Newsroom
All the news that's fit to print about the 24 Hours of Great Glen.
July 29, 2009
Fourteenth Annual 24 Hours of Great Glen Ready to Squish, Squash and Roll
Pinkham Notch, NH—On August 8 & 9, Great Glen Trails will host the fourteenth annual 24 Hours of Great Glen, a twenty-four-hour mountain bike race, at the base of Mt. Washington. For 2009, Great Glen Trails has added $1,000 to the prize purse. Registration is still open, and volunteers are also needed.
The 24 Hours of Great Glen begins at noon on August 8 and runs until noon on August 9. Competitors race around the clock and may compete solo or in teams of 2, 4 or 5 for a total purse of more than $10,000 in cash and prizes. The goal is to ride as many laps of the 8.25-mile course as possible. Registration closes on Tuesday, August 4 at noon, and spaces are still available.
In 2009, Great Glen Trails has increased the prize purse by more than $1,000. The biggest increases are in the male and female solo categories. The winner of each of the 24-hour solo categories will pocket $500 this year.
For those not ready to tackle the full 24, a 12-hour division will also be offered this year. Designed to introduce more riders to endurance racing, in this division, competitors will race the same exact course and have the same starting time as the 24-hour competitors, but their race ends at midnight. The 12-hour version will offer solo, 2-person and 4-person divisions.
Also for the first time ever, the 24 Hours of Great Glen will be timed by RealTime™ Scoring. RealTime™ Scoring is the timing system of the premier 24-hour mountain bike event production company, Granny Gear Productions. The addition of RealTime™ Scoring will improve the flow of the event for all racers and provide accurate in-race stats and lap times.
Not just a mountain bike race, the 24 Hours of Great Glen features Festival 24, which is packed with contests and games for the whole family, including the 24 Minutes of Great Glen—a mountain bike race for the kids.
The race course is currently marked and open daily for racers to preview before race day. Due to the soggy weather this summer, many sections of the course are muddy—some too muddy to ride. Great Glen Trails will make the final determination of the exact course on race day, but some short singletrack sections may be eliminated. Course adjustments are not unprecedented, as last year, the heavy rains the day before the event forced the elimination of a quarter-mile section of the course. After riding for 24 hours, not a single rider complained about the shortened course.
One of the keys to the continued success of the 24 Hours of Great Glen is volunteers, and Great Glen Trails is in need of help again this year. Volunteers are needed for shifts around the clock to assist as course marshals, timers and other positions. All volunteers will receive lunch, t-shirt, a trail pass for Great Glen Trails and a pass for the Mt. Washington Auto Road. To volunteer for the 24 Hours of Great Glen, contact Kelly Evans, kelly@mt-washington.com, or 603.466.2333.
Great Glen Trails is open daily for biking and paddling. For more information, visit www.greatglentrails.com or call 603.466.2333.
__________________________________________
August 10, 2008
Mud and Tight Races Throughout the Weekend
at the 13th Annual 24 Hours of Great Glen
Pinkham Notch, NH—Sum up the thirteenth annual 24 Hours of Great Glen in one word? Easy: MUD. Recent rains made the racecourse wet and slippery all weekend, even though not a drop of rain fell during the competition. As if on cue, the rains ended just before the start of the race on Saturday and resumed immediately after the conclusion on Sunday—wet bookends to a gorgeous weekend in Pinkham Notch that featured terrific performances in all divisions.
Despite the muddy and slippery conditions, 459 competitors took to the trails to compete for 24 consecutive hours in the premier 24-hour mountain bike race in New England. Competitors race as teams, made up of 2, 4 or 5 members or tackle the course solo. This year, 53 racers chose to ride on their own. Competitors raced around the clock for a total purse of more than $10,000 in cash and prizes. Not just a mountain bike race, the 24 Hours of Great Glen is a weekend-long event for the whole family featuring Festival 24, which is packed with contests and games for the whole family, including a cheese doodle toss and the 24 Minutes of Great Glen—a mountain bike race for the kids.
This year, the course was shortened slightly due to the recent rains. The final layout was just over 8 miles and featured technical single-track, steep drops and tricky corners. Its difficulty is compounded when riders tackle it in the dark as the race continues non-stop for the entire 24 Hours from noon to noon. However, the mud was truly the story of the course this year, as no one was able to avoid the mushy mess that only grew with each lap. Mud-splattered spandex was the attire of choice all weekend.
The mud didn’t dampen the race action, thought, as the action on the course was electric with some races not decided until the twenty-fourth hour. The overall all winner was the Men’s 4-person Pro Team, Cycle Loft, with 34 laps completed in 24:04:02. Completing 24 laps in 24:17:00, Sore Butt Speedy, a 4-person Expert Team was the top women’s team. The closest team competition was actually in the 4-person Men’s Beginner Category with two teams completing 23 laps. Team Ding Dong Ditch edged Team Butter by only 51 minutes, 24:02:07 to 24:53:36. Perhaps the most exciting team race was in the Mixed Pair division, one male/one female rider, in which Hari Kari battled closely with 50% Nuts throughout the night with the two teams often separated by just minutes. As the clocked neared noon, Hari Kari managed to pull away for a one-lap victory, 26 to 25.
On the solo side, Gregory Jancaitis was the overall winner turning an impressive 23 laps in 24:36:49. However, the most impressive solo performance of the weekend was turned in by sixteen year-old Ben Chase. Chase easily won the 18 and under Solo Men’s Division with 22 laps in 24:32:36, a total that placed him as the second solo rider overall. Jennifer Johnson was the top female solo rider completing a total of 14 laps in 24:25:24. The 24 Hours of Great Glen also features a Solo Single Speed Division in which racers select bicycles with only one gear, as opposed to traditional bicycles with multiple gears that allow for easier climbing and more efficient pedaling power. With 16 laps in 24:00:21, Abe Wrobleski was tops in this extremely challenging division.
Racers competed in 24 separate divisions for all ages and sexes from beginner to pro. And no matter what division in which they raced or order they finished, tackling the challenge of racing a mountain bike for 24 hours is an impressive accomplishment.
Complete results
The cycling events at Great Glen Trails continue this summer with the final 3 weeks of the Importech Summer Mountain Bike Series presented by Dakine still to come, and the racing will continue into the fall with the Porky Gulch Classic on November 8 & 9. The Porky Gulch Classic is a true test of all around cycling with three unique stages over two days. The first stage, The Toughest Two, is a two-mile hillclimb up the Mt. Washington Auto Road. The second stage, the Story Land Criterium, is a race through the popular amusement park. The race concludes on Sunday with the Rockpile Rampage, a cyclocross held at Great Glen Trails.
Great Glen Trails is open daily for biking and paddling. For more information, visit www.greatglentrails.com.

