2009 Dakar Rally

After taking a year off thanks to security concerns, the Dakar Rally is back, and well underway, just not where you would traditionally expect the iconic off-road race to be. The 2009 edition is the 30th running of the famous long distance, endurance race that has historically run from Paris, France to Dakar, Senegal, but this year finds itself on an entirely different continent, racing through Argentina and Chile.

Beginning and ending in Buenos Aires, this year’s race officially got underway back on January 3rd, with 540 teams setting out to cover the 5,951 mile course. Broken down into 14 stages, ten in Argentina and four in Chile, the teams will endure long days in the hot desert sun pushing themselves and their machines to the limits. The final 140 mile stage is scheduled to take place on Saturday, bringing the epic race to a close for another year. Whether or not it returns to its roots in Europe and Africa in 2010 remains to be seen.

Check out this amazing gallery of photos from the race. They give a little insight into danger and intensity of a long distance rally like this one, in which racers use motorcycles, quad runners, trucks, and cars to cross the rugged and demanding terrain.

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Dakar Rally 2009 to be held in… Argentina and Chile?

The Dakar Rally is one of those crazy events that it takes a certain kind of personality to do. I mean, why else would you willingly spend days and days speeding off-road across the Sahara with the inherent risk of death? But some people like that kind of thing, and since its creation in 1979, the annual event has attracted thrill seeking participants from around the globe.

Originally, the race went all the way from Paris, France to Dakar, Senegal but in recent years the event has commenced in places such as Lisbon and Barcelona. True fans of the “international nomad event” were disappointed when security concerns in Africa forced this year’s version to be canceled the night before it was supposed to begin.

The Rally is such a big deal that the organizers are committed to not letting political instability get in the way and have therefore decided to move the 2009 edition to South America with Buenos Aires as the start and finish. The Dakar Rally director Français Etienne Lavigne promises that the stint in Argentina and Chile is only temporary and that the Rally will return to its African roots when the “geopolitical situation is more stable.”

As for European competitors, participating on another continent should not cause worry; their cars will be shipped by boat across the Atlantic sometime late November. And Latin American participants will get to take advantage of a special entrance fee. Looks like the Dakar Rally will truly have gone global. But I still think the 2009 edition just might need a different name en español. Suggestions anyone?

Dakar Rally, another victim of terrorism

On our way from Portugal to Madrid last week, we saw a lot of trucks on their way to Lisbon for the annual Dakar Rally (previously Paris-Dakar). Unfortunately, the next day, they got the sad news that the Dakar Rally was canceled for the first time ever, because of terrorism.

Four French tourists were murdered in Mauritania on December 24 and nine of the Dakar Rally stages happen to go through Mauritania. The organizers feared they couldn’t provide sufficient security.

As an alternative, Dakar Rally organizers are considering a race through central Europe this spring. Czechs are big fans of the rally so I am sure they would be psyched, but replacing a race through the Sahara desert with a race through some “bad roads of Europe” is kind of a stretch, isn’t it?

Lisboa-Dakar Rally 2007

Danger – it is your middle name. You’re the type that likes big vehicles, fast motorcycles and gnarly tricked out cars sliding the thru desert sand in the race of a lifetime across two continents. Are you going to be there? The Lisboa-Dakar Rally kicks off this year on January 6, 2007-January 21, 2007. For the second time in history the race will start off in Portugal and run through Spain, Morocco, Mauritania, Mali and Senegal.

While trying to catch sight of death-defying feats during my travels hasn’t been high on my personal list of activities I can see how others might enjoy the action and suspense. I’d love to go if only to check out the African backdrop (villages, forests, and Sahara) these crazy men and women will be torpedoing by in their efforts to be victorious.