Modern Athlete Magazine Issue 121, August 2019 | Page 60

Africa and lined up a week later in the Bastille Day 25km in Franschhoek, and came away with a win and a course record on the new route. “It was a very good run for me, and I took 10 minutes off the previous course record, which I am pretty happy with.” (For the record, Kane Reilly still holds the record on the old route.) Vomiting repeatedly forced Rory to take regular breaks during the Dodo Trail Looking ahead to next year, Rory adds that he wants to go back to the Giants Cup event in the Drakensberg and give the course record a good go. “This year they put up a R20,000 pot for anyone that broke set time goals, and I needed to break six hours. Most of the race I was on track for it and going for the money, but when I had 10 kays to go, I knew that even if could keep going at that pace, I was still going to miss it by a few minutes, so I thought, let me just enjoy it now. I finished in 6:13 and still broke the course record, and Nicolette Griffioen was the only one who eventually went under the allocated time. Hey, I’m still young, so next year, I’ll go back and hopefully get a part of the pot, if it’s still on offer.” WHEN NOT RUNNING Apart from running, Rory is focused (pun intended) on his photography business, The Mountain Room, which he co-owns with fellow photographer Xavier Briel. “We’re a fully digital content creation studio and mostly service outdoor brands, or outdoor events, which really fits into our lifestyle. A unique selling point is that we’re both athletes, so we’re a lot more mobile and can run or ride with the athletes when shooting events. For example, Xavier ran the whole of the Ultra- Trail Drakensberg 100km with his camera. It’s almost unheard of for a photographer to run the whole route of an event he’s covering!” “Later this year I’ll be shooting a motorbike enduro event again, and there aren’t many photographers I know of that can actually ride a motorbike with the competitors. It allows us to get to spots on the route that are not accessible to other photographers. But I do try to stay away from shooting trail running events, because I’d rather be racing them, so I’m trying to Rory admits to being a bit superstitious, and thus never races without the Buff that his father gave him, which he wraps around his wrist 60 ISSUE 121 AUGUST 2019 / www.modernathlete.co.za focus more on the cycling and motorbike space in terms of event shoots.” Outside of running and photography, another passion for Rory is coffee, and he has a huge collection of coffee-making equipment at home. “For as long as I can remember I’ve enjoyed good coffee, more so now that I have started running. I think it’s part and parcel of being a trail runner. So I do have an extensive range of coffee paraphernalia at home, and I have actually worked as a coffee barista at a coffee shop, while I was studying. I really enjoy the art of coffee-making, and my dream has always been to have a shop similar to The Vine here in Hout Bay – it’s the ideal set-up, a coffee shop and a running shop, where people can do runs from and then have a coffee afterwards. Who knows, maybe one day I’ll have something like that... but for now, the focus is running and photography.” Naturally, this result was yet another confidence boost for Rory after a tough first half of the year, and he says he is now really looking forward to the rest of the year’s racing. “I’m running the CCC at the end of August, then it’ll be the Otter again in October, and in between there’s an adventure race that I’m hoping to do in September. I’ll see how I’m feeling, and it’s all based on how I feel after each race. Then in November it’ll be the Ultra-Trail Cape Town 100km. So it’s three more big races for the year, and the rest will just be training at home.”