What follows is an account chronicling my experience competing in Project X, a Navigational Team Challenge held in the Richtersveld and Namaqualand from 21 to 28 September, 2024. Although we competed in teams of two, this is relayed from a very personal perspective. Suffice to say at this juncture that my teammate, a fine gentleman and mensch, pulled me through a good few ordeals when I was ready to tap out of the event.
I don’t usually write up this sort of thing - not for social media or ride reports or anything. But when something as life changing (and, for one of us, tragically life ending) comes your way, it deserves reflection, and it deserves to be recorded. As one of the participants said when we discussed it afterward, “the depth of the experience on its own merits therapy just to unpack it.” Besides, my voice is completely gone from an upper respiratory tract infection I picked up mid event, so I can’t even tell my family and friends the stories and anecdotes. I guess this is then a journal of sorts, and a way to answer everyone who has curiously enquired after details.
If you’re not interested in all the background and context, and just want to know about the event, skip to the day by day accounts, or to the Epilogue if you’re considering doing this or something similar, and want to know the considerations. Otherwise, read on. It’s pretty wild.
Prologue
Let me back up a good bit, and explain how it came to be that Rayne (my teammate) and I even got to participate in this exclusive and unique challenge, designed and hosted by Specialised Adventures. As with most things in my life, I sort of just go with it if it feels right, without too much analysis or consideration of the finer details. Although I am certainly capable of high resolution analysis of almost anything, I find that it hardly ever moves the needle decidedly this way or that, once the fundamentals have been considered. It’s the big rocks that will divert a river’s course; there are almost never enough little ones around to have any measured effect.The first time I came to hear about Project X was in April, on a Tankwa Biking tour of southern Namibia with my friend Steve, from whom I bought a beautiful R1200GS Rallye a few months prior. My other bike is an F800 GSA, which has served me well as a first adventure bike, but more on that later. It took me a good 10,000km to come to terms with the telelever front suspension on the big GS, but once you come to trust it, it will take care of you. The long sandy gravel roads in Namibia seemed like GS territory, and in hindsight I can confirm that I would not have wanted to be on any other bike. The big GS should be your weapon of choice for Namibia.
Steve was on his semi-adventurised Husky 501, a bike I would have traded a kingdom for on a few occasions during Project X, but glad to not have been on in Namibia. Steve is made of tough stuff though - he had fun on the 501.
Also on this tour of Namibia was Lutz, on a well appointed Ducati DesertX. We chatted about this and that, and Lutz mentioned that he is glad to be riding a bit of sand, since he’s participating in this Project X thing in September. I didn’t know exactly what it was all about, but it sounded hella cool.
A while after this tour, I was on a ride with my BFF riding buddy, Albie. He said he was considering upgrading the suspension on his 890R, because he’s been roped into this challenge called Project X, and “suspension is everything”. Phwoar… intriguing. He tells me more, and I go look up the tantalising details on the Project X website. Fast forward a couple of months, and Albie’s teammate has to withdraw due to a compound set of factors. As you may have guessed, Mr Big-Rocks-Sure-Why-Not gets tapped as replacement. So now it’s Albie and I - we decide to name our team “Desert Rats”, competing in the Big Adventure Class. I booked leave and cleared my calendar, and with a little over three months to go, I thought I better get a bit fitter. The prospect of doing this with Albie was exciting. We ride well together - nearly always with Albie leading and me barely keeping up, and we seem to just chat about everything and anything until the silly hours. This was going to be great.
Around six weeks before the event, we decided to meet up for the 2024 Thumper Bash, staying with Debbie and Eugene at Koedoeskloof in Ladismith. I rode up with mates from Cape Town on my CRF450X (Hi Edgy!) Albie and his wife Luani rode from George on his 701 and her CRF300L, respectively.
Dwars Bar at Koedoeskloof, Ladismith.
After rising early to watch the rugby on Saturday morning, Albie and I opt to ride the scenic, twisty gravel along the Groenrivier from Calitzdorp towards Oudtshoorn, over Swartberg pass and then to do a speed run into Die Hel for lunch, while Luani stays at base catching up on some work she brought with.
Taking a pause at the top of Swartberg pass. Albie's 701 blew over in a sudden gust of wind.
The weather is great, and the repaired road into Gamkaskloof is a treat on our bikes. I nearly lost the front around a right hander, which surprised me since I wasn’t pushing at all… in fact, I recall being in a sort of coasting mode. We stop at Fontein plaas, and I mention this to Albie over lunch. In the process of relaying this, I recall a prior occasion when this happened during the Wacky Funduro earlier this year. Even now, I wish I had been more vocal about those incidents, but at the time I ascribed it to flawed technique, which after some analysis and consultation, it almost surely was.
View from our lunch table at Fontein plaas
We agree that we’ve had our fun and to take it easy on the way out, but for a little spice, we switch bikes for a bit. As Albie pulls away on my 450X, I notice my number plate got lost on the way in (I had roadworthied and adventurised the bike to some extent). I resolve to find it on the way back out, so I slow down a tad to have a good look around while jockeying Albie’s 701 to the point where we’d switch back for the rest of the ride out of the Kloof.
The events that unfolded over the next 12 hours probably deserves its own writeup, but I’ll try to summarise: As I rounded the corner to arrive at the first set of historic cottages before the rocky switchback that is Elands Pass, I found Albie dismounted next to my bike, and some other riders who only rode down to this point for the day. I don’t immediately recognise anything amiss, so I mumble something about looking for my lost number plate. “Deon, I’ve caused problems now. My knee is shot.” says Albie, the pain now apparent on his face. It turns out that while he was coming up to our planned stop, the front of the bike felt like washing out to the left - Albie caught it, overcorrected and dabbed his right knee to bits. ACLs ripped off the attachment points on the tib/fib. While riding my bike. My heart sank.
We exchange some more pained words, and in the details as well as his violently painful reaction when he accidentally places some weight on the knee, I surmise that the injury precludes riding out of there today. I begin to plan a return to Fontein plaas, where there is communication with the world outside the Kloof, overnight guests with vehicles, or at least some means to orchestrate casevac. The last thing I saw before setting off was my friend literally fainting due to the excruciating pain. While being carried to shade by the samaritans we found there, he just went limp and fell forward between them, face down into the dust. I didn’t catch any of you guys’ names, but if you’re reading this, thanks for staying with Albie through that ordeal, and please hit me up - I’d like to buy you all a good few beers.
Arriving back at Fontein plaas around 3pm, I hear that nobody was planning a trip back out that day, but once he learned of the situation, a gentleman by the name of Innes (Oosthuizen?) of Hartenbos offered to fetch the injured rider from the location of the accident to bring him back to Fontein plaas, without hesitation. We set off at once, and upon arrival at the site perhaps half an hour later, I am relieved to find Albie in somewhat better shape than when I left him, at least in spirit. “Where’s my bike? Let’s go!” he quips, and for a moment I almost take him seriously. Maybe he was, but either way I was having none of it. He has had no pain relief at this point… what a trouper. We load him into Innes’ Kombi, and I set off on my 450X back to Fontein plaas for the third time that day.
The logistics of getting myself, Albie and both bikes extracted involved a hired trip from Prins Albert by oom John Claassens, a fascinating man with many stories of his time as a hunting guide with the bushmen in the Kalahari. Once this was negotiated and agreed, the plan was that I would ride my 450X out to the Gamkaskloof turnoff on Swartberg Pass, and meet Oom John there, then catch a ride back to Fontein plaas with him, so that Albie could be driven out with him in his famous “John’s Donkey”, and then I’d ride Albie’s bike out to the same turnoff, where all riders and bikes should now have converged upon. The second part of the plan was then for Albie’s brother, Richard, to collect riders and bikes at this point, setting out from George at approximately the same time with Albie’s bakkie and bike trailer.
Source: John’s Facebook profile
A good plan in theory, but of course Oom John either doesn’t receive, or doesn’t internalise the detail that he’s supposed to wait at the turnoff for the red bike (me) to arrive, before descending into Die Hel. So, he turns in and begins his descent without delay. I met up with him on my way out already 14km from the turnoff. I decided to leave my bike there by the roadside and proceed as planned - we’d have to resolve this complication later. Oom John and I have ourselves a spectacularly beautiful sunset drive into the Kloof in his Donkey, an old Ford Everest that he rescued from where it was parked for years under a tree, while he regales me with tales from his storied past with the bushmen, and I take photos of the incredible sunset and wildlife before it gets dark, all the while wracked with worry about my injured friend.
A family of Klipspringers (?) watching us pass
Although I initially held out hope that this might be a fracture that would heal in time for Albie to ride a bike (6 weeks seemed reasonable?), and still compete in Project X, it was at this point it dawned on me that it was probably foolish, and wishful thinking. As I descended upon Fontein plaas for the fourth time that day, I started to feel a sadness and disappointment that would linger for a while, intermixed with feelings of doubt and guilt, of a nature that I’m sure the gentle reader can imagine.
The enchanting sunset over the Kloof that evening didn’t quite align with the drama of the day’s events
The rest of the extraction involved riding Albie’s 701 out of Die Hel, in the dark of night, to where I left my 450, or to where I met Albie’s inbound brother and bakkie, whichever came first. As it turned out, I got to my bike first, and then I rode on for a bit after Oom John and Albie caught up to me, to meet up with Richard on the way, in order to proactively assess the road conditions given that he’s coming in with a trailer. The remainder of the details are unimportant, except to say that we got the bike on the trailer around midnight, then I rode my own bike out the rest of the way ahead of the bakkie while off road, and nervously following it until we got to Oudsthoorn’s first fuel station, just as my bike started sputtering and choking on its last few drops of the stuff. The petcock was switched to reserve from about 15km outside of Oudsthoorn, so now I also knew what this bike’s useful range was on reserve - i.e. “not very”.
To avoid further logistical complications, I rode back to Koedoeskloof (Ladimith) and arrived there at 2:15am Sunday morning, against Albie’s concerned advice. In hindsight, this was a dangerously dumb endeavour. Although I felt physically and mentally up to it, it’s not the kind of bike one should take these risks on - a simple headlight bulb, stator or rectifier failure would have meant a cold, lonely and potentially dangerous night out in the sticks. There was one car that passed me from the front the whole way there. Anyway, I made it, that time.
Albie went straight to hospital in George, where they confirmed what we already knew - this was major trauma to the knee, and it’s going to take a very long time to heal. On the plus side, riding two enduro bikes out of Die Hel in the dark, with their hopelessly insufficient illumination, was probably a good bit of preparation for the night stage of Project X. Meagre consolation, I know.
So now, here we have the Project X Big Adventure Class, Team 3 substitute, me, looking for another substitute to partner with.
Given the nature of the team challenge, one can imagine how critical it is to have the right partnership. We all know that as adventure riders, we find ourselves in situations, more often than we care to admit, where our lives are dependent (and sometimes owed) to the riders in our riding groups. Moreso in challenges like this, and in terrain like the Richtersveld. The stakes are higher. Now, imagine the small inclusion in the Venn diagram of time / availability, means, skill, trust, and interest in participating in such a thing as this. With you. How many names can you write down?
Anyway, I made a list. It wasn’t long. Not really an ordered list in terms of preference, but I did feel that some had the right of first refusal for an opportunity such as this, because of their massively positive contributions to my riding life. Rayne is a member of that scruffy gang that guided me along when I first started riding in 2021, and one of the links in the chain of events that led to me buying my first adventure bike, although he didn’t know it at the time. I was properly happy when he signalled interest, and absolutely stoked when he accepted. At least I could fulfil half the dream of the OG Desert Rats. Rayne would get a chance to get really into his new Africa Twin, and Albie would at least recover his entry fee, hopefully to apply towards a future X. Maybe we can even be competitive. Things were looking up!
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