Category Archives: Race

Race: Winter 100

Photo by Stuart March
This little chunk of metal, an oval about four inches across, is a belt buckle that shows I finished a 100 mile race in under 24 hours. 23 hours, 15 minutes, 32nd place out of 150 starters. I’ve dreamed about winning this, or one like it, since I started running and discovered ultramarathons.

It’s the culmination of over 9 months of training. Of getting home from work, midweek, and eating dinner with Sarah and the kids before nipping out for a ‘quick’ run at midnight. Of getting up at 4:30 am at weekends and going for a longer run in the hills before getting back to breakfast while everyone else is waking up. Of planning, mapping and heading out on long adventurous running trips with friends. Of the low of the Punchbowl Marathon where lots of stuff went wrong, to the triumphant 10:08 50-mile PB at the SDW50, both with John Pickup. Of the disappointed elation of a 100-mile PB by four hours at the Thames Path 100, yet still coming in over 25 hours. Of the knuckle-gnawing disappointment of pulling out of the NDW100 in August at 91 miles, knowing that I’d injure myself further if I limped on. Of following a gruelling training plan. Of all those bloody roller sessions, strength sessions, speed sessions. All those expensive and exquisitely painful sports massages. Of absorbing inspiration from the amazing people in the Centurion Running and Bosh groups, like Jacqui Byrne and Luke Ashton and Tremayne Dill Cowdry and Ian Shelley and Shawn Timmons, and at times inspiring others to take up running. Of all the reliance on Sarah to keep things ticking over at home while I fussed over runs and rollers and kit and nutrition.

In August I attempted the NDW100 for the second year. First time was a success – finish at all costs was the brief I gave to my cowering mind, and it bullied my body into a finish in 29 hours 11 minutes. I didn’t run again for 4 months. This year the focus has been different; as races came and went I felt the constant need to return to them to do them better. My focus was becoming less about finishing long races and more about getting faster at them. My pullout this year was tactical, I knew with 11.5 miles to go that I could walk to the end, get a PB by a couple of hours, but what would that give me? A finisher’s shirt and a buckle, both same as last year, and perhaps risk further injuring my knee. It was a tough decision. I knew I had the Winter 100 coming up, and I felt it was better to pull out, recover, and come back stronger for the next race.

Saturday 18th October took a long time to come around.

In the weeks leading up to the race everything was perfect: I’d peaked at 84 miles a week training, tapered for 2 weeks, I’d done regular speed work and strength training. I’d had a couple of massages to make sure my legs and back were in decent shape, and I’d run at night and day in all sorts of weather and terrain. I felt unbreakable, until a couple of days before when I woke up feeling shivery and achey. After preparing for so long for a specific race the notion of not running it, or not running as well as hoped, because of a virus is acutely frustrating. So I regularly necked Lemsip and vitamins and slept as much as I could.

On Saturday morning I woke up and I could feel it. I felt overly hot and sweaty, and I had a sore throat that I knew wasn’t just a cold. I tried to remain confident, to fight the doubts and make myself believe it would be fine, but deep down I wasn’t confident at all. I didn’t tell anyone except Sarah and my coach because I hate making excuses for a potentially poor race; I don’t know why but I just prefer to keep it to myself. There was NO QUESTION of me DNSing this race, I just didn’t know what to expect from it with the illness. I overheard Ed Catmur, last year’s winner and record holder, say that he was feeling under the weather, and I figured that if he’s here like that then I’m in good company.

Sarah drove the kids and I over to the village hall at Goring and dropped me off before heading back home, as Billy had a school do to attend. It was raining as I pulled my bags out of the car and trudged into the hall for kit check.

I’d had plenty of time over the last few evenings to fanny about with kit. The Winter is a strange race in that you return to Goring at 25, 50 and 75 miles, and then again at the end – so you only need one drop bag and you can have it at any time. I’d assembled a couple of bags for 50 and 75 containing a dry base layer, hat, Buff, top and socks, plus a fresh pair of shoes for halfway in case I needed them. I also threw in a few extra pairs of socks, tops and another base layer, thinking they might come in handy.

Food-wise I packed 3 boxes of Morrison’s Bakewell Tarts – my favourite running food du jour – a pile of ham sandwiches that Sarah made for me, a dozen bananas, some flapjacks and a pile of Strawberry and Banana GUs. I packed a few carefully into my running vest – an Ultimate Direction SJ, which I really love. I weaned myself off a Salomon bladder earlier in the year after a split just before the TP100, and a quick experiment revealed that bottles worked for me and I haven’t looked back. I filled both bottles with water, and pinned my race number to my shorts. I think it was at that point that I realised how much Merino wool stuff I was wearing – my hat, Buff, base layer, gloves and pants were all made of the stuff. Basically I was to be a sheep for the day. I do love it though. Especially the pants.

After some unfortunate chafing on the NDW100 I needed to get some Glide ‘down there’. I went into the toilets and there was a big queue, so I just stood to one side and did the business, which must have looked a bit strange to the other chaps waiting for the loo. But I had to do it somewhere! After the race briefing and a final session of ‘dropping the kids off at the pool’ we all trooped down to the start line on the Thames Path. An inauspicious start position – no big inflatable start line, just a big group of runners standing about in a narrow car park. And then we were off, to some applause from onlookers. I love the beginnings of races. I love the end, too. Not sure about the middle bit mind.

The weather had been bad overnight, and although it wasn’t currently raining parts of the Thames Path were like a skating rink. Actually, probably more like a cross-country skiing course. My memory of the Thames Path from previous runs was of mostly tarmac and concrete, but it’s not – there are a lot of fields, earthy paths and rough areas. In places running was easier than walking, which was troubling because I didn’t intend to walk the whole thing. I ran 5 minutes and walked 1 minute right from the start. I was glad it was daylight because it would have been awfully hard in the dark, I thought – not thinking that the Thames Path on spur 4 might be equally slippery in the coming night. It was also very narrow in places, so I had to be flexible with my run/walk to avoid slowing other runners down behind me.

Photo by Stuart March

My nutrition was good right from the off, I found it quite easy to pack the calories in, took an S-Cap every hour, and I drank more water than I thought I needed, knowing that this race has an abundance of aid stations. The first, Wallingford at 6.5 miles, came and went – I made sure my number was recorded, popped in with my bottles already unscrewed for a refill, and popped straight back out again. It was like an F1 pit-stop, the most efficient I’ve ever been. I’ve done a couple of triathlons in my chequered ‘athletic’ past and I’ve never been all good at transitioning, so it felt great to do this first one so quickly. The weather was mild and the forecast rain didn’t seem to be anywhere near yet.

The next section was lovely, really easy to run and came with the added benefit of seeing other faster runners coming the other way. I passed Ed first (or, rather, he passed me) who seemed like an irresistible force travelling at my sprinting speed yet barely appearing to register an effort. He looked straight ahead, totally focused. At my speeds I don’t normally see quick runners in full flight so this was quite a special moment and spurred me on a little bit. A few minutes later I passed the guy in second place, who looked altogether more… normal, somehow. I remember thinking how could this guy be in second place, as he appeared to be running at a much slower pace than Ed. As he passed he looked me in the eye and said, with a Scottish accent, ‘well done mate’. I then passed a few other runners, and a couple of miles from Little Wittenham I passed Paul Ali, Tremayne Cowdry and Luke Ashton, and gave each of them a high-five – they were quite a way ahead of me already but that was OK. Today was about me and my plan, not racing anyone else – just focusing on getting under that 24 hour mark. The Little Wittenham aid station was a pagoda positioned behind a high wall up a little hill, almost as though it was hiding from the elements. One of the volunteers refilled my bottles, I grabbed a handful of peanuts and then ran back. Then it was my turn to pass runners on their way out, and I was determined to say well done to as many as I could to encourage them in the same way that the Scottish Guy had to me. I passed Ian Shelley and Shawn Timmons who both looked strong.

The return leg seemed much shorter than the way out, and it felt like no time before I was back at Wallingford and then back on the mud slide and into Goring for a pit stop at 25, about 4 hours 15 minutes in, which was on schedule. If I could get out quickly I’d have 6 hours to hit my target of halfway no later than 10 hours 30 minutes, which I knew I could easily do now as long as I didn’t hang about enjoying the warmth of Goring Village Hall. Immediately I walked in the hall and registered my number I was handed my drop bag by a volunteer. They were really on the ball with that all day – I didn’t need to ask for it once, it was just there waiting for me each time. I refilled my water, threw away my rubbish, and added enough food for 4-5 hours. It was a little warmer now and still no rain, and I regretted wearing SealSkinz waterproof socks during the first spur because really my feet were in little danger of getting wet. But I heard again that rain was coming soon so I made the snap decision to keep going with the SealSkinz and then think again at halfway. I headed out the door and onto the Ridgeway.

Like the Thames Path, this part of the Ridgeway is parallel with the Thames for about 5 miles, but on the opposite side of the river. It heads through fields and little villages like South Stoke and North Stoke, it has a great long section in the woods through the fabulously named Grim’s Ditch, and it has a challenging route through Nuffield golf course which I expected to be tricky in the dark. I was looking forward to this section, and at the end of it I’d be halfway done. I had a couple of cups of Coke at the North Stoke aid station. I really don’t like Coke except for when I’m running, where it tastes like the nectar of the gods and it’s a handy few calories to throw down. I tried to waste no time and dashed out again. About a mile further on I started to feel nauseous, so I slowed down a little bit, but pretty soon I had to be sick. With 70 miles to go I assumed my system wasn’t taking food in, and it was related to the virus, so I was worried. I walked for a couple of miles, regularly drinking water, and then had another salt cap and a bit of flapjack. It took a little while but eventually I started to feel a bit better, and began running a little again.

The Ridgeway towards Swyncombe is lovely, and it was nowhere near dark so it was a great, free run. On my recce I’d made a navigational error and missed a turn, adding on about a mile and a half – but none of that today. The route was well marked and I’d either run or recced the whole route before, but I was thankful on two occasions that other runners spotted a turning and a bit of tape that I may have missed had they not been there. This is the first long race where I didn’t get lost at least once. During my recce a few weeks earlier I remember an area with a couple of big fields which had just been ploughed. One was the sort of vast open space that gives you the feeling of vertigo looking across it, and I think it had been ploughed that morning because there were no tracks across it at all. I looked for signs of the Ridgeway continuing across it, spotted a couple of white posts, took a guess at the most likely one and ran across to it. This time, on race day, there was no such problem because both these fields had sprouted grass and the footpath was clear to see.

When I got to the top of Coneygear Wood a runner coming the other way told me that it wasn’t too far to the aid station. I’m not sure what I think about that sort of statement generally, because ‘not too far’ is relative – but I’ve learned to take it with a pinch of salt and extract the encouragement element while largely ignoring the distance information element. At Swyncombe I refilled, waved bye to the marshals and got on with the run. On the way back it was getting towards dusk and the wooded areas started becoming quite dark. It was only about 6 o’clock at this point though, and I’d planned on switching on my headtorch maybe an hour after this, so I ploughed on. It felt great to run in the woods on mulchy terrain, and I felt quick and spry. There was the odd tree root and other obstacles, plus a few direction changes, but they were easily negotiated even in near-dark and it was a wonderful part of my race. I saw a light in the distance and approached a runner wearing his head torch, heading in the same direction as me. As I passed him he jumped a little, which I guess is normal in a dark wood when approached by someone *not* wearing a head torch. I apologised and ran past him. A few minutes afterwards I couldn’t see the way, and relied on him catching me up to spot a signpost and a change of direction, and I realised that was perhaps a sign that I should be wearing my own torch and got it out. After a head torch disaster in the NDW100 this August I’d invested in a new Nao, and I do like it a lot – even on the lowest power it’s quite bright and apparently lasts for 12 hours. As it was heading towards 7pm now I was confident that it would survive the night and I wouldn’t have to mess about with any of the spare batteries I was carrying.

I continued to feel good running this section, and overtook a few more people along the way, quickly passing through Nuffield and North and South Stokes and texting Sarah and my brother Steve before heading back to Goring. A quick word on Nuffield: from one of my recces I was pointed to Nuffield Church for refreshments. There’s always fresh water, squash and a kettle with tea and coffee, and sometimes cake in the fridge, plus a little box for donations. It’s a lovely little church and I like that they have supplies for runners and walkers in case they’re passing, so if you’re in the area and need anything, just pop in.

Steve, Sarah and the kids were meeting me at halfway and Steve was to pace me. We’ve not run with each other much before, but he’s recently got into ultra-distance running and completed Race To The Stones in May with a decent time. Another friend of mine, Alick, was to pace me from 75 through to the finish, but he had to pull out due to ill-health. Steve’s response to that was “oh, I’ll just run the whole way with you.” What a trooper!

A few miles from halfway I texted Sarah and Steve and told them I was heading in, and asked if they would both be there. Because we’ve got young kids and they were staying in a local hotel I wasn’t sure if they’d still be up, but I got a text saying they were all there. Brilliant, that gave me a little boost. When I got there I headed through to register my number, picked up my drop bag (which was again handed to me automagically) and headed on through for hugs. Steve was about ready to go, so I started getting changed straight away. I swapped to a dry top and base layer, changed to Twin Skin socks and swapped shoes. These were a near-identical pair of Trailroc 255s, but a little newer so the grip would be better if the rain was finally to appear during the night. I’m glad I took lots of kit. The humidity meant everything got very sweaty despite the cold, and the facility to swap to whatever I liked was a big plus.

I said hi to Jacqui Byrne, a fellow Bosh runner and Goring volunteer for the day, and she got me some soup and bread which went down a treat. I had both bottles filled, one with half Coke half water, which is a new combination for me but I just felt like it was the right thing to do. I had this combo for the rest of the race, nice easy calories and I think it helped. I was dawdling though, I’d been about 20-25 minutes in there which I was a bit annoyed with myself about. It got to the stage where Jacqui was lurking and cajoling me to get out of the door. I kissed Sarah and the kids goodbye and Steve and I headed out.

I really enjoyed running from Goring 50 with Steve. We chatted about all sorts, and the miles ticked away. We ran the flats and downs, but I mostly only wanted to walk even the slightest uphills. It felt OK to do that, knowing that on the way back these would be runnable – and they were. That stretch of the Ridgeway, once it pulls away from the Thames, is extremely open and desolate, and it became quite cold, but it never seemed quite as inhospitable as I remember from my daytime recce. We kept moving well and Steve did a fantastic job of lighting the way – we both had head torches, and he had a bright hand torch as well which he shone across the path. That was particularly useful because my new Nao took this opportunity to flash and tell me the battery was expiring. It went to low-power mode, which I’m sure is still bright but it was terribly dim compared with how it had been. 6 hours from a battery that’s meant to last 12 hours; hmm, I need to investigate that. Then there was the aid station in the distance. We wondered what it could be – in reality it was a pagoda with some disco lights and music playing quite loudly, but from a couple of miles away it looked like an alien spacecraft. Wonderful to see that in (almost literally) the middle of nowhere. It had a real party atmosphere with music playing and some of the marshals were dancing; what a total contrast to the surroundings. I asked a marshal to refill my bottles while I sat down and replaced the rechargeable battery with a couple of Duracells for the return leg. This was fiddly in the dark but the marshals helped by keeping me well-lit. Steve changed his head torch batteries as well, and then we started running back, again trying to give some encouragement to the runners coming the other way. Even with new batteries the Nao went immediately into low power mode, so again I was really happy that Steve was around not only for company but with his extra lighting.

At this point I started having occasional feelings of despair about the 24 hour finish. Every so often I would calculate the number of hours remaining and quickly work out what I needed to do, and it wasn’t all good. I got to 50 miles in about 10 hours 15 minutes (8:15pm real time), and it seemed to take an age to reach 62.5 with all the uphill gradients and the walking. On the way back down I set a target of *leaving* Goring at 75 miles at 3am, giving me 7 hours to finish the last 25 miles. To leave Goring at 3am I would need to get there at 2:45am, and that meant we need to do the 12.5 miles back in about 2.5 hours – with low-power torches.

With the slight downhill gradients I felt like I was gliding along, but I fear Steve didn’t fare so well – his ankle was becoming more and more painful and a few miles from the end I could hear he was limping. Still, we were moving at a decent pace. We talked about whether he should stop at 75 or continue; and we decided he should stop. It would have been lovely for me to have his company for another few hours, running through dawn and on to the finish, but by the time we got to 75 at about 2:50am I felt quite fresh and I knew I could make it to the end on my own. I also thought that the Thames Path trail might be quite slippery and Steve might really hurt his ankle.

Making the 75 mile mark bang on time gave me a lot of confidence. I met up with Jacqui again who got me some more soup and bread, and a cup of tea. I shouted to James Elson that my 24 hours could be on, and he told me that it most definitely was on, that I should relax and go for it, not look at my watch, and I should be able to do it a lot under 7 hours. I saw Scottish Guy, Marco Consani, relaxing having already won the race with a course record of 15:03. That was humbling. I went over to him and asked if I could soak up some of his aura. I probably looked like a bloody lunatic, but I think it worked.

After leaving Steve and Goring, for the final time, just after 3am, I went out on the final spur. I really didn’t feel like running at all at that stage, and I’d assumed it would be flat. In reality it was undulating with a few short sharp climbs and downhills. My quads were letting me know they were there, and although I walked most of that 12.5 mile section I strode it out, doing 13.5 – 14 min/miles. Still, that feeling of despair appeared more than once, as I could feel my 24 hour finish slipping away. The first aid station was 4 miles in, and the next section – 8.5 miles into Reading – was horrible. There were 2 or 3 occasions when I thought I’d reached the aid station and I hadn’t. The first was a well-lit car park, the second was an empty field. With hindsight I asked too many runners coming the other way how long to the aid station. I got wildly different responses, which comes from asking people who’ve run over 87.5 miles about details of space and time. It felt never-ending, and this was my lowest point mentally. Finally I got to the aid station, and it was only then that I knew, reasonably concrete-ly, what I needed to do. I had about 3.5 hours to do 12.5 miles. I’d been running for over 20 hours at this stage and mental maths wasn’t a strong point, but I figured that meant below 4 mph, so should be possible even by walking it – but I wanted to be sure and as it was raining quite heavily at that point I knew that towards the end the ground would be a sea of mud. Somehow the knowledge of the distance galvanised me mentally. I ate a lot at the Reading aid station, asked for my Coke/water mix to be a little stronger, and just decided I was going to go for it. My quads were hurting and my toes felt hot, but otherwise I felt OK – and just putting one foot in front of the other with short steps came quite easy. So I started running. I don’t know where the energy to do that came from.

At the last aid station before the finish there was a little road leading up to it. Runners heading to Reading turned right, while people heading for the finish turned left. I felt physically sick imagining that I might have to turn right there. Yet still there were many runners coming towards me on that 4-mile stretch back to Goring. At no point in my races to date have I seen such humility, grace and raw drive that I saw in the eyes of those people. One held a large gate open for me and waved me through, and wished me good luck getting my sub-24. She had 20 miles yet to run. And she’s not alone. Shawn Timmons wished me all the best achieving my dream when he had a similar distance yet to cover. That really spurred me on and I had no trouble running then. Lots of runners clapped as I ran towards that finish, even though they had a long way to go. I felt more emotional than I ever have while running.

Towards the end a runner, not on the race, told me that I was the first person he’d seen running, everyone in front of me was walking. I thought for a brief moment of trying to catch them, but dismissed it quickly. I texted Sarah and told her I’d be there well within 24 hours, and it might even by 9:15 am.

Photo by Stuart March

Finally, having passed a sign for Goring Bowls Club, I asked a chap with his dog if this really was Goring, and was the village hall close by. It was – and he pointed out a chap waving to me a few hundred yards away, pointing up a slope. As I turned the corner I realised that was the final slope, and I was still running strongly at that point. I could see Sarah at the top, shouting to everyone that there’s a runner coming. I think Stuart the photographer had gone away for a minute and she was desperate that everyone should be there to see me and capture the moment. I felt an overwhelming urge to take my jacket and race vest off and fling them in the air while running on, and give her a big hug in some fantastic Hollywood-like scene. I don’t think it quite worked like that, but I’ll never forget her face, so much emotion, and that hug will stay with me for a while too.

This was the best races I’ve ever run. I did exactly what I needed to, and the result has given me huge confidence for progressing in 2015. The organisation was excellent as always, and the out-and-back format meant a great deal of contact with other runners which added a special element. From the encouragement and high-fives given by the leading runners while I was heading out, to the encouragement and high-fives that I could give to other runners on the way back, it was a highly unusual race and a tremendously uplifting experience. I will definitely do it again next year, especially now I know the lie of the land.

I became obsessed with this little piece of metal, or one like it, and now it’s mine. It’s been quite a journey getting here. Unlike my first 100-mile race last August, the NDW100, after which I didn’t run another step for 4 months, this time, a day later, I’m itching to get out again. I want to go faster. I want to run longer. I want to explore new places. I want to see what my body and mind can do.

There are lots of people to thank: the people of Bosh and Centurion running groups; the incredible volunteers who gave up their time to keep us healthy, happy and running; the other runners for a great spirit and camaraderie; Nici and James for organising the event and the latter for coaching me into shape; Stuart March for high fives and encouragement, and great photographs; Jacqui for hugs and help; Steve, for joining me for 25 miles on Saturday night in the pitch black and the rain, and for literally holding the torch when the going got bleak; Billy and Daisy for the little pictures they’d drawn for me. And most importantly of all, Sarah, for her unending support, enthusiasm, love and patience.

Race: TP100

billy_daisy_start

After my first 100 miler, the NDW 2013, I didn’t run another step for four months. I totally lost interest in running. I found other things to fill my time. I didn’t miss it at all. I put weight on, little niggly problems started to occur in my legs for no apparent reason, and I started to huff and puff while walking up escalators and stairs. After Christmas I knew I needed to get back in the saddle, and I did what I did the year before – I signed up for the NDW100 2014. I guess it’s like childbirth; you only really know how bad something like a tough Ultra is while it’s happening, and then once it’s finished, over time your mind eases off on it and the good things start to outweigh the bad. Out goes the tortuous climb up Box Hill after 26 miles of running, in comes the familial love of the Centurion marshals and volunteers. I forgot the night section with the hallucinations and the falling asleep while running pitch-dark trail, and instead remembered, vividly, the joy of that sweet finish line.

With the NDW 2014 booked, I now had eight months to prepare for it. I wanted to go under 24 hours. It would mean knocking more than five hours off my personal best, but I knew where I needed to improve and not only would this make me faster, it would also enable me to enjoy it more. I knew that I’d learned from the experience. I knew that I had to get ready. I booked the LDWA’s Punchbowl Marathon and Centurion’s SDW50, both to run with my friend John Pickup. With the NDW as a massive hilly horror show, I booked the TP100 thinking that it would be a straightforward way to get the distance in my legs and then later apply the hills. How wrong I was.

The Punchbowl went badly; I don’t think either John or I were happy with our performance there. 30 miles of hills in about 7 hours, something bad going on there. Together with James Elson I worked out that two of the major things I’d been getting wrong were hydration and nutrition: the former signified by crusty salt deposits on my face after each long distance run; the latter by crushing lows and long slow death marches when I should be running. If I learned to drink more and to eat more methodically, I could improve.

With more suitable hydration and nutrition the SDW50 was fantastic. I worked out an A, B and C race schedule, with the A race getting us both in around 10 hours 50 minutes. We both finished in some style in 10 hours 8 minutes, and it felt relatively easy. I was buoyed. And then came this race, the TP.

Crushing, relentless flatness.

James had warned me that this race is deceivingly tough because of its lack of hills. 2,500 feet of elevation, and I couldn’t really see where even that much ascension could come from – running along the Thames, surely that’s flat. Isn’t it? I needed to find out. Sarah offered to help me recce some of it a few weeks earlier, and we chose Henley to Whitchurch, a 14-mile section just after the halfway checkpoint, when during the race it would be dark and require a diversion away from the river. The recce went well, a very dry day and I realised that the biggest problem would be the severely rutted fields which had dried and toughened, and defined a really challenging and potentially ligament-damaging surface on which to run.

The day before the race I was still unsure on kit choice. I decided on road shoes for the first half, having heard that it was mostly tarmac and hard-packed dirt; and trails for the second half because it had been raining for a solid week around Reading and I didn’t fancy Torvill-and-Deaning my way over muddy fields at night in road shoes. The rest was easy, just warm tops and leggings, and more dry warm clothes in drop bags. Just in case, you know… it could be cold during the night down by the river. Or I might fall in the Thames.

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On the day of the race I drove Sarah and my two children down to Richmond Park, and they went to park while I went through registration. I checked in my drop bags, and then I saw my fellow Boshers Luke Ashton, Shawn Timmons, Tremayne Dill Cowdry, Helen Gittens and Sunday Odesanya, and had a… well, I would have had a nice chat with them, except that I realised my bladder had sprung a leak. No, not that bladder. The Hydrapak in my Salomon vest. The vest was sopping wet, and I traced it to a small hairline crack near the valve in the bladder itself. Shit. I’d packed an old spare Hydrapak, but it was in the drop bag I’d just put in the sodding van ready to be transported. Panicking a bit, I wasn’t sure what to do; Tremayne and Luke persuaded me that running with it like that wasn’t an option – what if it split during the race? “Get and sort yer bladder ahht,” the laughing voice of Helen rang in my ears as I raced inside and started registering, all the while looking for James Elson. Eventually I found him and, amazingly, he had a new Hydrapak bladder for sale. I’d have paid anything that moment. Handily, because this particular device has a removable tube I only had to transfer the water into the new bladder, which I did with Luke’s help, and jam it inside the vest. I was all set. My family and I decamped to a local café for tea and pastries, and then I kissed them all goodbye and went to the race briefing. The only thing of note there was the fire alarm, which kept going off as someone in the corner kept opening a fire door. It would repeatedly go off to accompanied groans, then that person would slam the door to silence the alarm and cause a hearty cheer from the 200+ runners squeezed into Richmond Town Hall. That happened maybe three times, and then after James had done his spiel we all headed down to the start line where I gave Sarah and the kids a kiss again and they, along with a couple of hundred others, waved us all off on our little journey to Oxford.

start

The first thing I remember was the track narrowing to single file, and the runners ahead slowing to a walk before stopping altogether. Some people were heading to the left and right to hurdle a fence, and then I could see why – a kissing gate at the end with 200+ runners trying to simultaneously squeeze through it. No chance. I ventured to one side, climbed over the fence, and was off. Within a couple of miles I was already hungry and, determined to eat right from the get-go according to my plan, I whipped out a ham sandwich from my pack… and promptly dropped the little plastic bag it was carried in. James had described littering the trail as “second only to abusing a volunteer,” so I was keen to head back and pick it up – but a kind runner picked it up for me and handed it over. One of the little touches that marks out Ultra running as one of the friendliest sports, someone – a ‘competitor’ – picking up your rubbish to save you having to do so.

Running_1

The first few miles were great, I fairly quickly started to recognise this area as I live near Walton (CP 1) and I’ve run as far as Eel Pie Island before, which is in Twickenham and only a mile or two from the start of this race. Heading through Kingston was busy with people as expected, and then passing Hampton Court Palace was lovely as always, with the golden gates glinting in the sunlight. Approaching the bridge just after the palace there was a bloke in a leather jacket with a clipboard, who consulted it before shouting to me “Here’s another one, COME ON ANDY!” I’ve no idea who he was or if he was in any way official. I thought to myself maybe he’s the Ultra running equivalent of a trainspotter; downloading the runner details and heading to cheer them on – quite a cool idea really  J

wraysbury_2

I felt good just burning through the miles, knowing that Sarah and the kids would be at Wraysbury. I texted her to ask if she could bring my Montaine lightweight trousers for the halfway point, already thinking that this temperature could really drop at nighttime near the river. Still feeling strong for the moment, I arrived at the Wraysbury check point about 20 minutes ahead of my schedule. Sarah and the kids were sitting outside and I gave them a hug each, with Billy commenting how sweaty I was. I went inside and grabbed a few bits of banana, cookies and sandwiches and threw away all my rubbish; then went to the loo – a luxurious aid station, this one. I went outside and kissed the family goodbye, and ran on towards Dorney. I was now only 10 minutes ahead of schedule, and slightly annoyed with myself for dawdling, but it was lovely to see Sarah and that gave me an extra lift as I set off towards Dorney.

As we passed the Dorney CP at mile 30.5 the volunteers there were talking in hallowed terms about Ed Catmur, who had been through there in, I think, about 3-and-a-half hours, and at that point was about 20 minutes ahead of second place. This was about hour six for me, and I wondered idly if they’d been talking about this to all runners for over two hours, would they keep that up for the next couple too? I didn’t really mind, the leaders in races like this are so far ahead of me as it makes no odds.

Onwards towards Cookham at mile 38. As I headed up Sutton Road I saw a face I recognised, Luke Tillen who I’d met doing The Wall last year. He runs a small charity called THHN that helps disadvantaged children to have a holiday, and we ran together for a while and compared fundraising notes. He was looking strong and it was good to catch up; I think both of us are pretty determined, so we drew a bit of extra resolve from each other and it was clear that, barring injury, we’d both finish this race.

Just after the Cookham CP we passed a pub on the left and a bloke sitting having a pint shouted encouragement to us and told us that we should be careful not to miss the bridge coming up. Yes, yes, I’m sure we’re capable of reading some signs old man, and it should be all marked. But, me and my big mouth, Luke and I settled into a rhythm of chatting again and, next to the aptly named ‘Cock Marsh’, we ran about a quarter-mile past the bridge in question. We would have kept going too, except an old dear seated next to another pub told us that other runners had crossed an earlier bridge. I turned around and could see the bloody thing and a bunch of runners who had been behind us were now crossing it, and we kicked ourselves for missing it. I called back another guy here who was 100 yards in front of us and in his own zone.

Running_2

Arriving at Henley dusk was approaching and the temperature was already dropping. As well as meeting Sarah I was also looking forward to hot food and my drop bag, and I expected to find a warm building, but instead the Centurion sails revealed a large open-sided tent. I couldn’t see Sarah yet so I texted her, grabbed my drop bag and sat down to open it. Ah, dry socks and shoes, and a fresh top. Sweet! I peeled off my road shoes and marvelled at the vast quantity of mud that had permeated them and turned my white socks a deep brown colour. Why doesn’t Hilly make black Twin Skin socks any more? Who the hell wears white socks anyway? Not trail runners, for sure. My feet were looking OK so I grabbed my Inov-8 gaiters and put them on as well, imagining there would be a lot of crap to be kept out in the coming 49 miles.

For some reason I really struggled to put my shoes on and tie them up. My fingers were cold and a bit shaky, while my left foot was swelling a bit at the top. I had a job tying it tight enough to not get sucked off in a bog (ooer missus) but not so tight as to prevent my foot from ballooning. Sarah arrived and explained they’d parked quite a way away and the kids and my mate Iain were waiting to make sure she’d found me. After a quick kiss and a hug she went to get me some pasta and a cup of tea, and then shot back to the car. I made myself busy with my new top (over the old base layer, which I’m now thinking was a mistake as I was a bit sweaty) my water/windproof jacket and a Buff. I started to feel incredibly cold and I just wanted to get out of there. I tried warming myself up with the tea and that helped a bit, but the pasta was cold by then and I only ate about three pieces, even though I’d been looking forward to it for so long. I felt a bit glum because of that, and looking back on it now I think, nutritionally, that was the time when the wheels started to fall off my wagon.

Sarah and I started running then, both with head torches turned on and Sarah skipping along the twilight trail. She’d never run at night before and I think she was relishing it and running well, intending to run for three miles and then meet up with Iain and the car. We chatted about what they’d been doing during the day, and I told her (through viciously chattering teeth) that I’d been going OK but really needed to warm up now. The trail at this point was lovely; fairly solid and flat mud, nice and wide so it never felt like we were in any peril from the drop into the river. The Thames itself looked inky black, exactly the sort of effect you get when running up high in the hills at night and look down a ravine; all that black could easily have been a few hundred feet of drop.

After a seemingly really short time I realised we’d reached Shiplake railway station, the intended meeting point with Iain; and there they were, all smiles and waving out of the car windows. My Garmin said 1.8 miles. Some bad Google maps plotting on my part, I think. Bugger. Kindly Iain offered to drive on a bit further so Sarah and I could run on a bit. Now this was strange; we were running in a small group along a narrow lane, and I could hear our car behind us, following at a sedate pace. It was actually really useful as the headlights picked out a much wider area of the dark road than the head torches would. In a few minutes we reached a gate that needed to be crossed, so Iain and Sarah swapped, and after kisses goodbye she and the kids drove off to their lovely warm hotel. Well, the Days Inn, which sometimes passes as a hotel.

Then it was Iain’s turn to run with me. I was grateful to have the continued company as it was pretty dark by now, and I hadn’t seen him for a few months so we had a lot to catch up on. We crossed from the road through a gate and down into… a quite boggy field. Honestly, I’d barely seen mud up until this point, and within about 10 yards of Iain starting to run we were ankle deep in it. Welcome to the Thames Path 100, Iain – you who primarily run on roads and had never run with a head torch before! We had too much to talk about to be bothered with the mud though, and I think he quite enjoyed it (I’m always quite mystified when runners are suspicious/wary/afraid of mud; running’s a great excuse to be a kid again, to go stomping through puddles and fall over in mudslides, and then just hose yourself down when you get home. A literal and figurative connection with nature. See Richard Askwith’s new book ‘Running Free’ for a much more detailed and astute description of this than I could wish to give). Iain had no idea where he would run to, he just wanted to start and then when the time felt right, he’d get a cab back to his car. I was happy for the extended company. We ended up running about 10 miles together and then eventually, just after we climbed the bridge near Tilehurst, he decided he’d have to head for civilisation in Pangbourne and a possible cab company, and we said goodbye before I disappeared down the steps back to the river and headed for the Whitchurch CP.

I was still run/walking at this stage and felt OK, but eating was still nagging at the back of my mind; I just wasn’t taking in enough and with around 33 miles to go I knew that meant problems. I had a gel for some instant calories and ran on. Walking felt good and strong, striding out, but running was getting less and less strong all the time.

I walked for a while with a guy called Martin, and feeling good to have the company of someone who seemed happy to be moving at my pace, and also seemed assured of the route having recced it all over the past few weeks. Nice guy, wish I could remember which of the several Martins in the race it was!

At Whitchurch I left ahead of him and ran on up a bridleway at a slight incline, wondering that because this was uphill and the Thames wasn’t in sight, if this was in fact the right way. But a glow stick and a couple of reflective red/white tape strips confirmed it for me, good old Centurion. Further up the bridleway I saw half a dozen head torches coming the other way though, and my first slightly disorientated thought was that they must be walkers or runners in a different race; but then as they came into focus I could see they were wearing TP numbers. They said that the two front runners had gone quite a way further on and that it didn’t lead anywhere. I was pretty confident that it must be the right way, given the recent waymarkers, but they were insistent on heading back. Martin caught me up at this stage and I explained what was going on – and he was very happy that it was the correct route so we strode on. I called to the others to come with us but they were intent on heading back down the hill. Martin and I got to the top of the incline and went through a marked gate – I felt a bit sorry for the other guys at this point because those front runners must have been disorientated or otherwise distracted, the marking was really quite obvious. But they were long gone, so we marched on.

The incline continued and became steeper, quite a decent climb which made my leg muscles almost sing with joy after the repetitive running/walking across flat ground for the last 15 hours or so. I knew at some point that the uphill would turn into a downhill, and my goodness it did – a really long slight incline downwards that seemed to go on forever. This is absolutely my favourite type of running; a downward incline, occasional twists and turns, rough ground, and a bit of company to share it with. A neutral observer watching us, 70+ miles into a race, would probably see two slow guys plodding their way tortuously down a hill; but in my mind’s eye we were Kilian Jornet and Geoff Roes, fleet of foot and really going for it, taking huge advantage of the slope to gain speed and ground, all the while thinking that around the next corner it would be flat again – but there must have been at least a couple of miles of this rapid descent and it felt GREAT to be running again.

After Streatley my memory turns to mush for a while, a combination of tiredness and the dark, and the hypnotic rhythm of watching my headtorch pass the otherwise pitch-dark ground. At some stage I remember walking with two or three others, including Gary Kelly, a guy with a distinctive grey moustache that I’d seen before at races. We talked about everything and nothing as we made our way across muddy fields and through seemingly dozens of gates. It was great to have company through this very dark and lonely section. I also remember leaving a CP, possibly Wallingford, and chatting with an extremely loud-talking, confident American guy – nice enough, but gosh he sounded assertive as he we chatted about something and nothing. I remember seeing him later too, just coming into a CP looking a bit worse for wear as I was leaving; I hope he finished. I also remember mostly gobbling gels at this stage; Gu gels are not my favourite, but I grabbed two or three at each CP and went through at least one if not two per hour in absence of any quantity of real food.

At CP mile 85, Clifton Hampden, this is where I was to meet my final crew member, so I had a little spring in my step (not literally, I couldn’t do anything physical but walk). I made it into the little room in which the aid station was set up, and there was Rod Densham, my pacer for the last 15 miles and fellow SpecialEffect Ambassador. Rod and I had run, together with four other guys, from Marathon to Athens in late 2012 to raise money for the charity. The run was over Mount Penteli, unlike the official Athens marathon route; none of this running along closed roads for us, we chose to brave the traffic and run directly over the mountain just as, we thought, Pheidippides would have done. Well, not the traffic, but you know what I mean. It was an extremely eventful and enjoyable trip and we got to know each other quite well, the six of us. I’d barely seen Rod since so we had an awful lot to catch up on.

I knew the next 15 miles were going to be slow and tough, and I explained to Rod that I was walking the whole time now, and he was fine with that – kept saying that it’s my race, and he’s just along to support me. Every time there was a photo opportunity he’d move to one side so the photographer could snap me, and at every opportunity he’d tell anyone applauding us that he’s “a fraud” as he’d only been with me for a few miles. Soak it up though, man!

As we headed towards CP MILE 95 I spotted a familiar face waving at me and calling my name: Ruth Finnie, a fellow member of the Bosh running group and with whom I’d spent the final few miles of The Wall run last year. It was great to see her managing the aid station and we hugged, I was really happy that there was only five miles to go and another friendly face reminded me that there would be more of the same at the finish.

Rod knows the Oxford area really well, but I’d asked him not to say how far is left unless he’s absolutely sure. A pet hate of mine is when someone – even a bystander trying to be supportive – says something like “not long to go now” when actually there are several miles, or – worse – “Just a marathon to go now” when you’re 24 miles into a 50-mile race. As we quickly walked the path he pointed out some of the sights and the relative position of local colleges. Fascinating history, how the Oxford colleges amalgamated to form part of the University. I was pleased at this point that I’d brought my second Garmin, as I could count down each mile covered since the CP at Lower Radley (95 miles). It was a beautiful warm morning and there were plenty of people about, again an astonishing number of whom knew what we were doing and how close we were to the finish.

I get really emotional thinking about completing these races, especially when my mind drifts back to previous finishes, but at the time I find it a fairly straightforward experience. Maybe not an anti-climax – I know that I’m finished and it’s a great achievement each time – but I’m not in floods of tears as I expect to be. I just get to the finish line, get congratulated, have my photo taken and shake a bunch of hands. I’m just too tired to do anything else.

As we passed a University playing field with just over a mile to go on my watch, a couple called some encouragement to us and told us that the finish is “just around the corner.” My natural suspicions raised, and I called back, with a smile on my face (I think) “is it literally around the corner, or are you just being encouraging?” to which they replied “No, it’s literally around the corner.”

I said to Rod for the first time since he’d joined me, and for my first time since about mile 70, that I feel like running. Ordinarily I’d say that, for me anyway, the process of not running during a race is mostly mental and less about actual physical fatigue. Instantly I started running this time, though, I felt dreadful, like I was forcing a rusted old machine into life for the first time in years. But I always want to finish strong, and in this case with the number of friends and family meeting me, I was desperate to. At first I saw my in-laws, John and Sandra, who were waiting on the path and who were cheering and clapping and pointing me in towards the playing fields and the finish line. I loved John’s face at that point, he looked like he knew that this was an achievement. That made me feel great, and spurred me on a little bit.

Running_finish

Rod gave me the SpecialEffect flag to hold, and I imagined that we’d hold it together when crossing the finish line – but Rod insisted I carried it myself. “What do I do with this?”, I wondered, and then I did what any runner would do, I took a corner in each hand and held it above my head, like Mo Farah after winning Olympic gold. It felt good, like a little sail blowing in the wind. Then I saw Sarah, and the emotion on her face was clear. I gave her a hug on the way past, then I heard Billy calling me, and I shouted to him to come and join me. I couldn’t see Daisy for a moment but then I saw her too. Running along with the SpecialEffect flag, with my son, over the finish line of this race, to incredibly loud cheering and clapping, is something that will stay with me forever. Honestly the applause was startlingly loud, and because it was from so few people (compared with big half marathons) it felt quite personal and it was probably the proudest I’ve ever felt from a running achievement. I was met with a hug first from Nici who gave me my buckle, then from Stuart the photographer, then Sarah again, and then I saw the SpecialEffect people – Dr Mick, the founder, and possibly the kindest most generous man on earth, along with Nick and Ali. Nick had brought a bottle of beer – Car-Beer-Etta – which is created by a local Oxford brewery especially for SpecialEffect, and which had been signed by the SE crew. Ali had baked a cake and she gave it to me, really apologetically because the message that she’d written on in icing had gone a bit fuzzy. She seemed distraught, that I might somehow feel massively let down by this, so I just gave her a big hug too and thanked her. It was a wonderful cake, as it happens.

Family_finish

Rod_finish

Billy_finish

Just before I finish let me give a big shout-out to the Centurion crew and volunteers, particularly Nici and James for stunning organisation as always, and to Rich Cranswick for standing the whole day at various CPs in a chicken costume. But honestly, these runs will not work without volunteers, and they don’t come any more thoughtful, sharp and helpful than in a Centurion race; they always all seem to be Ultra runners having a day off! Congrats to Tremayne and Shawn for brilliant runs despite plenty of hardship, and commiserations to Luke and Mark Griffiths who didn’t make it this time.

So there we are. Another race over, and what had I done? Well, what I hadn’t done is made it in 24 hours, which I was secretly disappointed by. But I had done it in 25 hours 13 minutes, which beat my previous (and only) 100 mile PB by four hours. I’d finished in 101st place, from 227 starters of which almost 80 had dropped out. I’d battled some demons around the cold second half, when it was dark and often quite lonely, and come through fairly strong. Apart from knackered muscles, a couple of small blisters caused by water ingress from the early morning dewy grass, and some chafing around several areas (some quite private), I had no real physical problems. I’d raised more than £1600 for SpecialEffect. I’d made some new acquaintances, reacquainted myself with some old friends, and I’d learned some stuff about myself and what to do/not to do next time so that I do it in nearer 20 hours, never mind 24. Most of all I’d really enjoyed myself; getting through the really low points truly is part of the fun. And while after the NDW100 I didn’t run another step for four months, this time I was already thinking forward to my next Ultra. Guess what it is? The NDW100, 2014. I’m coming for ya.

Race: Norman Conquest 50

Route: Crowborough, Sussex to Rye, Kent

Event Organiser: Saxon Way Ultra Trails

Distance: 51.3 miles (actual 54.5 miles)

Date: 18th May 2013

Finish time: 11 hours 58 minutes

Finish position: 9th

I’d been planning for, dreaming of and apprehensive about this day for a few months. I knew at some stage this evening I’d be in Rye, in a village hall, with a sleeping bag ready to bed down for the night, then wake up and go running. A long way. Longer than I’ve ever run before. Other than those facts, I had little idea of what was in store.

The purpose of this run was to reach 50 miles in my training for The Wall, a 69-mile run across Hadrian’s Wall in June. My plan had called for a 45-mile run with full pack at around this date, so I had a look on www.ultramarathonrunning.com and found this 51.3 miler. I considered that although it was much longer than my plan needed, it did have one big advantage – that I wouldn’t be running 45 miles into the unknown on my own, unsupervised. I signed up.

Sarah and the kids were to travel down to meet me at the end, in Rye, and drive me home, so I decided to get the train down from work. I left late as work’s pretty busy right now and we’re dealing a lot with the US, so I had a marketing call to sort out before I left and it dragged on a bit. I felt like a bored schoolkid watching the clock in a history lesson, waiting for the school bell. I left about 6:30, knowing that I had to get to Rye by 9pm before they closed the doors of the hall. The journey was via a Javelin train on the HS1 line, so after some unpleasant yet expensive food from some Whole Foods-copy store at St Pancras, I sped quickly towards Ashford and a simple linkup afterwards left me in Rye by about 8pm.

It was a short distance from the station to the Village Hall where we were to meet up, on Conduit Hill which was to become my focus several times when returning to this spot, not least at the end of the race! The hall was very quiet when I walked in, and I said hello to a lady behind a trestle table before noticing a bunch of guys sitting eating and drinking tea on the other side of the room. The lady, Pam, turned out to be Mike The Organiser’s mum, who was there with Mike’s dad to help organise and man the aid stations the next day. They must have been in their 60s, so good on them. I got my race number and pack, and realised that I had the pick of the hall floor pretty much in which to stash my gear and bed down for the night. I chose a spot just next to some power sockets so I could charge up my phone overnight and start with maximum power to give Runkeeper a chance of lasting the distance. I fully expected to take nearer the max 15 hours for the run, but I was secretly hoping for 12.

I went over to say hi to the fellas drinking tea, and one of them poured me a mug from a gigantic metal teapot. We got chatting, and it was as I’d hoped – a good mix of newbies and seasoned runners, some doing the 50 and some the 100. So I wasn’t alone in my novice status! We chatted about all sorts, particularly the exploits of some of the big races the guys had done before, and then started to bed down for the night. I went about getting my gear together for the morning, squashing my gels, S! Caps and so forth into my race vest and checking off kit against my list. I gave up halfway because I sensed the guy near me was trying to get to sleep and I kept rustling packets and paper. So I texted Sarah then went to sleep myself. Some runners came in at about 11:30, they were pretty discreet but it did half wake me up, and I felt a bit annoyed; but not as annoyed as I was when I realised I’d forgotten my inflatable pillow. That will be the first thing I pack next time. I’d rather run with no shorts than suffer another night with my head on my race vest.

I woke up at 6am having got some sleep, but nowhere near enough. Lots of people were already buzzing around, as the NC100 was due to begin at 7. Some of the guys were already kitted out and eating breakfast. The brekkie was pretty decent, lots of variety but the bacon sarnies and tea were my immediate choice and after them I felt much better. I got dressed and sorted out the remainder of my kit, again checking carefully against my list. I was desperate not to forget anything – even the smallest thing can ruin a training run, never mind a race. The weather was pretty cold so I decided on a cap, Buff, light jacket and running tights as well as the usual gear. I have an UltrAspire Surge pack which isn’t the biggest in which to stow stuff, but I figured I could always tie my jacket around my waist if it got too warm. After listening to the NC100 briefing and waving them off, we had 15 minutes to do final checks and prep before boarding the bus for the start line. The NC50 route is identical to the second-half of the NC100, so the bus was to take us to the NC100 halfway point, effectively, and we were to run back to Rye from there.

I get very easily travel sick, particularly on coaches, so I shot quickly to the bus and sat at the front. The others must have thought I was an idiot, trying to win the race to the coach, but I knew what I needed to do – all those coach journeys as a kid, all those queasy feelings and the knowledge that the vom was coming. And then run 50 miles? No thanks. I intended to keep my lovely tea and bacon exactly where it was, and sitting at the front did it for me. After half an hour I started chatting to the guy sitting behind me, who was wearing a battered old Spartathlon hat. He’d done it 13 times, with 9 finishes, apparently. Hard core. The journey was mostly uneventful until the end, when the driver couldn’t find the start line and shockingly didn’t have the phone number of the organiser. It was a fairly barren area of Sussex to be fair, and one field did look very similar to all the others; but still, black mark for the organisation. Cue a hilarious scene on a moving bus with a dozen runners jabbing at maps and GPS devices, all trying to locate our current position vs the start, all believing they knew exactly where we were, but all pointing to different places. Nightmare. Eventually we saw Mike and his van, and parked up nearby.

Ashdown Forest (0 miles)

A few of us had a quick wee, it had been a long bus ride. Then I had an S! cap to make sure I started  as I meant to go on with nutrition (I often suffer terribly with cramp at long distance so I’d recently been upping my electrolyte and water levels, which seemed to be doing the trick).

It struck me then how remote the place was, and how small the event was; I’ve done some small, low-key races before but I’ve never been to one that doesn’t have a start line or a clock. Mike asked us to follow him down to the start, and we walked behind him for a couple of minutes before he stopped us in the middle of a field. I was expecting him to then continue for a while, but it turned out that we were in fact at the start! He pointed up the trail and said something like “Rye is 50 miles… well, that way” and then counted down from 3 before we started running. I did appreciate the eccentricity of it, and knew I was going to love the next few hours as long as I didn’t get lost. Oh, dear, did I say lost?

About 10 minutes later a group of us were running down a trail following a guy who looked like he knew where he was heading; but it transpired he didn’t and we should have turned off the trail five minutes earlier. Cue an about-turn, a bit of grumbling, and a sprightly jog up a tarmac road to rejoin the real path as described by the GPS route. I’d decided that I was to use my Garmin 310 as a timer, to mark out run/walk intervals as I’d been training recently: 1 hour running, followed by 5 mins run/1 min walk, repeat until dead or finished. But after this early mishap I decided that relying on other people to navigate might not be the best option and switched to the course on my Garmin so at least I could be semi-independent! At this stage I didn’t think about consulting the map or directions provided by the organiser; of course now I would do either or both, but this was my first race of this kind and I really had no idea; I just trusted that everyone else would be going the right way. This thinking was to get me in trouble a few more times during the race.

After rejoining the Weald Way trail, following the ‘WW’ markers through Furness Wood, I felt a little better about things and settled into the run, regularly drinking water and generally enjoying it. A month earlier I’d been here and recced the first 7 miles of the course, so it all felt comfortable. I chatted with some of the other runners around me, the Spartathlon chap and a guy called Tom Sawyer, whose wife was also running but was likely some way behind us. We may have chatted a bit too much, and I may have got a bit too comfortable/complacent, as just after we tore down a hill (me imagining I was Kilian Jornet for a few seconds) we realised it was off the Weald Way, so we had to trudge back up the hill again. A little embarrassing and definitely quite frustrating this soon into the race.

We soon found our way again on the Weald Way, finding a rhythm to the run and taking in the innumerable stiles and the changes in terrain without too much trouble. At around 5 miles I knew we were about to cross the A26, an extremely busy road, and during the recce I’d lost the trail here and it took me a good 20 minutes to find it again (although 15 minutes of that were taken up with finding a small shop with great pies, and the consuming of a pie and a packet of crisps). I felt a bit smug that I knew the way here, so I was disappointed to find that all the other runners around me seemed to navigate it with no problem J

Uckfield (6.0 miles)

The first CP was stocked with water, biscuits and sweets, so I grabbed a couple of biccies and a couple of cups full of water (and, ok, a handful of cola bottles) and walked on quickly, esting as I walked. I think the fact I was esting a biscuit and looking quite chipper, it’s likely this was the point where a chap took the photo here. I later found out it was Stuart Miles, a very good Ultra runner who’s won a ton of races – I felt quite honoured to have my photo taken by him, and even more so to see what he wrote on his website: “As I watched the leaders of the 50 mile race pass through the drinks station I took a few photos.The leaders. Get me!

At the 1 hour mark I started to run and walk, as planned – 5 minutes running followed by 1 minute walking. My Garmin was taken up with navigating the course so I got a bit nervous about the timing here – I’d been quite strict about the 5/1 ratio in recent training runs. I fiddled with it for a little while walking, and worked out that I can set time intervals while it’s still navigating. So it beeped every 5/1 minutes, which I thought would be ok.

The next 6 miles were fairly uneventful, in that I continued to feel strong and navigated the way quite well.

East Hoathly (12.6 miles)

The St John Ambulance crew was in force here, and nobody needed any help so they were sitting and enjoying the sun while chatting to us as we stocked up on water and snacks. I was surprised to see a bunch of guys who had been running strongly take some rest here, one of them phoned someone to let them know how they were doing. I grabbed a pack of Hula Hoops and half a Mars bar and set off walking quickly down the lane. Jamie Elston caught up with me here, and we walked and chatted for a while before he ran on ahead, and then shortly afterwards a bunch of others, including Martyn Turner, arrived and we ran together for a while.

As we headed towards Hailsham, a group of 6 of us, some following the map, others directions, and others (like me) GPS, we headed confidently through Ashburton Estate, only to fond that our apparent route was blocked by some serious-looking ‘keep the f**k out’ fencing surrounding a vast building site. There was no apparent way through, yet four people from our group decided that breaking through the fence and crossing the land would be the best course. I figured that was taking GPS tracking a bit too far, so me and Martyn decided to carry on to find a main road. We stopped and asked a local who advised us that the main road ahead wasn’t very runnable and could be quite dangerous, so we hot-footed it back the way we came and took a longer but safer detour. (Note: afterwards I checked on the map and the main road ahead was the A22 towards Eastbourne, and that really would not have been a pleasant run!)

Shortly afterwards just as we had found our way out of the maze-like Ashburton Estate we spotted Jamie again coming the opposite way! I felt annoyed that we’d lost so much time fannying around in a bloody housing estate. I ran with them both for a little while, then gradually pulled away as I wanted to keep a slightly higher pace. I always find this a quandary; on one hand invariably ultra runners are solid, decent people and nice to chat to, but on the other hand I rarely go the same pace as them – I’m either faster or (more likely) slower, and in which case something has to give. It’s a measure of my increased confidence as a runner that I can pull away from people knowing that I feel strong, and just go for it.

Hailsham (21 miles)

Reaching this aid station had seemingly taken forever; the road approaching it looked quite short on the map but I think this was the first time my mind played tricks on me, and I felt like David Byrne on the Road to Nowhere video. I think this was the first aid station that had sandwiches, and they were plentiful but unfortunately all were peanut butter. I don’t like peanut butter. I decided I was feeling well enough to keep going on crisps, sweets and gels. I was hungry by this point though, and a nice bit of bread and butter, or a ham or jam sandwich would have gone down a treat. The four guys who had gone a different way at Ashburton were here, and we left at about the same time.

Shortly after leaving the CP, just past the Lookers Cottage, there was a real “FFS!” moment. After climbing a few stiles we crossed a river, and I was just about to hop over a stile to the right and run to the left of a small river when I heard a shout. The other guys were pointing back another way, saying their GPS was pointing there. I made the mistake of taking their advice. Their route took us, comically, over a gate, through a field, through another field, then over another gate, only to find that it was the same place again. About a mile round in a bloody circle! I resolved that this was the last time I’d follow anyone else. Bah!

I was annoyed and the adrenaline was coursing, so I ran on a bit quicker than the others. The trail moved from the Weald Way to the 1066 Country Walk, which we would remain on until back at Rye. It didn’t feel much different, to be honest; still pretty trails, just the signage was a bit different  J

And then I got lost. I was traversing a field and I could see from my GPS the place I needed to get to, but it was across a fairly wide stream. Jamie and Martyn were about with me, but the others had gone a completely different way. I took the lead in trying to get the three of us out of the field, heading alongside the stream to try to find a way across, past some interested cows. As I came to a trail across the river I saw a signpost and ran on, confidently, leaving Jamie and Martyn behind. Another sign on a weird stile in the middle of a field, where presumably there used to be a fence.

The trail then took me past Herstmonceux Castle, a very pretty structure with a giant moat. Mental note to pay a visit there when I wouldn’t be in such a rush. I took out my route directions at this point because it looked like a big pile of fields and stiles ahead and the route through didn’t look obvious. I found my current position relative to Herstmonceux, and found that I had to zig-zag diagonally across 6 fields, taking the stile in each opposite corner. Thanks to the organisers for providing those directions!

However, the quality of the instructions hit a blip when I reached a road, they weren’t easy to follow and my GPS pointed me along the trail, and there’s no way they’d put a CP 100 yards the opposite way from the trail, would they? Of course they would. No matter, I only ran half a mile in the wrong direction before realising I wasn’t going anywhere and took a asked a local where Reid Hall was, and he pointed me back the way I came. Bah!

Boreham Street (26.6 miles)

Marmite-only sandwiches at this CP. A massive pile of them. No solid food again except crisps. Rubbish. Mental note to pack sandwiches next time.

I ran again down the A271 Groundhog Day Road, as it shall now be known to me, and tried to make up some lost time. A few miles down the road I saw Martyn up ahead, running quite slowly, really laboured. We chatted for a bit and he said he’d missed the Boreham Street CP altogether, and he was really hurting. I sort of knew he was done for. Just up ahead though I could see Jamie, and he looked strong. I caught him up, and chatted about Martyn for a bit before we reached Ashburnham – 2.7 miles from Boreham Street. I’m still not sure why they put on both of these CPs.

Ashburnham (29.3 miles)

The chap here was just really handing out water, surrounded by massive bottles of the stuff. I thought I’d ask him how many people had gone ahead of us, thinking that we must be almost last after all the missed directions. He said he thought we were probably 9th and 10th place. That, to put it mildly, gave me a lift! Jamie and I ran for a little while, and then he said he was going to walk for a while and I should run on. This was about 31 miles, just about the longest I’ve ever run (previous longest was 30.37 miles), and I felt really good. I couldn’t quite believe it. 9th place, 30+ miles, and feeling good. I thought I could at least tell my grandchildren one day that I’d been 9th at one stage in an ultramarathon, and that thought kept me going all the way to the next CP!

Battle (35.9 miles)

Still 9th! The guy and girl at Battle CP were really helpful, pouring water into my backpack and helping me stock up with crisps and sweets. I asked the chap to pour me some cola. “Of course, sir!” he beamed, and did so. I drank it in one go, and asked for another. I knew it was a risk, because I’m not used to fizzy drinks while running, but it just felt like the right thing to do.

Before I left I sat down on the ground to retie my laces, and while I was sitting there I heard voices. It was the four guys! I quickly finished, and ran off while waving hello to them – and they waved back with a cheery “hallo!”

I really felt a buzz now, with people on my tail. I’ve never felt like this before, a proper rush, so I did what I felt was right and ran – right up to a level crossing just as the barriers were going down. Bollocks. I paced up and down, trying to keep moving and look much less annoyed than I actually was, all the while glancing back up the road expecting to see the 4 blokes following me appear and all the good running I’d put in go to waste. A chap in a van shouted out “What race are you running mate?”. I shouted back “Norman Conquest”, and he looked nonplussed. Not sure what he was expecting me to say – the London f**king Marathon? Anyway, the barriers went up shortly afterwards and I celebrated by pulling the half-Mars bar out of my backpack and eating it while walking quickly on. Feeling strong!

This was a really long section, 9.8 miles total, and so a good one to be feeling good in if you see what I mean. I knew that at the end of it I’d be 45 miles to the good, and then coasting in to the finish at 51 miles. In fact, honestly this was a FANTASTIC section. I remember undulating fields, a golf course, and beautiful woodland. I can see from the instructions now that I crossed a giant trunk road, a horribly rutted field, a big pile of stiles, some more roads, yet pretty much all of that is lost to my memory, replaced with all the wonder of nature. Amazing, I think this might have been the best case of runner’s high I’ve had, and it couldn’t have come at a better time. I exchanged texts with my wife Sarah along the way as well, and she and the kids were heading for the Icklesham CP – I think that added to my enthusiasm for finishing this section too  J

Icklesham (45.7 miles)

I saw Sarah! I saw the CP first, a small trestle table with a bored-looking young guy behind it, and I looked around for her car. I couldn’t see it at first, but then there she was, running towards me. I noticed Billy, my 9-year-old son, getting out of the car too. Big hugs and kisses all round, and “well dones”, and Sarah apologised because Daisy, my 3-year-old daughter was asleep in the car.

I had another couple of cups of cola at this CP. Maybe that’s the secret of good running – fake Coke! Sarah helped me drop a bit more water into my pack (good job, the disinterested guy probably wouldn’t have) and then they waved me on my way and told me they’d see me at the end.

Then starting to run again, I realised I was on the last page of instructions too. I did a little mental dance. The people behind me were nowhere to be seen now, even though I’d been a good five minutes at that CP. Natural doubts appeared, like “what if the guy had been wrong, and I wasn’t 9th after all?” Seemed like a reasonable question, but hey, I only had 6-odd miles to go, and I’ve done that distance a hundred times before, so let’s just go for it.

This section is honestly pretty hazy. I remember the following:

  • Running into a churchyard by accident instead of the path down the side of it. I was a little scared of being caught so I hoisted myself over the chain link fence at the far end of the graveyard, after apologising to the souls I’d just stood on. I got stuck, and realised my previously watertight Stuff Sack had snagged on some barbed wire and I just wrenched it loose. I could always buy another! Onwards.
  • Crossing a railway line via some gates. I’ve never been across a rural crossing like that, it wasn’t a level crossing, it was right across the rails and up to me to worry about the presence of a train or not. I looked left, then right, then left again, and (to paraphrase Wells from Assault on Precinct 13, “I got this plan. It’s called “Save Ass”. And the way it works is this – I slip through one of these gates and I run like a bastard!”
  • Two miles of cycle path heading into Rye. More David Byrne. Unbelievably long, like being on a dreadmill.
  • It was getting dark, and I *really* didn’t want to have to get out my headtorch.

But then I could see the lights of Rye, and I was on Wish Street then Cinque Ports Street, looking at all the people not at all bothered by my presence, nobody waving, nobody cheering, and I wasn’t the slightest bit bothered. I was only happy to have done it, to have got there in about 12 hours, to have gone 56.7 miles in the pursuit of a 51.3 mile goal, and to have lived to tell the tale. To find Conduit Street made me very, very happy. I burst through the door of that village hall, and was greeted by cheers.

Rye (51.3 miles)

The cheers were from Sarah, the kids, Mike’s mum who was still behind her table, and the St John Ambulance people in the corner. Mike’s mum confirmed I was 9th (YESSS! GET IN! TOP 10!) and then went off to get me a bowl of stew and rice. Which Daisy, now awake, proceeded to eat with me. Bless her, she had no idea what I’d just done. I almost wept when I saw the medal, a good chunk of metal, and a nice T-shirt too. Lots of hugs and kisses. I waved to the St John people, saying I didn’t want to disappoint them but I probably wouldn’t need their services this evening. I did, as it happens, have a small blood blister which they helped me pop, but otherwise I was feeling great. In this ‘training run’ I’d kept to my plan, I’d stuck with it despite getting lost a few times, I’d avoided my usual cramps, I hadn’t had any downers or ‘walls’, it had just gone well. My training run had just become my best ever race, probably my best ever run. I was an Ultra runner, and I had the bug.

G3 Race 2013 #3

I dipped under an hour for the first time in one of the G3 10Ks, 117th/283 overall, 44th in my age group. Big smile on my face. I felt rough this morning waking up at 6:15, I’m still getting over a headcold so lots of gunk flowing (sorry, TMI) and haven’t run or done any activity since Tuesday.

I had a caffeine gel before I started, and went for it. Starting near the front, I got pushed along with the big boys and girls and first mile was faster than I’d normally run. There are lots of long downhills and uphills on this route, and when I’d been overtaken by a couple of dozen people I got a bit disheartened and put this one down to experience and started to enjoy it rather than go hard, and stopped worrying about being overtaken. I started walking the steeper parts of the hills – walking quickly, but still walking. When I got to the last mile or I could see loads of people in front of me but I felt fairly OK, and I knew exactly the route and how far it was, so I ran a bit harder. I looked at my watch with a few hundred metres to go and saw it was 56 minutes. My heart started to beat a bit quicker – in the same race, same route last year I finished in 1:04:35, and at that moment I realised that I might be able to get under the hour this time. I fixated on the guy in front of me, and the sounds of the people behind me, put my head down and ran as hard as I could, keeping form as best I could with some fairly oozy mud involved. When I could see the finish line I glanced at my watch again, 58 minutes. Could I do it? My legs were hurting and I could feel myself slowing, but I was keeping up with the guy in front and those sounds behind me were keeping at bay, so I had one last push and sprinted over the line.

For me, knocking 5 minutes off the last year and dipping under an hour felt like winning the bloody thing. I scooped up a banana and a couple of flapjacks and some water, and went and bounced off some walls for a bit. Then I ran two miles cooldown, which I never do, but I just felt like getting rid of this excess energy I had, and I really enjoyed that last little run.

Now my calves are like rock. Time for some R&R with Sarah and the kids, and maybe a spot of rolling later on. Not sure if that 10k is good miles or bad with the big races coming my way, but it was real fun so I’m going to take the former. Bosh.

http://connect.garmin.com/activity/279158351

 

Trying a Tri.

After the initial success of the 10K run, I thought about longer distances. I’m not really one for half measures, so I immediately wanted to go for a marathon. Which one, and when, and how much training I would need could come later – I was keen to build on the momentum I’d gathered from the 5/10K runs. But then, circumstances changed. One morning I woke up with shoulder pain. I couldn’t raise my hand above shoulder height without excruciating pain. I visited the work physio and he told me it’s because of hypermobility.

I’ve always been hypermobile, although it used to be called double jointedness. A party trick when I was younger was to bend one of my arms back the wrong way, only a little but enough to make others groan. I never thought it to be a problem, until 42 years into my life it was explained that an excess of collagen, and the resulting hypermobility, need to be treated with a certain amount of care. The ball in the shoulder joint normally rotates tightly within its socket, but with my hypermobility it also moves up and down, which literally pinches bits of muscle and whatever other fleshy bits it comes across, and causes this pain. The physio said I’d need to learn to raise my arms differently, walk differently, do press-ups differently, stand differently – pretty much everything would need to change, so that all my joints should behave as they would ‘normally’ (if I wasn’t hypermobile). At the same time I told him about my notion of running a marathon, and his response was that not discouraging, exactly – but that I should consider other complementary activities to help balance out the running. Cycling and swimming, say. Yes, triathlon would be ideal.

So, this being July 2011, I set about finding a triathlon for sometime in 2012. Friends and colleagues of mine heard about it and some said that they did triathlons, something I didn’t know before. I suspect this is a similar phenomenon to the baby aisle in Tesco being invisible to shoppers until they have kids. All these people doing triathlons, until that time unbeknown to me. Two had even completed half-Iron Man events, and one a full Iron Man. So, I had a mountain bike, I could hire a wetsuit, this was for me. I started buying Triathlon magazines, getting into the swing of it all, and kept up my running. Just by thinking about triathlons I felt fitter and more capable. Some weeks later, I decided on a whim to bring the date forward by a few months to November 2011, because I found the Castle Series Triathlons – and the Hever Castle Tri looked like a good family-friendly one to have a crack at.

I trained and trained, doing most of my cycling in the gym along with some bike-to-run transitions. I happened to get talking to one of the mums at my son’s school, who said her husband (who had done an Iron Man) swims at a local open water lake – another thing that until then had passed me by. A lake that you could swim in, 3 miles from my house. (The lady’s husband, Alick, would later become my friend and training partner, and introduce me to the joy of trail running.) I found the idea of swimming in a lake exciting but scary, and turning up to my first swim at 8am on a Sunday morning was a pretty intense experience. I remember having to stop swimming so a family of ducks could swim past, which made me smile. I kept on going there each Sunday for a couple of months until I could swim 400m without stopping. Some effort, I can tell you – I’m not a naturaly swimmer.

Then in November I did the tri. The 400m swim went OK, I started at the very back and managed to overtake a few people; and I saw my wife and kids cheering me on before and after the lake. The 20K bike was great, I’d borrowed a nice carbon Bottechia from one of the PT instructors at my gym, which made me a bit more speedy; and then finally the 5K run – well, my chip time said 22 minutes, which put it in the fastest 5K I’d ever done by some 4 minutes. I always suspected the distance was nearer 4K. Anyway, I got round in 1 hr 35 or so, and knew I could easily improve in a few areas – particularly one of the transitions which was very slow.

I was ready for the next challenge.