2001 Columbia Gorge Classic Rally

Triumph, under a Bridge

When I was a kid my father drove MG’s. I can recall an MG Club Newsletter that spoke of Rallymasters living under a bridge, much like a troll. So here forty years later we started an MG Club Rally underneath a bridge – the Interstate 5 bridges over the Columbia River to be exact.

Novice Navigator Kyle Murray is all smiles at breakfast.

We came to Portland to participate in the 2011 Columbia Gorge Classic Rally, hosted by the Columbia Gorge MG A Car Club. For me it was a warm up rally for the Monte Shelton NW Classic later in the summer, but for my navigator Kyle Murray, it was his very first outing in a TSD rally. I’ve known Kyle for seven years, as we’ve worked together – both at digital.forest and now Facebook. He was very excited to finally be rallying – or at least not yet had his enthusiasm ripped out of him by a devious rallymaster. We collected our continental breakfast and perused the machines arranged beneath the roar of Sunday morning traffic over the bridge suspended above our heads.

Rallymaster Reid Trummel taunts his victims at the driver's meeting.

Kyle starts getting serious after the instructions are passed out.

We’re car number 32, so after the instructions are passed out Kyle gets to work and I pull out my camera and walk around shooting the rally cars lining up to start.

Car Number One, in conversation with a notorious Troll

The rally begins and cars start leaving at one minute intervals.

I wander back to the 65E and we queue up for the start. We’re a minute behind a black MG A and a minute ahead of a very nice ’74 246 Dino Spyder. I’ve seen this car before at the Monte Shelton NW Classic. Very nice.

The Dino

The odometer calibration stage takes us north across the Columbia on I-5, to a rest area, where we wait for the start of TSD Regularity & Monte Carlo stages. Kyle is totally into it and does a damn fine job in the segments before lunch. We nail a 00:00 on our first segment (anytime a Novice navigator gets a zero is a major achievement in my book! Well done Kyle!) followed by a 00:01, and 00:03, then 00:17, and a 00:12. We didn’t know we had only a cumulative 32 seconds of penalty at Lunchtime, but we did feel pretty damn good while we ate our burger at Battle Ground State Park.

The first post-lunch TSD was possibly the most vile, evil, and downright confusing regularity I had ever seen as a rally participant! The route instructions – even the novice-class ones – described just a series of left turns. The road(s) however were a confusing jumble of mysteries! We were in a rural part of SW Washington state with a maze of numbered streets and avenues, all twisting and turning, with many dead-ends, un-described forced turns, and limited visibility due to vegetation. It was insane, and we fell into one particularly difficult trap. (As did many other rallyists!)

It really threw Kyle for a loop, so I started doing navigation with him on the fly. We were hopelessly off-time, so our goal was just to stay on-course and make up time as much as possible. Kyle fed me route instructions and I navigated the traps (which were almost everywhere!) and drove like a madman to catch up. We missed a few turns, but mostly stayed on-course, occasionally seeing a lost rally car going the wrong(?) way, also at speed. We finally found the checkpoint (03:28 off time!) and continued driving like mad to make up time lost in future segments! We also blew the next segment’s checkpoint, and caught up to start time (just) by the start next segment. Later we learned that the rally master threw out the two segments after the particularly tough one because so many cars had missed their start times. Oh well!

The fourth segment after lunch was a Monte Carlo that started at a state park in the Columbia Gorge just off SR14.

Kyle calculates our timing for the upcoming Monte Carlo segment on the Washington side of the Columbia river.

I’m able to teach Kyle a lesson in Monte Carlo style rallying: Forget the average speed; go fast, get ahead, and find a stand-off. We launch off and head east on SR14 towards The Bridge of the Gods, where we were to cross the other Bridge of the Gods. The latter has a lattice steel deck, which you can look right through as you drive across, something that amused Kyle to no end.

Dude, you can look straight down and see the river!

We navigate west on I-84 for a few miles, then off the superslab and onto some winding backroads up the south slope of the gorge to the farm country between the Sandy & Columbia rivers. After navigating some tough, undeclared turns, we find what we think is a safe stand-off and Kyle walks ahead to scout the Monte Carlo’s checkpoint…

Kyle walking ahead from the stand-off.

While he’s walking away a lady comes over and takes some photos of the Jaguar…

Tourist snagging some photos

Kyle comes back and announces that he can not see the checkpoint, but can see the road where it likely is, so we roll forward until we can see the likely stop-sign that is where the checkpoint is located and await our time to go. We see almost no other rally cars, which is disturbing, but we’re confident that we’re in the right spot. I chose when to depart, and once rolling feel that I’ve gone too soon. Always easier to move fast to hit a time than to slowly crawl to it. I’m forced to crawl and sure enough arrive three seconds early. Grrr.

The final TSD Regularity is quite tough, and traps us in a wrong turn. I recover and drive too fast, thinking that the checkpoint is much farther ahead than it turns out to be. We arrive way too early (and unbeknownst to us at the time, capture the maximum 5 minute penalty,) which is all MY fault. I apologize to Kyle, fully admitting that my error has likely blown that segment. He’s cool with it all though as he’s had a ton of fun. Unburdened by timekeeping, we follow the route directions at whatever speed we wish, and roll into the finish area at a state park near Troutdale, Oregon.

The post-Rally refreshments are limited to water, or beer, which I find frustrating as we’ve got a 3 hour drive to get back to Central Oregon. We actually leave for a bit, to meet Kyle’s wife at a gas station nearby. I’ll gas up the Jag, and Kyle will drive his car back to Prineville. We stop by the state park in Troutdale in time to hear the rally results, and sure enough we collect a trophy.

Kyle with our trophies. Third place in the Novice class.

Reid mailed me the full rally results a week or so later and I note that without MY screwups, Kyle would have easily navigated us to a second-place finish in Novice class, and a likely ~10th overall. As it stands we finished 16th overall and 3rd in Novice.

Not a bad outing. Hopefully we’ll be back next year.

Yesterday game me Lemons. Today I’m going Rallying!

Canadian team at the 24 Hours of Lemons

Yesterday I drove north from Bend to Grass Valley, Oregon to visit a couple of friends at the 24 Hours of Lemons race being held at the Grass Valley Motorsports Park. I found one (competitor), but not the other (organizer). It was fun to finally see a little Lemons racing in person. You can see my pics from the day here:

http://etc.goolsbee.org/jag/lemons

After that, I drove west, across the plains, gorges, and mountains to Portland, where today I’m going to do a little TSD Rallying at the 2011 Columbia Gorge Classic. It will be a long day, so expect a full update later in the week.

About to drop (deeply) into the nearly invisible Deschutes River Gorge between Grass Valley & Tygh Valley, Oregon, then up and over the Cascade mountains to Portland.

TSD Rally School for Kyle

I always find it best to do a good “warm up” rally prior to trying to tackle a big one. The NW Classic is coming up in July, and I usually always run the Cascade Classic Rally (The rally previously known as the Classic Motorcar Rally) but was unable to make it back up to Washington this year due to schedule conflicts. So I’ve signed up to run the Columbia Gorge Classic Rally. My father won’t be available to navigate for me, so I invited a friend who has often asked to do an event with me. Kyle Murray worked for me at digital.forest starting in 2003. He was our Network Manager for most of that time and I really enjoyed working with him. He followed me to Facebook about six months after I started, and now is my co-worker, sitting right next to me at PRN1. So Kyle is now going to be my Navigator for this upcoming Rally.

This will be Kyle’s very first TSD rally, so I figured it would be good to give him some schooling. The 2009 NW Classic was held not far from here, so I unearthed a few rally stage instructions and a “how to” on staying on course, and staying on time – and Kyle & I went out after work to attend Rally School.

Where we started, Lake Billy Chinook. The confluence of the Crooked, Deschutes, and Metolius Rivers. Rally Stage 4 of Day 2 of the 2009 Monte Shelton started here. It was fun to try to find the exact locale via Google Maps and my memory.

Kyle & I left work and met at a state park near Terrebonne, then hopped in his Mercedes-Benz E-class to find our way to the vague start point of the rally stage instructions I had from 2009. I explained the concepts of “ONTO/TOWARD”, “observe”, “protection”, etc to him, and then went over how to interpret course instructions and doing pre-start prep. Timing I had to sort of gloss over, with basic concepts of “car zero”, keeping a running rally clock, and noting time aberrations such as pauses. After that quick intro, we hit the road.

Confused Yet? Kyle Murray tries TSD navigation for the first time!

We ran the first segment, which thankfully had several things to teach good lessons. Me making a wrong turn for one! But we also saw a great example of observation and protection. That accomplished we tried adding some timing to the second segment and did pretty good. Kyle picked up creating a table of running time calcs down the right side of the sheet. Had we actually been on a real rally stage, I think we would have nailed this one within a 10 second range. Not bad for a rank beginner. We also had a great example of a “toward” instruction to show Kyle how that worked. Unfortunately the actual roads had changed since the 2009 event, with one being closed off, and another going from a “T” intersection to an overpass – so the final segment we tried sort of disintegrated at the end. No matter. With a set of real instructions and a clock we had a nice, safe simulation of actual conditions. I think we’ll have a great time this weekend. We’re entered in the Novice Class, which is a bit of a cheat as I’ve been doing this stuff for decades now, but Kyle is a total n00b. I’ll be sure to not coach him TOO much. 😉

We went back to the state park to part ways in our own cars, Kyle back to his wife in Prineville, and me back to Chez Goolsbee in Deschutes County. I think Kyle had a good time, and I’m glad I was able to do a little teaching before the actual competition – he’ll probably have a lot more fun this way once things get insane as he’ll understand a bit of what’s going on.

Kyle's car - a lot more comfy and calm than the 65E for Rally School 101.

Stay tuned for an update from Portland!

Returning from Obscurity – and getting Back On The Road!

I’ve been REAL busy over the past year, and this website has suffered for it… sorry dear reader!

Thankfully things are settling down to a reasonable routine at work. I still have a couple of large-scale projects to hammer out over the summer, but the datacenter we set out to build is largely operational now, and my life is getting back to normal. I hope to start blogging regularly again, which means more “Car Photos of the Day” and participation in vintage car events. The first of which is just next weekend, an MG Car Club rally in the Columbia Gorge, serving as a warmup for the big daddy: The Monte Shelton NW Classic Rally in July.

I was interviewed by “Bring a Trailer” this week as they plan on covering the event on their website as well. It was a fun interview and they snagged a few photos from this website to accompany it. You can read the interview here.

Stay tuned for more, coming soon!

Bringatrailer.com"/

Car Photo of the Day: Just for Bill “WRD” Dickson.

Saw this car, thought of Bill

My good friend and longtime colleague Bill Dickson has a weakness for Scandinavian cars. Every time I see a vintage Northern European two-stroker, odd V-four, or similar – I think of Bill. This machine was spotted on a recent biz trip to the Seattle area, on I-5 near “the brewery”. Here you go Bill! This Saab’s for you.

Car Photo of the Day: Cure for a grey, snowy day.

Our mid-winter break of mild weather and sunshine is over. I put the studded snow tires back on the TDI and we’ve seen well over a foot of the white stuff. I did get the 65E out for a drive a few weeks ago… exploring roads I’ve never driven. It was wonderful, though a tad chilly with the top down. I’m looking forward to the end of winter so I can explore some more. Meanwhile, here is a shot of a summer’s evening drive up the Pacific Coast Highway in northern California a few years ago. Fond memories of that trip indeed.