The intended schedule of events:
Finish the last minute prep and packing on Wednesday, sleep well Wednesday night.
Leave early Thursday, arrive around noon, check in, do recce, hang with people, and sleep.
Finish recce and tech inspection on Friday morning, lunch, relax until first tarmac stages Friday night.
The actual schedule of events:
Worked from Wednesday around 1300 through 0500 Thursday morning, slept for 4 hours.
Finished the car after 20 Thursday night, packed, left at 2130 and immediately turned around b/c I would've been a danger on the road towing for the next 7 hours to Bristol.
Slept for 3 hours and left at 0100, heading straight for tech inspection, where we arrived at 0800 on the dot.
On to the actual event:
Arrived at tech inspection and actually passed without much issue, except a note about our horn being E36 M3 (which isn't true but we'll take it). We also didn't have all of the stickers we needed due to a miscommunication on part of event staff.
Stopped in at check in to get checked in and pick up our missing stickers. Then applied them in the parking lot next to a few other teams.
Swung by to pick up the rental car and dropped off the tow rig/car/trailer at service with a short list for the crew of Amanda, Stephen, and my Dad.
Thankfully we have white car for this weird white graphics package.
We got a single pass of recce in on the 2 tarmac stages and went back to the airbnb to sleep for another 2.5 hours before returning to service for the drivers meeting. Leaving shortly after for the tarmac stages.
At this point I've slept <10 hours in almost 3 days, Julia managed to eek out a few hours on the tow there so she was a bit ahead but neither of us were in peak form by any means. I definitely don't recommend it and if it wasn't our first ever event, there's a good chance we wouldn't have gone.
The first tarmac stage was okay, we ended up delayed as a local managed to drive on course in the middle of 2 cars running. Julia and a bunch of other codrivers ended up getting penalties from the confusion. Which were later removed. After the wait, we were finally belted up and at the line.
Butterflies were rampant in our insides but it was the good kind of excitement. Roughly 3 years after deciding we would race a stage rally, we were sitting in our own car, in our own gear, about to race our first stage ever.
And it was about as messy as you can expect. Julia got lost a bunch of times in the notes, I could barely keep track of them while also driving the car hard for the first time ever on pavement and the second time ever in general. The first being a rally cross 2 weeks prior.
My driving was molasses on a cold day, Julia was rubber banding through the notes like Flubber, and we were both having a ton of fun.
Sailed through the finish line with big dumb grins and a cemented addiction for whatever it was we just did.
Oh, and we were last car in the order because first time and zero other applicable driving experience.
Joined the rest of the field at the regroup just after finish and hung out with everyone for a while.
I'll spare the rest of the details as they can be found on the anypercent thread, but we didn't end up racing the reverse stage. Much to my annoyance after spending time to mount and wire the lightbar.
Got back to service and then the airbnb and crashed hard until we absolutely had to be up on Saturday.
Saturday was awesome, we finally had some rest and were on the way to our first gravel stages. The reason we actually put in the effort.
We started out slow but built confidence in both our hastily marked up Jemba notes and the car itself. The stages themselves were a bit of a blur as we tried to figure out how to do the thing. But by the end of the day we were able to push harder than the morning and had begun to get in sync for significant portions of the last stage with minimal loss in notes.
Random pic from first(?) service:
Everyone at the event was super, super helpful and friendly. Especially towards Julia as a first time codriver, she probably had almost a century worth of combined experience giving her advice and patiently answering all of her questions at various times of the day. On the driver side, a bunch of our friends/rally acquaintances and especially Chris and Adam were congratulatory towards us all day for finishing each leg, which was nice. We had over an hour at one of the regroups in the woods and basically hung out with everyone for a while. Sadly Josh and the Yeetle were out at this point along with a large portion of the rest of the field.
This was also where someone kindly pointed out that our rear wheels had been installed backwards. This was remedied at the last service where the car seemed to check out fine again besides a little more oil used. A baffle, pickup, and oil cooler are planned before our next event to hopefully fix this.
A few stages later, we proudly took our last stage selfie:
Returned to service to more congrats on surviving our first ever event at a rally with 53% attrition. Headed back to the airbnb and then to the awards ceremony to hang out and celebrate our friends on the podium.
An uneventful 7 hour tow later, with a quick gas station pic.
We returned to home, which is where the cat is.