Transsyberia Rallye: Day one text update

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While we’re enjoying the sunshine at Lime Rock, entrants at the Transsyberia Rallye are enduring heavy rains, which are throwing all sorts of deep mud their way. The first text update provided by organizers actually comes from the Canadian team of Kees Neirop and Laurance Yap.

Laurance writes:

Transsyberia, as I learned last year, has an awful little habit of taking you down a notch just when things are feeling really good.

Kees and I had spend the whole week preparing and our car was sorted out exactly the way we wanted; I got a good start on the navigation, entering waypoints into the GPS. We’d both even had a decent night’s sleep.

The police-escorted convoy to and from the start in Red Square was harrowing enough - Moscow drivers are hands-down the world’s craziest - but the run out to the start of the stage was easy enough. As was about the first 20 km of the special stage itself.

All of which changed somewhere around kilometre 26 (of 48) in the roadbook, where the directions stopped making sense and we found ourselves driving around in circles. I would have felt bad for screwing something up, but everyone else was lost too.

A whole train of about 15 cars ended up together at one side of a massive water hole. The lucky ones made it through slowly and steadily; the unlucky ones had to be towed out. And this wasn’t even the BIG water hole that the organizers had warned as about. We spent probably another hour there, being towed through.

During our adventure in the hole - I walked it first and it was waist-deep - we hooked to the car in front of us, but got going under our own power. Which was good, but it also meant we drove over our own tow strap, wrapping it around our wheel and cutting our brake line. Kees is driving it now, to the hotel, using the emergency brake; we’re hoping to have it fixed tonight.

It was carnage on the first day of the rally. We started near the back of the pack, passed a good few cars and finished the stage, but not without some minor damage to the front bumper along with our brake trouble. But we finished better than we started and as I write this, it’s bucketing down rain and 20-plus cars are still stuck halfway into the stage.

All I want right now is some clean clothes, a hot shower and some rest. I don’t even want to think about tomorrow. Yet.

Daily results and video of the pre event tech inspection after the break.
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Video: Porsche teams are ready to roll in Transsyberia Rallye

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The 31 teams competing in the 2008 Transsyberia Rallye have just 2 more sleeps before they strap themselves in to their steeds to tackle the 4347 miles leading from Moscow to Ulaanbaatar in Mongolia.

It would be hard to believe that any team could be better prepared than those who are campaigning the specially prepared Porsche Cayenne. In the video after the break, the Porsche team does a bit of final testing of their steeds and competitors like Rod & Ryan Millen and Canadian Kees Nierop discuss what it takes to compete in an event like this.
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