I am pedaling my Mazda MX-5 as fast as I dare. In front of me is almost perfect darkness.
I know there's a sharp right-hander coming up quickly, but I’m finding it difficult to pick a braking point, because behind me is a PENETRATING high beam from the front bumper-mounted auxiliary lights of a 1990s Mitsubishi Evo rally car.
I turn right. Make it round the corner without incident. Then, indicate right, stay right, and hear the tsu tsu schuu of a turbo wastegate fly past on the left. Man, this driving at track in the dark malarkey is no joke.
I am taking part in the “world’s first unlit night time track day” at Anglesey. Yep, North Wales, at night, in the winter. Mission Motorsport - the forces motorsport charity - does not mess about.
It has hosted its Race of Remembrance endurance event at Trac Mon for more than a decade and has decided to run a track night to give regular folk the chance to enjoy the special madness that is a racing circuit, set next to the coast, at 2 degrees.
Mazda’s PR Manager, Owen Mildenhall, has invited me along in my long-term MX-5 so I can get a bit of track driving in.
Owen is a man completely au fait with driving on track at night, having competed in the Nurburgring 24 hours, whereas I am not. In fact I have never even driven round Anglesey. So I decide to get there early, before daybreak, to at least get round the track during daylight hours.
Anglesey - despite what its General Manager Annette Freeman says - is in the arse end of nowhere. Which means I got to take the Mazda on its first long trip. In years gone by, a six-hour journey in a low-slung sports car would have probably warranted a separate article. But the ease at which a modern MX-5 can shrug this off makes it barely worth mentioning.

Within 30 minutes of arriving at the track I realise I have thoroughly underestimated the amount of faffing and form filling required to actually get moving.
I only achieve five laps out during daytime. And they were a bit of a blur to be honest. I didn’t manage to pick a quiet time and it felt like more serious racing machinery was constantly coming up in the rear view mirror and I was always off-line letting things pass and not quite learning the track.
Night time soon comes and we head out on track. There were around 25 cars taking part in total, split into two groups. I was in the first group. As I exit the fully lit pitlane and emerge onto the track I begin to understand the size of the task at hand. After a few corners, the bright, clear, warm iridescent lights of the pitlane seem a lifetime ago.




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l Get paid over $110 per hour working from home. l never thought I'd be able to do it but my buddy makes over $22991 a m0nth doing this and she convinced me to try. The p0ssibility with this is endless....
This is what I do… Www.HighProfit1.Com
Murray, that's 3 minutes of my life you owe me back!
Quite frankly, that was a load of twaddle!
Now, AUTOCAR owes me a further 8 minutes because YET AGAIN the site is fracking about with 'log in', P-W, 'reset' and goodness knows what!
I don't have the time left! I am 77 years young and I want to read or drive interesting things, NOT prat about with a site constructed by a juvenile web-master! Or so it feels...
Now, please pass the message upstairs and hopefully they MAY take some notice? BTW: I have read the AUOCAR since 1971! Long before you incorporated MOTOR!
Please get it sorted? Thanks!
YF.