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Simon Woodall Won a Very Wet and Muddy Ilkley Trial on
17 May
Simon
Woodall and Barbara Selkirk are very happy after cleaning Sword Point
3. They were the only car to clean the hill before, Sword Point 2 and
this won them the trial. (Picture by Dave Cook)
In
Car on The Ilkley Trial with James Shallcross
After a couple of years of good fortune
The Ilkley Club were un-lucky with the weather this year. It started
raining during the late morning and it stayed all through the afternoon,
turning some of the sections into mud baths that had to be cancelled for
the later numbers.
Running
at the front of the field Classes Seven and Eight had the most favourable
conditions but more restarts and some tricky alternative routes to even
things out. Overall victory went to Simon Woodall in his VW Buggy when he
was the only car to clean the muddy Sword Point 2 at the end of the event.
Earlier Simon was challenged not only by his
Class 8 rivals but also James Shallcross and Dave Haizelden from Class 1.
James was leading the class at the lunch break before dropping 11 on
Brimham Lodge.
Riding
a Ural Combination was none other than Fifth Gears Tiff Needell so its
eyes glued to the telly in June.
With the benefit of hindsight the club were a bit
ambitious trying to stick to their original plan and would have been
better to simplify some of the sections to fit in with the conditions on
the day.
The Start
The Start and Finish were back
at Ilkley Rugby Club
this year
Tubby Power - Under the hood of
Tristan Whites successful Class Seven Hillman Imp which was to destroy
its diff on Hey Slack
(Picture by Dave Cooke).
Falcons Don
Stringer and Stella Pearce wait for the off in
their Austin Seven. Behind them is clubmate Dave Wise is in his ex
Verdun Webley Pinto engined Rickman Ranger
The start
was back at the excellent Ilkley Rugby club, with plenty of space and an
official OK to camp overnight. Lots of attention on Tiff Needell who was
competing on a Ural combination, followed everywhere by a Channel Five
film crew.
It was dry
at the start but there had been rain leading up to the event and more was
forecast later in the day.
Langbar 1 & 2
These grassy sections were cancelled before the
start as they were waterlogged.
These two
grassy sections are down in a valley. They were cancelled before the start
as there would have been problems getting back to the surfaced road.
Strid Wood 1 & 2
Two sections laid out in a field with a peaty
surface. Strid 1 was a straight grassy climb alongside a wall, with a
restart for all accept class 0. Strid 2 was the familiar blast up the
gully.
Myke
Pocock failing Strid Wood 1 as he understeers into the 12 marker. he
was not the only one! Myke struggled with a misfire all day on his
bike carbed Skoda.
John Bell approached the difficult
bit on Strid Wood 2 in his very nice MG TB. Only three cars cleaned
this section, all in class eight.
Only a
couple of cars managed to clean the grassy first section and they were
early numbers. The rain started after class seven and eight passed
through, by this time the grass had gone and most endured the fate of
understeering into the 12 marker.
The second
section was the usual blast up the gully. This developed a horrendous hole
which stopped almost everyone that managed to get that far. However, it
was possible to come out the top without a tow and Paul Bartleman (Troll)
and Stuart Lambert (Cannon Austin) both went clear.
Hawpike 1 & 2
The first section was pure PCT in a grass field,
the second started with a ford then followed a grassy route through
the trees following natural gully.
Chris
Veevers on Hawpike 1 in his Austin Seven. Chris retired after the
halfway halt.
Myke Pocock only just fails to make
the bank on Hawpike 2
The first
Hawpike section was pure grass PCT, cleanable for the early numbers but
impossible for later runners as the mud bath developed.
The second
section is in very picturesque surroundings, starting with a small ford
before going through a gate, up a bank and following a grassy gully.
Unfortunately the conditions made the bank impassable for most outside
class eight and the best class one cars. In class four Skoda drivers
Thomas Aldrian and Alistair Queen proved it was on. Unfortunately Alistair
stopped at the four but Thomas went on to clear the hill.
Highfield Farm
Straightforward Special Test, through a gate, up
a grassy bank and onto a super wiggle woggle.
Class
Five winner Stephen Kingstone at speed.
After the picturesque Hawpike 2 there were some
wonderful views from the green lanes that led to the special test at
Highfield Farm.
Hazelwood
Special Test on a tarmac road
Ellers
A gentle, grassy track, following a wall. Restart
for the higher classes
Only Seven
and Eight had a go at this as the access from the road became impassable
once the heavens opened.
Peels Wood
Grassy farm track with a difficult and rather hairy
deviation for the higher classes. The lower classes had to contend
with a tricky restart.
Keith Dobinson eases his Austin
Seven up the muddy track after a long wait.
Adrian Tucker-Peake approaches the
restart in his Peugeot 205.
The higher
classes had a very difficult deviation that proved impassable causing a
long queue to develop, later numbers having to wait the best part of a
couple of hours. By the time the later numbers had their turn the rain had
become persistent making the grass impossibly slippery. Robin Barlow (Dellow
Mk2) was amongst the non restarting class 0's to be defeated only by the
final bank, which Tony Leedal actually surmounted in his GN.
James
Shallcross was the only driver to get to the final bank, doing well to get
away from the slippery restart.
Hey Slack
PCT style section on Moorland
adjacent to the rest halt. Yellows and Reds had a rather rough
alternative route.
Edward Broom and Katrina Selwood
launch their Escort into space on Hey Slack.
Up on top
of the moor this short little section saw the demise of Tris White's Imp
with a broken diff.
Wilsons Wood
Clean Grassy Track. Restart on a
hairpin left followed by a straight climb with a hard to spot
deviation.
Chris Veevers on the start line at
Wilsons Wood.
Running
towards the front of the cars Dudley Sterry and Nick Farmer both cleaned
this one but by now a familiar pattern was developing as the grass became
increasingly slippy as the rain came down. Classes 3, 4 and 5 had another
wait of an hour and the section was finally cancelled for them when Edward
Broom got his Escort stuck on a tree stump. Rather than scrub the section
in the results the course closing car scored remaining cars a seven.
It was
nearly four in the afternoon when the stragglers arrived at the lunch halt
where the caters had kindly waited which was much appreciated. Paul
Bartleman was leading the trial overall at this point on 24 with Philip
Bovill (Cannon DP) on 27, followed by Simon Woodall and Stuart
Lambert on 28
Brimham Lodge
The section was a grassy track,
starting with a gentle gradient but getting steeper after a 90 left
with a really steep bit at the top.
Dean
Partington went into the lead of the trial here when he was the only car
to go clean. For the rest it was the familiar mud bath and when Thomas
Aldrian got well and truly stuck it was abandoned for the remaining cars
who accepted an eleven from the course closing car.
Incline 1 and 2
Incline 1 was a grassy track
between stone walls. Incline 2 was only attempted by the Higher
Classes.
Julian Lack looks to see if he can
get more grip. Julian retired soon afterwards with a broken gearbox.
(Picture by Dave Cook)
Class Seven winner Bri Colman lifts
a wheel at the summit. Tiff Needell trusted Bri and Johns navigation,
following them round the second half of the route.
(Picture by Dave Cook)
Classes
Seven and Eight attempted these classic Ilkley sections which were both
cleaned by the leading cars. Later they were cancelled for the remaining
cars but there was confusion for classes 3, 4 and 5, by now running with
more than an hours gap behind the field, as all they found was a closed
gate with no notice or marshal to explain what was going on. This even
confused the course closing cars who the stragglers were getting to know
very well.
Watergate
A real Classic Section, the best one on the event.
Starting with a ford it climbed a twisty, rocky track with a restart
for the higher classes.
Nigel Jones giving his Skoda some
stick on Watergate.
Always an
Ilkley highlight. Brian Colman did well to be the only class 7 to get off
the restart. In class 1 Dave Haizelden, James Shallcross and Adrian
Tucker-Peake all went clear, although without a restart of course, as did
Alan Smith with his Marlin in Class 0. With ground clearance at a premium
the section wasn't particularly Skoda friendly so Alistair Queen was
delighted to come so close to a clean, demonstrating he hasn't lost his
touch after a long lay-off.
Cock Hill Mine
Steep bank followed by a difficult restart.
Kevin Barnes finished third in class
seven in his Liege (Picture by Julian Lack)
None of the
cars could clean this section which had a greasy impossible restart.
However, the highlight was the exit track. A wonderful, long, rutted
track, worthy of Calton in its prime. Shame that wasn't the section!
Peels Wood 2
A second go at this section.
Only classes
seven and eight had a go at this, later numbers arrived to find the gate
closed and the marshals gone. Like the Incline sections it was shame a
marshal hadn't stayed on to explain what was going on or at least left a
notice.
Ellers 2
A second go at this section was cancelled
Sword Point 1, 2 and 3
These first of these three
adjacent sections was a weave through a wood with a fearsome bump near
the summit. The second a grassy PCT type affair. The third a
straight blast up a tree lined track with a deviation higher up.
Dave
Haizelden on Sword Point 3 before the storm came down (Picture by Dave
Cook)
Don
Stringer and Stella Pearce contemplating if they should switch to a
car with a roof (Picture by Dave Cook)
There were
some issues finding these sections as the arrow from the main road was
missing. Most competitors managed to find these sections but one or two
didn't, including Thomas Aldrian, costing him a win in class four.
The overall
winner was decided here, when Simon Woodall cleaned the second, grassy
section while his rivals dropped eleven or twelve.
Browns Wood
Short Classic Track with a restart on a sharp LH
corner.
This super
little section had a restart on a sharp left hand corner. You had to get
going of the start line first though, catching out a few but not affecting
the results.
The Finish
Ilkley Rugby Club
Back at the
finish their was an excellent pie and peas supper, even
for the later numbers who didn't arrive till gone 7pm. Very few
competitors waited for the results, understandably preferring to go
home and dry out.
Despite all the issues it was a very enjoyable trial,
despite the weather.