Latest charts December 6th!
It is difficult to keep up with the blog these days, I am just out running too much!! Good excuse I suppose.
Had not realized there was the training log in Strava. It actually gives a very good weekly summary of my activities. Really it almost renders what I am doing here redundant as it is the same data, except it was not! My weekly totals on this site was splitting the week on a Saturday, so that the weekly totals were different to Strava where Monday is the first day of the week. I have fixed that now so that my weekly totals in the below images are the same as Strava to within a couple of metres climbing a week.
After three years in a row doing the Stockpot 10 in December, this
year, instead, I ran the Tour of Pendle since the last time I updated the blog.
Its a great race nothing special about the climb to the first check
point but then it is a lovely 6Km section on soft spongy ground between
CP 1 & CP2, loved that section. The hills come tick and fast after
that. It really is a tough second half to the race. I had prepared a
lovely map for myself with the route plotted out and everything. I send a
copy to my brother in Dublin who was coming over for it and printed out
a couple of copies for use on race-day. Unlike my brother who studied
it closely so that on race day he always had and idea of where he was.
Me on the other-hand stuck the map in my bum bag and ignored it the
whole day. My navigation tactic consisted of relying on the large field so that I would probably have
somebody to follow! I was OK except that I totally lost count of the
number of climbs I had done and in my "addled" state I managed to
convince myself my guesstimate finish time was 2:45 and not 3:45. So when
I climbed the second last hill I though that was it just the 4Km run
home now. I was not impressed when the route veered off into the
middle-of-no-where again :) I then managed to convince myself that I
actually had two more climbs. When I was overtaken on the last climb by a
friend from BG support duties he told me this was the last climb. I was
not sure I believed him until a stranger confirmed what I was told.
What he said was "we would not lie!" It was amazing that despite there
being 400 starters we got very thin on the ground by this late stage of
the race. I was OK as after the second last checkpoint a couple of
people ahead of me headed across a moor without a moment hesitation. I
just used my navigation skills gained from years in the mountains to
follow them! My bother was not so lucky looking at our Strava times he
was 20 minutes behind me at that checkpoint but ended up finishing up
over 40 minutes behind by going the wrong way at that
checkpoint (they followed the path they came up and had to veer to the right to get to the last CP). That run-out at the end is cruel sheer stubbornness kept me
running to the end to come home in 3:34. My guess was 3:45 to 4:00 based
on looking at the previous results and knowing generally where I
finish. I would loved to have got into the top half but my 3:34 was 12
minutes too slow.
I had a dicky right ankle the whole
day and it really slowed my up on the faster sections. My club mate
Anna from Pennine overtook me about 5 times during the race but I always
caught her on the next climb. If I had been faster on the downhills I
would easily have taken that 12 minutes off my time. Considering it was
my first visit to Pendle I was very happy with how the day went.
I
have had ankle problems (both of them at different times) off and on
for years. I have now changed the work I am doing in the gym to try to
strengthen them up. There is no way I could get around a BG if I am
struggling on the downhills.
Saturday, 29 November 2014
Monday, 10 November 2014
Eating!
On Friday night I was chauffeur for an armistice day service in Hayfield so I took it as an opportunity to get in a longish run in the bigger hills over by Kinder. It did not start off well as I was a bit late home from work so I had a quick sandwich before heading over to Hayfield. As usual with the BG training I wanted to get in some more climbing so I headed up to the Shooting Cabin and then down to foot bridge below Sandy Heys. It was my intention to try to do three reps of it. On the descent from the Shooting Cabin I did not feel great, I actually felt a bit hungry. I seriously considered wimping out just running around the res, but I decided to do one rep and see how I felt. It was not a bad night and for 4/5 of the climb it was very nice. The last 1/5 got very windy and and misty but it was for a relatively short time. Once I got to the Pennine Way I did not hang around, but just turned and headed straight back down again. Sandy Heys (both up and down) are Strava Segments so I can see how long each climb and descent takes. On my own in the dark safety comes first so I take it very gentle on the descent so my times on that are way outside my PB. My assent PB for Sandy Heys is 15:45 but in the dark and wet ground I would not get anywhere near that, in these conditions 19 to 20 minutes would be more typical. I was not pushing myself too hard so the first one took a bit over 20 minutes. It went well so I decided I would go for the three. Second and third climbs went OK as well, each one a bit slower which is to be expected. Not long into the 3rd descent the legs turned to jelly, I was like a drunk man trying to make my way down the steep descent at the top. A couple of times I just sat down but forced myself to move again as I knew that would not help. I was cursing myself as I knew the lack of food was the cause of this collapse. I had loads of food for my 7 hour attempt on the Kinder Dozen and felt pretty good for the entire trip, but here I was collapsing after 2 hours.There is a stream about 2/3 of the way down so I kept pushing to it so that I could have a drink. That help massively and by the time I got to the bottom I was feeling pretty OK again. It had taken me 21 minutes to descend - not good! I had recovered enough to run back up to the shooting cabin and then the longs descent on the Snake Path to Hayfield where I went into the pub to buy a couple of bags of crisps. Despite the mishap it was a good night and I got in 14.7 km with 1050m of climbing.
I was a good lesson, the runs will only get harder from now to the actual attempt. I will make sure that I always carry a stocked running rucksack with me on all of these longer runs.
I was a good lesson, the runs will only get harder from now to the actual attempt. I will make sure that I always carry a stocked running rucksack with me on all of these longer runs.
Thursday, 30 October 2014
More BG Training and some Kinder Dozen Messing about!
An update to the training progression. The top chart below is a visual representation of what I think I should be doing. It has been recommended to me on the FRA Form that I need to be doing 3000 mtrs per week for about 3 months, before the attempt. The 100 mile training schedule that I found recommended that the schedule should be in 4 week cycles with a rest week before ramping the training up again. The two lower charts show that I am well ahead of the schedule at this stage.
I am targeting the Kinder Dozen as ideal training for the BG. There are a few Kinder Dozen plots on Strava and they put it at about 39 Km and 2,900 mtrs of climbing. It is about 1/3 of a BG but it is much harder going with some steep climbs and very rough ground. I had a couple of night time reccies, between them doing about 8 of the climbs. Yesterday I took the morning off work as the forecast was excellent and had a go to see how far I would get. I started a 6am and knew I needed to be finished by 1pm as I had to get back to work. I thought that maybe I might get 10 climbs in but in the end I managed 8 from the base of Jacobs Ladder, to Edale YHA. When I got to the YHA I knew I did not have time for another climb so I had to head straight back via the valley floor to Jacobs Ladder and onto Harry Moor Ford where I joined the route. It was an excellent morning, really enjoyed it and in daylight it was a lot easier! On some of the night time climbs and descents I was trashing across rough ground not knowing there was a good trod near by.
I am targeting the Kinder Dozen as ideal training for the BG. There are a few Kinder Dozen plots on Strava and they put it at about 39 Km and 2,900 mtrs of climbing. It is about 1/3 of a BG but it is much harder going with some steep climbs and very rough ground. I had a couple of night time reccies, between them doing about 8 of the climbs. Yesterday I took the morning off work as the forecast was excellent and had a go to see how far I would get. I started a 6am and knew I needed to be finished by 1pm as I had to get back to work. I thought that maybe I might get 10 climbs in but in the end I managed 8 from the base of Jacobs Ladder, to Edale YHA. When I got to the YHA I knew I did not have time for another climb so I had to head straight back via the valley floor to Jacobs Ladder and onto Harry Moor Ford where I joined the route. It was an excellent morning, really enjoyed it and in daylight it was a lot easier! On some of the night time climbs and descents I was trashing across rough ground not knowing there was a good trod near by.
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
Bob Graham Training Log
I used the site to export my activities to a comma-separated file (csv) that I was then able to import into Excel (or in my case Libre Office Calc (a free version of Microsoft office)). The data was imported in a raw format, basically one record for each activity. I wanted to group the data by week so that I would have an idea of the height (mtrs) and distance (km) I am achieving each week. This took a bit of Googling to extract the week number form each activity and a lot more Googling to find out the date of the first Monday in each week. It was then necessary to group the distance and heigh gain by week, which was achieved using the Spreadsheet "Pivot Table" functionality. From the Pivot Table it was then a simple task to create a couple of charts of the weekly height and distance completed. The results can be seen in the two images below.
I mentioned in another post that in September 2013 I started to develop an abdominal muscle injury. I struggled on with that until I got January's Trigger out of the way. That is why there is a peak right at the beginning of the year. Once the race was done I really cut back the running to concentrate on gym work to strengthen my core. This can be seen in the massive drop in activities in the spring. Since the late spring I have been slowly building up my activities and it is going pretty well at the moment.
Now that that I have the spread sheet functions in place it is a fairly straight-forward job to do more exports over the coming months and update these charts.
Monday, 1 September 2014
Bob Graham Training
Like many others I first heard of the Bob Graham via Feet in the Clouds. Unlike many others it really caught my imagination - I would love to have a got at that! That was 3 or 4 years ago. It was just not practicable back then. I was just too new to fell running (never ran in the lakes) and with a young family it would be very difficult to fit the training in around parenting duties. I though maybe when I am 50 and two of the kids are in secondary school I may be able to do it. Well that is next year and I have thrown my hat in the ring. I have got great support from the few guys at Pennine who know and looks of incomprehension from my work colleagues!
From a bit of Googling and reading some of the invaluable threads on the FRA Forum I have got an idea of the type of training required. Basically the consensus is that it is climbing rather than miles ran that matters. The 68 miles for a BG in 24 hrs is a little bit less that 3 miles an hour. It is the 26,000 ft (8000 metres) that is the challenging bit and from what I read it is the 8000 metres of down hill that is the real killer. So any Bob Graham training has to really concentrating on the climbing.
Surprisingly there is not a great amount of information available on the web for Bob Graham training schedules - so I had to create my own! I found a 6 month training plan for a 100 mile ultra, that I was able to open in the Google Docs spread sheet package. This is all based on distance - building up to the 100 miles on race day. Using the spread sheet functionality I took 100 miles to be equal to 3000 metres (10,000 ft) and recalculated all of the daily mileage targets as height gained. Living west of the Peak District I am not great on hills from the house. I have one climb (Cobden Cross) a couple of Km from the house (1.7km 212m (13%)). Much of my training will be based on doing reps of that. It is not really steep enough at 13% but it is much better than nothing and I know that doing 6 reps of it hurts like 'ell. Link to: Cobden Cross Strava Segment
The training plan below shows the results of my efforts. Basically it is build on blocks of 4 weeks. For 3 weeks each week builds up on the previous week while the fourth week is a rest week before building up to a higher level over the next 3 weeks and then the next rest week. That pattern is repeated for 6 months.
This will be a guide - hopefully I will be doing the Long Tour of Pendle before Christmas and The Trigger after Christmas so I will be well ahead of the schedule come the middle of January. If anybody has any comments feel free to post below!
EDIT 09/09/2014
Had some feedback on the FRA Forum and this training plan is not enough. Basically I need to be achieving the 3000 m/wk 5 months before the BG attempt and keep doing that level of training for the next 4 months before beginning the taper. The plans below for April and May are repeats of each other this will also need repeating for February and March which will mean bringing the earlier part of the plan forward by 2 months. This does not really matter as, said previously, I expected to be well ahead of the plan by the turn of the year anyway. What it does mean is that I underestimated the amount of work I will have to do in the spring - oops! Better to know now that to find out on the day I am not fit enough.
I will modify the plan and stick up a new "screen grab" of it. (done now!)
From a bit of Googling and reading some of the invaluable threads on the FRA Forum I have got an idea of the type of training required. Basically the consensus is that it is climbing rather than miles ran that matters. The 68 miles for a BG in 24 hrs is a little bit less that 3 miles an hour. It is the 26,000 ft (8000 metres) that is the challenging bit and from what I read it is the 8000 metres of down hill that is the real killer. So any Bob Graham training has to really concentrating on the climbing.
Surprisingly there is not a great amount of information available on the web for Bob Graham training schedules - so I had to create my own! I found a 6 month training plan for a 100 mile ultra, that I was able to open in the Google Docs spread sheet package. This is all based on distance - building up to the 100 miles on race day. Using the spread sheet functionality I took 100 miles to be equal to 3000 metres (10,000 ft) and recalculated all of the daily mileage targets as height gained. Living west of the Peak District I am not great on hills from the house. I have one climb (Cobden Cross) a couple of Km from the house (1.7km 212m (13%)). Much of my training will be based on doing reps of that. It is not really steep enough at 13% but it is much better than nothing and I know that doing 6 reps of it hurts like 'ell. Link to: Cobden Cross Strava Segment
The training plan below shows the results of my efforts. Basically it is build on blocks of 4 weeks. For 3 weeks each week builds up on the previous week while the fourth week is a rest week before building up to a higher level over the next 3 weeks and then the next rest week. That pattern is repeated for 6 months.
This will be a guide - hopefully I will be doing the Long Tour of Pendle before Christmas and The Trigger after Christmas so I will be well ahead of the schedule come the middle of January. If anybody has any comments feel free to post below!
EDIT 09/09/2014
Had some feedback on the FRA Forum and this training plan is not enough. Basically I need to be achieving the 3000 m/wk 5 months before the BG attempt and keep doing that level of training for the next 4 months before beginning the taper. The plans below for April and May are repeats of each other this will also need repeating for February and March which will mean bringing the earlier part of the plan forward by 2 months. This does not really matter as, said previously, I expected to be well ahead of the plan by the turn of the year anyway. What it does mean is that I underestimated the amount of work I will have to do in the spring - oops! Better to know now that to find out on the day I am not fit enough.
I will modify the plan and stick up a new "screen grab" of it. (done now!)
Monday, 14 July 2014
IMRA - West Dublin Peaks
Back in Ireland for a family visit when my brother informs me of the inaugural running of the Leinster Championship "West Dublin Peaks" mountain race. The race directory Ken Cowley was selling this race by stating that there was "almost no fire road". I assume from that it must be an issue in Irish races:). Like many IMRA races it is basically an "out-and-back" race. With the tiny running community they must struggle to get the necessary volunteers so out-and-back routes are much easier to manage which is a very understandable consideration. In my first IMRA race (this is the second) on Galteemore a couple of years ago a runner missed the left turn off Galtee Beag on the return leg to go very badly off course and overdue. The race organisers had to take on the responsibility to go and find her. The West Dublin Peaks race was been run on-trust due to the call for "non-running" volunteers failed to get the required bodies to man the summits.
Up at 7am for the 2 hr drive to South Dublin to get to some middle-of-nowhere lay-by on the edge of a forest. It was 9:30 with a race start at 11 but my twin brother John was on Laptop duty so he would be taking the runners details before heading off for a warm up himself. IMRA have a very successful Leinster League that runs on Wednesday nights over the summer months. They are even starting to get into the same issues as many FRA race organisers are only too familiar with limiting numbers. No such issue exists with the Leinster Championship, John had a look at the previous races in the championship and reckoned 30 would be a good turn out. It is a regular occurrence (that FRA race organisers should use more) in IMRA races - an early start. By 10:30 registration for the 26 runners was nearly complete and about half the field headed off. John had meant to go with them but laptop duties prevented it so at 11:am about 15 of us headed up the fire road through the commercial forest. I dropped into my customary last position as I forgot to set my watch going and I was holding my arm out to get a GPS lock! Very quickly we left the fire road to begin a climb on a reasonably path though the trees. After a couple of hundred metres we hit another fire road went across it and straight into the trees. It was a bit different trashing though the dead branches with bodies heading in every direction trying to find a decent line. Broke out of the trees to hit an area of "felled trees for a 100 metres. This was hellish and a bit funny seeing people scattered all over the place trying to find a decent line through the stumps and abandoned branches. As I knew that we would be returning back the same way. I looked back over my shoulder to identify something to aim for on the return leg, but it was all very "samey". I found a broken fence and and old stream bed which was ideal so followed that up to the first summit Seehan. This area is completely new to me I have only had the one outing in the Dublin Mountains which was the "Run the Line" trail race last year. I was told that this race would be a right "bog trot" but the weather had been very dry recently so I was reasonably confident that it would not be so bad. After the first summit we swung South to head to the second summit Corrig and then onto Seefingan.
This was brilliant as expected the ground was perfect for running on, pretty decent footpaths/trods that were quite spongy underfoot. After Seefingan we swung right for the 1.5 km out and back to the outlying summit Seefin. Between the early starters and leaders we were meeting loads of people coming in the other direction. I got to the summit and there was a massive pile of rocks. I stopped for a second to grab a quick photo, that I don't have along with many others that day because I did not know how to use the new camera app on my phone! A another runner arrived and said "have you ever been inside? but today is not the day". What was he on about? I went up for a closer look and there was a narrow opening. The pile of stones is in fact a 5000 year old neolithic tomb! Had a look then turned around for the return back to Seefingan.
Got back to Seefingan OK and now this was the key part of the race the 5 km over to the furthest point at Kippure. The col was a challenge it very heavy going and involved a lot of jumping and climbing back out of deep peaty holes. Eventually got to the Kippure trig point that was tucked away against the fence surrounding the TV transmitter station.
I said to myself I need to find a different way back so I kept well to the east of the way I came up. It was not going so bad but I could only see a drop down to a valley in front of me. I veered left as I could see that I was too far east. I don't know what I was thinking but I kept contouring and ended up travelling about 3 times further that I needed to and ended up well west of the way I came out. I got the compass out and I could see that I was travelling 90 degrees to the the direction I need to be so another hard right to head down to the col.
A late course change removed Seefingan as a checkpoint on the return leg that allowed for an alternative to contour east around it. I knew I was heading straight back to the very area I was trying to avoid and it was my intention to bypass Seefingan so I steered off east again to try to get around the col. By sheer luck I found an old stream bed (we call them "gruffs" in the the UK), which was perfect.
It had a lovely sandy and grassy floor and went around all of the difficult ground I passed through on the way out. I was not the only person to find it either as there was a single pair of running shoe tracks through it as well. Before the race I had decided to follow the stream bed "Turrachawn" around Seefingan but on the day I decided to just gain a bit more height before starting the contour. It turned out to be a good move as the heather was pretty stunted so it was possible to keep running while circling around.
Regained the main track and I could see three people scattered ahead of me I thought that maybe I could reel them in but they were a bit too far in front. Straight forward return to Corrig and then onto the final summit Seehan. I spotted the peat bank I identified on the way out and headed to it as I knew that would lead me to the stream bed. Down to the "felled" area and just had to be careful climbing over all of the branches. I actually found a much better route down through the trees to hit the fire road. I could not see the next track that I needed but I guessed it must be to my left and so it was. Down that and then the short run-in to finish in 12 place my highest ever finish! (2:46 for the 20Km - the winner was 1:57). Don't need to mention there were 26 runners. I actually overtook two of the people in front of me by returning down through the wood as they took a longer track back to the finish.
Really enjoyable day out in perfect conditions. Hopefully I will be back in Ireland again for Galteemore.
West Dublin Peak "lay by" |
This was brilliant as expected the ground was perfect for running on, pretty decent footpaths/trods that were quite spongy underfoot. After Seefingan we swung right for the 1.5 km out and back to the outlying summit Seefin. Between the early starters and leaders we were meeting loads of people coming in the other direction. I got to the summit and there was a massive pile of rocks. I stopped for a second to grab a quick photo, that I don't have along with many others that day because I did not know how to use the new camera app on my phone! A another runner arrived and said "have you ever been inside? but today is not the day". What was he on about? I went up for a closer look and there was a narrow opening. The pile of stones is in fact a 5000 year old neolithic tomb! Had a look then turned around for the return back to Seefingan.
Got back to Seefingan OK and now this was the key part of the race the 5 km over to the furthest point at Kippure. The col was a challenge it very heavy going and involved a lot of jumping and climbing back out of deep peaty holes. Eventually got to the Kippure trig point that was tucked away against the fence surrounding the TV transmitter station.
Kippure trig point |
A late course change removed Seefingan as a checkpoint on the return leg that allowed for an alternative to contour east around it. I knew I was heading straight back to the very area I was trying to avoid and it was my intention to bypass Seefingan so I steered off east again to try to get around the col. By sheer luck I found an old stream bed (we call them "gruffs" in the the UK), which was perfect.
An "Irish Gruff" |
The "Sugarloaf" in the distance |
John & Annette - two happy campers! |
Really enjoyable day out in perfect conditions. Hopefully I will be back in Ireland again for Galteemore.
Strava plot! |
Friday, 27 June 2014
Kinder Trog 2014
I have been very quite on the blog over the past few months - there has been a reason. From about last September I have been struggling with an abdominal muscle pain. On the pain level it would have been about 4 out of 10. It did not stop me running but there was no great enjoyment to the running. It was not so bad climbing but really effected me on the faster sections. During that time I done the Stockport 10 road race (in a pretty good time actually) and January’s "Trigger" which did not go so well but that was mainly due to dodgy navigation over Kinder. Before each of those races I knocked back three ibuprofen to ensure I got through OK. I was hoping it would go away on its own but by January no joy so I had to go to the GP in case it was a hernia. That was discounted so I got a referral to a physio that I could use my work health insurance for.
Off to the physio, who seemed very young and my initial impressions were "how long has she been qualified?". Done the initial assessment and then spent ages on the phone to one of the senior partners and they decided the actual problem was stiffness in my lower back was putting unnatural strains on the muscles in abdomen. Can't say I was totally shocked by this as I have had back issues on an off for years. I knew what this mean loads of exercises. I tried doing them at home but it is so easy to find an excuse to not do them so I ended up doing something I never expected I would do "I joined a gym!". PureGym is next door to work and I have been going each lunchtime for the past five months. I don't use the equipment very much mainly exercises on the mats. Shockingly enough it is not without enjoyment! As I improve I can get more aggressive with the exercises. I am even doing classes there now, spin, circuit training, etc. Now in June the abdominal pain is not so bad, the right hip flexor is a bit sore but that is probably related to all of the stretching.
A few weeks ago I decided the Kinder Trog would be a good target for a come-back race. In the past three weeks I have been around the entire route twice on the Pennine Thursday runs. I felt OK so I knew I was ready to do it. I ran this race twice before in 2:55 and 2:39, I though that I would probably get somewhere between those two times. It is a very low key local race so just turn up on the morning and pay the £5. It was going to be a very hot day so I was glad they did not do a kit check so I just stuck a wind proof in my bag. No messing about with this race it is straight into the lantern pike climb. Most of this climb is on a minor road which is OK when climbing. I am a very slow starter, in the DazH race last summer I was in the bottom 10 for the first couple of Kilometres but ended up just missing the top half by the end. Likewise in this I was slow but slowly started to overtake load of people on that slog up the road to the first checkpoint. The marshal at lantern pike called out my number "47", I though I was 67 but he must be right! I had not realized it but my number was a bit low so the strap of my bag had gone over the bottom bit of the number. My number was 67. The marshals at the next couple of checkpoints at Kinder Downfall and Edale cross asked my to call out my number so I unknowingly carried on the error and shouted 47. I know this route so well so I slowly picked places up as we ran the long section from lantern pike to Mill hill. The weather has been dry so the climb from Chunel Junction to the flags was pretty straight forward instead of the heavy peat that it can often be. I overtook a woman in a Buxton top around this area, I was to see a lot of her during the race as she was faster than me on the flat and down hill but I was considerably faster on the climbs. The race was going pretty well personally I though the conditions on Kinder were not too bad it was a bit higher so a slight breeze helped to keep me cool. We have been over Kinder so many times on the Pennine Thursday runs that I now know the couple of little short cuts, Sandy Heys being the main one. Despite this I made a mistake at kinder low. There were two blokes in front of me and they were drifting to the left I was saying to myself why are the going over there? The flags are to the right. Despite that I started to follow them thankfully I decided they had gone wrong before it was too late to cut back right again to join the flags. When the two lads cut across on the trod from Edale rocks to the flags stones I had actually closed the gap on them. We passed a walker who called out 69,70,71, that was interesting I know what position I am in!
We now have the calm before the storm the great descent to the Upper Sett and then "that" climb. The Buxton woman shot past me on the descent. I am just so poor on the descents now, I suppose a lot of it is loss of confident due to the injury. I was been pushed on that descent by another runner so I actually went down it a lot faster that I would have chosen to but the Buxton woman was out of sight. It would be Big Stone before I caught her again. The race was getting very difficult by this stage we had lost a lot of height now and as we went past midday the temperature got considerably warmer. It is a pig of a climb from the Sett but I have done it so many times now I am used to it. Somebody made a "Strava Segment" out of it and at the time of writing I am actually 15/68 (6:15). Today it took me 8:11 so well outside my PB! I was expecting the section from the flags to South Head to be reasonably good. Four of us had ran the entire route a couple of weeks previously and one of the lads gave his knee a bad wrench when he went down into the soft peat. The conditions has been very dry since then and so it turned out - it was pretty straight forward. I was getting very hot and thirsty by this stage, but I just had to keep a steady run going to the water station at Peep O Day. I took my time there had three full cups before I started my "Buxton Chase" up the track. One again I have done this many times so I was able to keep a steady run up it but I was not pulling her in quick enough. I would need to be well ahead of her at Big Stone to have any chance of keeping ahead of her on the long descent home.
Over the top at Big Stone and I was 3 or 4 metres behind her, a look at my watch showed I had to do 4.5 Km in 15 minutes to match my 2:39 from two years ago - no chance I thought. Lets see how how close I can get. I shot off down the lovely descent to the wall crossing and then along the track that is now in a right mess because of the Dry Stone Walling work that is going on. She was pulling away from me but then stopped by the gate where we take the left turn. I shouted out LEFT HERE THEN KEEP RIGHT BY THE LITTLE HILL and that was the last I saw of her till the finish. I was pretty tired by this stage so not going very fast but I still passed a couple of blokes in the horrible section through the trees that were in an even worse state! I eventually got home in 2:49 (70/135 starters) so I had gained a whole one place since Edale Cross!. The issue about the number was still bugging me so I made sure I took off my bag in the finishing tunnel so the recorders could see it properly and "67". Before the race I predicted I would spit my 2:39 and 2:55 and so it turned out. I found the race director and told him what happened and he thanked me as they did have double recording of number 47. It shows how easily things can go wrong. I made a mistake in positioning my number and from my understanding of the FRA rules the marshals should not have asked me to call my number they should read it themselves.
My family were there at the end as I piled into the Scout hut to start devouring the sandwiches (I got a tuna one!) and litres of cordial. My daughter came in to reprimand me for not coming out to them but my reply was the drink is in here.
I am a member of Pennine about 4 years now and we have had so many young runners join us in that time some of them had great runs finishing 20 minutes ahead of me, which is great for the club. I was actually well in the top half of all the Pennine finishers which I am well "chuffed" with! Once again a great race as 16 mile races go this would be on the easier end of the spectrum so a great introduction to somebody who wants to try out a longer fell race.
Off to the physio, who seemed very young and my initial impressions were "how long has she been qualified?". Done the initial assessment and then spent ages on the phone to one of the senior partners and they decided the actual problem was stiffness in my lower back was putting unnatural strains on the muscles in abdomen. Can't say I was totally shocked by this as I have had back issues on an off for years. I knew what this mean loads of exercises. I tried doing them at home but it is so easy to find an excuse to not do them so I ended up doing something I never expected I would do "I joined a gym!". PureGym is next door to work and I have been going each lunchtime for the past five months. I don't use the equipment very much mainly exercises on the mats. Shockingly enough it is not without enjoyment! As I improve I can get more aggressive with the exercises. I am even doing classes there now, spin, circuit training, etc. Now in June the abdominal pain is not so bad, the right hip flexor is a bit sore but that is probably related to all of the stretching.
A few weeks ago I decided the Kinder Trog would be a good target for a come-back race. In the past three weeks I have been around the entire route twice on the Pennine Thursday runs. I felt OK so I knew I was ready to do it. I ran this race twice before in 2:55 and 2:39, I though that I would probably get somewhere between those two times. It is a very low key local race so just turn up on the morning and pay the £5. It was going to be a very hot day so I was glad they did not do a kit check so I just stuck a wind proof in my bag. No messing about with this race it is straight into the lantern pike climb. Most of this climb is on a minor road which is OK when climbing. I am a very slow starter, in the DazH race last summer I was in the bottom 10 for the first couple of Kilometres but ended up just missing the top half by the end. Likewise in this I was slow but slowly started to overtake load of people on that slog up the road to the first checkpoint. The marshal at lantern pike called out my number "47", I though I was 67 but he must be right! I had not realized it but my number was a bit low so the strap of my bag had gone over the bottom bit of the number. My number was 67. The marshals at the next couple of checkpoints at Kinder Downfall and Edale cross asked my to call out my number so I unknowingly carried on the error and shouted 47. I know this route so well so I slowly picked places up as we ran the long section from lantern pike to Mill hill. The weather has been dry so the climb from Chunel Junction to the flags was pretty straight forward instead of the heavy peat that it can often be. I overtook a woman in a Buxton top around this area, I was to see a lot of her during the race as she was faster than me on the flat and down hill but I was considerably faster on the climbs. The race was going pretty well personally I though the conditions on Kinder were not too bad it was a bit higher so a slight breeze helped to keep me cool. We have been over Kinder so many times on the Pennine Thursday runs that I now know the couple of little short cuts, Sandy Heys being the main one. Despite this I made a mistake at kinder low. There were two blokes in front of me and they were drifting to the left I was saying to myself why are the going over there? The flags are to the right. Despite that I started to follow them thankfully I decided they had gone wrong before it was too late to cut back right again to join the flags. When the two lads cut across on the trod from Edale rocks to the flags stones I had actually closed the gap on them. We passed a walker who called out 69,70,71, that was interesting I know what position I am in!
We now have the calm before the storm the great descent to the Upper Sett and then "that" climb. The Buxton woman shot past me on the descent. I am just so poor on the descents now, I suppose a lot of it is loss of confident due to the injury. I was been pushed on that descent by another runner so I actually went down it a lot faster that I would have chosen to but the Buxton woman was out of sight. It would be Big Stone before I caught her again. The race was getting very difficult by this stage we had lost a lot of height now and as we went past midday the temperature got considerably warmer. It is a pig of a climb from the Sett but I have done it so many times now I am used to it. Somebody made a "Strava Segment" out of it and at the time of writing I am actually 15/68 (6:15). Today it took me 8:11 so well outside my PB! I was expecting the section from the flags to South Head to be reasonably good. Four of us had ran the entire route a couple of weeks previously and one of the lads gave his knee a bad wrench when he went down into the soft peat. The conditions has been very dry since then and so it turned out - it was pretty straight forward. I was getting very hot and thirsty by this stage, but I just had to keep a steady run going to the water station at Peep O Day. I took my time there had three full cups before I started my "Buxton Chase" up the track. One again I have done this many times so I was able to keep a steady run up it but I was not pulling her in quick enough. I would need to be well ahead of her at Big Stone to have any chance of keeping ahead of her on the long descent home.
Over the top at Big Stone and I was 3 or 4 metres behind her, a look at my watch showed I had to do 4.5 Km in 15 minutes to match my 2:39 from two years ago - no chance I thought. Lets see how how close I can get. I shot off down the lovely descent to the wall crossing and then along the track that is now in a right mess because of the Dry Stone Walling work that is going on. She was pulling away from me but then stopped by the gate where we take the left turn. I shouted out LEFT HERE THEN KEEP RIGHT BY THE LITTLE HILL and that was the last I saw of her till the finish. I was pretty tired by this stage so not going very fast but I still passed a couple of blokes in the horrible section through the trees that were in an even worse state! I eventually got home in 2:49 (70/135 starters) so I had gained a whole one place since Edale Cross!. The issue about the number was still bugging me so I made sure I took off my bag in the finishing tunnel so the recorders could see it properly and "67". Before the race I predicted I would spit my 2:39 and 2:55 and so it turned out. I found the race director and told him what happened and he thanked me as they did have double recording of number 47. It shows how easily things can go wrong. I made a mistake in positioning my number and from my understanding of the FRA rules the marshals should not have asked me to call my number they should read it themselves.
My family were there at the end as I piled into the Scout hut to start devouring the sandwiches (I got a tuna one!) and litres of cordial. My daughter came in to reprimand me for not coming out to them but my reply was the drink is in here.
I am a member of Pennine about 4 years now and we have had so many young runners join us in that time some of them had great runs finishing 20 minutes ahead of me, which is great for the club. I was actually well in the top half of all the Pennine finishers which I am well "chuffed" with! Once again a great race as 16 mile races go this would be on the easier end of the spectrum so a great introduction to somebody who wants to try out a longer fell race.
Monday, 13 January 2014
The Trigger 2014
Here we go again. Another early morning alarm call on a very cold morning to get to Hayfield for "The Trigger" bus. Bit different this year as I left my car at New Mills Station and then four of us continued onto Hayfield in Geoff's car. The Cricket club is such a nice start venue, great atmosphere in side and warm as well. Chatted to quite a few people then outside to drop off the bag. Chatting to IanW outside I find out about another route change so that we will not be going down the road but instead a little cut through directly from the start field.
Happy Campers |
It is funny in Crowden hardly anybody carries straight on past the decision point for Torside or Lawrence Edge/Wild boar. The latter two seem to have become the de facto route choices. IanW rumbled me on Facebook (as he tagged me in a photo on the climb to Lawrence Edge) there is a pretty impressive picture of me with a good smile and high knee as I run up the steep climb. His comment "It's funny how the sight of a camera can make people run." as if I would do such a thing, its slanderous.
Poser! |
Did not get to pose for this one! |
Higher Shelf Stones (credit http://runningdelights.blogspot.co.uk/2014/01/janathon-12-plus-trigger-race.html) Hard to imagine it is the same day to the photos above! |
At the start some of us were chatting about the Snake to CP5 route options. My intention was to go along to Glead Hill and head south from there. Geoff had mentioned he was going to go down the east side of Within. With the likely icy flags I had decided that I would do the same as Geoff as the ice flags would not allow us to make up for the greater distance. I followed the flags for about a Km then struck south-west from there. The Strava plot is reasonable enough, fairly straight line. I have had a look at a couple of strava plots by other people with a similar time to me and I was about 5 minutes (48 minutes snake top to CP5) slower than the people that stayed on the flags. With the old checkpoint we climb up to the plateau 90 degrees to the contours, so while steep we get it done with quickly. The new checkpoint involves a long angled climb that goes on for ever and looses a lot of time.
Snake to CP5 |
Leaving CP5 felt like entering hell, the conditions has deteriorate considerably, with low clouds and a driving wind straight into our faces. It was to some considerable relief that I turned left down the river Kinder and some reprieve from the wind. My race went tits up at this stage. Followed the gruff system OK until forced to leave them then set my compass to join the next system. I had a guess at the bearing but it was not south enough and I did not following it properly anyway. I really started to suffer across here with yet more eye problems as they clouded over and cold hands, I needed to get some food down but it was such hard work trying to work the zip on the bum bag. I eventually hit the edge path about 50 metres north of Grindslow Knoll. Not realising this I turned left for another 50 metres until I got to a stream I recognised from the Edale Skyline and realised my mistake. About turn and headed back to Grindslow.
It's all gone 'orribly wrong! |
Edit:
Just had a another look at the 2013 & 2014 strava plots. The split for the cairn after Kinder Gates was 4:00 in 2013 and 4:30 in 2014. So in reality I lost 20 minutes from there to the end. Not as bad as I thought!
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