Five-Hour Hands
Ironmanning the
Grueling 2009 Mark Hahn Memorial 300
Text by Steve Matchett
Photography from PWI archives
(Above photo courtesy of Steve Matchett)
The Tlingit people of southeastern Alaska have a word, Shgagwei, meaning "a windy place with white caps on the water." Welcome
to Lake Havasu's February 28, 2009 Mark Hahn
Memorial 300 - a race run in conditions the Tlingit would have understood.
The schedule: 300 miles or six hours, whichever comes first.
Because I was running the event solo on my rented Yamaha VX110, and since I'm
relatively new to this long distance offshore-type deal, I knew I needed a
disciplined game plan if I was physically going to last the full distance. My
answer: "Five-Hour Hands." I've heard people say that the legs go first in
offshore racing, but I figured it would be my hands. In its previous four
editions, this race had never gone past five hours. So I decided the weakest
link in my physical chain, my hands, would be my strength gauge for lasting
five hours. I had to keep my hands as relaxed as possible at all times. That
meant that, from the get-go, I'd have to maintain a settled pace that would let
me hold on for 300 minutes or 300 miles. I didn't think that would be a problem;
I'd been in Havasu since the Thursday before the race and the weather had been
Chamber of Commerce perfect around a lake as smooth as polished silver. Thursday
afternoon I did an hour's pre-race running on water so placid I could count the
sky's few clouds reflected on its surface.
Then Saturday arrived. Editor Kevin Shaw's race report in the
May issue of Personal Watercraft
Illustrated described the conditions as "looking like Ultra water...winds
to 35 mph, dropping the temperature and churning the once placid Lake Havasu
into a boiling cauldron of white-capped three- to four-foot swells and crashing
surf." All very ‘shgagwei', as the Tlingit would say. When we rubber-suited
people gathered in the parking lot at 6 am, there were a lot of concerned faces.

Racers get ‘Red Mist' disease at the drop of a green flag. They
are happiest with throttles full on - anything else is a waste of time. But in
this case, from lap one, every time I'd feel racy and start jumping white cap
to white cap, I'd think about my hands and ask myself if I could maintain that
grip for 300 miles. Then I'd dial it back to a five-hour-grip pace; not fast
and glamorous, but it just might keep me in the game. I hadn't traveled all the
way from North Carolina
to bail out and sit on the beach and watching everybody else have fun.
When I came in for my first fuel stop, the good guys from
Skiwi Rentals (skiwirentals.com) had the trailers and fuel dump jugs ready for
the six boats they were running. Because the fencing they had laid down for shore
traction had already been beaten into the sand, they yelled for me to get off
the boat so the 4-wheeler could pull the load. I tried to jump off but after an
hour of racing my legs moved slower than my brain. I crashed to the ground flat
on my back under a crowd of feet. By the time I got up, the fuel was in so off
I went.
Running my five-hour-hands pace, I started noting the changing
shadows on the turn boats and checking the movement of the sun across the sky
to get some idea of the passing time. I had a watch on my wrist under my wetsuit,
but my hands were so busy trying to hold me on the Yamaha and keep me out of
the lake, there was no way to get to it. The wind was such that on the
approximately 2.5-mile northern leg, across the wind between turns two and
three, it was necessary to steer noticeably north of the turn three marker boat
to avoid being blown south of it.

The laps pounded on and, by the second fuel stop, my energy
level and concentration had both dropped. I needed the half bagel and Gatorade
I had in my kit bag. This time I didn't fall getting off the boat, but I did walk
like a drunk, bumping into people, fences, and the lone tree.
Back in the saddle, it was tempting to peg the throttle and
go for it but my hands kept screaming "NO." I watched both the sun and my fuel
level sink lower. It wouldn't be a lie to say I was hurting by now. My knees
were barking and my fingers were numb from cold and strain. I had to look at my
hands to place my fingers on the throttle lever. Both thumbs hurt like hell
after being bent back against the joint by the hammering of the boat. I've had
three back operations, so I had to be careful how I sat and held my back. One
time on Lake Norman, north of
Charlotte, NC (where I live), I jumped a boat wake on a Sea-Doo, landed wrong,
and walked a little bent for over a month.
I don't point out all these aches and pains to wave my macho
banner; I do it to emphasize how much fun events like the Mark Hahn Memorial 300
truly are. As the race miles bounced by I'd laugh, telling myself it's a good thing
I really like riding PWC, because otherwise I'd be majorly uncomfortable and
pissed off by the unexpected conditions.
When I judged I'd been running about four hours, I came in
for my third fuel stop, figuring a full load at that point would get me to the
magical fifth hour. As the four-wheeler dragged me and the boat the required-for-refueling
20 feet from the water line, I noticed one of the Skiwi crew guys pulling on
his helmet and gloves. They think I'm going to get off? Are they crazy? I yelled,
"Fuel, fuel, fuel!" Someone leaned in, shouting, "We thought you wanted to get
off!" I shook my head and pounded on the filler cap. As the fuel went in somebody
held up two fingers, shouting, "Two laps to go!"

I hit the water thinking, "Two laps? Twenty measly miles? Is
that all? Piece of cake!" I squeezed the throttle, thinking at last I could stand
up and do some jumping since this whole deal was almost over. I tried to stand
up three times, really tried, but no way could I do it. It was only then I
realized my legs had given up long ago but I hadn't noticed because I'd been concentrating
on my hands so much.
Two laps later, checkered flag. Due to the conditions, the
race had run the full six hours, one hour past my five-hour-hands target time. I
got to the beach and had to ask someone to undo my helmet and pull it off my
head. I didn't have the strength. When I got my gloves off, I found both thumbs
bleeding and swollen. I was totally depleted physically, and couldn't stop
shivering. I found bruises on my hands and legs and in places I'd let only a
proctologist see. The Skiwi guys gave me a candy bar, loaded me into a parked car,
cranked the heater full blast, and rolled the windows up.
Recovering in the car, I had three thoughts:
1) That was the most fun I'd had in a long time
2) When you do the distance solo, the race organizers call
it going ‘Ironman', but I felt more like crinkled tin foil
3) Rodeo guys win awards by staying on the bull for eight
seconds - I say let's bring them to our world to see what they can do. I'd
trade eight seconds of bull for 300 miles of fun any day.
