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Like last year the field was split and went on two
separate loops. Classes 0 to Five tackled the Western loop first, embarking
on a long detour around The Long Mynd because of the treacherous conditions.
Ratlinghope came first, a special test, then a section which was cleaned by
everyone. A long descent followed, crossing a road to the farm at the foot
of Gattens Gamble.
There was a new section this year, the route turning left
at the tank to Phils Folly. This was new section on an old coach road that
is now privately owned. The section started on a level rutted track,
hair-pinning right where the gradient started up a muddy tree lined track.
Unfortunately Jeff Buchanan couldn’t get his ex Dennis Greenslade Reliant
round the corner, neither could David Bowlas who was following in his
Midget. Extracting the cars took so long that the section had to be
cancelled.
By the time the higher classes came along in the afternoon
the farmer had scrapped the mud off the hairpin and there was plenty of
traction. The problem was getting round the hairpin. Regrettably there were
problems at the top of the section and the exit road, making it rather to
hairy for comfort and it was necessary to cancel it again. Gattens Gamble
was cleaned by most of the field but Derek Reynolds found his DAF’s drive
belts struggled with the steep gradient at the start. The views at the top
were as magnificent as ever.
After a straightforward Walkmill came Adstone for the
lower classes, who descended what was to be Medicot for six, seven and eight
in the afternoon. Adstone was not a problem but the descent of Medicot
certainly was. The track has really suffered at the hands of 4x4 traffic and
the right hand rut was very, very deep. This caused major problems as cars
were leaning so far they were practically on their side. Some suffered
damage, including Colin Perryman whose BMW ended up with damaged doors and
rear quarter panel.
Ian Davis was the first class eight in the afternoon and
described the ascent of Medicot as a nightmare. After a delay waiting for
some trail bikes Ian hit a root, throwing the front of his buggy so high in
the air it came out of the ruts and beached on the left hand bank. Ian
managed to reverse a few yards and get going as there was plenty of
traction. Delays built up, causing the section to be cancelled for classes
six and seven but not before Stuart Harrold deranged his steering on the
same root that caused a problem for Ian Davis.
The route round its way up the hills to the historic Allez
‘Oop, first used in 1939 and featured in C.A.N. Mays book Wheelspin. It was
grass in those days but has a hard surface now. It was covered in snow and a
delightful climb to the summit with its magnificent views where the class
three and four competitors waited for each other and a had a snowball fight!
Most of the entry got to the summit, but it wasn’t a class one friendly hill
and three of them got a six.
The Harton Wood special test was all about time but the
challenge at the Longville test was actually re-starting after the reverse.
After last year most of the experienced competitors were ready for Longville
and backed right down to make sure they cleaned the section, rather than
worry about the time. Not Tristan White. He and Emma Flay risked a modest
reverse and gave the Escort a blast. They made it in a huge cloud of rubber
smoke but the time it took was probably as much as backing right down!
Ippikins Rock couldn’t be used this year because of
logging, so the lower classes tackled Easthope 1 and 2. One was the section
new for last year, two was new for this. It wasn’t very long, just a short
blast up a gully and a sharp right turn up the bank. This was the events
stopper and nobody was successful. Simon Woodall and Mick Workman were the
most successful, both reaching the two. Overall winner Adrian Marfell scored
four, the only marks he was to drop all day.
After Much Wenlock came The Jenny Wind, an old cable
railway incline. This was slippery in the morning for the higher classes and
only Andrew Martin in his Dutton Melos reached the summit. Fellow class
seven driver Tony Branson didn’t get that far in Jonathan Toulmins Marlin
which suffered a persistent misfire all day. Conditions had improved in the
afternoon and there were some cleans. Adrian Marfell and Adrian Dommett
reached the summit, So did Harvey Waters and the amazing Dave Haizelden in
his Golf. The first time a Front Wheel Drive has achieved that distinction.
Harley Bank saw problems for Dick Bolt when the UJ on the
end of his prop-shaft broke, possibly weakened when he broke his CWP on
Simms. Fortunately Dick has a two piece shaft on his Escort and carries a
spare, so he was able to change it and drive back to the finish although he
had to retire. The higher classes had a different section too last year and
Ian Davis couldn’t get across the frosty grass on the lower reaches,
dropping six. Fellow Buggy driver Simon Woodall did well here, only losing
two marks which gave him the class win.
Hungerford was the last section on the Eastern loop for
the lower classes and is another to have suffered badly from 4x4 traffic.
There were ground clearance problems, both on the section and the exit road,
where even some of the class eights had to be towed out. Simon Groves was a
little late in arriving at Hungerford, having had no less than four
punctures. Because of the penalties on the Clee, for slipping back down the
field, his fellow competitors let him back to his place at the head of the
class. Simon duly let his tyres down, only to ground out his diff at the
six, and had to reverse back down. Seeing this his classmates duly pumped
their tyres up to give more ground clearance and cleaned the hill!
The higher classes had to tackle Meadowley, another
historic Clee section, but again one that has suffered severe erosion. There
was a tree root across the track, followed by a huge hole and that was as
far as most competitors got. There were exceptions of course. Two of the
flyweights came out the top and March Hare winner Andy Curtis did
exceptionally well to get to the two, benefiting from the increased ground
clearance he has generated by fitting dropped spindles to the front, even
though it gives the buggy a pronounced nose up stance.
Despite the problems caused by the conditions, all the
competitors signed off in daylight, and first man home Ian Davis was back at
The Craven Arms by 2.30. This years Clee was more difficult than usual, both
the snow and 4x4 damage taking their toll. It was still a success though.
Beautiful views, historic sections and six different classes in the top ten,
all a tribute to Jonathan Toulmin and his team.
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