Written by Jess Gray - http://tinkstrails.co.uk

In the pitch black with the rain and wind hitting me sideways I found myself crouched down in the wet grass.  I was somewhere along the ancient Ridgeway trail approximately 68 miles into the race. Unable to put one foot in front of the other, I had come to a standstill.  Around me it was eerily silent but in my head a thunderous battle was raging; a battle between giving up or pushing on.  The words in my head were so loud, they were almost deafening ‘Maybe I just can’t run 100 miles….’

This was to be my third attempt at running 100 miles.  It wasn’t originally a race I had planned but I’d had to withdraw at mile 60 mile of South Downs Way 100 in June with an on-going knee injury.  This was such a disappointment as up until that point of the race I felt really strong and had been running well.  Once I had finished wallowing in self-pity, Coach Fifty and I decided that I needed to put these demons to bed, so I put my name on the waiting-list for the Autumn 100.

Finding myself standing on the start line, grinning for photographs with two very speedy ladies; Cat Simpson and Susie Chesher, I reminded myself that there was only one goal today; placings, times, course records were all irrelevant.  It had been drilled into me by Coach Fifty from the moment we knew I’d made it off the wait-list….I just had to finish.  We both knew that I would want to be competitive, I don’t really know how to race any other way, but we also knew that whatever happened out there, excluding a limb falling off, I was to finish.

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Relaxed at the start with Susie Chesher (L) and Cat Simpson (R) photo: Stuart March

This style of race was also going to be a completely new experience for me as it is made up of series of four different 25 mile out and back legs which start and finish in the village of Goring on Thames.

Leg 1: Goring to Little Wittenham and return

A few runners raced off as the starting claxon sounded, my urge to chase them was almost uncontrollable but somehow I reined it in.  I had been warned that this section was pretty flat so it was crucial I didn’t get carried away with the pace otherwise I may end up paying for it later on.  The plan was to settle into a pace which I hoped would get me back to Goring close to 3 hours 30 minutes.

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Full of smiles near Benson  Photo: Stuart March

I ran with a few guys but there wasn’t much chat going on until we saw the lead runner Mark Denby, who was already heading back to Goring before we’d even got anywhere near the turnaround point.  There were mumbles of amazement and awe at his speed from everyone and we briefly chatted about how long he could keep going at that pace.

At the turnaround point I filled up my water bottle and grabbed a gel.  With horrible sweaty hands I fought to open the slippery packet, so for the next mile or so I was distracted with gel juggling whilst shouting support and encouragement to fellow runners and friends heading towards the turnaround.  When I had finally managed to ingest the gel and focus again on running I realised I had sped up but it still felt comfortable so I tried not to worry.

I checked in back at Goring in 3 hours 18 minutes, slightly ahead of schedule but this leg is actually only 24 miles, so wasn’t too far off target and now I was looking forward to heading out on the undulating Ridgeway.

Leg 2: Goring to Swyncombe Farm and return

I grabbed a full water bottle and banana from Team Gray at the CP and raced back out onto the course.  As I opened my banana I chastised myself for not remembering to ask Thea how she had done in her own race. That morning Team Gray had dropped me at the start before driving to Oxford so Thea could compete in her first Cross Country race for Wycombe Phoenix before coming back to crew for me.  I was so upset at this that I momentarily thought about running back to apologise, so as I looked back over my shoulder I was very much surprised to see Susie Chesher behind me.

As she caught up, bouncing along, she told me she’d got lost leaving Goring, ending up in someone’s front garden.  She looked fresh, comfortable and full of running.  She smiled as she told me we were on pace for the ladies’ course record.  I felt excited for her, I had a feeling she might go on to smash it today and I was very happy to let her go.  In my head the only thing that mattered today was to finish.  As the gap between us started to open up I wasn’t going to try and stay with her, I even had to tell her to stop holding gates open for me and get on with running her race!

My favourite part of this leg is the undulating narrow path up and along Grim’s Ditch.  the twisting path is riddled with hidden tree roots, so it takes a lot of concentration to stay upright.  Normally I love skipping along here from side to side, but today, disappointingly, it just felt like hard work.

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On the Ridgeway     photo: Stuart March

At the turnaround point at Swyncombe Farm I grabbed a few segments of satsuma before heading back to Goring.  On the return section I felt much stronger, I was enjoying the race again and the fun of the tricky trail.  I still felt positive I was going to finish, although it had dawned on me that I was feeling nowhere near as comfortable as I had felt at the SDW100 in June.

Maybe something to do with this was arriving back at Goring in 7 hours and 8 minutes, a massive 50-mile personal best for me and certainly not planned!  I tried to eat some fruit and take in some calories by swigging chocolate milk, but I was really struggling, there was nothing that could tempt my appetite.

I left the aid station, walking over the bridge trying to chew and swallow yet another satsuma, but I tossed it aside almost gagging on the texture before breaking back into a steady run.

Leg 3: Goring to Chain Hill and return

I’m very familiar with this leg of the course having raced the Ridgeway Challenge in 2015 and it is undoubtedly tough.  The trail climbs very gradually all the way to the turnaround point and with a mix of chalk, stony trail and grassy field it really is tough on the legs and lungs.

At this point the rain had started and the daylight was deteriorating rapidly.  I didn’t want to stop to get my head torch out, so I made myself a little game.  I challenged myself to beat the dark by pushing hard to get to the 58-mile aid station at Bury Down before it was pitch black when only then would I stop to get my head torch on.

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Near Swyncombe photo: Stuart March

I just about managed it, I pulled out my head torch and my crew gave me my Ashmei Gilet to wear as I was feeling too warm for a full waterproof jacket, but the temperature was dropping.  At this stage I was beginning to struggle mentally so I started to break the course down into sections, only thinking about checkpoint to checkpoint.   I knew the turnaround was only 4 miles away, so it was a case of head down, concentrate on my footing along the trail and keep pushing forwards for as long as I could.

I’d seen the race leaders heading back towards Goring, well at least I’d seen their head torches and they all appeared to be running strong.  I had a great shout out of encouragement from John Stocker which really cheered me up. At one point I did try to work out how far ahead of me they were but simple numbers were proving too difficult to process this late into the evening.

At the Chain Hill turnaround, I gulped down a cup of ice cold water and it was absolutely the best thing ever.  After sweet drinks and horrid sickly sweet gels, plain old water was amazing.  I drank three cups of water successively and started to wonder whether I was slightly dehydrated. The fabulous volunteers tried hard to tempt me with all sorts of delicious food, but nothing appealed except for a few more satsuma segments.

I was now aware of just how tired I felt, everything was starting to hurt from my shoulders to my toes and that positivity I had felt earlier in the day was starting to wane.  As one of the volunteers remarked that she could see some head torches approaching in the distance I forced myself to leave and get running, trying hard to focus on downhill fun I was about to have!

Once back at the Bury Down checkpoint the wheels were really starting to fall off.  The volunteers made me a milky coffee and Phil handed me a homemade cookie that was nearly as big as my head.  I was finding chewing really hard work, so instead broke the cookie into pieces and dunked it in the hot coffee so it was soggy and easy to swallow.  Then before I had much of a chance to resist my family chivvied my back out into the cold wet night but I was nearly broken.

Within minutes of jogging out of the CP in the pitch black with the rain and wind hitting me sideways I found myself crouched down in the wet grass.  I was somewhere along the ancient Ridgeway trail approximately 68 miles into the race. Unable to put one foot in front of the other, I had come to a standstill.  Around me it was eerily silent but in my head a thunderous battle was raging; a battle between giving up or pushing on.  The words in my head were so loud, they were almost deafening ‘Maybe I just can’t run 100 miles….’

I was so close to quitting, I had nothing left to give, I was almost done.  Suddenly I could feel this rising sense of disappointment welling up inside me.  In my head was a vivid image of the next morning waking up without that 100-mile buckle. The feeling was so powerful, I believe this turned it around for me, well that and the effects of the cookie.  Moments later I managed to claw my way out of that very dark place and much to my amazement I was running once again, firing on all cylinders.

Heading back along Goring High Street a head torch called out my name, I didn’t immediately recognise the voice, but it was my friend and fellow runner Kevin Smith who has been volunteering at Goring earlier in the day.  He had been told by Phil that I was struggling to eat and he had decided to come and give me a few stern words of advice.

Back at Goring Kev produced a packet of doughnuts, a flake and handed me a milky coffee.  Now I’d normally inhale any offering of chocolate but I put it in my pack for later as an emergency.  Team Gray helped me change my trainers from Salomon Fellraisers into a pair of La Sportiva Helios as I knew the next section was dry and flat and thought my legs might benefit from a lighter trainer.  I had fresh socks ready too but I decided against peeling off the pair that had well and truly moulded themselves to my feet over the last 75 miles.

Leg 4: Goring to Reading and return

With some food inside me and just over 25 miles left to run, I knew I had beaten those demons that had haunted me along the Ridgeway, my challenge now was to keep moving forward and avoid being overtaken by too many people.

This last leg is pretty flat, with one sharp hill and a few steps not far out of Goring. As I hiked the hill I took the opportunity to take on a gel and have a little chat with myself.  I had berated myself after my poor performance along the Ridgeway, but now I told myself that I was over the worst, this was the easy bit, I told myself that I could do this.

I had recced this section of course so I had no worries about the route, but I was slightly concerned about running in a residential area as a lone female late on a Saturday night.  However, I only had one nervy moment when I was running towards three young boys who had one dimly lit torch between them.  I tried to run as tall and confidently towards them as possible, but maybe I was slightly too confident, as I think they were more scared of me and my blinding head torch as they shouted some abuse about not being able to see who I was, however I wasn’t going to hang around to argue that’s for sure.

Somewhere on the outskirts of Reading I saw John Stocker again, he told me he had not been very well.  A few moments later I too was overcome with nausea, so I stopped to dry wretch at the side of the path.  I felt terrible, I wanted to lose my stomach contents so badly but I couldn’t force anything out so I carried on.  At this point there was slightly more walking than running and I was overtaken by a male runner as we headed towards the turnaround point pushing me into 6th place.

The legendary stairs up to the final check point weren’t actually too bad.  In the CP the volunteers proudly told me how terrible I looked, which made me laugh.  With just over 12 miles left to run, I was at the point now where I just wanted to finish, it wasn’t never going to be pretty or stylish.  I was not that happy about being over taken just before the turnaround point so I got out of there as quickly as possible for the final run for home hoping that I could hold on to my original 5th place.  As I hobbled down the stairs I saw Paul Ali just about to come up and as lovely as it was to see him, he was too close for comfort!

Just over a mile or so later I felt I was running pretty well all things considered, but then I saw Cat Simpson and her Dad running towards the turnaround point and she looked blooming amazing, so effortless.  Like so many of my other races the last section was run on pure adrenaline, pushing hard, refusing to be overtaken, there is nothing like being chased by another lady to make me take it up a gear!

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The last few miles of the Thames path really dragged on.  At one point I was so convinced I only had a mile left that when I asked a runner going the other way how far it was to Goring and he’d replied ‘oh a good 2 to 3 miles’ I nearly screamed! So when the faint illumination of bridge at Goring came into view I finally allowed myself to smile.

The crowd of volunteers and supporters outside the village hall cheered as I ran through them towards the finishing table situated just inside the hall.  All I could manage was a little whoop of joy as I shouted out my number to the time-keepers for the very last time.  I stopped my watch having started it 16 hours 42 minutes earlier, finishing as 2nd lady and 5th place overall and my first thought

I am a 100-mile runner…

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I am so grateful to the army of Centurion volunteers, Team Gray and my best mate Lucy and her boyfriend Robin who selflessly helped to get me to the end of this race and my sincere apologies to the guy in the toilet at the finish who had listen to me vomiting up my stomach contents in the cubicle next door!

Written by Nicola Hoy - https://nicsjourneyto100.wordpress.com

Autumn 100 (my third 100 mile challenge)

Goring & Streatley (how did I get here?)

Arriving at registration for a Centurion ultra marathon is like coming home.  It’s like arriving at a gathering of family that you haven’t seen for a while.  Whether I know people or not, they all just feel like people I belong with. Home is not a place, it’s a feeling of belonging, and that is exactly how I felt.

It was Saturday morning and Goring Village Hall was buzzing.  Upon arrival, I was greeted with a big hug from Stuart March, a fantastic guy (pretty awesome ultra runner) and amazing photographer, who always manages to capture the real essence of an event and who brings our adventures to life, capturing the moments that make the memories.  Honestly … check out his work! stuartmarchphotography.co.uk   The greeting from Stuart made me smile, he had recognised me from my previous race, NDW100 and it settled my nerves to see a friendly face. A strange feeling, having catapulted into this ultra world pretty quickly, it just amazes me how many people I have met and how they are so welcoming.  I never dreamt I would be a part of anything like this – never dreamt.

I went through kit check, always feel a bit clumsy at this point.  The volunteers and staff are great and never rush you, but I always seem to have to pull out the complete contents of my race pack to produce the items that they ask for at the kit check.  They always smile.  Disclaimer signed, drop bags dropped to the lovely lady with a handmade sign on her head saying. ‘I’ve got baggage’, race number collected.  I almost forgot to collect my order from the Centurion store (maps of Thames Path and Ridgeway National trail in case of loss of navigation – but more for souvenir status!), but I remembered so all was well.  I wandered around the hall, taking in the atmosphere, and nibbling on a brioche roll.  Runners were greeting each other, taping muscles, packing ultra vests, filling water, nibbling on snacks, chatting excitedly and giving instructions to crews. It sounds manic, but it is actually very calm.  Nici Griffin (how can I describe Nici? – the heart and sole of Centurion Running) was calmly (on the outside) organising everyone, smiling and making us all feel good – as only Nici does. I bumped into Paul, and it was good to see him.  I ran most of NDW100 with Paul, really nice guy, we kept each other going.  Paul was going for the Centurion Grand Slam (all 4 Centurion 100 mile ultras in a year – well actually in less than 6 months).  I had was about to undertake my 3rd (had missed South Downs Way 100).

I had spent the night before at a pub/hotel in neighbouring Pangbourne to be close to the race start.  The hotel was fine, if basic, but I do wonder if it was actually the same place that was illustrated in the photographs on their website!  In the morning I met other runners on the train to Goring.  Walking to registration I found myself chatting to a woman, who I couldn’t place but knew I’d seen before. She told me about the numerous ultras (100 milers) she had run, and confessed to just getting over a lung infection!  After chatting to her again at reception, the penny dropped and I realised it was Roz. I knew of her through a mutual running friend, Bruce, and she had actually given Bruce and I the kick we needed to get out of Reading Aid Station at mile 74 (I think) on Thames Path 100, with hot sweet coffee, when we were both flagging!  Thinking back to that race, and realising I was rocking up to the start of my third 100 miler reminded me of the surreal journey that I had been on so far!

Somehow I was starting my third 100 miler (all 3 Centurion races).  I was never sporty, started exercising at 40 (originally to lose weight), started running really only less than 3 years ago at 45/46, following some foot issues (which I still have to manage).  I ramped up distance quickly, discovered this thing called trail running (to me much more exciting and motivating than road) and pushed myself to complete a couple of trail marathons.  Then I learnt about these ridiculously long distances that people run called ultra marathons. I read some pretty inspirational books and learned that people do actually run 100 miles non stop.  Well the rest is history, as they say.  I am not belittling this challenge by any means at all, quite the opposite, but little old me got it into my head that I was going to run 100 miles! In 2015 I ran 2 ultras (The Wall – 69 miles and White Rose 60).  Then I entered Centurion’s Thames Path 100 (TP100).  I went for 10k to 100 miles in 2 years.  You can read all about my journey to 100 and my TP100 race in my blog  Did I really run 100 miles? – TP100.  Needless to say it was the toughest thing I’d ever done, but I loved it, you soon forget the pain a relentless challenge to get to the finish line.  So on the waiting list I went and ended up getting a place in North Downs Way 100  (NDW100).  Now this one was a different beast, in my view the terrain was a lot tougher but I got on better with nutrition and hydration, and despite the hot August weather, I think that one was actually my favourite.  You can read about that one too North Downs Way 100 (another 100 miles).  After NDW100 I joined the waiting list again (don’t even remember doing it), and just 4 weeks before the race I entered my 3rd 100 miler, Autumn 100 (A100).  It was just 5.5 months since the first, and seeing as my goal was just 1, it was a pretty surreal feeling being at the start of my 3rd in less than 6 months, already having earned 2 coveted 100 mile buckles!  Despite my late entry, I had not stopped training. I have been lucky with my post race recovery and after both TP100 and NDW100 I was back to full strength and mileage pretty quickly.  I cover a lot of mileage, averaging probably 75 -80 miles per week, peaking at higher in preparation for a race. I run 30 plus miles pretty much every Sunday and I like to build up 40 miles before a race. I’m not saying that is the right way to train or that I am fast or a good runner (I am definitely not), but it seems to work for me.  I also try to do a lot of cross training, strength, cardio, a bit of weights, core, circuits etc.  I have had Personal Training for about the last 2.5 years with a good friend and great trainer, Cameron at jensenexercise.com.  Cam has supported and encouraged me, and is particular good at tailoring training to his clients’ needs, getting fantastic results.  He probably realised that I wanted to run ultras before I did, and he has worked with me on my strength and core training in particular, and constantly reminds me of the importance of rest, recovery and hydration.  He’s also an awesome Sports Therapist, I swear by his deep tissue massage.

Anyway, back to that Village Hall in Goring – I spotted the Centurion Grand Slam Buckle. It is awesome, it is big. I was kicking myself for missing South Downs Way 100 (in June), I was about to complete 3/4 of the job and felt that I had it in me and could have gone for that GS Buckle.  But that was not the original plan, and so I had to remind myself to happy with being on the start line for third 100 (the last one being only 9 weeks ago).  I saw Alf outside the hall at Goring.  I originally met Alf at The Wall (my first ultra in June of last year).  He is a good ultra runner but has dogged by injury so today he was volunteering.  It was good to see him, the world of ultra running seems a small one.

I walked with the other runners the short walk to Streatley where the race would start.  James Elson (Ultra Runner supreme, founder of Centurion Running and Race Director) gave the race briefing.  James was the course record holder, and smiled wryly as he said that conditions were good and he expected both male and female records to be broken. At 10:00am on the dot we were off. A100 is formed of  25 mile 4 spurs (or legs), each roughly 12.5 miles out and back.  The first is little shorter and the last a little longer, but there or there abouts.  The first and fourth spur are Thames Path National Trail and the second and third are Ridgeway.  At the end of each spur the runners return to Goring & Streatley. The other 2 100 mile races I had run were both point to point, so this was a different dynamic and a slightly different mental challenge.

Spur 1 – Goring to Little Wittenham and return – Thames Path

Running an ultra on the Thames Path is difficult as it is relatively flat and therefore the terrain does not determine pace.  When I ran TP100 I went out too fast and probably paid for that later on.  There is a fine line between getting the first half of the race completed quickly (bagging time for later) and over cooking it early on.  I was determined not to go out too quick on A100, but go out too quick I did, as did quite a few others.  The first 12 miles went well.  It was a sunny morning, hot for mid October.  For the first part of the race runners are less spread out, so whilst I ran on my own a lot, I did chat fellow runners and there were always people around me.  The first Aid Station was about 6.5 miles in, I was feeling good, stocked up on water  and made sure I ate some food.  At the turnaround for the first leg I met Paul, and we ran together for a while heading back.  At this point I was aware I’d gone out a bit quick (Paul said he had too), so we reined in our pace just a little.  I say ‘we’ but I actually lost Paul after a while.  I stopped to check for stone in my shoe and he was moving well, so I didn’t actually catch him up again.  Paul went on to finish the race in 23 hours, so not only did he get his Grand Slam buckle, but also got a special ‘1 day buckle’ for completing A100 in under 24 hours – awesome achievement!

I ran with a guy for a while who had a fantastic blue mohawk hairstyle.  It was hot and he was running without his shirt, just his ultra back and sporting some cool tattoos.  It’s good to see a bit of colour and eccentricity on the trail and I complemented his hair.  He said that he liked my purple hair, but I don’t think I was pulling off my look anywhere near as well as he did his.  I can’t remember his name, but unfortunately he pulled out of the race after 25 miles with severe plantar fasciitis pain (I know all about that so I was full of sympathy).

Shoes – should have got new ones!

I am proud to say that I have never had blisters from running shoes (or at least I was until A100).  For distance I wear Brooks Adrenaline ASR (a hybrid shoe), which although not the best for technical trail, are supportive, comfortable and good to my feet. I have had pair after pair and they work for me.  So, back to A100 – first leg –  I stopped to check for a stone in my shoe, but it wasn’t a stone.  What I discovered was the material coming away on the inside of my left shoe and had started to rub my foot. Later on in the race the outer part of the shoes would actually start to come apart.  It’s not that they are bad shoes, it’s just that the pair I was wearing had done more miles than they probably should and I should have bought a new pair before the race – Schoolgirl error number 1!   I adjusted my sock and shoe and carried on, it wasn’t too uncomfortable at this stage.

I completed the first 25 mile leg in about 4 hours 20mins (having checked my pace a bit) so was happy with that. Stocked up on water and food (Alf looked after me), now for leg 2.

Spur 2 – Goring to Swyncome Farm and return, Ridgeway (a leg for the girls)

The second leg was the most fun.  It was only 4 miles to the first Aid Station, so that came fairly quickly.  It was still pretty warm so I was glad of the flat coke and water top ups.  I was making myself eat.  The terrain was a bit more varied.  I had slowed down, maybe a bit more than I would have liked, but I was still going ok.  The shoe was still rubbing and my hips were feeling it but nothing too bad.  The race leaders passed me, coming back on their return, both male and female were absolutely flying, they just seem to glide over the trail.  The leader was running 7 minute miles, how on earth does he sustain that over 100 miles? Wow!

Ultra running is a male dominated sport.  No, that probably doesn’t paint the correct picture.  There are many outstanding women ultra runners, but percentage wise there are a lot more men than women in the races. However, I seemed to meet a lot of crazy, lovely women during A100. I ran on an off with a group of ladies during the second leg.  One of them was Emma, she was great fun and really encouraging.  Ultra running does strange things to your digestive system and I’m not sure who was burping the loudest out of me and Emma!!  There was Jane and Becky too, and we paced each other well.  The turnaround seemed a long time coming, it was about 8.5 miles. I was trying to spend as little time as possible at the aid stations.  The longer you stop, the more you seize up and the harder it is to get going again.  It seemed a long way back, you have some long fields on this section of Ridgeway trail plus woodlands.  By now my feet were a bit sore and I could feel it in my legs but I was going ok and was enjoying occasional chat and banter with the girls.  We pushed on well.  Early evening, it started to rain.  I like running ing the rain and at first it was quite refreshing.

Goring is Evil

I made the half way point at Goring (50 miles) in about 10 1/2 hours, I was happy with that. Before the race, someone had said “Consider Goring as evil”.  This was the best advice.  You really have to stop yourself taking root at an aid station.  It’s all about knowing what you need to do before you go in and just doing that and getting out again.  I was trying to do this but I did faff around with my drop bag a bit at the half way point (didn’t really need it to be honest).  Alf helped me fill bottles and made me coffee. I ate some food but finding it more difficult to eat by now. Nici was calmly having a crisis with her laptop and dealing with everything else at the same time!

As I said before, the half way point is a big boost mentally, effectively you are counting down from then on.  But it is also where the race really starts.  I was already tired, my foot was sore, hips were aching, it was dark and thought of another 50 miles was quite daunting.  But you just have to get out there and carry on and that’s what I did – on into the night for leg 3.

Coke, coffee, electrolytes and grub

Ok so maybe that heading should be ‘Hydration and Nutrition’.

I don’t take gels, I never have done.  I try to eat something at every aid station.  As the race goes on it gets more and more difficult.  By the half way point I was finding it more difficult to swallow food, I had to chew it a lot or eat soft foods.  In the latter miles, it was a real struggle to get food down, but when I did it would really help.  I can’t say it enough – flat coca cola – gets me through ultras.  I never usually drink coke, but in both NDW100 and A100, I was craving it and the thought of coke was spurring me on to the next aid station.  Electrolytes – I putting an SIS tab into a bottle of water every so often and I really believe it helps.  A cup of warm coffee at the aid stations was another ‘pick me up’.  These are the things that work for me!

Spur 3 – Goring to Chain Hill and back (not my best leg)

I set off on the 3rd leg and found myself with Emma and Becky again.  It was 8.5 miles to the next Aid Station at Bury Downs, so quite a long section. The trail was quite uneven in places, so I was feeling it on my feet. Emma had a friend of hers, Keith, pacing for her on this leg.  He was a friendly guy, and a pleasure to run behind – his backside was the best view on the Ridgeway!  ;0)

Bury Downs Aid Station – quick stop and push onwards.  Not long afterwards, at about mile 60 I took a tumble, just lost my footing and came down hard on the trail.  It took me a minute to recover before I got up (Emma later said that from a distance she thought I was being sick), and it took me a few more minutes to walk it off.  I wouldn’t recommend falling over at mile 60 but I eventually managed to get going again.  Chain Hill seemed a very jovial Aid Station and everyone was in good spirits.  I got moving again quickly on the long slog back to Goring.

I lost Emma and the lovely Keith whilst faffing around putting my garmin on charge.  It was beeping ‘low battery’ so I charged in on my wrist from a portable USB charger.  I was still making good time (for me), managing to run at a decent pace and walk when I needed to.  The trail was uneven and I worried about falling over again.  By now, my feet were quite sore and ankles and shins were hurting.

It was a beautiful night, the sky was clear and the stars were bright, at this point I could still appreciate it (just about).  This section of the Ridgeway is very open and the night was so bright, you could probably have run it without a head torch on (not that I tried).  I was keeping good pace running and walking a bit when I needed to.  It seemed a long leg but I passed back through Bury Downs and kept moving forwards.

The detour

By my reckoning I was about 4 miles from Goring, it was 3am. Once I got back, there would just be one leg left to go. It was getting tougher now.  Early on, if you feel pain you can pinpoint where it is, but as the race goes on it gradually blends to an all over ache until it’s a case of ‘everything hurts!’

I was running on my own, had been for a while. I was pretty zoned out intent on getting back to Goring.  I suddenly came to my senses and thought, ‘I don’t recognise that section that I’ve just run’ and became aware that I hadn’t seen a course marker for sometime.  But I had been going straight with no junction, so decided to keep going a bit further, sure that I would see a marker soon – Schoolgirl error number 2!  Shadows and tiredness can play tricks on your eyes in the night on the trail and I kept thinking I could see a marker only then realise it was just leaves or a branch.  I came to a section of houses and thought ‘this definitely doesn’t look right’, so I back tracked a bit.  I saw no other runners and faffed around for quite a while convincing myself that I had not actually gone wrong. – Schoolgirl error number 3!  Not sure why I didn’t get the map out of my pack! Not sure why I didn’t straight away go back track to the point at which I had last seen a course marker.  I was getting a bit panicky worrying about lost time.  In the end I did backtrack, which I should have done much earlier and I eventually found the left turn that I should have taken about 3 miles back.  As soon as I got back on track I could see other runners.  I had lost time and added distance, it was a big mental blow and would put pressure on me despite still having enough time in the bank, I could have kicked myself (but that would have hurt too much :o).  All I could do was suck it up, put it out of my head and keep moving forward.  I got back to Goring at 5am, a good hour later than I would have, had I not taken the detour.

The last leg – Goring to Reading and back -Thames Path – (a little bit of hell)

I was annoyed with myself for going wrong and losing all that time but had to push it out of my mind.  I set off on the last spur, the longest section to Reading and back again.  I was back on the Thames Path, which is anything but pretty when you have been running for 19 hours!

My feet felt shredded.  My shoes were falling apart.  Then came the rain, heavy torrential rain.  It was ok at first, but as it got heavier and heavier I was getting more and more soaked and started to feel cold.  There was a section of woodland with a lot of tree roots, rocks and slopes.  There were fields, which in the rain became muddy and water logged, my feet were so sore.

Whitchurch Aid Station was only about 4 miles from Goring, that was a welcome site.  The Marshall there encouraged me to get going again quickly.  The race was still doable within the cut offs but it was advisable to keep moving forward.

The 9 miles from Whitchurch to Reading felt like 90.  It was pouring with rain, I was soaked and I started to shiver.  My feet could feel every stone, every step.  My garmin battery was low again (I hadn’t charged it for long enough earlier).  I tried to put it back on charge, but it just didn’t seem to be charging.  I think maybe I hadn’t charged the USB charger for long enough – Schoolgirl error number 4.  Subsequently my watch became a bit flakey, sometimes working, sometimes not (due to the low charge), when I desperately needed it to work out my cut off times and mileage.

Relentless Forward Progress

There is a book about ultra running called ‘Relentless Forward Progress’ and in my view it is the most aptly named book you will get.  That is exactly what an ultra marathon is!  Before I did my first 100 miler, I thought that the night would be the toughest part.  Running all night long isn’t easy, but I actually like it.  It is the next day when the sun is up, it’s a new day and you are still going – that’s what I find the toughest.

I eventually got to Reading, shivering and in pain.  The Aid Station was Wokingham Waterside Centre seemed and it seemed to take forever to appear.  I asked other runners, who were returning on their way back how far it was and they kept saying I was nearly there – nearly there was forever!

The last 15 (ish) miles of a 100 miler is  relentless,  painful and filled with a desperate need to get to the finish.  That return journey from Reading to Goring seemed to go on and on.  I was thinking that I was closer to the cut-off than I actually was. I had time to make it, but by now my feet were in agony!  Despite this feeling, there wasn’t a moment when I wished that I wasn’t there, not a moment when I regretted and not a moment when I doubted I would finish.

The Finish

I eventually made it back to Whitchurch and then the longest ever 4 miles to Goring.  As I approached the finish, I felt myself welling up.  I have never had a crew or a pacer for my ultras, happy to run with other runners and make the most of the amazing volunteers at the Aid Stations. But amazing daughter Natalie always insists on being at the end of every race, and as I headed towards the finish I could see her cheering me on.  I felt the tears come (have never shed a tear in previous races), Natalie noticed, took my hand and ran the last few steps with me.  At 26 hours 56mins I reached the finish line.  Had I not taken the detour it would have been somewhat quicker, but I got there and was proud.

I was whisked into a side room of the Town Hall, where the ever smiling Stuart was taking superb Finish photos.  I was congratulated and hugged by Stuart and by Nici (who had hugged every sweaty runner). Nici presented me with my t shirt and my 3rd 100 mile buckle.

I joined the other finishers in the hall, sat down and everything hurt.  I somehow managed to get my shoes off.  My feet were a state, massively blistered underneath.  I threw my shoes away, they were fit for nothing.  I wondered how on earth I would get anything on my feet to travel home.  I had been hoping to go straight to friends’ barbecue but realised that that had been a bit too ambitious.  I ate some food a bit too quickly and felt a bit sick.  But that didn’t matter as I was holding my 3rd 100 mile buckle :o)

Volunteers

Once again, the volunteers were amazing.  Some worked 30 hour plus shifts. Everytime I got to an aid station, there would be someone offering to fill my water, make me coffee, pour me coke.  There was food and incredible words of encouragement.  It inspires me to volunteer myself.

The People

Ultra runners are awesome.  I’ve made some great new friends through running and at each race I meet more incredible people.

Several people I knew were celebrating completing the Grand Slam, including Paul (who I ran NDW100 with), Tracey and Kate, an outstanding achievement by all.

Tinu

At A100 I met an incredible lady.  Tinu epitomises ultra running. She had attempting 100 miles twice before but unfortunately had not made the finish.  It was Tinu’s birthday on Saturday when we set off and she lit up the trails with a smile and tinsel skirt!  She was the last runner for a lot of the course, but she did not give up.  A lot of people may have thought it was beyond her, but Tinu perservered and finished well ahead of the final cut off.  When she arrived at Goring everyone sang, ‘Happy Birthday’ as she was presented with her buckle.  I honestly don’t think there was dry eye in that village hall when Tinu finished.

 What Next?

I have a dream of doing Ultra Trail du Mont Blanc (UTMB).  I have sufficient qualifying points, so I will enter the ballot. Not sure I have that much chance of a place but will keep trying each year until I get in.

Now I’ve seen the Centurion Grand Slam buckle and it is special.  So do I go back next year, do the 3 races I’ve done this year plus SDW100 and get the Grand Slam?  That will be foregoing other races and there are quite a few I’d like to try, so we’ll see.

All I know is that I was never a runner, I set a challenge, had a go, enjoyed it, so tried it again and then again!  Every achievement starts with the decision to try.  I was never sporty I’m not fast, I’m not a great runner.  But I saw something that I really wanted to do, so I gave it a try and I think I’ve found my sport.   I am proud of my 3 buckles, here’s to many more! :o)

Written by Paul Ali - https://ultraavon.com

Autumn 100 report (by the Boy Who Cried Wolf).

Since picking up a knee injury at the Monarchs Way back in June, I’ve been troubled with that injury for a few months.

Running has been a bit patchy (although I have been running) but I did make a deliberate attempt to keep all my running offline as I just wanted to do my own thing and get fit in my own time. I did foolishly started the T184 at the end of August and bailed out after 80 miles and since then have been trying get fit and prepared for the A100. 3 weeks ago was a big test when I took part in the Rocky Triple (2 Marathons 1 day and a Half Marathon the next) which I managed to complete but the knees were pretty sore (any more than 25 miles and that was the problem). So I went into to the A100 with no plans/no goal and a fair amount of caution.

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Reading Joggers at the start.

I’ve done a few training runs with Paul Beechey and Alex Whearity recently and to them this sounded like a familiar story to the Endure 1250 run back in July where I had a decent run so they were convinced I was sandbagging. I had a few excuses, as whilst I have logged a few miles I have not run with any intensity, have been forced to take rest days at times (I know it was that bad), have been carrying 1/2 stone over fighting weight and had no form over the past few months and was in unknown shape… so it may have been only partly true!

Alex Whearity was also taking part in the event was was planning on running with Reading Jogger Wendy Shaw and they were aiming for a sub 18 time and so I elected to hang back, take it cautiously and do my own thing. No pressure, a relaxed run, let’s see how it goes. I didn’t event prepare an excel spreadsheet with splits and times.. shocking I know.

As a side note, despite the Reading Joggers being a pretty small, sociable running club we do have a small core of good Ultra runners including Paul Beechey, Barry Miller (both resting from Sparta today), Alex, Wendy and myself as the ‘Ben Kenobi’ wizened old man of the team although Alex and Paul like to call the ‘The King’…. not through any form of flattery but as “The King” (of Junk Miles) which is probably more appropriate.

There was one little fun aspect of the race in that Nici Griffin (current owner of ‘The Hat’, long story but I lost it, found it and then gambled it away) had offered it back if I could run a PB time (current PB was 18.44 at the TP100 this year). We kept this largely to ourselves having done the public bet a couple of years ago and so a nice bit of extra motivation.

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Photo by Super Stuart March

Leg 1 – Goring to Days Lock (and back)

The weather was ok at the start and I elected to run with a 1/2 zip running top and 1/2 zip mid layer but with sleeves pulled up to keep myself cool but after running the first few miles I did feel warm so adjusted the tops to give myself a bit more air. The field set off quite quickly with about 50 runners heading off infront of me. My observation here is that some people went off far too quickly. I had a plan of nothing faster than 8.30m/m for the first leg which I pretty much stuck to.

I had a chat with Jay McDonald on the first leg out but we drifted apart at some stage. I was pretty surprised to see Mark Denby hurtling back towards me when I reached the 10 mile point (which meant he had run at least 14 miles). Mark eventually run a 14hr something time to take the overall win and course record (sorry James) with an incredible performance. I recall running this event in 2014 where Mark was a place ahead of me with an 18hr something time. So he has improved his time by 4 hours in 2 years, so hat’s off to Mark for a super run.I made a minor mistake after entering the field in Shillingford where the route I have run in the past went straight on but I missed the X sign on the cross directing us a little to the left (and maybe one or two who followed me.. apologies) so I made a wide loop of the field to make up the few yards I missed so I could continue to enjoy a ‘guilt free’ run.

Wendy and Alex passed me not too far from the turn point and gave me a wave and I reached the turn point, grabbed a sandwich and headed back straight away. It was getting pretty warm on the return leg although running conditions were almost perfect overall so no complaints about the weather or footing at all.

I stopped to use the facilities at Benson on the way back and ran all of the leg and arrived back at Goring in 3.32 in 27th place have moved a little way through the field on the first leg.

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Grin and bear it! Photo by Stuart March

Leg 2 – Goring to Swyncombe (and back)

I ran this leg by myself and took it easy on the way out as we headed through South Stoke and North Stoke. I caught up with Wendy and Alex as we saw Tom Sawyer struggling with a bad back and checked he was ok briefly (he was ok to get to the Aid Station) before continuing on. I drifted ahead of Wendy and Alex and ran this leg largely by myself through the lovely Grims Ditch section. There were a couple of points I hiked briefly but I was pleased that I ran most of the upwards leg (more than I had done last time).

Stuart March had positioned himself in the dipping/ploughed fields before the turn and I had to make sure I ran this bit to save a bit of pride and avoid any photos of me walking this section.

I arrived at the turn, didn’t tarry too long and headed back, hiked up the hill and then started running back. This return section was probably my quickest and at times I ran some of these sections quite strongly (the Grims Ditch bit is great). I had overtaken a few people and arrived at the 50 mile point with Jez Isaacs. The Centurion Live Timings had me in 6th place at the 50 mile point in 7.20 which was only 10 mins off my 50 mile PB. I was also feeling pretty good, had some energy to run the second half and I cheekily whispered to Nici Griffin that “the hat is coming back today”. This was more for my own motivation as I couldn’t have a disastrous second half after a comment like that! I did spend a few minutes here to put some Rocktape over a potential hotspot, change socks and wolf down some tea, fruit and biscuits but left the Aid Station running.

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Photo by Stuart March

Leg 3 – Goring to Chain Hill (and back)

I had hoped to get out onto leg 3 in the light and managed that with an estimated hour or so before I needed to the headtorch. It did start to rain, not too heavily but enough for me to pause and swap my midlayer for a rain jacket as I didn’t want to go into the night with a wet and cold upper torso. Leg 3 was always going to be the make or break leg for me. If I could run a half decent leg, I could manage a PB here. I’m not sure what it was but I ran a good leg and tried to run a lot of the ascents and keep the odd hike to a minimum. I arrived at Chain Hill (62.5m) in 9.33 (shout out to Ken Hughes and Barry Miller who were manning the Aid Stations around  here). I had a quick cup of tea and rammed down a few more biscuits and then trotted back.

I’ve commented on this before but I like the out and backs and passing the other runners. It had got dark at the 58ish mile Aid Station which exceeded my expectations so I had my head torch switched on for the way back and offered a ‘well done’ to the runners I passed. Unfortunately, as it was dark I didn’t recognise many runners aside from Russell Tullet who was on course to finish a 100 miler after an injury hit few years which was great to see. He looked like he was enjoying the run more than our recce a few weeks earlier! Thanks to those people who gave me a shout out and apologies for not recognising many people.

I arrived back at Goring in just under 12 hours have traded places with a couple of people and was in 7th position at that time. Hold on.. 75 miles in under 12 hours thats around 4 hours per leg? That’s an hour up on where I was 2 years ago.. not sure what’s going on here but let’s see if I can keep this going.

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Photo by Stuart March

Leg 4 – Goring to Reading (and back)

Well after 3 great legs I was starting to run out of energy and crammed in some more biscuits before I headed out. I had to make a toilet stop somewhere where I lost a few mins and then found an LED Lenser SE07 head torch on the floor which I picked up and handed in at the Whitchurch Aid Station. I was starting to struggle a bit more and my jog was being punctuated by more marching breaks.

It was noticeably colder down by the river after Whitchurch and you could start to see the white of the evening frost forming but as I was still moving ok I didn’t need to put my midlayer back on (and the emergency base layer was still safely stashed away). I took a pro plus to fight off the sleep demons and for the first time put on the iPod but even my favourite tunes couldn’t get me moving any quicker.

I walked/ran to Reading high-fiving Jess Gray who was just leaving the Aid Station, grabbed another cup of tea and a few biscuits and tarried here for a couple of minutes before heading back. It was around here that my knee started to feel a bit sore and the walk breaks started to become more frequent. Nothing too bad just the usual late race aches but I was definitely running out of energy aswell by now. 3 legs had gone really well so no surprises that I was becoming tired and slower on the 4th.

I ran/walked as best I could but could only really manage the 100 yards run/100 yards walk routine and knew time was slipping away. My Garmin ran out around mile 93 so I didn’t have much of an idea of the time but knew it must be a PB by some margin. I was overtaken by one chap a couple of miles before the end as I was doing the run/walking but nothing much I could do so as I was moving as best I could.

Despite a bit of a slog on the last leg, I arrived at the finish to find out that I was in 8th place and had finished in 17.04. A personal best by 1hr 40mins. How the hell did that happen? It seems a little churlish to feel disappointed to miss the Sparta auto-qualifier by 16 mins with a big shiny new PB but we’re never satisfied as runners and I know the last leg was where I lost the time.

Nici put on her look of mock disgust that I earned the Hat back (it will never die.. will it?) but did make the observation that she should take it more often with improvements like that! Thanks for being a good sport again Nici.

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No comment from Nici.

Well done to all the runners who took part and thanks to the Centurion Army for another well organised, well supported event. I should add that there was a strong female presence with Susie Chesher running the fastest female 100 mile time at a Centurion event and finishing 2nd overall, Jess Gray running sub 17 hours and Cat Simpson and Wendy all looking strong and all 4 finishing in the Top 12/13 with well paced efforts. Wendy finished together with Alex in the end both achieving their sub 18 targets so a good day all round.

The finish time of 17.04 represents a 10% improvement in my Personal Best time for the distance (Previous PB was 18.44 at the TP100 earlier this year) which is a big gain and the question is what did I do differently from other events of a similar distance.I am going to list what I did differently below and leave it for people to decide which they feel was the biggest benefit.

  • (I hope Mike Julien thanks for me for this!) but I used Tailwind for the first time during a race. I had bought a couple sample packs previously and have started to try it out during long training runs. During the race I carried 2 x 500ml bottles with Tailwind and replenished my supplies after each leg. I did not rely exclusively on Tailwind but also ate real food during the race and did have other drinks at Aid Stations (Coke and Milkshake). However, I can honestly say that I felt like I had more energy to run than I have done at previous races (well.. up until the last leg). So using Tailwind to supplement my hydration and nutrition is something I will continue with. As a side note I used the ‘tasteless flavour’ (is that an oxymoron?). However, there is some taste to it which you have to get used to.
  • I completed more long runs. Since the knee injury at the Monarchs Way I had been struggling to complete long runs as the knees wouldn’t take the stress and did a lot of shorter runs. It has only been in the last 6 weeks that I managed to put regular long runs together and I had alternated between 1 long run and 2 long runs (20-25m) per week.
  • I had a rest day once a week. This was largely down to the fact that I needed to rest my knees at least once a week but the rest may have helped.
  • I had a more relaxed attitude going into the race and paced the race better (i.e. went from 27th after 25 miles down to 8th overall at the finish) and made a particular effort not to go off too fast.
  • Obviously ‘The Hat’ motivation was a factor.

So at long last you get to read a race report where I say I was pretty satisfied with the result. Not to say there aren’t areas for improvement (i.e. the last leg) but it was definitely a good day/night and I have no complaints at all. If I had been offered that finish time at the start, I would have bitten your arm off.

Edit: A couple of things I have forgotten to mention. Firstly, I have started to have a massage on my legs on a semi-regular basis thanks to my friend Matt who is training to be a Sports Physio and he needed a volunteer to practice on. Secondly, thank you to Adrian who was crewing Wendy and Alex but kindly took a bag of drinks and snacks for me and who I saw periodically at the crew meeting points and grabbed the odd extra snack or drink.

Written by Paul Ali - https://ultraavon.com

“You’re not very good at this race, are you Daddy?” stated my Daughter after the race… “No, I guess not”.

Well two years after my first DNF at the T184 Challenge, I was back to have my revenge, fitter, stronger, leaner, better prepared mentally and physically… well… um… er… not quite.

Due to an injury hit summer it was totally the opposite, I was lacking fitness, weighing 10% more than I did the same time last year, lacking long runs, under prepared and not really motivated at all. A couple of weeks before the race I was seriously considering not starting but as I had travel and accommodation arrangements booked and a few friends were taking part I sort of drifted into the “I will see how it goes” camp.

Unfortunately the T184 Challenge is not an event where you can just ‘wing it’. It’s long (184 miles covering the length of the Thames Path from the Thames Barrier to the river source in Cirencester), competitors have to carry their own kit and food (except for water) and it ends up being a 2-4 day run/hike with a 8-10kg on your pack with minimal sleep on the way and camping outdoors. Whilst it may fall more into the ‘adventure race’ category it’s definitely a challenging event as evidence by the low finish rate each year.

Full race support is provided with GPS trackers allowing those at home to follow peoples journey, Checkpoints, Volunteers, Pick up van. It has all of the things you would expect from an ultra event aside from the provision of food at Checkpoints.

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At the race start the night before with Alex Whearity

I arrived at the ‘Pasta Party’ the night before and met up with a few competitors before going back to my hotel for the night. I was rooming with Alex Whearity who was running the T100 Challenge (the 100 mile version of the race) and woke up earlier than I wanted. I was still tempted just to stay in bed and not bother turning up at the start but eventually headed down to breakfast to meet up with a few other competitors and then heading to the start.

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Start of the race

After kit checks and race briefing it was time to set off and I waited at the back and trotted off with Ernie Jewson bringing up the rear. I ran/walked a bit and caught up with Kevin Mayo and we settled into an easy conversation. We both admitted that we didn’t really enjoy the ‘London’ leg of this race. Despite the Thames Path passing various landmarks we were both keen to get out of the City and could then start to enjoy the event at from this point.

I asked Kevin what his race strategy was and he gave me a detailed explanation of his run/walk strategy and his timings and planned stops. He asked me what my plan was “I don’t have one I replied… so we will follow yours!”. From the man who loves his excel spreadsheets with race timings and pacings this was a shocking admission from me. I genuinely had no plan and was just going to take it easy and see how it went.

We kept leapfrogging Dave Cox, James Allan (doing the T184) and Jason Whipp (doing the T100) for a little while and we shared a bit of banter. I particularly liked the fact that they were all wearing the same kit, same buff and had the same backpack. It was almost the ultra running equivalent of turning up in your favourite teams football kit head to toe. Dave, James and Jason all had brilliant runs with Dave and James eventually finishing joint winners of the T184 and Jason finishing third in the T100.

About six miles in I had a comedy fall. I don’t recall what I tripped over but I took a forward tumble, held it for about 5 metres before eventually falling face down. I managed to get the palms of my hands out in front to avoid the full face plant but managed to cut and graze both hands which were stinging for the new couple of hours.

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Kevin Mayo pictured

Kevin and I continued on and spent most of the day together following Kevins run/walk plan. The weather was extremely warm and we took the opportunity to soak ourselves at a few of the taps along the route. We had one slight ‘incident’ when visiting a public toilet. After fishing out some 20p’s to access the toilet. We entered only to find that we couldn’t see the urinals and so we used the cubicles. After heading out of the cubicle we noticed a lady doing her hair next to the wash basins and we quickly realised that we had entered the ladies by mistake! We swiftly left and apologised to the lady on the way out and made our escape.

The London leg was warm but thankfully after a recent holiday (with a bit of running) in Crete it didn’t worry me too much and the walk/run approach meant that we were not pushing ourselves too hard. My legs had the usual ache after being out on your feet for several hours but the back of my neck felt the worst with a constant pain almost from the start with having to carry a heavy pack (and admittedly not having trained with the pack due to injury).

It was early evening when we arrived around the Walton on Thames area which I knew reasonably well from running the Phoenix Marathons along here. I had planned to have my evening meal (a self heating meal pack) before it got dark and as we got to Sunbury Lock decided to stop here and eat whilst Kevin carried on ahead. At this point, I had been on my feet for 8 hours and I stopped by the river, took off my shoes and socks to allow my feet to breathe and had a little lie down as my meal cooked (sausage and beans). I ended up stopping here for about 45mins and a couple of people passed me during this time. I was fairly relaxed as I had decided to take as long as I needed.

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Time for tea

As I was packing up a Dutch runner Francois caught up with me and we tagged along together on and off for a few hours into the night and chatted generally about running, work and family along the way before eventually separating and heading off at our own pace.

My knees were starting to ache as we went into the night and I had a couple of blisters on the toes forming now. I had worn some heavy duty knee supports which felt like they had helped with the weight bearing but I hadn’t realised these were cutting into the back of my legs (see picture below) and were feeling a little uncomfortable.

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Yes, the supports were a touch uncomfortable

Once again during the night phase, I settled into a sombre mood and once again (as usual) questioned why I am actually taking part in these sort of events. For the past year or two I have to admit that (aside from one or two races) I haven’t really enjoyed the long ultras. I don’t mind putting the miles into the training (more time and volume than quality if I’m honest), enjoy catching up with people before and during the race but don’t really enjoy the race itself and tend to focus on all the negative aspects (the aching legs, blistered feet, tiredness), get to the finish and then feel ultimately disappointed with my time because I walked a % of the race/was tired etc. At that point all I wanted to do was be at home and lie down on the carpet in my lounge.

During the early hours, I became more sleepy (as usual) and at a couple of points stopped at a park bench to close my eyes for a couple of minutes before carrying on. Unfortunately at one point I lay down on a park bench for a 5 minute nap and was awoken by Tom Garrod who was passing me and asking if I was all right. I asked him what time it was (it was around 5am) and I then realised that I had no idea how long I had slept as it was starting to get a light by now. I could have been out for anything between 15 minutes to over an hour!

Thankfully the short sleep had helped with the tiredness but I had been laying on the park bench on my side and my left leg and thigh felt stiff and awkward as if it had been locked in a position and I trailed behind Tom as he marched on ahead.

I bumped into Javed and Allan as they caught up with me and marched on ahead a little while later.

I was getting closer to the Checkpoint at Henley some 80 miles in and was mulling over whether I actually wanted to or should carry on. Physically, I was getting to the point where things were starting to become uncomfortable and mentally I was never invested in the race at all. Ultimately, if I wanted to carry on it would have meant a 3 day uncomfortable march and even then there was no guarantee that I could physically complete the race in my current condition and level of fitness. Mentally, I wanted the easiest option.

I bumped into James Bennet just before the Henley Checkpoint and we walked in together. Stouty was running this Checkpoint and I arrived, sat down and told him I had decided to stop here. I didn’t fancy trying to walk another 3 days and I quit. When I had DNF’d a couple of years ago, I was really disappointed with myself, this time I wasn’t bothered by the decision at all.

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Happiest DNF ever

So both times I have entered the T184 I have started the event untrained and under prepared. If I enter this event again then I must make sure it is an ‘A’ race otherwise it will simply be a case of the same result.

Congratulations to everyone who took part and completed the T100 or T184 events and thanks to Shane and team and all the volunteers and marshals who helped put the event on.

I was sorry to hear that Kevin who had got himself into the lead position by an hour or two had to quit through injury but delighted for Dave Cox who finished first with James. I should also mention Tom Garrod who not only completed the T184 but also did the ‘double’ by going back t London on foot the next day and well done to Paul Beechey and Alex Whearity who were joint winners of the T100.

My next planned event is the Autumn 100 and I need to try and get in some sort of shape to be able to just complete this event.

Written by Paul Ali - https://ultraavon.com

I’m not sure how interesting this write up will be when I was essentially running 10 x 5 mile laps around a field at night but here goes..

The Endure 1250 is the little brother to the Endure 24 event. The event involves three different races a short 50k race, a 50 mile race and a 12 hour event, which also caters for team options. The course is 5 mile trail route around Beale Park near Reading and the event starts at 7pm on the evening and finishes at 7am in the morning.

I had run the 50k last year as a training run and had enjoyed the low key nature of the event with a few hundred runners compared to a couple of thousand at Endure 24, it was smaller and perhaps a little more intimate.

Four days before the event and I had even entered, it wasn’t even on the radar with only a very recent return to running after a few week lay off (refer to the Monarchs Way blog). Essentially a midweek conversation with Stouty (who had entered the 12 hour event) led to an entry. With only a Half Marathon and one 20 mile run being the only long runs I had completed in 6-8 weeks I decided that I wasn’t fit enough to try and the run 50k fast, wasn’t fit enough to try and run for 12 hours solid and so the 50 mile race looked the best option.

It would be good to get a few miles in the legs if I’m going to have any chance of being on the start line of the T184 (a family holiday in-between now and then with limited running also a factor). Covering a 50 mile distance meant I could finish some time late night/early morning and then go home with the race venue about a 15 minute drive from my house. So that was the plan.

2016 Endure 1250 Paul Ali 00 Pictured with (from left to right) Myself, Stouty, Mike, Paul & Alex

I arrived around 5.30pm to register and met up with a few local runners. Stouty was doing the 12 hour event, Paul Beechey was running the 12 hour event with his wife in a pair, Alex was also taking part in the 12 hour event and Mike was doing the 50k. Stouty and I also bumped into Russ Bestley (also running the 50 miler) and Sarah.

Little preparation was needed, I had a cooler box with some drinks, a few snacks, spare head torch and a extra layer ready and I left this near the start/finish area so I could access this each lap.

The plan had been to run at a steady pace and see how it went. I really wasn’t sure of my overall fitness levels and thought the second half of the race would be a bit of run/walk if I’m honest. The weather during the day had been really warm and it was still feeling pretty muggy as we approached the race start time of 7pm.

2016 Endure 1250 Paul Ali 02

Running with Wendy on the first lap

The race started 15 minutes later than planned and I ran the first lap with Wendy Shaw who was running in a pair with Mark another local runner and we covered the first lap in 38 minutes something, a bit quicker than planned but ok on fresh legs. Stouty was a short way behind us and Alex was a little ahead of us. As Wendy tagged her partner I continued by myself following the field round the first 2k and then back around a circular route to the start and then along the river through lumpy fields back towards the start and then a loop across the other side of the course and back to the start/finish zone.

The route was mainly fields with about 25% of paths and I had opted to wear my Hoka Speedgoats for comfort, which felt like a sound choice in the end with only a small blister on one foot to mention.

2016 Endure 1250 Paul Ali 03 Lap after lap

I carried on lap after lap, counting up the laps to 5 and then counting down to 1. At the start/finish zone of each lap, I would pause briefly (no more than 30 seconds to a minute maximum) to grab a quick drink and snack and then head off for the next lap. There was a race announcer commentating on the event and as I crossed the line after lap 3, was advised I was in 3rd place in my category. Nice to hear but we were only getting warmed up at that point.

The event was being supported by some local club runners and it was nice to see some familiar faces at odd points around the course and get a bit of morale support.

I managed to cover 4 (and a bit) laps in the light before I needed my head torch, which I had carried from the start and continued on in the dark. It was a lovely warm evening with a full moon giving some element of natural light. With the warm weather and the fact that I was still running, I was feeling pretty warm, and sweaty and had a real thirst and used the mid-way drinks station on a few occasions for a drink or just to splash some water over my face and chest.

2016 Endure 1250 Paul Ali 04Pictured after 3-4 laps (Photo by Sunil Fernandes)

As the evening turned to night, the race commentator went quiet to allow those camping to sleep as I carried on. I was overtaken a few times by (I assumed) the occasional relay or 50k runner but in the dark I had no idea which position I was in and it wasn’t really worth stopping at the start/finish zone to check the TV screen cycle through the various leaderboards for each category and so I just carried on running, ticking off lap after lap.

I ended up running a couple of laps (laps 7 and 8) with Heidi a fellow club runner who was running the pair’s event with a friend. We hadn’t really met before so we ended up having a chat about running and other random rubbish for a couple of laps (and I even persuaded her to run one more lap then she had planned!). This really helped pass the time at that phase of the race where I could have started to flag.

2016 Endure 1250 Paul Ali 01

 Smiling.. sort of

By the time Heidi left me, I had two laps to go. Looking at my watch and I had only been running for just over 5 ½ hours and had 10 miles to go. I had settled into a pretty constant 9 m/m pace and had been eating and drinking every lap so whilst the legs were stiffening up and the knees felt like they had taken a pounding, I was feeling ok energy wise and mentally still quote motivated to continue to run.

I came into grab my drink at lap 8 and saw Kevin Massey (who was supporting his wife Sarah who was running the 12 hour event) and asked him if he could check the leaderboard and give me a shout where I was when I passed again on the next lap.

The penultimate lap was a bit of a grind as I started to repeatedly count to 10 in my head over and over through sections and ticked off the different kilometer markers.

I passed the start/finish zone but elected not to stop for a drink and see out the race. I spotted Kevin and gave him a shout but he either didn’t hear or see me and I didn’t get the call where I was. No worries, you can only run what you can run and I carried on.

It has struck me that I had run every step off the race so far. I’m a regular at the Thames Trot each year which is a comparable distance (48 miles if you run the non-flooded route) and even then I end up having a little walk break towards the end of the race at some point. I felt pretty motivated to run the entire last lap and complete the entire race running (a rare achievement on any ultra of that distance for me). In addition, if I could maintain the same pace then I would be close to last years winning time of 7.10 and used this as motivation to keep going.

The effort level increased on the last lap with this motivation but unfortunately the pace only crept up marginally and I just started to reach the point where things started to feel a little uncomfortable. My knees were really sore by now (others mentioned they felt it hard underfoot so may not just be previous injury related), my stomach was feeling uncomfortable but there was no stopping now and so I carried on around the course trying to take my mind of it by ticking off each kilometer marker and telling myself I won’t have to run this section again.

As I got a little closer, there was a slight surge of adrenaline as I neared the finish, through the wooded area with the fairy lights, down the short path, sharp right and then a sprint to the finish. The time on the clock was 7.06 – 7.07, a new 50 mile personal best by some margin and running every step of the way.. How on earth did that happen?

There was a marshal at the finish point who approached me and I let him know that I had finished the 50 mile event to which he replied I was first home, another unexpected result!

He kindly let me sit in his chair for a couple of minutes as I removed my chip tag and then I collected my medal and headed back to see Kevin and sit (lie) down for 10-15 minutes to get a drink before heading home.

A check of the results a couple of days later showed my 5 mile lap splits as follows: 00:37:47, 00:38:45, 00:39:40, 00:41:25, 00:44:04, 00:45:15, 00:45:19, 00:45:17, 00:45:28 and 00:43:12.

So pretty consistent second half of the race where I had half expected the wheels to have come off. Position wise I had been in 2nd place up until lap 7 about 5 minutes behind the leader. We actually both finished lap 8 within 18 seconds of each other (not that either of us really knew it in the dark around midnight time) but the other guys pace dropped off the last few laps and by being able to maintain the same consistent pace meant I built up a 10-15 minute cushion in the end. So some decent pacing by me for a change… although I was pretty thankful the race ended when it did as my reserves were starting to run out.

I think early year mileage and some decent rest after a brief injury layoff got me through the event but it was a little unexpected.. (not that I’m complaining at all).

2016 Endure 1250 Paul Ali 10

I had half a night sleep and returned early the next day to see how everyone else got on. Stouty managed 65 miles in the 12 hour event and was joint 3rd in terms of distance with about 5 people managing 65 miles (a shout out to James Poole who won with 80 miles). Wendy and Mark were joint 1st in the pair with Paul Beechey and wife Hannah second. Mike was 6th in the 50k, Sarah Massey completed 50 miles in the 12 hour event and Alex stopped after 30 miles in the 12 hour event with a few stomach issues and in view of a 24 hour event next weekend.

Overall, it’s good small sized event and dare I say it, I prefer the intimacy and small numbers to the bigger Endure 24 event. Being a short drive from my house means I can definitely see myself running it again in the future. Thanks to Race Director Chris, all the volunteers and supporters for hosting another well organised event and well done to all the other runners who took part.

Written by Paul Ali - https://ultraavon.com

2016 Monarchs Way Paul Ali 01

The Monarchs Way race was a new event put on by Lindley Chambers of Challenge Running. The event was designed as a continuous (i.e. the clock doesn’t stop until the finish) run of 615 miles covering the Monarchs Way (following an approximation of the route taken by King Charles II when fleeing from Cromwell) over 14 days with Checkpoints available once a day.

I had decided I would run for a charity associated with my workplace the Alexander Devine Childrens Hospice (www.justgiving.com/paulali2016) and I would like to thank everyone who sponsored or supported the run. We managed to raise around £1900 for charity and every penny helps.

The continuous nature of the race meant that competitors had the option to cover the minimum distance per day or more if they wished.

In running terms an average mileage of 44 miles per day doesn’t seem that significant (a marathon, a half marathon and a 10k a day for 14 days). Practically, mandatory kit requirements, self-navigation, rural trails over multiple days with camping options each night at best meant I was under no illusions this was going to be a long hard slog and more of a hike than a run.

Despite grumbling about it at the time, I had run an ok time at the Thames Path 100 a few weeks earlier and then spent the next few weeks just ticking over and tapering. I wasn’t at peak fitness but was injury free.

I arrived Friday afternoon and met up with fellow competitors Allan Rumbles and Tim Welch. I’ve known Allan for a few years and he is an experienced runner having completed numerous long distance ultras although by his own admission he hadn’t trained as he would have liked for this event for personal reasons. Tim described himself as a ‘cut off chaser’ in a self-deprecating manner but is an experienced racer with more of a background (I believe) of multi-day stage races.

As we chatted over dinner with Race Director Lindley and supporting crew Maxine and Brian we knew this was a completely different proposition to anything we’ve tackled before and we were approaching this with a mindset of this being an adventure rather than a race. Strategy wise we were all quite open with our approaches which were all pretty flexible to be fair. We had all decided that we would probably not stop to sleep at the first Checkpoint and gain some miles going into Day 2. We all recognised that looking after your body, feet, eating well and getting some sleep were all key requirements to finishing this race. No one was being too bold.

My personal (and somewhat loose) plan was to try and complete 3 legs in 2 days buying me a day ahead of the cut offs and then settle into a leg a day and then possibly try and complete the last two shorter legs in one go at the end. So I was possibly looking at a 12 day finish but I had 2 days contingency if things went wrong. Not the most ambitious plan but something I was comfortable with. I also suspected that with just the three starters over such a distance then there would be little contact with the others although I was hoping to see them at Checkpoints.

Lindley had been promoting the race and had been in touch with the Monarchs Way walkers association who had shown some interest in the race and a couple of them were kind enough to turn up at the start of the race and see us off.

The start was surreal, very very low key (as expected) and I didn’t feel any emotion at all. There was no excitement, anticipation, nervousness or fear I commented to Tim that I just felt.. empty.

We set out at 10am in good weather (I had a new hat.. which looked suspiciously like the old hat) and the three of us trotted 100 yards for the cameras across the field before settling into a hike for a couple of miles, generally chatting and settling into the race. I managed to record my slowest ever mile for the first mile of any race with a 15m/m to start with. For a race of this size, if I kept up that pace I would be delighted.

After a couple of miles through a few fields we headed onto the paths into Worcester. I wanted to do a bit of running and bid my best wishes to Allan and Tim as I plodded on by myself. The guys were content to hike a bit more and I left them to their own devices.

I spent the first day, running, hiking and walking by myself until I was due to meet Lindley at Checkpoint 1. Lindley had organised 3 cars with 3 crew (Lindley, Maxine & Brian) to ensure each runner would be met. Each car had a tent, sleeping mat, food and supplies and each crew was assigned to a different runner so they also carried out drop bags. For the first few days the crew were likely to setup and move along together but with race spread then they would all be self sufficient over the next week or so. If the race had bigger numbers then there are options for hiring camper vans and bigger setups but this arrangement worked fine for the few of us.

2016 Monarchs Way Paul Ali 02

The Monarchs Way is not designated as a national trail and therefore is not as well maintained as other trails you may all be familiar with. This resulted in trekking up and down through lots of fields, finding the rights of way, getting caught by lots of overgrown bushes and enduring many many stingy nettles. We were provided with maps but each of was carrying a handheld GPS device and I would suggest (in my inexpert opinion) that unless you were a skilled navigator then it would be difficult to successfully navigate the route without incurring some bonus miles particularly during the night where there are some precise routes and paths to be found.

The route was also fairly unforgiving on the feet. Overgrown grass which was shaded was often wet and a lot of the ground was firm and rutted which meant my feet took a pounding and I alternated between getting wet from the ground conditions, then drying and then getting wet again over and over despite the decent weather. I’m not sure what the correct footwear choice is here.. probably hiking boots. I had brought 4 pairs of shoes with me, 2 road pairs and 2 trail pairs and was going to alternate between them depending upon the conditions. As this leg took me through Worcester and along Canal Paths for a decent stretch I went with the Hoka Conquest 2 to start.

My navigation skills are untested, I’ve run a few LDWA events and taken part in a few hiking events but generally participate in events on marked and national trail designated routes. I did elect to brush up on my skills and took part in a 1 day course organised by Lindley which was well received although I had elected to rely on a handheld GPS device as my primary form of navigation for confidence and speed with map-reading a contingency plan.

I was navigating on a budget with an eTrex 20 device, loaded with open source type maps and a GPX route of the course and this generally worked really well. I didn’t have to check my maps once during this leg. The Monarchs Way association have also taken it upon themselves to mark the route as best they can with signs and stickers and I saw plenty of these along the route.

However, it wasn’t perfect. I made a few small micro navigation errors (i.e. picking the wrong side of a bush) or not spotting or being able to see the exit gate in a field, or some areas being overgrown so a path was difficult to spot but most of this was corrected within 50-100 yards as the device could show me when I was off-course. However, the GPX route was not completely accurate despite Lindleys best preparation (his planned recce of the route was cut short due to injury) and there a few occasions when there was no visible path according to the GPX so a little bit of back-tracking was required to ensure I picked out the correct route. I was conscious of one or two errors particularly one by a fishing area but I stumbled across a toilet at the right time so that wasn’t an issue! Overall, the GPX route was 40 miles for the first day and Lindley expected a bit more with small twists and turns in the route and I came in under 42 miles so pretty good effort overall.

I had know from the start that I wouldn’t be running all of this and made steady progress throughout the day with a walk, run strategy. I stopped briefly at a Tea Room around 2pm for a bottle of coke and a cake and I also munched through a few of my own supplies before carrying on. I was conscious of carrying a tracker and texted Lindley to say I had stopped briefly for lunch.

I continued on in the afternoon in fine weather and enjoyed the last long section along a flat Canal Path which allowed a bit of running. I arrived at the Navigation Inn early evening and met all of the crew there where I stopped to have some food, rest briefly, change my socks, trainers (to a dry pair) and re-taped the feet, topped up some supplies before heading out for Leg 2. I switched to the Hoka Speedgoat which were a little looser than the Conquest and gave my feet some breathing space as they were feeling a little sore and I could feel some hot spots largely caused by the constant soaking of the feet due to the undergrowth.

2016 Monarchs Way Paul Ali 03

Checkpoint 1 stop (Photo Lindley Chambers)

Allan and Tim were a couple of hours behind and were reported as having a merry old time with numerous ice-cream breaks and witty banter being shared between them.

Aside from some expected stiffness in the legs and feet then I felt pretty good and ran a few miles along the Canal Path. The next leg was 46 miles long and I had planned to try and cover perhaps half the distance before bivvying out for a few hours. I was definitely planning on sleeping every night and didn’t want to suffer in that sleep deprived state. Chatting with Lindley, I realised I would actually pass Checkpoint 2 before completing a loop and then returning to the Checkpoint officially. Lindley was going to set up Checkpoint 2 a few hours after I left and it made sense that I would stop here and sleep under supervision before completing the loop the next day and making the Checkpoint officially if that makes sense.

It took me longer than expected to complete this next section and I was relieved that I met Lindley after 17 miles just after midnight. He had a tent setup and I put some drying sleeping clothes on and crashed out for a couple of hours and was awoken in the early hours as I heard Allan arrive and press on with Tim a short distance behind.

I got up, changed and had some breakfast and saw Tim pass through before heading out 10 minutes after him. I ran a few miles and caught up with Tim and we walked together briefly and chatted before I headed on. I found this section pretty difficult (and this was confirmed by Tim and Allan when we spoke later) with more rutted fields, overgrown paths which was pretty unforgiving on the feet. Navigation wise this loop was a little more difficult than the first aswell. I had one particular issue near a golf course where for the life of me I couldn’t find the right path and then had to walk all around the edges of the golf course before finding the path again. This was the section which took its toll on my feet and legs and there was little running but more hiking. I arrived back at Checkpoint 2 officially around 2pm. Allan had arrived half an hour earlier and was having a kip (as he hadn’t slept the night before). I had a huge portion of beans, sausages and bacon (which went down very well), had a brief doze, organised my gear and set out. I should offer a thank you aswell to Boscobel House for allowing us to setup the tents their and use the facilities.

2016 Monarchs Way Paul Ali 04

Checkpoint 2 stop (Photo Lindley Chambers)

Tim had just arrived as I was about to leave and Allan was stirring so we all took the opportunity to compare notes and all agreed the last leg was hard going.

I left the next leg around 4pm with approximately 40 miles to complete which was later than I expected. I was hoping to get to the next Checkpoint and sleep most of the night but even at a hopeful 4mph pace then this would be a 2am arrival. If I was slower than this could easily be a night leg which I wanted to avoid so I forewarned Lindley I may bivvy down for an hour or two if necessary but would text (as agreed) if I did. As phone signals can be unreliable in more remote places I didn’t want anyone to worry unnecessarily.

I settled into a hike and ticked off a few miles but the pace was slower than expected. I had about 6 hours of light before it started to get dark. I passed through a few roads and villages and through the suburbs of Wolverhampton. My only real stops here was at a corner shop around 8-9pm where I bought a bottle of coke and an ice cream before moving on.

It was pitch back as I passed through the 1.5 length of Netherton Tunnel which ran underneath Wolverhampton and was flooded in places which meant more wet feet. I was making slow but steady progress but my knees (left in particular) was feeling increasingly uncomfortable.

I passed a pub with some late night revellers who saw the night hiker out and kindly started singing the Proclaimers 500 miles song… oh how right they were about the distance!

Looking at the time, I was caught in a situation where I wasn’t too far from the Checkpoint (10 miles at 2.5 – 3 hours at the pace I was travelling) but starting to feel very tired having only had a couple of hours sleep. Do I stay or do I go was the question I pondered as I stumbled around in a sleep deprived state. I started to imagine things. I know it’s all the rage these days to say you had hallucinations during the night leg of a race and at some level I was conscious it was just tricks of the mind but I thought I saw Lindley by his car a few times waiting to check up on me and various small creatures on the path infront of me. At one point I saw a few ducks in my way and tried to step over them to find my feet magically passing through them to realise it was just some shadow. Yes, I was pretty tired.

I settled into a habit of walking a few miles and then having a minute or two break to shut my eyes, rest my feet and legs and then go again. I was noticeably unsteady on my feet and my left knee would flex slightly as it didn’t like the weight.

In the early hours of the morning I had the first of my two incidents. I was passing through a cow field looking for the exit gate and right of way. Normally I find cows to be pretty docile but not this group of 20 or so. As I walked past them they started to congregate and walk towards me, I started to move a bit quicker and they started to trot. I shone my head torch in their faces to wave them away trying to defy them like some Priest with a Holy Symbol waving away a horde of Vampires but they started to circle me. I was feeling a little uncomfortable now and looked ahead to see a gate, I stumbled as fast as I could as the cows broke into a trot, vaulted the gate awkwardly and collapsed on the other side. Graceful it was not but I had made it! I then turned around with a bit of false bravado as the cows glared at me angrily (I did capture it on video but the footage was too dark to see)…. before realising I had gone over the wrong gate and I had to go back into the cow field and find the correct exit.

I was caught in a situation where I couldn’t use the same exit as the cows had effectively blocked it barring trying to push them out the way which didn’t seem a good idea.

I followed the edge of the field to see if there was another gate (there wasn’t) but worked out the direction I had to go in. The barbed wire fence didn’t look like it would support my weight and with a wobbly knee then I wasn’t confident of climbing over this without some injury and so I elected to go into stealth mode. I turned off my head torch, removed my backpack and gently slide underneath the barbed wire, retrieved my gear and tiptoed out of the field picking up the correct route before switching on my head torch after I had put sufficient distance between me and the angry cows.

I continued trekking through the night in increasing discomfort and found myself walking a few miles and then having to pause for a break through tiredness and stiffness. I wasn’t too far away from the next CP and decided to press on and sleep in relevant comfort there. I realised I had lost one of my gloves after the cow incidents but thankfully Tim picked this up a few hours later (thanks Tim).

I thought my brush with danger was over for the night as I followed a trail through a wooded area and I was confronted by two large badgers (actually much bigger than I had expected) standing in my path.

We must have startled each other as they started making some grotesque snarling sound and I didn’t really have any time to think but just reacted by flashing my head torch at them to scare them away which didn’t work as they both then started to charge me! Once again, it was reaction not thinking time and with no time to grab anything or run, I shouted as loudly as I could at them to scare them off and was readying the right foot to give the onward charging badger a swift boot in self-defence if he came for me but thankfully they both scurried narrowly past me and physical contact was avoided. That was my chance to head on down the path and I moved on as quickly as I could in the opposite direction. I assume I must have stumbled near a den or something or perhaps they didn’t like my smell after 30+ hours of hiking.

2016 Monarchs Way Paul Ali 05

Checkpoint 3 stop (Photo Lindley Chambers)

I managed to limp into Checkpoint 3 around 4am. Lindley was waiting for me and organised some hot food before I crashed out for a couple of hours. I woke at 6am to find that I could hardly move my legs, both knees were sore (the left was worse) and my feet were feeling battered. Deep down I knew I would struggle from here but I had to at least try and continue. I had put a lot of time and effort (and money) into getting here, had the pressure of charity fund-raising on the mind and couldn’t give in too easily.

Brian escorted me to the toilets as I shuffled there and I then returned had some breakfast, changed into my running gear, attended my feet and then set off for the next leg.

I was hoping that by starting to walk this would loosen the muscles and reduce the stiffness and after a slow first mile I thought the discomfort was bearable. I felt I had completed the ‘little push at the start’ of the race in my head by making a day up and was planning on doing 1 leg a day and then having a good amount of rest each night from that point with the possibility of a double leg at the end to finish this off.

I followed the route up and down a couple of hills, into a farmyard where I couldnt spot the right exit and the farmer kindly pointed me in the direction of a path which actually wasn’t the one I wanted. However, I managed to get back on track but the pace was slowing, and the left knee was becoming increasingly uncomfortable with some swelling and tenderness on the inside of the knee and odd twinges of pain. Occasionally the knee would flex and wobble as it was struggling with weight bearing.

I struggled on stop/start for a little while and then gave Lindley a call to explain the problem. He kindly drove out to meet me (I didn’t take him long as I hadn’t made that much progress from the start) and strapped my knees up with compression tape and gave me a set of poles to use which may assist by taking some of the weight of my knees. I decided to press on for an hour and see how it went. I’ve not used poles before and tried to get into a rhythm walking with them. I walked on for another 45 minutes or so but the pace was slowing to 2 mph and I was stop starting again in discomfort.

I had only made less than 5 miles in the 2.5 hours since I had left the Checkpoint. With 46 miles to be completed that day I was looking at least a 20 hour uncomfortable hike, limited sleep before repeating again for the next 10 days.

This just simply wasn’t going to happen and having only completed 135 miles in 48 hours I reluctantly made the call to Lindley to withdraw and arrange collection back to the Checkpoint. I was really disappointed to have to withdraw from the race particularly as this was my big event of the year.

I had put a lot of effort into preparing for the event and I had elected to do some fund raising as well and I had failed to deliver my end of the bargain. I also knew this was my one-shot at the event, taking this amount of time off (I had bought some extra holiday through work), childcare cover and cost means that it’s not something I can just enter on a whim each year. With a history of knee niggles then there’s a real risk that my body may not be able to handle an event of this nature.

So, I am sorry to say I failed. It is an incredibly challenging race, even if my knee had not been an issue then despite great care, my feet were pretty bashed (soreness and blistering) and I definitely needed to start getting more sleep, so whether or not I would have finished the event is still debatable if I’m honest.

Back at the Checkpoint, Allan and Tim had arrived and were having a sleep. Both guys were also suffering but were going to carry on. Unfortunately, Allan pulled out later that day due to bad blistering and Tim withdrew the next day I believe due to sleep deprivation resulting in slow progress so it was a 0% finish rate. Has there ever been an ultra-race (Barkley aside) with no finishers?

Therefore, the challenge has been set for runners in future years. There are plenty of better runners/ hikers than me so I firmly believe the event is do-able but it will still be a difficult challenge.

I would like to thank Lindley, Maxine and Brian for their sterling working supporting the three of us. There was a 1 to 1 ratio between runners and crew and they were also planning on being out on the route supporting for the entire period of the race so their efforts are very much appreciated.

To Allan and Tim, I’m not sure I can offer a well done as none of us completed the event but it was great to catch up and share some stories/banter before and during the event.

Finally, thank you to everyone who supported my efforts to raise some money for the Alexander Devine Children’s Hospice charity. This is the area that I feel the guiltiest about not completing the event especially when I’ve asked people to put their hands into their pocket. I’m really sorry I couldn’t continue and hope you don’t mind you donations going to this very worthy cause.

For anyone reading this blog and thinking about tackling this next year then here are a few thoughts to consider based on my (albeit limited) experience of the race. None of these were major issues at all but areas which could have been a lot more difficult if I hadn’t considered each of these.

  • Investing in a handheld GPS device is invaluable (particularly at night) unless you are a skilled navigator. I used a budget device (e-Trex20) and obtained some inexpensive maps through the www.talkytoaster.com website. From memory I think I had around 3 errors where I went 500 yards off route and then a dozen ‘micro’ errors where I backtracked 50-100 yards to find the correct path. Over 135 miles of completely unknown terrain that is pretty good going (despite feeling frustrated with the odd error). The GPX files will be updated and get more accurate as Lindley reviews the data where the actual paths differed from the GPX route so this will get more accurate each year.
  • I’m not sure there is a correct choice for footwear as the terrain is mixed and hard going on the feet ranging from rutted terrain, mud, roads, foot-paths and canal paths (and there’s another 480 miles of unseen terrain). As the trail is quite rural there are lots of overgrown areas and your feet will get wet a lot (i.e. through long grass or areas where it is shaded and ground doesn’t dry out) so thinking about foot care is very important. All three of us suffered blistering to various degrees and I was being ultra-cautious with my feet with constant taping/care/using foot powder at each Checkpoint and attending to hot-spots during the race. I was alternating between three pairs to give the other pairs time to dry out after each leg.
  • You have to carry mandatory kit (waterproofs, bivvy bag, spare cloths, food for the day, 2l of water, maps, compass, phone & charger, head torch, spare light & batteries) which can mean say 5kg of weight coupled with self-navigating and occasional breaks means you will move a lot slower than ultra ‘running pace’ so plan accordingly. It took me longer than planned to complete each leg as I got slower due to injuries.
  • I had planned to cover the first 3 legs over 2 days to give myself a day’s contingency and with hindsight, it may have been prudent to take an even more cautious approach and just aim to complete 1 leg a day. I could have stopped around 6pm on Day 1 had an evening’s rest and sleep and headed out early in Day 2. I hadn’t planned to go through the night at all but ended up doing this due to my slower pace.
  • This wasn’t a major issue but a thought to organise your kit well to minimise time at the Checkpoint. I had a couple of large holdalls with kit organised into smaller labelled bags so I could easily find what I needed. Electronic items and medical supplies (such as batteries, spare head torch, power charges, scissors, tape etc.) were all placed in a small plastic box which was accessed more frequently. Upon reflection I could have organised my items into a holdall of stuff I needed to a quick stop (medical/batteries/socks/snacks and change of clothes) and a holdall of stuff I wanted for a night-stop (sleeping bag/dry sleeping clothes). This isn’t about trying to shave a minute or two at a CP but about less faffing about as I was accessing all of my bags. It took me a while to unpack and pack each time I stopped.

Good luck to anyone thinking about taking this challenge on in the future.

Written by Paul Ali - https://ultraavon.com

Another year and another run at the Thames Trot. This is my typical early season (if you count these things by year) warm up and involves a muddy 48 mile run along the Thames Path from Oxford to Henley and this would be my 8th running of the event. As always, this is a good training run and a benchmark of my fitness (after the usual Xmas blow-out). I’m probably ½ stone over ideal weight although I have been logging quite a few miles in recent months (and I realise this is going to sound a little ridiculous) but I’ve been drifting through 100 mile weeks so I don’t feel as if I’ve been really ‘on it’ training wise. However, the mileage volume means my fitness is probably better than usual at this time of the year.

The timing of the event means it’s pretty popular with an estimated 300 runners taking part and for some it’s also a good recce of events like the Thames Path 100 or T184.

My history at the event ranges from finishing around the old cut off time in 12 hours on my first attempt (a very long walk!) 8 years ago to finishing around 7.30 last year so a slight improvement over the years! The event has seen all sorts of bad weather conditions from ice and snow to rain and flooding and of course mud. The weather conditions this year were not looking favourable with a day of rain and very strong winds predicted.

Thanks to Adrian Lee for the lift to the start, Adrian wasn’t running this year but was supporting a few of the Reading Joggers. We arrived 45 minutes before the start which was sufficient time to collect race numbers, say a few hello’s and grab a picture with a few fellow “Run Until You Drop” runners (a February running based challenge where you have to run a mile or km for each day of the month). As this was Day 6 only 6 miles were needed and I was running 48 miles so I definitely over-achieved this day!

2016 Thames Trot Paul Ali 09

Some of the Run Until You Droppers Class of 2016

There was the usual conversation about plans and estimated time for the day and I thought my range would be around 7.30 (good), 8.00 (ok), 8.30 (a bit slower than expected). I wheel this phrase out a lot but this was just ‘a training run’ and I was not worrying about specific time goals just an approximate range of where I would finish.

I lined up near the front to get ahead of the main pack for the early bridge crossing and we set off into light rain with Centurion Runnings Craig Colgate (annual winner) and a few others sprinting off ahead. I spent a mile or two chatting to fellow RJ Barry Miller before he pushed on (Barry finished 4th in a fantastic time of 6.44) before settling into a comfortable pace resulting in a few people drifting ahead of me for the first leg.

2016 Thames Trot Paul Ali 02

The dash at the start line

The Thames Path is a real mixture of muddy paths, fields and some surfaced paths so you have a mixture of all conditions. The first leg was muddy and miserable and I was slipping and sliding all over the place regretting my shoe choice. My trail shoe options were the Inov Race Ultra 290’s (comfortable but no grip), Salomon Sense Mantra 2 (slightly better grip but hard on the feet) or my Inov8 Trailroc 255’s (best grip but not comfortable at all on the paved sections). I went with the Mantra’s which is a shoe I said I would never run more than a marathon distance in but felt this was the middle option between comfort and being able to keep my footing on the muddy sections.

The first leg felt pretty grim with the rain getting a little heavier as we headed towards the first Checkpoint near Culham. I had elected to wear my waterproof jacket (Salomon Bonatti which did a fine job) from the start on the basis that rain was predicted most of the day. It was cool enough that I didn’t feel too hot whilst running in the jacket and was a sensible choice for me as I didn’t get wet (legs aside) or feel too cold even when the pace slowed a bit in the second half.

I moved through Checkpoint 1 pretty quickly, grabbing a quick drink and a piece of cake and ran on. Having run the race before, I knew it was mainly cake/gels/jelly babies/bananas and the Checkpoints aside from the (sort of halfway) point at Streatley where there are a few more savoury items and I had elected to carry a few of own supplies so I could snack between Checkpoints.

2016 Thames Trot Paul Ali 10

Getting battered by the wind and rain

The rain eased off after Checkpoint 1 but then we suffered the full effects of the wind which was straight into the face between here and Checkpoint 2, there were a few times where it felt like I was really struggling against the wind and a few negative thoughts started to creep in.

Having run a race so many times can be a help and a hinderance. It’s nice to have that comfort over the event knowing the setup, logistics and route very well but the old adage that “familiarity breeds contempt” definitely applies to the usual muddy sections! I did question why I keep doing the same event and then gently reminded myself about the unbroken streak.

I ran along with Frank Womelsdorf for a few miles and we spoke a bit but the wind was so strong that I was struggling to hear him properly unless I turned to face him whilst he was speaking.

I once again didn’t tarry at the second Checkpoint in Benson. I grabbed a drink and a bit of cake (again) and moved on. The rain had eased off but it was still windy although as the river follows a meandering route the direction of the wind changed but it never seemed to be in our favour so far. I ran a few miles with Darren Clark as we made our way to the Streatley Checkpoint where I had a drink, grabbed a few savoury snacks and spent a couple of minutes walking over the bridge and back onto the footpath which gave me time to eat my handful of food.

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A “clean” part of the course

The condition of the path was along the Whitchurch section was pretty good and I ran along this section by myself just behind Charmaine who was slightly ahead. My familiarity with this route meant I caught her up when she paused to check her directions and we tagged along together for a little while over Whitchurch Bridge, through the fields (which weren’t too muddy) and on towards Checkpoint 4 at Mapledurham.

I paused to have a drink, eat a banana and have one of my bottles refilled and walked up the small hill before settling into a trot again. I was started to run a little low on energy and was experiencing that ‘empty pit of the stomach feeling’. I also think I sometimes drink too much during races (which then means lots of ‘comfort’ breaks) and today I just sipped on my bottles occasionally and drank half of the small bottles at each Checkpoint. I only had to refill one of my bottles once during the race and only paused a couple of times during the run so that worked ok but hydration can be very weather dependent.

I caught up with Charmaine again and a guy called James who was also from Reading funnily enough and we tagged along together following the Thames Promenade section over the surfaced path through Reading. The wind started to become a bit more favourable blowing us towards Henley which was a bit of a relief.

We ‘trotted’ (see what I did there?) along this section until I felt a little low on energy and slowed to walk for a few mins whilst I grabbed some of the remaining food out of my pack and ate this as I walked although it’s probably a fair observation to say I was mentally slacking off at this point as Charmaine and James continued on ahead.

I picked up the jogging and arrived at the final Checkpoint by Sonning Bridge and ate another banana. The next section after the bridge involves a few muddy miles before you come off the path at Shiplake and then a few roads before the last section along the path before the end. I ran/walked this last section, lacking a bit of energy and mental drive. I couldn’t see anyone ahead or behind me so little opportunity to use another person as motivation to catch them up (or stay ahead of someone).

2016 Thames Trot Paul Ali 05

On the home stretch in Henley

As I got through the muddy sections (and getting closer to the finish) I settled into a continuous jog as I got down to the last couple of miles. I plodded along the last section over the long bridges and onto the path by the park when the finish is located. This last section of path near the park used to seem a lot longer but within a few minutes I saw the bandstand and finish area and ran across the line finishing in 7.37.

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Finally.. the finish!

My time was a little slower than last year (by 10 mins) but conditions felt a bit harder than usual (with the strong winds) so I was reasonably satisfied with the effort (despite flagging mentally a bit towards the last section!). The event had around 80 DNF’s on the day from around 300 starters which was one of the highest drop out rates for this event to my knowledge.

Thanks to Steve and the GoBeyond team for a well organised events. The marshalls were supportive, friendly and helpful as usual. I did mention to Steve that a Thames Trot in the summer would be a far more enjoyable run if he ever decided to organise a ‘bonus’ run one year. Having said that a muddy, sloppy run in February is what the Thames Trot is all about.

Congratulations to all those who made it to the finish, most people I spoke to felt it was a hard year. The winner Craig Holgate finished in 5.49 and there were some good results from our club runners and local runners with RJ Barry Miller finishing 4th in 6.44, (soon to be RJ?) Paul Beechey finished 9th in 7.06, RJ Alex Whearity finishing in 14th in 7.32, RJ Darren Clark 24th in 7.56 and RJ Wendy Shaw finishing in 27th in 7.59. Including my result (17th) that made 5 Reading Joggers in the Top 30 was a good result for the club.

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Stout, Chambers and Ali (The Rob Pinnington Fan Club)

I waited around at the finish to support a few other runners coming in (plus Stouty was my lift option home!) and it was good to see Paul Stout, Jim Seaton and Sue van Huysteen all finishing. I did have a chance to catch up with Lindley who I hadn’t seen at the end who was crewing someone (see picture above). Finally, a quick thanks to Arthur the RJ’s coach who came out to support the runners all day on a wet and miserable day.

See you next year for Thames Trot number 9.

Written by Thomas Bubendorfer - http://rubbishrunner.blogspot.fr

I had heard of the Spartathlon well before most people. A magazine had a feature about the race from 1983, detailing the run of the athlete who ended up in fourth place. It must have been the first time I had become aware of the fact that there were races longer than even a marathon. I never once imagined I would ever be on the startline of any such race but the fact that I still remember the article 30 years later shows that it must have left a deep impression on me.

We were following in the footsteps of Pheidippides, an Athenian messenger who had been sent to Sparta to ask for help fighting the Persian invasion in 490 BC (and he did NOT drop down dead at the end). The race route was a reconstruction of his original route and even the fact that there was a 36 hours cut-off was down to the historical connection as Pheidippides had left Athens in the morning of one day and arrived in Sparta the evening of the next, which was interpreted as no more than 36 hours,

 
Thomas B, Thomas K, Don, Anto, Brian. Photo by Sparta Photography Club.

As you might now, my preparation had been severely hampered. Just as I was about to increase the intensity of training I injured a muscle in my hip that meant I missed all of July and half of August. I did a fair amount of cycling but as soon as I was able to start running again I realised just how much fitness I had lost and the 4 or 5 weeks or training I had left were never sufficient to make up for the lost time. Still, 5 or 6 weeks ago I was convinced the race would start without me but the next few weeks went very well, so making it to Athens with a reasonably trained body was actually a minor miracle in itself.

With Stelios. Photo by Niamh Swan.

There were plenty of Irish and Austrian team mates (I'm never quite sure what I can count as "my" team so I just include both - it's even better this way) and I knew a fair few of the British contingent as well, plus my friend from Taiwan, and I really hoped the best for every single one of them. We arrived at the foot of the Akropolis about half an hour before the start and upon seeing the fuss that was made about the runners commented to Brian and Don they should enjoy the celebrity lifestyle for the next 20 minutes. 10 seconds later a local man approached me, introduced himself as Stelios and told me that he had been following my running career for years and knew me better than any of the Greek runners. Talk about receiving an ego boost just before the start!

The start itself was rather low key (something like 3-2-1-go) and we went off without much fanfare. I hung back towards the end of the field and took it very, very easy. I had a few words with Anto but soon found my own rhythm. The first mile took 9:30 despite being rather steep downhill - excellent! One full mile into the race and I still had not done anything stupid!

 

The first few miles lead us straight through the centre of Athens. The police had stopped the morning commute traffic for us and if the drivers minded then we did not notice it. Some people waiting at bus stops shouted "bravo, bravo" for encouragement while others had that typical commuter-zombie stare into nothing.

Photo by Niamh Swan.

The elevation profile for the first 50 miles looks reasonably flat but that is entirely misleading. There is an early hill, still inside the Athenian suburbs, that is higher than the Hell of the West, though with fresh legs nobody was having any troubles yet. After the residential areas came more industrial ones and then the major dual carriageway leading us out of the Greek capital. So far the scenery had not been much to look at but after 10 miles it gradually changed into a much more idyllic landscape, we got off the motorway onto the old coast road and things improved significantly. Local school children were waiting along the road, excitedly holding out their hands for a high-5 and shouting encouragement. I had heard that this race means a lot to the Greeks - it sure showed!

Of course the sun rose behind us and after a couple of hours the rise in temperature became very much noticeable. The forecast had been for 28 degrees, and while this wasn't too bad for this latitude it sure seemed rather hot to someone used to half that during the lousy Irish summer we've just had. What was a problem for everyone was the unusually high humidity of 80%. It had been raining a couple of days before and now we got to feel the aftermath.

When running a race I never make pace charts. I always run by effort and with so many years of running in the legs know my body pretty well. I kept things very easy. Looking at the chart I can see that I never ran faster than 9 minutes for a while except for one single downhill mile that felt even easier. I don't know where I was in the field but I'm sure it was well inside the lower half. I had done the same in the World Championships in Turin before gradually working my way forward, and the field today consisted to a very large degree of the very same runners, with the overall quality being very much comparable.

Somewhere around the half-marathon point I caught up with an old friend, Ken Zemach from California, who 5 years ago had used a holiday in Ireland to run the inaugural Dingle Ultra (as you do) and we ended up running most of the first 30 miles either together or in close proximity to each other before he pulled away to finish strongly. It was really cool to run into him again in this race and we chatted for a little bit before I went ahead again on the next climb (just like the old times!). I was reasonably sure I would see him again soon enough.

Photo by Niamh Swan.


Just before the marathon point Niamh was at CP10, her bus taking a little break. I was feeling pretty good but the heat was starting to get to me. Cyril, Anto's dad, was here as well before they had to jump into the bus as it was leaving. CP11 in Megara marked the first marathon in 4:09, pretty much what I had expected, maybe a couple of minutes fast. It was at that point that I noticed that my shoe choice might not have been 100% ideal. My Skechers GoRun shoes are very light with very little cushioning, the way I prefer it, but as I found out here on dirt roads they let grit come into the shoe itself. I had only every used them on roads where that is not a problem. As I did not have a second pair (I never change my shoes in a race), I just had to get on with it. A mile or two outside Megara there was an empty portaloo and I went inside. I wasn't desperate for a pee but I sat down and got rid of the unwanted little stones inside my shoes - a blister was the last thing I needed at this point with 200k yet to come! Since I was in here anyway I did use the loo and noticed that my urine was rather dark (and if you think that is TMI then you don't know the first thing about ultra running - monitoring the colour of your urine is just about the most crucial thing you do outside running and nutrition). Most runners ran with either a backpack or a water bottle. I did not. I hate running with extra weight and every ounce counts, so I ran without. The CPs were on average 2 miles apart and I figured I could easily make do with what the race provides at these points. In the heat of Friday, however, I was obviously getting dehydrated and I resolved to drink more from here on.

Eddie Gallen. Photo by Niamh Swan.

The course was getting very hilly but I really enjoyed this jog along the beautiful Mediterranean countryside. I did, however, look left a few times across the Aegean sea and had to think of those poor people who were paying with their life savings and far too often their lives to cross that very stretch of water. Was what we were doing here entirely self-indulgent? Was the pain we were about to go through voluntarily a sign of being pampered by too many trappings of civilisation? Well, there are worse things than trying the lead a fit and healthy lifestyle (ok, healthy apart from when we're running an ultra, probably) and there is nothing shameful about trying find your own limits. And anyway, just by running here in this country we were supporting people that needed and deserved support in rather troubled economic times. I put my mind back to the race.

I had an ingenious idea to deal with the heat by putting ice cubes into the bandana I was wearing. They usually lasted until the next CP where I would replace them with new ones, at least on those CPs that had ice. Apart from that trick, I could feel that the heat training I had done in the previous 3 weeks was working - Ireland might have been cold but running with 4 layers had simulated hot and humid conditions very well and I could see that I was coping with the heat better than many others around me.

On a downhill a lady running just a few metres ahead of me stumbled and fell over. Three of us helped her up and she was fine, just said "that was rather silly of me" in a very English accent. It wasn't until the CP just around the corner that I saw her name on her bib - this was Mimi Anderson, the record holder for the run from Malin Head to Mizen Head. I told her I was a fan of her since that run and she thanked me but when I mentioned that I would have expected her to be far ahead of me she said how much the heat was getting to her. To be honest, she did not look good and I did not feel too optimistic about her finishing.

Just a few minutes later I passed an older runner walking/running rather slowly and his bib gave him away as Eric Clifton. Wow, imagine, meeting two legends within a few minutes of each other! He told me that he was used to the temperatures but the humidity was killing him. The fact that we were over half an hour ahead of the cut-offs clearly did not fill him with too much optimism. He made it to CP28 before sadly having to end his race.

The cut-offs. Spartathlon is often described as the toughest race on Earth. It's not the terrain, though that is indeed challenging. It's not the heat, though it is indeed hot. It's the cut-offs. There are 75 CPs along the way and every single one has a closing time and if you're late at even just one of them your race is over. To make things worse, considerably worse, the cut-offs during the first third are particularly tough, leading to many runners ruining their race by storming off far too fast and running out of energy well before the end. To be honest, I was never too worried about having to cover the first 50 miles in 9:30 even in the heat and humidity, and then having over 27 hours to cover the final 100 (ok, 103) miles seemed eminently doable. But I was well aware that the average finisher rate is about 30% and that just about everyone who has run both Badwater and the Spartathlon has said that finishing the Spartathlon is tougher.

Photo by Niamh Swan.


As we were nearing Corinth we had to run past another industrial area and the oil smell from the
refinery wasn't particularly pleasant. Here I passed Harald, an Austrian team mate. He was suffering from cramps and I gave him one of my s-caps, in case the cramps were caused by a lack of electrolytes, before saying good bye. He later confirmed that the tablet had really helped and he managed to get all the way past the mountain but his race was over at CP52 in Nestani.

I had been hoping to meet Niamh in Corinth, the first really major CP and the end of the first section. Before the CP we had the treat of crossing the Isthmus canal on the bridge and my God, what a sight! I deliberately walked the bridge without running a single step, not because I was feeling tired but because I wanted to get as much a view of this spectacular sight as possible. The prize we had to pay to get to this were about 5 miles of running on the side or inside the concrete drain of a busy dual carriageway while the traffic was zooming past us - definitely my least favourite part of the course so far. Unfortunately Niamh's bus had left Corinth early and I did not get to meet her. I knew it would be Sparta until I saw her again, still over 100 miles away.

When I asked for ice for my bandana trick the lady obviously misunderstood because she handed me a tub. When I opened it it was full of rice! My first instinct was to go back and asc for ice but then I realised that I was actually quite hungry - no wonder, it was getting close to dinner time and I had not eaten lunch, except for small bites of fruit or biscuits along the way! However, my body was not too eager to accept solids. I ate a little less than half of the meal before giving up; any more and I risked getting re-acquainted with the content of my stomach, something I'd prefer to avoid. Corinth also provided a slightly disappointing encounter, team mate Tony Gschiel confirming that he had had to pull out.

Photo by Niamh Swan.

Once you leave Corinth, the cut-offs immediately become a lot softer. I had built up a solid 70 minutes cushion by the time I left that CP and even though I slowed down a bit, especially with that food in my stomach that I found hard to digest, within 3 or 4 CPs that had expanded to 2 full hours. The terrain had changed significantly, after the constants ups and downs of the Attica peninsula the next 15 miles were completely flat. I could feel the exhaustion building up and started introducing regular walk breaks into my routine as I was making my way towards Ancient Corinth and its spectacular temple. Around the 60 mile mark, I had a very much expected encounter as Ken Zemach caught up with me. I made a joke about only 93 miles being left and eventually he pulled away. He confirmed later that I wasn't looking great but good enough to suggest that I would definitely finish, though personally I find it impossible to predict at this stage how a runner would cope. Sometimes you would pass a runner that seemed dead on his/her feet only for them to pass you again a few miles later bouncing along happily. Sometimes someone you would be overtaken by an incredibly fresh looking runner only to see them looking half-dead at a CP in the not-too far future.

Jan Uzik. Photo by Niamh Swan.

Sparta is to the south but the road had turned northwards to get us into Ancient Corinth past an impressive looking mountain, a route choice that had infuriated the legendary multiple Spartathlon champion Yannis Kouros who insisted Pheidippides had turned southwards here. A shorter Spartathlon route would have done me just fine, to be honest, but I know that great care had been taken to reproduce the roads the antique messenger would have taken 2500 years ago and whoever had agreed upon the most likely road had disagreed with Kouros.

The little village of Assos had turned the Spartathlon into a major party and the local support was
brilliant. The next CP, and the next street party, was at Zevgolateio, where I learned that Anto's race had not gone to plan as he was standing at the CP sans bib but at least the other Irish were all still in it. Shortly afterwards the long climb into the central highlands of the Peloponnese peninsula begun and from here we definitely headed southwards, and would be doing so for a very, very long time. The road rises very gradually but steadily and many, many miles of constant elevation gain were ahead of us. The landscape changed and soon we were surrounded by mountains and civilisation often seemed far away.

The rural roads were supposed to be lonely but there were plenty of cars. I had long ago realised that the vast majority of traffic were not locals but crews of runners. The rules of the Spartathlon were very clear, crews could only support their runners at a handful of major CPs along the way but that rule was clearly ignored by many. I could see runners being handed goods on the road on countless occasions. The rule makes a lot of sense. The way it is being ignored causes a lot of traffic as we were overtaken dozens of times by the ever same cars as they kept leapfrogging us a hundred times. I wished they stopped doing that. I prefer running on roads without constant car encounters.

As the sun went down and the temperature became more pleasant (it would remain over 20 degrees well into the night though) and the light begun to fade, I gradually realised that I had made a mistake when I had unthinkingly followed someone else's advice on facebook by depositing my headlamp at CP35, Ancient Nemea. This would be the halfway point of my race at 123 km. I had reckoned I would get there somewhere between 7:30 and 8 o'clock and reckoned the light would have easily been sufficient until then. It realised that not only would I get there later than anticipated, the light here in the South of Greece was fading a lot quicker than in Ireland and I would be surrounded by darkness much sooner than expected.

It was a pure stroke of luck that it was almost a Full Moon, so maybe it would not get too dark? But it was cloudy and the Moon was rarely fully visible, so that did not help. Also, the road was getting considerably more lonely. Until 100k navigation was never required, I could always follow the runners in front. From here on I would often not see anyone in front of me for long stretches and on the occasional crossroad I would have to check the markers myself. Thankfully the marking is excellent and navigation largely idiot-proof, but during the night it would be much easier to take a wrong turn. The main worry, however, were those cars. They knew the runners were around, of course, and mostly drove very carefully. It only takes a second, though, especially as the drivers themselves were bound to be exhausted in the night.

Photo by Niamh Swan.

There was one very steep mile of climbing into the little village of Chalkio. It was here that I saw that I was hiking very effectively. That runner must have been way ahead of me just a mile or two ago and but I left him in the dust striding past him with purpose while he was taking one exhausted steps after the other. CP34 was the last one with any semblance of light and for the last stretch into Nemea I just followed the light of the runner in front of me, American Bob Hearn. I ran about 5 metres behind him hoping he would not feel stalked but he never said a word. As we got into Ancient Nemea we were greeted by a dozen kids on their bikes. It must have been past their usual bedtime but once again a community had turned this into a street party and the CP was buzzing. As soon as I got in I was handed my goody bag straight away and it felt good to be able to strap on the headlamp after so many miles in the dark where I clearly felt I was doing this wrong. I also sat down for a few minutes and had some pasta to eat. I did not feel overly hungry but I figured I needed some calories. Unlike the rice earlier on I managed to eat the entire tub, though I did have to force myself to eat it. I also had a bottle of my protein/energy drink in there which I was going to bring with me and consume on the road over the next couple of miles.

It was still quite warm but Ken Zemach had warned me a few hours ago that the weather was going to turn overnight so I took out my rain jacket but left it in its pouch that I clipped on to my race number belt. I left the long sleeved shirt in the bag and gave it back to the volunteers. It would be transported to Sparta for collection on Sunday.

I was half a mile up the hill out of the village when I realised that I had left my spare batteries in the bag! They must have been hidden underneath the long sleeved shirt and I since I never saw them I never remembered to take them out. I wasn't too worried. I set the headlamp to the lowest setting that should last for days and was surprised by how bright it was, brighter than most other runners' light. I was unlikely to require the spare batteries and I certainly wasn't going back to the CP.

Exhausted already

I left the Nemea CP shortly before 9 o'clock. I was now on the second half of the race and took stock. It had taken me just under 14 hours to complete the first half. I was over 2 hours ahead of the cut-offs and I had 22 hours to complete the second half. Even with the mountain, the night and the fatigue of the second day all still to come, surely, surely, SURELY I was going to finish this race. Even with my comfortable cushion the cut-offs were still messing with my head.

I didn't know it at the time but I was now in 91st place, having made my way past three quarters of the field after starting pretty much at the back. Even had I known, I would not have cared. My goal today was to finish, everything else was merely a bonus. I would have been absolutely delighted with a top-100 finish but that really was a very minor concern. Coming DFL in 35:59:59 would have done me just fine, thank you very much.

We crossed a hill towards present-day Nemea but did not enter that town itself. Instead we were led onto a dirt road that led us deep into a very dark valley, with some high mountains looming far ahead of us. What worried me most were the flashes of light I kept seeing in the sky. I knew rain had been forecast but I had heard nothing of thunderstorms. Crossing the mountain in the middle of a thunderstorm was just about the worst nightmare I could imagine - during the Hardrock 100 race this year in Colorado one runner very nearly had been killed when lightning struck very close to him high on a mountain pass. I had no wish to put myself in a similar situation. However, I reckoned since it would still require me several hours to reach the mountain the thunderstorm had plenty of time to blow itself out. I wondered if the lead runners were running right through it right now, though.

 
still able to run

When being transported back on Sunday we could see that this area was stunningly beautiful, absolutely breathtaking. In the middle of the night, however, this was kept a secret from us. It's a shame, really, that we had to run through those ugly industrial areas near Corinth and Athens in bright daylight while this gem was kept hidden under a veil of darkness. Actually, it wasn't quite as dark any more. The thunderstorm might have been raging further on but I was now running under a clear sky with the almost Full Moon providing plenty of illumination. In Kerry I would have turned off my headlamp under such conditions but here I was afraid I was going to miss a turn if I ran without my own light source. The course marking was still excellent with yellow (in places orange or even pink) markers on the road and a few glow-sticks every now and then showing the way. It really was pretty much idiot proof.

The miles dragged on but I was entirely on autopilot and barely noticed the time passing, just kept putting a foot in front of the other while taking the occasional walk breaks to give the tired leg muscles a rest. I remembered back to my first marathon, almost 11 years ago, when I had to stop running after 18 miles after being hit by some violent cramps and run/walked the final 8 miles into the finish, which I always described as "NOT the most fun I've ever had". Today I had been run/walking since about mile 60, not because of cramps but of exhaustion, which meant a whopping 93 miles of exhausted run/walking was in store, which is on an entirely different level altogether. However, I had never expected this to be easy!

The dirt road meant I was once more getting grit into my shoes and the feet didn't particularly like it, but stopping and shaking out the shoes here would have been pointless, I had to get off that stretch first. Thankfully things were progressing nicely and I was feeling reasonably good, quite in contrast to 2 or 3 runners I was passing, one of which told me that her race was over.

 
Eddie Gallen

I was just about to run into the village of Malandreni when without any sign of warning my headlamp suddenly went dark. It's a new headlamp that I had bought only 4 weeks ago, specifically for this race, after some recommendations on facebook. My previous headlamp had been a €3.99 job from Aldi that had been entirely sufficient for all of my winter training (and even the Connemara 100) but I did not fancy heading into the mountains in the middle of the night in a foreign country with such a cheap piece of equipment and purchased a supposed quality piece of equipment. However, it meant I was not used to it. My old headlamp would gradually dim once the batteries started draining and there would literally be hours of use left once you noticed the dimness. My fancy new Led Lenser was different: as soon as the battery output dropped the damn thing just shut itself off! I went through shock, confusion, anger and despair in very quick succession, desperately trying to come up with a solution. So far I could not even open the battery compartment, still being unused to the thing. After a minute on the roadside I decided to make my way into Malandreni without extra light, the moon being exceptionally bright and the markers clearly visible even without headlamp. Once in the aid station I sat down, eventually managed to work out the opening mechanism and was ecstatic that it started working again when I took out and re-inserted the batteries, only to be crushed when the light stopped again after 10 seconds. I asked around for spare batteries but had no luck. Eventually I decided to run on regardless. The mountain was still 20k away and maybe some solution would present itself along the way. As long as I was on the road the moonlight was sufficient to keep going and I flashed the light on for a second every time a car appeared, just to make sure the drivers would be aware of my presence (having it on for more than a few seconds would require opening the compartment and re-inserting the batteries to revive it, something I managed to work fairly quickly). The sky was brilliant, but I had a metaphorical dark cloud hanging over me. How would I get over that mountain?

 
Thomas Klimas

Going deeper and deeper into the valley we passed a succession of pretty villages, Sterna, Lyrkia and Kaparelli, all with their aid stations and street life. It was now past midnight but the race would go on for much, much longer. At each aid station I would ask if they had spare batteries but no luck. One Dutch runner had one spare AAA battery but I required 3 and had to decline. The crew for one of the British runners was a bit rude when I asked, something I could have done without (I guess they were tired, but still!). I passed a lady running rather slowly, eventually recognising her as Sharon Law. She told me she was toast and it had taken her ages to get here from the last aid station. We got into the next CP together and the first thing she told the crew was that she was done, and my assurance that we were over 2 hours ahead of the cut-off cut no ice with her. As they tried to talk her out of it and I was sorely tempted to ask if I could borrow her headlamp but thought the better of it - I moved on while they were still arguing if she should drop. Looking at the results now I can see that unfortunately she did.

 
myself

Then the climbing started in earnest, but still on road for a good while. We were making our way up the steep serpentines, climbing steadily higher. After feeling very much alone during the last hour or two I don't know where all those runners (ok, walkers on this section) suddenly all came from but there was plenty of action going on. The legs hurt, even when walking and the effort showed. I passed a few runners (walkers - ok, I'll let go) and got passed myself a few times, sometimes by the same people again. We could see the bright lights of the motorway that went on the other slope and eventually, after what felt like at least an hour, the two roads almost converged, with the motorway passing on a bridge overhead and heading for a tunnel and us still climbing higher and higher. Eventually, after an age, we reached the last CP before the mountain, which was seemingly manned by a British ex-pat crew. I sat down and played my last desperate card, asking once more for spare batteries, having pretty much given up all hope. The guy, I think he was the station captain, thought he might have some and sent his daughter to look through a box. I could see her coming back empty-handed and my heart dropped but she went away again and then again once more. I ate or drank something small (I can't remember), wondering if the race was over here and now, or if I should go on regardless. Then, after maybe 10 minutes but what had felt much longer, she returned with an entire packet of spare batteries, and just the kind I needed. I could not believe my luck! I inserted the batteries and lo and behold, I had light again! I could not thank them enough, I was so grateful but I had to go, entirely unexpectedly I was back in business and now I had a job to do. I was about to head further up the road when I was directed to my left instead. My jaw dropped. Oh f*ck! That stony, barely visible mountain path that was heading straight upwards, was our route now. When they said there was no road, they had really meant it!

 
Brian Ankers

Just to emphasise the task at hand, this mountain pass we were ascending was higher than Carrauntoohil, Ireland's highest mountain! Pheidippides apparently had run into the God Pan here, though the thing I wonder most is how he got over this path without a headlamp in the middle of the night, something I had gotten dangerously close to emulating. As a road runner I did not feel entirely comfortable on this stony path, badly lit with our headlamps. I worried about falling off the mountain because after 100 miles I wasn't entirely steady on my legs any more and I worried about dislodging a stone that might injure a runner further down the mountain (for some reason the idea that I could be hit by a stone from above never crossed my mind). The legs hurt and all you could do was to keep going and ignore the pain. I was just thinking "I would not fancy that in the rain" and 5 seconds later I felt the first drop! Sorry about that, it was clearly my fault. At least there was no sign of any thunderstorm.

Actually, the top came sooner than I expected. I caught up with Eddie Gallen right there. He had gone past me when I had been waiting in the previous CP but my climbing legs had been in better shape apparently. However, once we started the descend on the other side he soon came flying past me and disappeared very quickly.

Would I have attempted the climb without a headlamp? I honestly don't know! When my light started failing I had pushed out that decision for as long as I could and in the end I never had to make it, close thing as it was. In any rational circumstances, would I think that climbing a steep stony path in the middle of the night would be a good idea? Of course not! But at that point, having already covered 100 miles on foot and with a single minded determination to finish this race I may well have decided to risk it. When I told the guy at the CP "you are a lifesaver!", who knows, it might even have been literal! Anyway, it shows that if you're lucky enough you can get away with being a complete and utter idiot.

 
Brian and his reflection

Anyway, those problems were now behind me and the light was bright and shiny. I did not run on the path down, partially because my shoes did not have much grip and I was sliding barely within control as it was and on three or fours occasion very nearly lost my balance and fell, but also because I did not want to fry my quads. I still had to cover over 50 miles and another mountain range. I eventually got to tarmac again, which marked the end of the mountain section. At Sagkas village, the first CP past the mountain, I was surprised to see Thomas Klimas in there. His 100 mile PB is over an hour faster than mine and I expected him to be way ahead of me. We had a little chat, I left slightly ahead of him but he overtook me not much later. I did not expect to see him again before Sparta.

The next major CP was Nestani and I realised that I really had not thought things through. I had left my second drop bag here so that I would be able to deposit my headlamp instead of having to carry it all the way to Sparta but it was still pitch dark here and would remain so for several hours, so ditching the headlamp was not an option. Instead I picked up a new top, namely my orange club t-shirt that I intended to wear at the finish, and a bottle of my sports drink. I also had another light meal, potatoes, but they were fried and nowhere near as edible as the boiled spuds I have personally made so popular as ultra endurance food in Ireland.

It was now raining heavily. In no time at all the roads were waterlogged and with the difficult lighting conditions I could not see the puddles properly and stepped into several of them, completely soaking my feet. It was not particularly pleasant and greatly increased the risk of bad blisters. So far my feet had held up admirably and I sure hoped that would continue. On one section I could not see a road marker for at least a mile. I was still doing my run/walk thing - can you imagine how hard it is to force yourself to run when you're not sure if you're heading into the right direction and might have to backtrack? I had just told myself "if I don't see a marker very soon I'm going to panic" when, to my intense relief, I spotted the next one.

Heading through the region of Arkadia in the pouring rain just before first dawn was weary work and the miles dragged on but they still passed. At about half past six I got another shock when my light started failing once more! That's when I finally clicked what was going on. My lamp has a mode where it automatically adapts to the external light conditions, and since it was pitch dark the lamp beamed as brightly as possible, thereby eating into the batteries much faster than anticipated. I think it's a design fault because there is no indicator on the lamp itself to show what mode it is in, you have to tell from the behaviour of the lamp itself, and since it was brand new I was not used to it. I never ran long enough in training to drain the batteries and was not aware of the setting. It goes to show the dangers of using very new equipment for such a race, it can catch you out in completely unexpected ways. Thankfully dawn was about to break and I managed a couple of miles even without lamp just fine and then it got bright enough anyway. Jesus, I really had gotten away with that one but I had cut it mightily fine!

 
The final mountain

I kept calculating in my head what pace I required to make the final cut-off, 15, 16 then 17-minute miles and when I was at 20-minute miles I knew I was going to make it bar injury because even when completely and utterly exhausted I can still walk faster than that, even over the second mountain range. Somewhere around CP56, much to my surprise, I saw Thomas Klimas again, and once more I got ahead of him by leaving quickly. That was not a ploy to pass him - I always tried to minimise my time in those stations. With 75 CPs in the race, even if you average less than a minute per CP you're still wasting over an entire hour. Stay for 5 minutes and you can probably kiss your chances of making the cut-offs good bye. I had done the same in the World championships in Turin where I beat a lot of runners who were nominally faster than me but who spend less time on the road than myself.

However, Thomas quickly caught up again but this time, instead of disappearing beyond the horizon once more, he started running with me and suggested we work together. We were 60k from the finish and I readily agreed. After close to 24 hours of lonely running I welcomed company, and misery clearly loves company.

At first this was working really well. We pushed each other and definitely spent more time running than walking than we would have on our own. We were three hours ahead of the cut-off and save as far as making it to the finish was concerned but we wanted to get this over with and worked fairly hard. The next major CP was at Tegea, just as the next mountain section was about to start, and according to the road book there were meals available there. I was starving and really looking forward to that but when I asked for food all they had were the usual fare of biscuits, crisps and fruit but no "real food". My heart sank, I ate what I could but was mightily sick of the standard fare. I had some soup (not sure if that was here or at a nearby CP) but that contained too few calories to make a difference and I think from here on my energy levels plummeted and never recovered. What did not help was that the road started climbing again.

 
this is what total exhaustion looks like

The first mountain is tough but it's the second one that breaks you. With 27 miles to go we were overtaken by a strongly running Isobel Wykes who quipped "nearly there". Shocked pause. "I can't believe she just said that, with over a marathon still to go!" Another pause. "For F*ck sake!!!"

In contrast to the other mountain we stayed on a major road for this one and it wasn't pleasant. Some drivers were driving very fast and much too close to comfort to us. "I can't believe nobody ever got killed in this race" said Thomas K, and I agreed. Several parts of the way, including the one we were on just now, did not feel safe.

Every bend in the road revealed nothing but another climb and by now we had stopped pushing each other and just kept moaning and complaining to each other how tired we were and how much this was hurting. We discussed what new hobby we would take up as soon as we would reach Sparta because neither of us was inclined to run another step in our lives again, ever. Too bad neither of us likes fishing.

We could see some lightning right in front of us and the thunder reached us within a few seconds, so this was maybe a mile ahead, much too close for comfort and to make things worse we were heading right into that direction. And indeed, 10 minutes later we were making our way through the pouring rain while watching some lightning strikes right above our heads. This definitely was not safe! The general idea was to get out of here as fast as possible, the only problem being that "fast" was not something either of us was still capable of, so we just kept going, ever so slightly worried, but eventually the rain eased and the lightning stopped and we had made it through!

 
matching strides

But Good God we were so tired! Somewhere around CP 60 Thomas had managed to sneak a look at the name sheet and saw us in about 63rd place (not entirely sure about the exact number). This was much better than expected and rather pleasing. On this mountain now, however, we were both dead on our feet and quite a few runners had passed us. We caught a few that were in even worse condition ourselves but we were definitely going backwards in the field, not that either of us cared too much. We were far too tired to care.

CP after CP we plonked our bodies into a chair for some time. The idea to get out of CPs as quickly as possible had lost its appeal, we were only living from CP to CP, never thinking further ahead, always groaning in disapproval when the sign noted the distance to the next CP being more than 3 km. At one CP a lady asked "what do you want" and all I could come up with was "I want to go home". My God, this was pathetic!

Eventually, after a long slog of several hours, the road pointed downwards and we could count the number of remaining CPs on one hand. "To the next sign" became the new mantra , which was as far as we would run before walking again, and the process was repeated countless times and progress was almost reasonable. We had lost a little bit of time with regards to the cut offs and were generally about 2:45 ahead at most CPs. I had thought that the cut offs were fairly easy at this stage but had forgotten to take the total exhaustion into account that would hit the runners on this final section. I was glad we had such a comfortable cushion; being only one hour ahead would have completely wrecked my nerves.

At one CP a lady told us "it's all downhill from here, no more climbing", which was great news. Alas, we went along for maybe a mile, turned the next corner and "you've got to be f*cking kidding me!!!", the lady had been lying, that definitely looked and felt like another climb to me. Thankfully, this one really was the last one.

 
Photo by Nikos Lamprinopoulos

A good thing too, because I was having real troubles with my right calf muscle. It had gotten really painful over that last couple of hours. This was not normal fatigue, there was something else going on and I really worried about an injury taking me out of the race so late, which would have been utterly heartbreaking. I told Thomas that it was really bad and that I did not dare to run on it any more in case I would injure it. He had the option of going alone and I would not have thought any less of him but he refused to leave me on my own and agreed to walk the last 10k or so into Sparta. What a friend to have!

The rain had completely stopped by now and it actually got quite hot again. We were glad it had not been like that all day. Running in the rain is something we can both cope with easily but a second day of heat and humidity might have been too much to take, who knows.

At one point we could see Sparta for the first time. It looked absolutely beautiful, what a stunning setting, but it also looked still very, very far away. The race course still has one more minor sting by leaving the national road and taking a slightly longer route, though getting off that road was definitely a positive development. The last CPs passed by reasonably quickly but two 4.7 km sections both elicited further groans and complaints. The last marathon must have taken us about 6 hours. I never thought I'd ever move so slowly!

And then there were only a few kilometres to go and Sparta was right there! Thomas' hip started hurting and he had troubles walking while I still barely dared to run but was able to walks at a good pace so he would run slowly and I would walk fast and we still averaged the same pace. Under the bridge (unfortunately the "welcome to Sparta" banner was not on this year), over the bridge crossing the river and into Sparta itself. CP 74, the final CP was right here. (CP 75 is the finish itself)

 
 
Photo by Nikos Lamprinopoulos

"This Is Sparta!!" Did the guy make the same joke to every runner? Quite possibly, but it did elicit a smile from me, and there was not much that would have made me smile at that point! The last section is different. People are shouting at us from the balconies "bravo! bravo!", kids are cycling with us (I was actually worried they'd get hit by a car, That would have put a dampener on things). We could not see any markers but reckoned that those people cheering us on would let us know if we were headed into the wrong direction. Then a right turn, and not long after another right turn and the flags betray the proximity of the finish. A minute ago I had said to Thomas K "I don't know if I'll be able to run at the finish but I promise I will try". Turns out I did not even have to try.

Seeing the statue of Leonidas at the top of the hill is the most potent painkiller known to mankind. Pain, what pain? I have never felt better! We ran up the road, half of Sparta cheering us on, shouting more bravos. It is the best finish in the world! Nothing has ever even been close to that. I can't even begin to describe it. You'll have to see for yourself.

Niamh was there, time for a quick hug and a kiss and then on to the statue. Your race is officially finished when you touch the statue of King Leonidas and Thomas and me held hands as we touched his feet at the same time. This is Sparta indeed!

For the next 90 seconds we were at the centre of hero worship. We received a gift each from one of the local children, as well as a medal and a trophy. They put an olive wreath on our heads and we took in the acclaim of the crowd once more before the next runner appeared and it was his turn to be celebrated.


Pain? I felt no pain. There was no pain, just pure joy and euphoria, a solid 11 out of a scale from 1 to 10. As someone else has said "I don't need to tell you just how much it means to finish this race. When you get there, you'll know"

Don't tell anyone but ... I can't wait to do it again!

25 and 26 Sep
Spartathlon 2015
33:29:04, 73rd place

Written by Rusty Rusk

I entered Spartathlon 2016 and found myself as 6th reserve. Week after week I checked. Each week I'd moved up, but never got to the top. Technically, I never did get to the top. I'm told I was number 26, a clerical mix up. But I got in!

That I thought would be the closest I'd get to completing the historical race. I'd enter, but I'd definitely DNF. That in my opinion was what would happen, I needed to get things into perspective.

My feet were in horrendous condition before the event. I'd not hit the 50 mile cut off in respect to Spartathlon in any of the 3x 100 miles, I'd done in 2016. In fact, I'd RTCd in the T100 at 70 miles, telling people I was looking after my feet. Really!!

Thinking you're going to DNF and actually DNFing are 2 different things. No one told my mind, which wasn't listening to what my brain told it. Things such as

A. You're not ready
B. You're feet are knackered
C. You're training was inadequate

Well brain, you can sod off, I do have my heart telling me I can do it even if you're not listening.

Fast forward to race day. I'd do everything correct, other than put 15 dropbags together with nothing that I'd trained with. I also was wearing trainers that had 15 miles on the clock, along with 4 Garmins and my wives (Eoz) regular watch.

I was as close to you can be to preparing everything wrong. To top it off my wife dyed my desert cap a ghastly sickly green.

The race is 36 hours long and I'd need every minute of all 36 hours. 24 of those are in ridiculous temperatures. I'm from up north where we only get sun if you travel south. I definitely didn't prepare for the heat.

So what can I do that might help in this years Spartathlon? I can walk and if I'm truthful , it's my number 1 strength.

Having spent 10 years in the armed forces, I was taught to move quick for long periods of time.

The support out on the course from all nationalities was truly staggering.

Anyway, as disjointed as my thoughts are here branches itself out into my run. I knew I'd struggle from the word get go. I knew I'd be near the back pretty soon just as soon as the sun zapped my energy. I had a brilliant plan and tell everyone I'm on a run/walk strategy which wasn't entirely false as that's how I set off for the first 2/3 hours.

Unlike the rest of the team I didn't really chat to many others as I literally was near the back and had no one to chat to.

Look away now if you hate puke. I started at mile 15.7(I checked my watch when I first puked) and finished puking at around 145 miles. That's 5 marathons of puke. But, if you are sick, then keep topping up with more food.

I arrived at mile 50 with about 3/4 minutes under the cutoff and was told by a Marshall that if I ran, at the time I was walking, he'd let me continue. That made me run in and become a F1 driver in the pit lanes where I was cooled down and fed by Zoe and watered by Jeff.

I set off like I was in a 400 metre race and was soon building a buffer for the first time in the entire event.

I'd been telling people that I'm good during the night. Well we were soon to find that out if only I'd manage not to be timed out in that first 12 hours.

True to my word, unsure how I did it, by the end of the night I think I had around a 55 minute cushion. Now here's a thing that rescued my race, between the hours of 7-9am on the 2nd day, the unusually high temperatures where replaced by a hanging mist, which allowed me to get some extra fast walking miles.

The beginning of that 2nd day of heat already saw at least 3 runners already finished. The winner had averaged 8m36s for every mile. I'm going to try that approach next year, meaning I won't have to run a 2nd day of blistering heat.

My legs weren't suffering on the uphill or downhills, quads seemed fine throughout. What was an issue was the blisters I purchased in the NDW100 and I still hadn't sorted. I thought it'd be good to set off with wet trainers. Well there had to look good so I cleaned them.

The last marathon and an half was a bit of a blur. An uphill blur. The first time I realised I might actually finish was at CP72 with a little over 10k to go. Zoe gave me a massive boost by telling me the next 5k are all downhill I managed to run as soon as I stopped crying about hurting the blisters, which were self inflicted.

With 5k left, I had 80 mins to complete and told myself to walk it in, I was in no rush now I knew I'd make it.

I hope I'm not belittling anyone else's attempt to finish, but like I said at the beginning in my head I didn't have any hope of finishing. Because of this reason I didn't apply much pressure to myself. Don't get me wrong, I wanted to finish and was constantly aware of each and every cut off.

I remember thinking at the end, every finisher, every participant, every crew member and volunteer had ran Spartathlon 2016. It's as much effort for everyone. In fact, the crews job doesn't stop at the finish. Zoe fad to force me to shower. She had to feed me. Collect my things, take me to breakfast. My race ended when I kissed the bronzed feet. Zoe and crew went on for much longer.

I enjoyed every mile of the race, and always had smile on my face, apart from with a half marathon to go when I shouted at Russ and Zoe that I had 14.6 miles left.

Thanks to Darren, James, Russ, Russ, Sarah anEoz Rusk.