Sandblast 2015
Having sold my Suburban while gas was still $4 a gallon, we had to come up with a different solution to tow. My GFs Saab and a Harbor Freight trailer were determined to be the answer, and we actually had 2 bikes, since a friend of mine was coming with to volunteer and bringing his Husqvarna as a way to get around.
When it was time to leave, though, we were in the middle of a blizzard. The Saab needed a tow just to pull the trailer out of the garage, but it had snow tires on it and could move the trailer under its' own power once dragged into the snow, so we said berkeley it and went anyway.
Everything actually went fine until...
Somewhere on I-81S, traffic ground to a halt- unsurprising given the amount of accidents we were seeing. I checked the rearview as I stopped, and saw nothing, but about 15 seconds later a van slammed into the back of us at full speed. This jackknifed the trailer and pushed the Saab into the guardrail, spinning us a full rotation before a Semi made a glancing blow to the nose of the car, which eventually came to rest facing the wrong way in the right lane.
The car was totaled, the trailer was totaled, but the bikes seemed mostly OK- both had tail section damage and the DRZ had a bent kickstand. After some drama with competing tow companies and help from some extremely nice State Troopers and Firemen, all our E36 M3 was hauled to a local tow yard. We talked it over, and the decision was made that we weren't going home, we were going to Sandblast dammit!
I eventually, through bribes, threats, and more sweet talking than I thought I was capable of, acquired a crew cab Dodge Ram rental truck in the middle of a blizzard in bumberkeley nowhere PA, and we drove through the night, arriving in Cheraw at 3 AM or so with tech first thing in the morning.
The next morning, the Husky fired up like nothing had happened, but the DRZ wouldn't start- something in the carb had been knocked loose in the crash. Luckily, this beast has kickstart, so we were able to diagnose it and get it fired long after the battery had died from cranking. Tech was fine, although some hasty wiring repairs were made to get the turn signals working again, and at registration Anders (organizer and chair) made sure to swing by and say he was glad to see I made it.
It was cold at the start (Sandblast is one long day, and starts early) and with a ton of bikes we were running on 30 second intervals. Lots of passing. I am also terrible at riding in sand, but had no navigation issues and made it to the first service without a hitch, other than the bike stalling occasionally and being hard to start.
The rest of the rally went equally well, with me being slow but having no nav or timing issues- it felt like I'd actually figured out transits and time cards.
The bike only really gave me trouble once- I was coming into the "spectator hairpin", back end dancing around, hard on the brakes, clutch in, down to first, and... it stalled. In the most photographed and recorded corner of the entire event. Oops.
Anyway, at the end of the day, in a field of 46 Moto competitors, I finished 32nd. Not bad for barely making it to the Rally! I ran into tdrrally at the finish party, along with a number of rallycrossers- Sandblast is a long haul for anyone from the northeast but it seems that many make the trip to volunteer and compete. We loaded up our rental truck and went home, snagging excellent BBQ on the the way.