Starboard paddler Fiona Wylde had a great weekend at the Columbia Gorge Paddle Challenge, winning the double downwinder at her home spot. Fiona gives TotalSUP the report of the performance at the Columbia Gorge Paddle Challenge.
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
What an amazing weekend it was! We were fortunate to be greeted with a hefty breeze all weekend for the 8th Annual Columbia Gorge Paddle Challenge, creating epic downwind conditions and a very technical course race! It is crazy to think that this is already the eighth year of the Paddle Challenge. The race was my first stand up paddle event that I ever competed in! Right from the start downwinding has been something that I’ve loved, and with very few downwind dedicated events, it’s an honour to have one of the most prestigious events held in my home town of Hood River, Oregon!
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
This year was extra special because the Gorge Challenge joined forces with The Paddle League bringing together a strong group of elite paddlers, plus there was massive open field. Luckily for us, we had a little bit of everything in the week leading up to the paddle challenge, a mix of windy and flat days. This allowed visitors to check out the sights surrounding the Gorge like mountain biking, hiking, and of course lots of eating and maybe some wine tasting.
The days before the race the forecast lined up perfectly to provide two windy days for both the Double Downwinder and the Hot Lap. I am not going to lie, I was really nervous for this race. I won the race in the last two years and I really wanted to win the double down a third year in a row, but the women paddlers are getting stronger and faster in downwind. So I knew it was going to be a difficult race.
I have spent so much time on the river between windsurfing, paddling, sailing and kiting, that I understand the way that the currents work, but it changes every day. The currents are controlled by the dams, the dams either release more or less water depending on how little or how much power they need to produce. This means that the currents are constantly changing and it’s tricky to pinpoint exactly what is going on that day.
Without a doubt I knew I was going to take the Starboard Allstar. This board is my magic board and I have never felt as comfortable on any other board. Not having to make a decision of what board to take on race day makes it so much easier to just focus on the race. I also knew my line that I wanted to take, but the current was strong and the wind was still light on the first run, so this made the bumps a little bit flatter. Everybody flew out of the gates in the fastest start I can remember!
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
Terrene Black was right next to me and we were going side by side pushing hard, each trying to make a little gap with every bump. It took me about 2 miles before I could put on any gap that was more than one bump length ahead of her. By then I was already pretty exhausted. I basically had just sprinted two miles to establish a lead. This kept me nervous and kept me paddling quickly. I was able to keep my head down, transition a bit more from sprinting for bumps to surfing glides and this helped me put a little bit more distance on the rest of the pack.
I won the first run by about two minutes. In any other race, I would be stoked to win by over two minutes! But in this type of racing, especially when you have to to go back up to the start and do there same run over again, anything can happen. All is takes is a few bumps and you can either close or lose 50 meters. I knew that if I wanted to hold onto the lead, I was going to have to dig deep to get another quick start and keep pushing hard all the way through the finish.
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
On the second lap, Annie Rieckert, amazing water woman and good friend from Maui, sprinted like I have never seen off of the start! We were neck and neck for the first third of the race, trading glides, sprinting up next to each other and weaving near and far depending on which direction our glide took us. It was really amazing in that sense, we were just surfing together! But at the same time, the race was on, and as much as it is fun to surf with friends, that day we were on a mission. One of my favourite sections in the Viento Run is called Mitchell Point. The bumps get much steeper and become groomed.
Through this section of the river, I can normally keep my board planing by surfing from bump to bump, but only if I get a good bump ahead of the section and it all lines up. When I saw the trough of the glide that would carry me through Mitchell Point, I knew I was golden! I just had to keep it rolling! I got on the bump, stepped back and boom, I was off. It is the coolest sensation in the world to have your race board planning from downwind glide to downwind glide! I just kept this momentum going! One glide at a time, that’s all I was telling myself- you can do it!
When I rounded the island, I saw the flags blowing at the finish, only half a mile to go! Coming into the finish I could see people lined up along the bank of the river, and when I got closer the roar of cheers was belting through the wind! It was the most amazing thing to hear friends, family, people I didn’t even know, all cheering for me! I couldn’t help by smile on my way into the finish line! I jumped off my board to run up the finish line where kids and adults were all holding out there hands for me to high five them on the way up! All of the JET (Junior Elite Team) kids were standing there at the finish waiting to give me the biggest hug!
For me, this really is a community win. So many people have helped and watched me grow up in this community, all contributing to the person that I am today. For me to be able to share this win with all of you, everybody from Hood River, family and friends, it is the most rewarding victory I have ever experienced! So many emotions went into day one, that when day two came around, I felt the biggest relief lifted off of my shoulders! Serene William once said, “Pressure is Privilege”, and I never understood it until this weekend.
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
Last year in the Course Race I ended up passing out and spending the afternoon in the Hospital, so my only goal for the course race was to not do that! To be completely honest, I didn’t know how the course race was going to go. I was really tired and definitely sore from the downwinders, so anything could have happened. The course was a four lap course with one lap being a ‘Hot Lap’, meaning one lap was slightly shorter than the others. This throws a lot of strategy in the mix. I had a really good start and found myself tied for first with Sey Chelle Webster heading into the first upwind leg. When we rounded the upwind mark, I sprinted and got a bit of a gap on the downwind section. She caught back up to me on the second leg and we went into the W part of the course together. No hot lap for us on the first lap.
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
However some people did do their hot lap on the first lap, including Olivia Piana. So then Shae Foudy, Sey Chelle and I were all neck and neck, then on the next upwind leg, I managed to gain some separation only a board length. Since some people took their hot lap early, it meant that there were people ahead of me and also the downwind section of the course was really choppy. It was tricky to find a good glide and connect with it. It was the second lap in a Sey Chelle and Shae were about two board lengths ahead of me but when they didn’t take their hot lap and I did! I went for it, put the hammer down and started sprinting.
I tried everything to hang onto the lead, but when we came back together, I was about 2 meters behind. Whether that rocked my confidence or I was just exhausted, I’m not sure, maybe both, but I lost a ton of speed. I finished the race in fourth behind Shae, who won, Sey Chelle in second and Olivia in third. I am not bummed with this result at all! I had given it my all, tried to make up some ground by taking a different strategy, and it just didn’t work. And beyond that, I was standing on my two feet, not in an ambulance, so that was a major plus.
With my combined time between the downwind runs and the course race I won the Overall Water Woman Award! Creating a three-peat in the double downwinders is something I am so proud of, but to have this be my 4th Overall win is something that makes me even happier. As an athlete I find it important to be able to compete in many different disciplines, and I am honoured to take this award home, especially 4 out of the 8 years this event has been running!
I will always remember this event and this summer with a smile on my face. Sharing Hood River with friends from around the world and making new friends along the way, is the greatest pleasure I could have as an athlete! Thank you to everyone who came out to Hood River to be part of this event, but also thanks to my amazing friends for just being such good people and loving life!
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
The biggest thanks of all goes out to Steve Gates, the owner of Big Winds and his family, Erin, Rob, Jody, and Jinny for all of the hard work they put in to keep this event running and for the amazing influence that they have had on my own life. Steve introduced me to the sport of SUP and for that, I can never be grateful enough.
Photo Credit: Paddle League / Georgia Schofield
Now that the event is over and things are quieter, I am sitting in my living room finishing up this post just smiling. I couldn’t have asked for a better summer or better people to share it with. Thank you all!
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