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Once Upon a
Duck
Greetings to Real Endurance
Riders
Perhaps some of you have been wondering
whatever happened to the sadistic Frozen Duck who put on the
midwinter endurance race at Lar-amie, Wyoming, back in '81. Well,
the last time we heard from the Duck he had routed a trail across
the frozen tundra, dynamited the ice off the Laramie River to
release the entrapped polar bears, and had even awakened a herd of
250 sex-crazed, hibernating reindeer to terrorize the riders. It was
a devastating shock to the Duck to find that Mother Nature, with her
perverted sense of humor, provided an all time record breaking day
of 72 degrees in beautiful downtown Laramie. Well, some
good did come out of the day. The Duck cleared enough money from the
ride to purchase a ticket on a southbound bus. Unfortunately,
however, the bus broke down 5 miles east of Minturn, Colorado, and
the Duck had to continue on foot. He finally arrived half frozen and
broke at an old tavern and restaurant named The Saloon. There he met
a kindred spirit tending bar, named Big Bob Cherry ( Colorado's
answer to Kojack and Hitler, all rolled into one). Well, here the
Duck has remained (the drinks were cheap) whiling away the hours and
solving the great philisophical problems of the world: like why
would anyone want to ride in an endurance race when they could be
doing something less expensive like chasing women in Monte Carlo in
a red Ferrari. It finally occurred to the Duck and BBC that some
research was in order to study the peculiar endurance riders in some
depth if an answer was to be found to the perplexing
problem. What is being
proposed to you is the opportunity to participate in a great
research project designed by two fo the finest minds of Tie Siding,
Wyoming. Tie Siding, by the way, is an intellectual experiment
station in southern Wyoming where great thinkers go in the winter to
see how long they can maintain their concentration while watching
the big wind molecules beat up the little wind molecules.
The proposal is this, folks, you've made
it through the b.s. and are now down to the real nitty gritty. On
February 21, 1983 there will be a 50 mile, AERC sanctioned,
endurance race starting from Joe's Dugout Pony Express station, a
real place located 7 miles west of Lehi, Utah. This race will run
down the original Pony Express Trail finishing near Simpson Springs
XP station. The next day there will be another 50 mile race starting
at Simpson Springs and continuing down the trail for another 50
miles. This format will continue for 5 days and a total of 250
miles, just the right distance for the Duck and BBC to thoroughly
study your behavior. The last day's race will end at the site of the
old Ft. Ruby Pony Express station. Should you choose to ride every
day you will have ridden across 250 miles of original XP trail,
passing the remains of 24 original stations. During the first day
you will cross two paved roads and see one small town. After the
lunch break of the first day we will only cross one paved road and
pass five places of human habitation in the next 225 miles. The
experience is awesome. The country remains as it has been since the
days of the Pony Express. The majority of the trail is accessible by
vehicle as a graded dirst road approximates, and in some cases
obliterates, the original trail. There are no services that can be
depended upon. The Duck, however, will advise you in how to safely
and comfortably negotiate the course with your support crews. The
terrain is not difficult and each day's ride can be made on young,
inexperienced horses if proper horsemanship is used. Friends of the
Duck have traveled this same route with a similar format on two
previous occasions. It can and has been done.
Now the Duck and BBC, both being
extremely kind, gentle, benevolent and chaste individuals who would
never kill anyone unless they bothered them, worried that some
pain-crazed endurance rider might make some nasty scene out in the
wilderness that would provoke them into having to take some rash
action. Just when things seemed hopeless, the Duck hit upon an idea.
"Let's hire Kathy Riordan to run this for us. She lives in
California so she's used to working with the fruits and nuts," he
said. BBC agreed that this was the perfect solution as it would
allow them to continue working on some of their other problems -
like precisely how much tequila has to be put in the Margaritas
before the average skier perceives the 63-year-old Minturn meter
maid as a perfect 10.
Perhaps this is the place to define how some endurance riders view
the sport. It is a challenge; each new obstacle is something to
overcome with individual initiative, not something to expect ride
management to overcome for you. Some endurance riders are not unlike
the young men of the early days who, as they floated down the great
rivers on their way West, were tempted into the many caves along the
way to "wrestle the bear." It would have been no sport to wrestle
the bear if you were always guaranteed a happy ending, but when you
emerged from the cave you had met the unknown and had conquered it.
Some caves contained two bears for added enjoyment. The Duck and
BBC, being a couple of old bear wrestlers themselves, believe that
management exists to create a challenge, not to help you through
every possible obstacle. Many endurance riders today compete only to
race their machines; they don't want any surprises. They prepare
themselves and their mounts beforehand and they want a guarantee
that the event will be predictably exact. Due to the magnitude of
this project and the lack of funds to provide control over all of
the factors involved, not to mention the Duck's lackadaisical
attitude on life in general, this ride will be short on guarantees
and niceties. The barest essentials will be provided: cave, one or
more bears, awards on exit. They will, however, provide you with
more than you have ever been provided with on a ride - more miles to
ride, more historic sites, more open country, more freedom to
succeed but also more freedom to fail. All of the essentials will be
provided to ensure AERC sanction. There will be a marked trail (they
are trying to obtain the other half of the roll of ribbon Pat
Fitzgerald used to mark the Silver Springs Ride) and the services of
a qualified veterinarian (his former employer said he was the most
qualified chicken inspector the state ever had until he got on the
bottle). There will also be awards - silver awards for the finishers
of each day's ride along with daily 1st place and best condition
awards.
In an attempt to lure you into the whole
shebang, the Saloon has graciously offered to present a beautiful
silver cup to the accumulator of the most points received during the
five day series. The Saloon has also agreed to keep the cup filled
with Margaritas any time the winner is in Minturn for the rest of
the winner's life or until BBC tires of the winner's company, which
may come at precisely the same time. One point will be awarded for
every mile ridden by any horse/rider team along with a bonus point
of 2.5 points for each place above 10th. There will also be an
oveerall best condition award along with anything else the Duck
decides to give away by then. So the bottom line is this: you get to
enter five 50 mile rides in a row, each one a separate event, each
one with a quite reasonable entry fee of $300. This fee entitles you
to be recorded as a participant in a day's race and receive an award
after a successful completion. It also insures that the results will
be sent on to AERC for the permanent record, so that when you look
back on this week and say, "I don't believe those smooth talkin'
suckers really conned me into that mess," you can call up Annie T.
and she'll say, "Thats right sweetie, You were there." What you
don't get for your money is the right to whimper and bitch at
management about how things ought to be different. Try to always
remember the famous saying, " If you don't like what they do in
Rome, go to Turkey."
Now, having some extensive experience in
dealing with the species Endurio peculiario , the dynamic duo
recognized that most applicants to this event will be relatively
manageable people who, although their elevators don't usually run
all the way to the top, will realize that they participate in this
sort of event on their own free will. So, the Duck has initiated a
grant in aid program to deserving persons. (Now aren't you sorry you
snickered when the Duck was described as "benevolent"?) The Frozen
Duck Trust Fund has agreed to offer an unlimited number of grants to
the tune of $260 a day. All you have to do is apply, on a daily
basis, just prior to entry time and see if your grant has come
through, and there is no reason why it shouldn't if you have been
nice to the Duck and all of his friends. Should you cause the
management more than $300 a day in grief, however, they will reserve
the right to cast you out into the wilderness. It is an interesting
side light to note the close proximity that this wilderness has to a
dead sea (Great Salt Lake). This could even qualify as a religious
experience, so if you want to make your checks out to the Reverend
Duck, you can try taking it off your income taxes as a religious
deduction. Well, that's about the whole story. Get your
entries in early as that will please the Duck and he will remember
you kindly as he makes out his grants in aid. Remember -
save a buck and ride with the Duck.
Best Regards,
Attention You are preparing to
enter a remote, arid portion of what has been called the Great
American Desert. This area is basically the same as it was 150 years
ago when most civilized people thought it was impassable.
Originally, the primary intent of the Pony Express was to prove to
the world that the route was indeed passable. It has never been
touted as a playground for the shoe clerks and other various dimwits
of the world. Remember that your modern conveyances, should they
fail you, will leave you in the exact same position that your
pioneer forefathers would have been in had they found themselves
afoot in the same area. Many of them died. The Duck and BBC believe
this explains why the descendants of the original pioneers are
genetically superior to the rest of the world. All the dummies died
on the way west. Should you fail to use your head, you can and will
create a life threatening situation for yourself. No one is
responsible for your safety and well-being except you. You must
prepare yourself for any circumstance. Be sure you always have
enough water and warm cloths to weather out any storm. A major storm
can isolate you for several days or more. Do not start off for any
destination unless you are sure that you can either make it there or
to some place of safety enroute. Be sure enough of your decision
that you will bet your life upon it, because that is what you are
doing in a very literal sense.
Pony Express Trail in Nevada and
Utah U.S. Geological Survey Map Station Name Distance
Last Station Total Distance
NK 12-11 Joe's
Dugout 0 0 NK 12-10 Camp Floyd (Ft.
Crittendon) (Carson's Inn) 8.5 8.5
NK 12-10 Rush Valley (Meadow Creek) 11.8
20.3
NK 12-10 Faust 8.5 28.8 NK 12-10 Point
Lookout (Lookout) 8.3 37.1 NK 12-10 Government Well 8.3
45.4 NK 12-10 Simpson Springs 8.2 53.6 NJ 12-1 River Bed
(River Bottom) 8.1 61.7 NJ 12-1 Dugway 10.0 71.7 NJ
12-1Black Rock 14.0 85.7 NJ 12-1 Fish Springs 10.5 96.2 NJ
12-1 Boyd's 8.0 104.2 NJ 12-1 Willow Springs 9.5 113.7
NJ 12-1 Willow Creek 5.0 118.7 NK
12-10 Canon (Burnt Station) 11.5 130.2 NK 12-10 Deep Creek
(Ibapah) 10.2 140.4 NJ 11-3 Eight Mile (Prarie Gate) 7.3
147.7 NJ 11-3 Antelope Springs 19.3 167.0 NJ 11-3 Spring Valley 12.5 179.5 NJ 11-3 Schell
Creek (Ft. Schellbourne after the Pony Express) 7.5 187.0
NJ 11-3 Egan's (Egan Canyon) 15.8
202.8 NJ 11-3 Butte ( Robber's Roost, Theives Delight, Bates)
14.2 217.0
NK 11-2 Mountain Springs 13.5 230.5 NK
11-2 Ruby Valley (Ft. Ruby) 8.2 238.7 NK 11-2 Ruby Lakes (not
located on the original Pony Express Trail) 8.0 246.7
The following maps will be used during
the five days of the Pony Express endurance ride series NK 12-11
Salt Lake City, Utah - NK 12-10 Toole, Utah - NJ 12-1 Delta, Utah -
NJ 11-3 Ely, Nevada - NK 11-12 Elko, Nevada These maps may be
purchased from the U.S. Geological Survey, Denver, Colorado
80225
The information given above is an
approximation of the locations of the original XP station sites. The
precise milage may differ slightly due to variations in the trail
made necessary by the weather. A more precise information list will
be made available to you at the pre-ride breifings. You should be
aware of the fact that the exact location of an individual station
would vary depending upon season water availability and Indian
pressure. Due to the scarcity of water in some areas, some stations
were nothing more than an agreed upon spot where a contractor would
bring a new horse and drink of water out in a wagon. This is
especially characteristic of the desert stations in the western part
of Utah and Nevada. The information given here, however, will allow
you to accurately predict your needs in terms of water and rest
stops. All riders will be supplied with Xerox copies of the above
maps. Many people, however, will find it much easier to transcribe
the xeroxed information onto an original topographical map which
will show the contours and vegetation in much better
detail.
If you would like to download Once Upon a
Duck click here. This requires Adobe Acrobat which is free from
Adobe's web site.
 Katie Riordan, Duck's Western Connection 2060 Hwy
193 Cool, California 95614 916 485-4443 work 916 885-3993
home
The Duck Himself P.O. Box 33 Tie Siding, WY 82084 303
493-7585 home (The Duck obviously doesn't
work) |