Laps of 3.7 miles- 44 of them in 48 hrs. It should mean hour laps and a 4 hour buffer. Easy! Ha ha.
I don't really have an ideal local hill to replicate this on but did belatedly have a bit of a go on Parlic and Fairsnape. Distance is a little further and climb a little more plus there is no flat and the steep bit is at the bottom. I did 3 laps at a steady pace and was sure hour laps was possible.
The advert |
I banked some speedy early laps to try to gain more of a buffer. This was good but meant less eating!
Friday afternoon as we arrived |
Auchinhope Hut after a few laps |
I do remember congratulating myself on being 1/4 way there and this was around the time it was getting light again. Dawn always lifts my spirits and it nice to get rid of the head torch which always seems to annoy my head/ears. The 'tunnel' effect from the torches was not so bad this weekend as the moon was quite full and despite the clouds was giving some light on the wider hills. I was slightly shocked to find how many had already bailed by daylight. (facebook from Mark C = Hill update. Half the field gone overnight.) This is not a race but the sort of challenge where we were all willing each other on. Well, that was my take on it. If I am honest it's a bit of a blur but I do remember going inside to find that Gaynor had stopped (at 10 laps) and that Alan had stopped at 8 laps. Alan had kindly loaned me his spare pair of gaiters and was now rooting for me so that they travelled as many laps as possible.
The route mark had found as a replacement for Shining Tor was interesting. After last years icy problems he was determined the event would not be stopped again. The first part from Mounthooly bunkhouse is a track with some small undulations and a gradual climb. After a mile there is a slight dip and a grassy path to a tin hut. Then the real 'fun' begins with a wet quad bike track to the skyline ridge and then along the ridge to Auchinhope Hut. Most of the first section looked great when we arrived and stayed not too bad though out. After the tin hut was a different story. The quad track was a boggy mess when we arrived. It got worse and worse as we went up and down it even though the lines we took varied as we searched for better lines.At the start it was just wet. After a few laps it was muddy. By daylight you could see a huge brown stain snaking down the hill. By the end it was a peaty muddy bog fest. It was impossible to run up this bog and even running down was tricky. We feared losing a foot or leg in a hole and wrenching forward.
The boggy quad bike track |
Gradually there were fewer runners passing me in either direction and so fewer cheerful Hellos or more solemn grunts. Carl and Martin bailed at 14 laps and then Mark and Karl at 16. Heather was still in albeit moving slowly. Her crew had decided not to tell her the real maths unless she worked it out for herself. We had shared some chats and maths and knew we were unlikely to do all 160 miles in the time allowed. She bowed to the inevitable after 18 laps knowing she could not make the Half Hill. There were only 7 of us trudging up and down by now 20 hours in. I kept doing the maths and decided to concentrate on getting a Half Hill of 22 laps in 24 hours. I felt this would mean I had achieved something; although I now recognise that it also set in my mind that I would stop at that point.
Resting not sleeping |
Windy but not evil weather |
Now we were 3. Having made my decision I enjoyed the last couple of laps more and at 6.40pm went inside with my Half Hill done.
Yes- I look like I should have continued |
I crawled into bed willing Paul and Guy onwards. Paul I knew from Hardmoors races and especially the H200 when back in 2017 he finished in 48 hrs, well ahead of my 56 hrs. Guy I did not know but he was moving well. As I slept Paul bailed at 25 laps having decided the boggy track would not let him do fast enough laps. Guy toughed it out for 29 laps. He did set out on the 30th lap but kept lying down to sleep and wisely decided he should return to the bunkhouse not long after midnight. All this confirms to me that if they couldn't do it then I was wise to stop; doing more laps but in a slower time would not really count as a victory.
Congratulations to all who accepted the challenge- how ever many laps you did |
Lessons learnt:
Find a way of recording exactly what your times per lap are and when you have had breaks.
Have a supporter to do this and to chase you out or make you eat. (Karen didn't know me well enough)
Practise more on a local hill- perhaps 15 laps rather than the 3 I did on Fairsnape.
Have a food box outside or in the drying room as Gaynor did- this reduces your stops and getting comfortable.
Get fitter so that I do actually run the easy bits even when I am tired.
Would I do it again. Yes, but not on that course. My legs felt fine both then and in the days after, although I could not go any faster. My feet felt fine - until I stopped and realised that the frost nip in two toes was reactivated and that the "not a neuroma" was sore and my whole foot was huge. Not sure if this was the newish shoes, laces too tight or other. I never did change my socks as it was so wet that there seemed little point. I guess if I had maybe I would have spotted the problems earlier. Not sure it would have changed the overall result though.
No idea what went on but four days later and still not good |
Am I disappointed. Mostly no, or at least not in myself. I was 3rd man standing and 4th on laps per hr. I made it to the Half Hill along with 3 fit men.
Great report Karen and well done on getting as far as you did. I was watching your progress on the tracker and impressed with how many reps you achieved. I hope you are recovering well.
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