TRAVERSE Issue 14 - October 2019 | Page 92

tattered old windsock hanging limply, fuel drums rusting in a heap. It was as if the occupants packed up walked away 50 years ago. Unsettled, I con- tinued. The following morning, I woke with stiff legs. My body in shock by the amount of punishment I was put- ting it through. The unsettled feeling remained. I checked and rechecked my kit. It wasn’t long before the problems began. Around mid-morning, cresting a sand dune, the bike bounced like a pinball off a tree. Somehow, I man- aged to keep it upright and power out of the sand. Pulling up I realised one of my water bottles had burst. One and half litres of water gone, six hours of precious life. Not long after the nipple on my bladder came off, losing another 12 hours of life out of my backpack. Shit! Almost 500 kilometres from the nearest township, I had only seen two cars in nearly three days. My only company had been the tyres marks left by ‘Slips’. I had at least two days to reach my next resupply and less than a day of drinkable water remain- ing. The situation wasn’t horrible, but I knew I had to make up some ground or spend a very thirsty day on the bike. With little options available I bot- tled my urine from then on, making a cocktail of urine, water, Berocca and hydrolyte. I swilled it down like a pint of beer. A sandstorm came blowing in. Gusts of wind started pushing me across the track, blowing the wheel ruts clean. Stopping to fix yet an- other water leak, I watched my own tracks get blown over. Not just mine! I realised the tracks left by ‘Slips’ were also disappearing. I’d become attached to these simple tracks, I now felt very alone, vulnerable and afraid. Covering almost 350 kilometres that day, my poor little bike screamed TRAVERSE 92