Motorsports
Dakar bivouac: everything looked fine
On December 31st, our Dakar began and we began our journey to the bivouac. Yanbu. It was time to check in my suitcase at 5 in the morning and then I stopped by istanbul Waited 7 hours for a flight to Saudi Arabia. We arrived at 11:30pm. At 12:15 a.m., we set up our tents at midnight and welcomed in the new year in our bivouac. Everything seemed to be going better than expected. I didn’t have any connection issues with the truck like last year satellite. ¡It worked fine! And the sandstorm that repeatedly occurred during the first bivouac of 2025 in Bisha did not appear.
The new location is on the banks of the river. Red Seaprovided the sun and heat. Everything was perfect. The bathroom was also clean and the shower had hot water. glory.
But on January 2nd, dakar He once again reminded us that it is also the toughest race in the world for press. Suddenly my computer no longer connects to the satellite truck. Only mine. And no one had an explanation. I was unable to write, and the pain was immeasurable. Until suddenly, like magic, it worked.
And yesterday, Wifi I kept getting disconnected. He stopped 11 times while writing this column. All the backlogs just piled up even more. The day before the race is tough. Pilots were available and stories had to be collected one after the other. It’s very tiring because of how much you have to walk under the sun. he dakar It has only just begun, but fatigue is already upon us. There are only 15 days left…and we’re already counting.
Source: Mundo Deportivo
I am a writer at Sportish, where I mainly cover sports news. I’ve also written for The Guardian and ESPN Brasil, and my work has been featured on NBC Sports, SI.com and more. Before working in journalism, I was an athlete: I played football for Colgate University and competed in the US Open Cross Country Championships.
