Just follow the yellow line |
and down to the far eastern end of the Maurienne valley, turn east up the Bonneval valley, over the Col d' Iseran,
down almost to Bourg St Maurice and then over the Petit St Bernard to Cormayeur.
So many amazing views and so many memories - family holidays in Briancon, Skiing and walking through deep snow drifts at Cenis, nordic skiing in a blizzard at Bessans, Via Feratta with the boys in Val d'Isere, so many ski holidays in Bourg and cycling down a piste on the Petit St Bernard before the boys were even born. It took all day, not the 5 hours that sat nav suggested.
A chilly Courmayeur when we arrived |
Most of the rest of the time was spent faffing and getting more and more nervous about what I had taken on. The website said we needed GPS and so I bought one, only to find the official file was so huge I couldn't work out how to upload it.
Snow and rain arrriving |
Glad I wore tights given the snow and cold nights |
Nervous before the start pen |
Col Arp to La Thuile (from Andy H) |
Climbing to Col Arp (from Andy H) |
The rest of the afternoon passed in a blur. I can remember passing and chatting to Jenn. I think she was struggling with a knee problem. I knew my race plan had to be flexible and so when I got to Valgrisenche in the dark and not having eaten enough I knew I should rest. In the dark over the col with the fixed ropes I had escaped a close call with a big falling rock and then at the perspex box CP at the top had thrown up after a small amount of food and drink. The three cols of 2571m, 2875m and 2829m plus 50km had taken their toll at several hours a piece. The beds were great and the dorm quiet but I barely slept. I did though have chance to take stock, use the loo, drink chocolate milk and then go into the very crowded food hall. It was packed and I was not feeling like what they had on offer. I craved milk based stuff and did manage two yogurts plus a few other bits and pieces. I set off out again alone at about 00.30am.
Somewhere in the next section I hooked up with Matt N - we had a greed in advance no pact but company would be good and we knew we could run together after hours on the NT. It was a good day, not too hot and with some amazing scenery. There were three enormous climbs with cols at 2840m,3002m and 3279m. Each climb took well over two hours and closer to three. My memories are muddled but I remember big climbs for hours, big drops for hours and it being warm once the sun was up. On the way to the third col, Loson, I was suffering a little and let Matt go on. We had already seen the other Matthew but he was struggling badly with heat, altitude and more. Up and up I climbed until I could see lots of compacted snow. I escaped without the need for spikes but those coming later once the sun dropped would struggle. After the perspex box CP at the top I got second wind and loved the narrow descent path. I ran down to Sella enjoying myself to find Matt had been cat-napping. It was good to see him again and after refuelling we set off together. Once we hit the valley I thought we were almost there but no, the trail continued along the valley and then across the spur and into another valley before at least another km into the village. We arrived at Cogne in the late afternoon with a plan for a couple of hours sleep or so. I envied Matt. He seemed to be able to arrive, eat, sleep and then after a few hours be ready to go. I arrived and struggled with food, got a doctor to inject me for nausea, had my feet taped and under my ribs where the pain on the left was becoming an issue and then tossed on my bed for 90 mins or so. I did feel the benefits of the injection and was able to manage a serious refuel before waiting for Matt to leave with me. We had been there almost 5 hours in all. I only really register this now and am appalled at how long everything seemed to take. Perhaps I should have let Bob support me after all. If I taped my own feet, let somebody else worry about recharging my torch and phone and refilling water bottles and snacks to carry it must be possible to cut that time? We set off into the dark hoping to reach Donnas for breakfast. As we left the village a cafe was doing free coffee and biscuits which was nice. Despite the dark there were beautiful sections and I loved the rocky area where we met the Tor des Glaciers route and then the lovely alpine pasture paths. There was also a section of forest which had been damaged by a storm and the path and wooden railings were in a bad state. This section also had an amazing gorge with huge pools, massive rocks and some bouncy bridges. On the spreadsheet of altitudes it seemed we would be going downhill- the reality was the path crossed the gorge a couple of times and had some serious climbs. OK, not serious as in several hours up but bad enough when you expected downhill. Again I thought we were nearly there only to find the village with the level crossing was not quite Bard - and we had to wait for two trains! Then there was the picturesque Bard with narrow streets and fort but even this was not quite Donnas until we had run along the old cobbled/rock Roman road and then through the town. At 8.43am we arrived, so not quite breakfast. Time for a serious refuel. Matt then went off to sleep but I did not feel tired and knew I would struggle to sleep in sunshine and heat. I left a note on his blanket and hoped he would catch me later. I set off as luck would have it with Andy H, a new friend made on the Tor. At Perloz we had the treat of home baked sugared cakes/donuts before the photographer at Tour d'Hereraz. The climb was through interesting vineyards trained on roof like trellises and then more pastures. As we climbed the clouds thickened and the rain appeared. We waited but it was soon heavy enough to demand waterproofs. The next CP was in a tiny gazebo so no real shelter. Luckily the chalet had also put up a dome tent with real beds in it. We claimed one each and voted for two hours sleep. When we were woken the rain had just stopped - superb. We should have stopped to eat more. I felt good initially and even by Coda with the lovely mountain ridges and views down to the Turin Plain I was moving well. This little refuge had our food in the cramped basement. We ate but not much and thin soup with a few tiny bits of pasta was not really hitting the mark. In the next section I felt ill and started to lack energy. We did pass a tiny unofficial food station and it had the best spread of the lot! Melon, home baked apricot tart and so much more. By Barma I was suffering and struggling to eat again. I was made a double shot of coffee here which I thought would help but on an empty stomach it seemed to have a very odd effect. The next section from Barma to Col Marmontana and Col Vecchia was in the dark with some big ups and downs, even some short bits of iron work. I felt very wobbly and almost not in my body. Each zig zag turn on the descent seemed to take me longer to adjust and sort my balance. Andy was clearly worried. I did try to eat and the marshalls were roasting meat with melted cheese but after a few nibbles I was sick. We grabbed an hours sleep in an overheated porta-cabin and it helped a little. We hoped that when we got to Niel Refufio we could have a proper rest and even sleep. Sadly we arrived to find only one bed which I let Andy take. I tried to sleep on the floor but failed. I moved into the dining room and found Matt also struggling and wanting to sleep. I managed a big bowl of what seemed like cottage pie and fell asleep at the table. We left Niel as the sun was coming up and after one big climb and yes, another big drop we were in Gressoney. I think it was en route to here that we had the best CP food at a little chalet in the sun- ravioli, cheeses and even the offer of wine. Matt stuck to his routine in the Life Base and I managed to eat more, sleep a bit more ( I think the glass of beer helped), eat again and also get my feet taped. It seemed a shame to waste daylight but it just had to be. We left together refuelled and in good spirits. Leaving the village we got an ice lolly which lifted our spirits further. The weather was now sunny and so much warmer hence the 3/4 tights, T Shirt and all the photos. A bit of a shame I took none in the first 200km.
The climb to Col Pinter was well over 1500m but seemed to pass quickly and we were treated to a herd of Ibex on the ridge as we arrived.
The drop to Champouluc was just as great but what a lovely little ski town. We left town at dusk and made our way through a wooded area of trails, BBQ pits and stunning views on Monta Rosa.
Had to keep remembering to turn and check the views behind too |
Big views to Mnt Blanc and others- a huge descent again on leg 6 |
Spotting where we were heading was daunting |
waited patiently behind a herd of cows being brought off the mountain
and had a lie in the shade at a tiny Refugio.
The scenery was stunning in all directions.
We had seen the whole Monta Rosa range, the Matterhorn, the Mont Blanc range and others that I could not name.
Descents were enormous and what you thought was the bottom wasn't |
Cracked lips- take lipsalve next time |
There was always a view, even at night |
The Matterhorn looking majestic |
Taking a moment to check the legs before the climb to Col Pinter |
Not looking too bad considering this was almost 100 hours in |
Easy ground to Rifugio Frassati |
can you spot the path to the top? |
Malatra window- the iconic shot |
I was on a mission now and the end was in sight. I raced down from the col and then found at Aminaz we still had almost 14km to go.
Great running down from Malatra |
Apparently one of the glaciers is about to collapse now (Oct) |
Only 6km or so to go. Some was the sort of track it's easy to trip on and I slowed here just in case. Bob had been texting me to make sure he was at the finish line and I was just so happy I was going to finish. I raced the last section down hill and all through the town.
The support really gave me a lift and then there was the finish ramp and gantry. 121 hrs 21 mins, 20th female, 151st overall and 4th FV50.
About 25 hours were part of major stops to sleep, eat and rest, it seems a huge amount in retrospect and I wonder how much I could shave off this if I was more efficient- and yet still enjoy it/ not be too sleep deprived.
We took the finish photos, signed the boards and then sat under the tented finish area in the main square.
Matt wasn't far behind and we cheered him in.
My feet were a bit mashed and sore but I only had one tiny blister that I should have stopped to deal with in the last hour.
My legs felt strangely fine, far better than after the H200 or NT. I was no where near as trashed. Perhaps this means I did not race hard enough? Who knows.It was an interesting challenge and a real effort keeping it together over so many hours- thinking, following flags, deciding what to eat, where to sleep, recharging phones and torches, repacking after a Life Base, restocking snack food and water, taping feet, changing socks .... Support would be good (Bob had offered, so that is my fault entirely). Would I do it again? Yes. I learnt a great deal and would love to do it as a V60 in two years time if I can get a place and am still running OK.
The next days were mostly spent drinking beer and eating ice cream. We had a lovely celebration meal with Matt the next evening having watched the last people run in before the final cut off and those doing the 30km race from Malatra sprint in.
Running with Matt again was great and I now have a new friend in Andy. He took lots of video and has made a great post race video that he has shared on Youtube- fantastic scenery and memories.
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