jump off cliffs on skis for the fun and challenge of it so I can see the attraction. Indeed having watched Brenda Faircloughs, Ben Deakins and Olly Wilkins YouTube vids I get that in some ways the biking is a small part of it.

    However it still does worry me that some people would be prepared to push further than they would otherwise if it wasnt for sponsorship and TV etc.

    Plus I am not mad keen on this raping and pillaging a mountain to make it rideable on a bike. Would much prefer it if they had to pick a natural line, or to be fair just got a bulldozer and built a slope style course

    1
    stwhannah
    Full Member

    @steamtb Cami passed the hospital’s concussion tests and is riding. The event relies on the hospital assessment – if a rider passes that they’re cleared to ride if they want to. She’s pretty beat up around the face but hiked up last night and is planning to ride today. Obviously a secondary hit would be very worrying, but right now she’s passed the tests and is clear to ride.

    stwhannah
    Full Member

    @ossify they have Mylar heat shields for wrapping the cameras in. I want one for me!

    steamtb
    Full Member

    @stwhannah fingers crossed she is ok, thanks for the update!

    chrismac
    Full Member

    The big show you see on tv is kinda the byproduct of it al

    I disagree. The product is the show. That’s what makes it commercially viable. Without the tv and broadcast line it wouldn’t happen

    chrismac
    Full Member

    But then, just a few days ago

    Jess Blewitt Broke T1 Transverse Process & T12 Vertebrae in Semi-Finals Crash – Mont-Sainte-Anne DH World Cup 2024

    Completely agree. I would suggest wcdh is far safer and less risky than rampage.

    1
    steamtb
    Full Member

    Chelsea hit the monster drop nicely, mind boggling really, there can’t be many people who could do that well:

    https://www.instagram.com/reel/DA6nvesJ-gR/?igsh=MWF0djMybXFoczF5Zg==

    stwhannah
    Full Member

    @steamtb Yup, she took a long while to think about it! Then she screamed with delight all the way to the finish. Amazing to see.

    2
    LAT
    Full Member

    Great job, Hannah. I’m enjoying your reporting style.

    2
    steamtb
    Full Member

    It sounds like the medical team are following up with riders who have big crashes and pulling them from the competition if needed. Cami won’t be competing now this year, hopefully it won’t be too long and she will be well and back on a bike, she is an amazing rider!

    1
    goby
    Full Member

    Many thanks for the great style of reporting love it @stwhannah

     

    squirrelking
    Free Member

    These boys are what Rampage is all about.

    I thought it was about riding the landscape, not smashing it up.

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