Everything to Live For: The Inspirational Story of Turia Pitt (5 page)

BOOK: Everything to Live For: The Inspirational Story of Turia Pitt
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The race was started by John Storey, a local farmer and a friend of RacingthePlanet founder, Mary Gadams; Mary was also competing. John had been a volunteer for the previous year’s event in the Kimberley and he and his wife, Ann-Marie, flew to Emma Gorge in their gyrocopter. Also on the airstrip was the media helicopter with the Beyond Action crew on board that we’d been told about at the previous day’s briefing.

On the crack of the starter gun we were off. For about the first 10 kilometres I ran with the three guys I’d been talking to on the bus. But I was faster and eventually pulled away from them, going ahead on my own. After checkpoint one, the course veered off the Gibb River Road toward the Tier Ranges. It was rugged country, through long grass, trees and shrubby bush. I stopped for a rest and some water at checkpoint two which was at about the 19-kilometre mark, where other competitors were also resting and chatting, and some race officials checked off our names.

The next stretch went through the Tier Gorge, the most inaccessible and difficult part of the 20 kilometres to checkpoint three. I set off on my own. On the way I passed two other competitors, a younger guy and an older man, sitting under a tree having something to eat. I couldn’t see the smoke from there and I had my iPod on and couldn’t hear anything either. When I took my earphones out to say hello as I ran past them, I heard a noise and thought it must be trucks from the distant Great Northern Highway. I look back on that moment now and shiver at my unwitting mistake.

A bit further on where the route funnelled into the narrow section of the Tier Gorge with high rock cliffs either side, I had to stop running; I was walking and clambering over rocks and was climbing for a while before descending into a wide, flat, scrubby bush- and grass-covered valley with a rocky steep escarpment on my right.

I was running again, still with my iPod on, when suddenly I saw smoke from a fire in the distance; to me it looked like a low brush fire coming across the floor of the valley towards the escarpment on my right. At that moment it didn’t look all that big but as I looked about anxiously I saw a girl and a guy who were obviously discussing the fire and as I stopped, another two competitors ran up; I recognised them as the guys I’d seen having lunch. Another guy joined us, and as we congregated together, we looked around for a way out.

Suddenly, the fire was metres away and we realised we were in terrible danger. We were trapped; the wind was rapidly funnelling the fire towards us and into the gorge; the only way out was the steep rocky cliff covered in long grass on our right. I knew fire travelled uphill very fast but we had no choice – there was no other way, we had to go up.

FOUR
THE RACE

F
IVE OTHERS FACED THE SAME TERRIBLE PREDICAMENT AS
T
URIA
in those seemingly short minutes before the fire overcame them all.

Michael Hull, from the Central Coast of New South Wales, was a veteran of extreme racing and had participated in five of RacingthePlanet’s previous events over a number of years: the Gobi March, the Atacama Crossing in Chile, Antarctica – the Last Desert, the Sahara Race in Egypt and the staged seven-day 250-kilometre run in the Kimberley the previous year.

Forty-four-year-old Michael, a sales executive with a telecommunications company, was in the United Kingdom to compete in a 100-mile (160 km) race organised by Centurion Running when he was invited to participate in the Kimberley event. Michael was staying with his brother, who lives in London, when he received an email from RacingthePlanet’s race director offering to waive the entry fee if he agreed to be part of a documentary being filmed to promote tourism in Western Australia. He said it was put to him as a way of ‘helping them out’.

Immediately after the UK race, Michael was planning to fly to the United States to be his friend’s support person in another ultramarathon; he emailed RacingthePlanet back telling them that if he didn’t sustain any injuries and felt up to it, he’d be a starter. A week after his return to Australia he was on a flight to Kununurra. He expected to do the race in good time and promised his wife and daughters he’d be on the plane out the day after to be home in time for Father’s Day.

The previous year the ultramarathon race had been over the same route but run in reverse; Michael knew that in the first part of the Tier Gorge was a stretch of approximately 2 kilometres that was narrow and rugged, the only part of the course where there was no vehicle access – no tracks or trails. He planned to do an easy run to checkpoint two and walk to checkpoint three, by which time he would have warmed up and could start serious running.

As part of the agreement to participate in the documentary, Michael was asked to wear a special camera strapped to his chest, which he was told he could take off if he found it uncomfortable or the batteries ran flat. He decided to take it off at checkpoint two because he found it annoying; a decision, in retrospect, he regrets. At checkpoint two, while filling up his water bottle, he saw Turia and the four others with whom he would later confront the fire. He left just ahead of the others.

About fifteen minutes later, the father and son team of Shaun and Martin Van der Merwe passed Michael. Thirty-two-year-old Shaun had immigrated to Australia from South Africa in 2005. He was living in Perth with his wife and one child and working in a corporate role for a mining company.

His fifty-six-year-old father, Martin, lived in Ghana, where he worked as human resources manager for another mining company. Both Martin and Shaun had taken part in ultramarathons before. Shaun’s had mostly been on-road in South Africa, and the Kimberley ultra was his first off-road race. Martin was well seasoned at multi-sport competitions, mostly in South Africa. He had competed in Iron Man events and ultramarathons in both running and canoeing, the Cape Epic Ultra – an off-road cycle event over nine days – as well as the Ultra Man, an ultra-distance event involving running, cycling, swimming and canoeing over one year.

Shaun and Martin had a ‘bucket list’ of things they would like to do together, which gave them an opportunity to catch up every year. They took turns at selecting an activity such as a marathon, fly fishing, canoeing or mountain-bike riding; this year it was Shaun’s choice. He’d seen a documentary on RacingthePlanet and was attracted to the ultra in the Kimberley. He’d always wanted to go to the Kimberley and thought this might be a great way to do it; he and Martin agreed that they’d squeeze it in before going over to New Zealand for the Rugby World Cup the following week.

Competitors in the event had a choice of doing 100 kilometres or 50 kilometres. Martin didn’t feel he’d had enough training to do the 100 kilometres and Shaun didn’t care either way, so they registered for 100 kilometres with the option of finishing after 50 kilometres. Martin flew to Perth to meet Shaun and they flew to Kununurra together.

About halfway between checkpoint two and checkpoint three, Martin and Shaun decided to take a break and have something to eat in the shade of a tree. While resting, Michael came past, stopping briefly to say hello. Shortly afterwards, Turia also passed them and called out hello.

After passing the Van der Merwes, Michael had gone about 500 metres more when he heard a roaring noise and surmised it must be a road train on the Great Northern Highway, which he knew was in the vicinity but still some distance away. He didn’t see the smoke from the fire because he was consciously looking down so as not to roll an ankle on the rocky surface and he was also keeping an eye out for the pink bunting attached to trees and rocks to mark the course. He didn’t think much more about the noise until he went up a slight rise – and there was the fire, steadily devouring the route to checkpoint three.

Meanwhile, back at the top of the gorge, the Van der Merwes, who had resumed running, were passed by two other competitors: Hal Benson and Kate Sanderson. Hal, a thirty-six-year-old financial analyst from Sydney, and Kate, also thirty-six, a private investigator from Melbourne, had been friends for some years; both had competed in other ultramarathons but this was the first one they’d entered together. They’d met some years earlier when they were both volunteers for an adventure race in Thredbo. Although Hal had done ultramarathon runs before, he preferred adventure racing – ultratriathlons that involve a mix of sports, such as mountain biking, trekking and paddling, and which can last anywhere from six hours to ten days.

It was Kate’s idea to enter the Kimberley ultra; she emailed Hal saying it was a ‘once in a lifetime opportunity’. Hal didn’t take much convincing and a few days before the event he flew to Perth to meet her and her friend Andrew Baker, who wasn’t participating but planned to join Hal and Kate for a few days touring the region after the race. At the last minute, Andrew joined as a volunteer.

The pair began the race together but while Hal took it easy at the start, Kate took off ahead of him. He wasn’t expecting to see her again but caught up with her at checkpoint two; she appeared to be struggling with the heat. Hal, who’d been in the Army for three years and was accustomed to serious fitness training, did not feel affected by the heat.

Hal and Kate left checkpoint two together and were a little concerned to see patches of smouldering grass from spot fires along the route. There was smoke on the horizon. They jogged on until they had to slow to navigate the narrowest part of the gorge. When Hal and Kate emerged from this part of the course they came down to the floor of the gorge – a valley about 800 metres wide – and could see the string of pink markers stretching into the distance, slightly above the waist-high grass and intermittent bush. Ahead of them and about 300 metres to the right of the course markings was another smouldering fire. They discussed the possibility that they might be heading into a trap because it looked bigger than the other spot fires. They could also hear a worrying roaring noise in the distance.

They kept going but the fire front appeared to be getting bigger and the distant noise had intensified. At this point, Kate saw Turia some distance away and she appeared to be running towards the fire, and thought anxiously that she was going straight into it. But Kate could see Turia had her earphones in and her head down and knew it would be no use calling out to her, plus the noise of the fire would deafen any attempt she made.

Hal and Kate stopped. The fire had started sweeping up and across from the left side of the gorge, gathering momentum, and would soon be coming their way. They had two options – backtrack and try to outrun the fire or go up the steep slope on the right side of the gorge; they knew both options were a no-no in terms of what to do if confronted by a fire; on the one hand, no one could outrun the speed of a fire and on the other, they knew fire travelled even faster uphill. They had to choose one.

The Van der Merwes had also come across some burnt-out spot-fire patches after leaving checkpoint two but it hadn’t worried them as the scorched areas were quite small. Back on course after their break, they heard a distant roar; Martin thought it may have been a fire they’d seen en route to the start of the race, coming back the other way. Nothing could have prepared Shaun and Martin for the sight that confronted them as they emerged from the narrow gorge and looked down across the wide valley: thick smoke and, in the distance heading their way, a band of flame stretching as far as the eye could see.

Almost at the same time they came across Turia, Hal and Kate and within minutes were joined by Michael, who had run back after seeing the fire blocking his way. Now there were six.

By this stage the noise was deafening. From where they were standing they didn’t have the best vantage point to see exactly what direction the fire was moving but judged it was coming towards them by the way the wind was blowing the smoke. They quickly canvassed their options.

Turia said she was scared.

‘Don’t worry,’ Martin said, trying to reassure her. ‘We’ll be alright if we stick together.’

They thought they might backtrack and find refuge somewhere in the gorge but after about 10 metres, they turned around and realised this was not going to work as already the fire was noticeably bigger and closer. Martin was thinking about the Venturi effect – what would happen once the fire reached the narrow entrance of the gorge. Essentially, the funnelling and condensing of the flames into the gorge would create suction, and the hot air pulled in would accelerate the fire rapidly through the gorge; it would be like being trapped in a blast furnace. So they all quickly made their way back to their original meeting point, traversing a small dry river bed with no undergrowth but dismissing it as a place of refuge as it was not wide enough to shelter them from the flames.

In the meantime the fire continued to advance across the valley. Vegetation in the valley included gum trees, acacias, grevillea and spinifex grass. The grass is renowned for being enormously combustible, burning hot and fast; this fire was fuelled by a seasonally high growth of dry grass. And September is the hottest season in the north.

They had run out of options.

All they could do was head for the steep wall of the gorge to their right; they could see a rocky outcrop halfway up; it had less vegetation. If they huddled there, with less fuel for the fire, hopefully the flames would go around them.

‘I’m going,’ Kate shouted above the rumble of the fire and started off up the hill and everyone followed.

They all started running as the huge band of fire came towards them, forcing them up the cliff. Martin, Kate and Turia stopped halfway up on the narrow rock ledge, which wasn’t as large as it had looked from below. They were joined by Michael and Hal; Shaun had to stand just off the ledge as there wasn’t enough room for him. They looked at the fire now licking at the bottom of the slope where they had just been standing.

Turia looked at Kate and started crying. Kate said, ‘I’m scared too but it will be alright.’

There was hurried talk about putting on the pre-requisite long-sleeved tops in their backpacks. Kate grabbed her merino jersey and by the time she had pulled it on, she saw to her horror the fire was surging towards them. A hasty discussion followed about whether the ledge would protect them, whether perhaps – if they all huddled together – they could use their backpacks as a barrier. But as the fire raced up the hill towards the ledge each had to make a split-second choice.

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