Today is the day of the Dutch Championships Headwind Cycling, where pro riders get beaten by the mailman! It will be a mild edition, with only a 6-7 Bft westerly wind, but the race parcours is chosen such that there is zero protection: the 9 km long Oosterschelde dam! A dam with a history.
The race will be held in Zeeland, a province in the SW of the Netherlands. Zeeland is an amalgamation of islands in an estuary, where the Meuse, Rhine, and Scheldt rivers meet the North Sea. And with the Dutch hobby of making polders, this land is especially vulnerable for floods.
On February 1st, 1953, disaster struck. A storm surge led to multiple dike breaches, and an area of 150.000 hectare (370.000 acres) flooded. Nearly 2000 people drowned that night. 47000 cattle and 140000 poultry died. This was not the first flood, but it was the worst.
Following this disaster, the 'deltaworks' started: the inlets of the Zeeland estuary were dammed, dykes were raised. The project took decades and shortened the Dutch coastline by 700 km. All but one inlet are now dammed: only the Westerschelde, that leads to the Antwerp harbor, is still open.
While the project became an enormous engineering success, it had ecological downsides. The dammed inlets turned from brackish to fresh water, affecting biodiversity. The final dam, of the Oosterschelde, is therefore contains open partitions that only during storms are shut.
For the riders today, this is bad news. When the partitions are up, they provide some shelter to the wind. But during today's storm, they'll be down. Perfect conditions for some suffering. The organization is well prepared: behind the finish line, there is a puke station with plenty of buckets 😂.