GHR Honda Team Site & Blog
Rider Profile: Simon Harslett
Simon Harslett. 43. GHR Honda Dakar 2010 Team Member.
Ed: What do you do for a living?
SH: I’m a mechanical manager in the oil and gas industry. Although the work is all over the world, it now allows me to work from home in Geraldton. It’s a good balance. We returned from the middle east around June or July of 2009 just to be back with family. My wife is a school teacher, and we have two girls. Being able to work as a consultant home was a welcome change to working as an expatriate for the last 15 or 18 years. It’s good to be back and to live a normal life once more. It was primarily a family decision but the other was that it has enabled me to pick up my bike racing again.
Ed: When did you start racing?
I started when I was about 12. It’s always been a passion of mine and I’ve always ridden as much as I could. Now that I’m home I’ve also been able to put a lot back into the community and the local clubs. People have always helped me along the way so it’s good to be at a point in life where I can reciprocate. My private life has really revolved around racing since I was about that age. I shudder to think of how many motorcycles I have worn out.
Ed: When did the Dakar dream start for you?
SH: It was probably 1994. I was in Mali and Mauritania for work and I actually saw the Dakar competitors go past me. I watched Stephan Petterhansel and the others all fly by. I knew what it was and I thought that looks alright! Ever since then I’ve followed the race religiously. I went as a spectator to the start of the 2007 event in Lisbon and I just thought “this is me”. We came back to Australia and bought the bikes we needed – KTM 690 Rallye bikes – and rode the 2007 Australian Safari on those. I came 19th which I thought was respectable considering it was a bike I’d never ridden before and they’d been air freighted from Austria just the week before. In 2008 I didn’t race because of work commitments, but I raced the Safari in 2009 as a privateer and came 9th in spite of some mechanical problems.
Earlier, I had plans to do Dakar in 2009 but I just hadn’t ridden enough due to work and travel commitments. I was lucky that life didn’t just revolve around just making a dollar anymore at that stage and I knew I had good pace, so I just decided it had to be 2011. I spoke with GHR early in 2010 about a package for the Safari and Glenn asked me if I’d be interested in a package for Dakar too. He hardly needed to finish the sentence. I just said “yeah! tell me what I need to do!”. It proceeded pretty quickly from there. Within a week or two we were committed. Initially when expenses were discussed, Glenn was concerned that we would baulk at the package cost. But we’d already run the numbers too, and to campaign it alone without all the support and having to build the bikes yourself… well that’s the sort of money it costs. To me it was a no brainer. It was obvious that he’d put a lot of thought into and I was happy to step back knowing that all the support, transport and servicing was taken care of. This is what he’s been doing on a domestic level for years. I’m a believer that an Australian can eventually win the event, but it’s a long way from home so having this sort of support is vital.
Ed: Tell me about your preparation for the event?
SH: I’ve had a bike for some time that’s identical to what we’re campaigning at Dakar. It’s a GHR built bike. I’ve been riding that up to 3,000km a week and maintaining it for the last 3 months. I slowed down my work and put a lot of it on the back burner until February. I basically focussed on riding. Gym work was something that I hated, so instead I would spend from 6.00 in the morning until 4.00 or 5.00 in the afternoon on the bike. I’d routinely do 800km days and to me that was it. 800k’s, and just keep knocking it out! I got to the point that I’d go out riding and meet up with other people half way. They would do 400km and just be shattered. But I could happily just get on the bike again in the morning and do it all again. That was the main thing, just spending huge amounts of time on the bike.
Two weeks ago was the turning point for me, when I realised that everything was done. I was out riding about 150km from Geraldton on these little back tracks I’d come to know well, just smiling to myself. I realised that every extra day riding these tracks I’d been pushing harder and harder and I wondered “what are you doing this for… you’re not going to learn anything now”. I realised that I was just riding because I liked doing it. I’d damaged my shoulder badly in August but was supposed to be doing the Safari this year. It occurred to me that riding the Safari would not be a prudent decision. If I came off again and made it worse then I’d not make it to Dakar. As hard as it was for someone like me, I stayed off the bike until October.
I know my riding ability. I may not be the fastest and I am way too old for that. But it comes down to knowing your own abilities – in terms riding and mechanical competence – and looking after yourself. I must have done close to 30,000km in the last 3 months. The toughest day on the bike isn’t likely to be the day you win. The toughest day will be the day you come in 30th or 40th and you’ve worked hard just to get there. I know I’m just going to have to chip away and that’s what I’ve been preparing myself for.
Ed: Glenn talks about “guaranteeing experiences”… What are you expecting for the event?
SH: Well that would be right. To get all four bikes home would be wonderful, and you know what? There’s no reason it can’t happen. Luck does pay a factor, but I was talking to a friend of mine, Rob Pollard, who raced the event last year. He said to me the other day, “you make your own luck”. If you’ve got all your preparation done, and you’re meticulous at what you do, that’s how you make your luck. You have everything squared away before you start and then all you have to do is ride your bike and look after yourself. You don’t have to worry so much because you’ve got all these passionate people there to support you.
Ed: I’ve asked the others how they got their “leave passes” from their bosses, but it’s different for you.
SH: The people we work with have known for a long time that I am doing this. The main thing they want to know is how do they find out what I’m up to and keep in touch. That’s been more important to them than keeping themselves in the loop business wise. I’m going to fire out an email tomorrow night to tell them to watch the website and the blog. It’s the small things that people miss and it’s going to be great if they can see how everything works in the race.
Ed: So you fly out when?
SH: I leave Perth at 11.30 on 22 December and meet everyone at Sydney airport that night. We’re in Perth right now catching up with a few people, but then we’re done. We had an early Christmas at home with the kids last week. My wife is taking the kids to Darwin for “the real Christmas” with family and then she’s flying over at the end of the event to come and join me. We’ll be apart on the day, but I’m going to be a with a great bunch of blokes in Buenos Aires and that’s just fine. My Dad is also coming to see me at the end. Everything is packed and we’re ready to go. It’s going to be a wonderful thing.
Ed: I’ll leave you to it and I won’t wish you luck because you’ll make your own.
SH: That’s how it works! I would like to add something which I read sometime ago and it typifies what my mind set is:
“All men dream; but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds, wake in the day to find that it’s vanity. But the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible.”
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about 15 years ago
Good luck Simon and look forward to seeing your daily progress. It’s been a while since riding in Dubai with you and look forward to seeing the photos of you at the finish line no doubt cracking a beer open or two open to celebrate!!!!
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about 15 years ago
give it the beegeebees Simon best of luck Burf
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