Monday 18 November 2013

Summer to Autumn to Winter.

Suddenly, five months had passed and Simon realised he hadn't actually justified his existence by writing down what he had been doing since the 10 Peaks run finished early one June morning.

So all aboard the Franklin Express, destination November 2013, stopping very briefly at my races and runs on the way.

July 2013

Helm Crag and Steel Fell

The day after my 10 Peaks run I thought I needed to stretch my legs a bit and did a walk that turned into a bit of a jog from Grasmere up Helm Crag and round to Steel Fell, trying not to entertain any ridiculous Bob Graham fantasies.

The Howitzer on Helm Crag. I climbed it, as you have to.

Looking up towards Helvellyn and Thirlmere

The view from Steel Fell
Wasdale Fell Race

In what seemed like a great idea at the time, I foolishly entered the Wasdale race 3 weeks after the 10 Peaks instead of the sensible option of going up to watch and support. A scorching day which saw a large number of DNF's resulted in me deciding I'd had enough at Styhead, after the cutoffs, but before what seemed to me to be an unnecessary 4th ascent of Scafell Pike in 2 months.

Smiling? It's early on. (c) Andy Holden.

Wasdale the day after it broke me.

August 2013

Turner Landscape Recce

After Wasdale I cancelled my plan of running the Borrowdale race and instead spent the weekend at Seathwaite running around the unfamiliar route of the Turner Landscape fell race.

From Seathwaite Reservoir looking down Duddon Valley


The horseshoe including Grey Friar and Swirl How.

Looking towards Little Langdale

The brilliant final section back to Seathwaite


Round Hill Fell Race

The day after this recce I was back in Yorkshire for the Round Hill fell race. I did not enjoy it. I think it shows.


Gargrave Show

Sneaked this in to the afternoon before I went on holiday. A quick trip up to Sharp Haw with river crossings, hay bale jumping and a poorly executed Mobot. 




September 2013

Three Shires

Best visibility of the day (c) Cathy Bradley
On a terrible day for navigating I managed  good climb up Weatherlam, and a perfect descent right onto the checkpoint at the Three Shires Stone (where many others got lost) and then ruined it all by drifting so far off course on the descent from Pike O'Blisco that I was mistaken for the first placed runner in the Langdale Marathon.

Horsforth 10K

Road race. Hated it.

October 2013

Ian Hodgson Relay

Partnered with a runner nearly 30 years younger than me on leg 3, I managed both to slow him down and to offer no help in finding the second checkpoint. We didn't lose any places, but onl because everyone else got as lost as us. Great event though.

The start of leg 1

Our team's leg 4 runners oblivious to the pain ahead for them.

All smiles once it's over.
Langdale Fell Race

Finally a good day in the Lakes, no navigation errors and this time a brilliant descent from Pike O'Blisco to get a new pb on my 4th year running it.

Chasing Martyn to the finish

Heading for the cattle grid

What a car park.
Weekend running on Ilkley Moor

The Burley Moor track in early Sunday morning sunshine


Looking towards Beamsley Beacon

Trail sunset near the Cow and Calf












Monday 1 July 2013

10 Peaks

Finally my 10 Peaks weekend arrived, and I spent Friday driving up and then registering in the Crossthwaite Centre in Keswick that was also the finish and that would see either my success or failure sometime early on Sunday morning.

I was booked in for the whole weekend at a pub close to the start and spent a while geting all my kit ready for the 4am start the next day:
  

Kit checked and ready. Blencathra from my bedroom window. 
I had my dinner in the bar, being joined briefly by Tom, who'd suggested this as a good place to stay. Map in hand, he took me through all the intricate short cuts and secrets of the 10 Peaks route that he had researched in countless trips up to the Lakes, while I tried not to be distracted by my sausage and mash and pint of Jennings.

Sometime in the hazy early hours of Saturday, and before my alarm went off, I awoke, excited and ready to go. I sneaked down the creaky stairs, met Tom in reception and then we were out trotting in the early morning gloom to the start.

After a brief talk and a queue to register our first 'dib' in the sensors, it was off on the long first climb up to Hellvellyn.

4am climb to the first peak
A few slower walkers had pushed to the front, but it was a good feeling to push on up the hill at a strong walking pace, passing a few of them and stopping once to add a layer when I realised my mistake in starting in a t-shirt.

On the summit it was misty and cold.


Peak 1 - Helvellyn
The mist nearly made me lose my nerve in taking the short cut off the top. Most people were following the tourist path, but I kept to my plan and ran down the grassy slopes of Whelpside Ghyll, getting the line slightly wrong and ending up with a very steep slope and then a climb, but I felt like at least I'd tried to be clever.

I rejoined the main path, jogged down to the first checkpoint on the valley floor at the end of Thirlmere, and then had the long boggy climb up Wythburn.


Wythburn Valley looking back to Helvellyn.
At the end of the valley, the extra peak of High Raise was the next place to dib. From here you should be able to have a view of the whole route, but the clouds were drifting around, making it atmospheric but not great for long distance vistas.

Leaving High Raise

By now the second peak was in sight, and a grassy descent followed by a cut across to Angle Tarn got me to the bottom of the descent. A large number of runners in front of me had disappeared at this point. I got excited about finishing positions at this point, but they all turned out to have taking an alternate route and arrived at the summit just before me anyway.

I overtook a runner on the climb up to Bowfell who was obviously unhappy. I knew exactly how he felt; at this point I was feeling good, but on a race this long there is an ebb and flow, and sure enough when I saw him later he'd perked up.

View to the Langdale Pikes from the climb to Bowfell 

Peak 2 - Bowfell
I reached the top of Bowfell at the same time as a couple of strangers. We said 'hi' and checked in then went off separately. More of them later though...

A rough run over Esk Pike and another check in on a peak that wasn't one of the 10, and it was down to my old friend Esk Hause, starting point of the climb to the Scafell Massif. After a brilliant piece of clumsiness with my electrolyte tables and water, I checked the time. It was just after 9am. I'd been going for 5 hours, whereas normally on a Saturday I'd only just have got up. More importantly though, I was well within the target time I'd mapped out the day before.
Climbing away from Esk Hause
Buoyed up by this I started off up Great End and quickly checked into the closely packed 3rd, 4th and 5th Peaks.


Peak 3 - Great End

Peak 4 - Ill Crag

Peak 5 - Broad Crag
It may seem a bit like cheating that the first two peaks take 4 hours to cover while these three are a stone's throw from each other, but a lot of stones have been thrown around here and it is hard going as I head on to Scafell Pike for the third time in 6 weeks for the literal but not metaphorical highpoint of the day. 

Peak 6 - Scafell Pike
By the time I get there it is very misty, but typically for me and my fragile self esteem, I don't want the many walkers up here to think I don't know where I'm going so I head off along the wrong path without checking map or compass. Embarrassingly the leader of one of the walking groups points me on the right path towards Scafell, but this turns out to be the turning point of the day. 
Back on the path to Mickedore, the huge gash between Scafell Pike and Scafell, I link up with Luc and Dave, two guys from Reading. This turns out to be very lucky for me on three points.

One, they were great company. I had wondered before the race how I would manage through low points if I were on my own as on the Fellsman and the Old County Tops I needed someone to help me through my weak patches. Selfish? Me?

Two, it turned out they had their own brilliant cheerleading team of friends and family who took me on board as if I were one of them. I hadn't really thought about what an anti-climax it would be to finish early on Sunday morning with just the marshals there. I didn't find out..

Three, and most importantly at this particular time, they knew the way up Lord's Rake.

On this race there are two options to get from Scafell Pike to Scafell. One is via Foxes' Tarn, which I had done before, but which is longer and less convenient for the rest of the route than Lord's Rake.

However, Lord's Rake is a narrow chasm full of scree with a finely balanced chock stone at the top.


Lord's Rake from the top

And once you get up that, there's a tricky downhill, and then another uphill scree slope.
Lord's Rake part 2. More scree
With Luc and Dave's guidance we found the rake and I actually enjoyed it; the concentration involved made the ascent seem less about actually trying to go uphill and more like trying to avoid injury. It was great and we were soon at Scafell.


Peak 7 - Scafell

Then it was back down Lord's Rake in reverse which was almost as exciting.


Scafell done.
We had a very brief discussion about whether to drop down to Wasdale and then attempt the ridiculously tough steep climb up to Pillar, or take the sensible option of the Corridor Route to climb Great Gable. I think this is how I may have phrased the choice at the time and unsurprisingly we soon set off contouring around the cliffs below Scafell Pike and then up to join the Corridor Route, the rocky path that connects Scafell Pike to Styhead Pass. There was a brief hiccup when I tried to take up on a short cut, but we just managed to avoid the fate of the runner we saw looking forlornly across at the correct path from the other side of the abyss of Pier Gill.

A long climb up Great Gable and we were at Peak 8. Again the top was misty, and a couple of degrees off the true bearing took us and all the people around us onto the shocking unstable scree that J and I had been on on our Wasdale recce.


Fantastic Wasdale view appearing out of the cloud
I finally managed to get across to a piece of scree with smaller stones and it was like a down escalator as I jumped down towards the third checkpoint at Beck Head.
The Beck Head checkpoint. So near, yet so far.

Off towards Pillar with Ennerdale behind.
We now had the tedious contouring round Kirk Fell before the climb up to peak number 9.

The view towards Yewbarrow from the route to Pillar. 

Peak 9 - Pillar
After checking in at Pillar we had to retrace our steps back down to Black Sail Pass, but at this point I actually tried to finally make a contribution to our group by pretending that Tom's clever route across Ennerdale to Honister was a personal idea. We dropped down to the valley, I crossed several streams more than I needed to, and after a long climb out of the end of Ennerdale we rejoined the race route, and seemed to have made up some places.

Up to now Luc had shown his obvious fitness, gained from running ultras in the south, and had had to spend large periods waiting for Dave and I, but at this point started to get pain in his knee which would start to slow him down as we went on.
Looking into Buttermere from the route to Honister
Into the Honister checkpoint and the team supporters were there (and had been waiting 4 hours) and were ready to cheer us up. After a refuelling session on chicken pasta, hot tea and Coke, and a chance for Luc to change into new socks AND shoes, we were off on the climb up towards Dalehead, forking off before the summit and following the path down into the Newlands Valley.


The start of the descent into Newlands

Looking back at the Newlands valley.
For various individual reasons we took it slowly on the rocky descent and then to long flat section back to checkpoint 5, which cruelly was also going to be the finish everal hours later. Hearing the news that Tom had won the race in record time gave me a boost as we set off for the final peak.

It was now late evening, but warm and light as we crawled slowly up Carl Side on our way to Skiddaw.


View back to Keswick from the ascent of Skiddaw.

The climb went on and on, first on a rocky winding path, then a ruler straight path heading up to Carlside Tarn. We had to put our headtorches on and started off on the next climb up to Skiddaw, but the conditions had suddenly changed entirely. The cold gales buffeted us as we trudged upwards, blinding us as it blew the clouds across our headtorch beams. Occasionally there would be a gap and the orange glow of the sunset would briefly appear. All that was missing were flashes of lightning and a soundtrack of Death Metal. Ahead of us, it was impossible to see if the shapes were a 100,000 foot mountain 100 miles away or the top we were waiting for.

Finally we reached the top and had a brief view of the trig point and headed off to it to get our final checkin. Heading back along the hell of the ridge we met a slightly scared solo runner (probably just reflecting back our expressions) who asked us to wait for him while he went to the summit. We huddled in a stone shelter, wondering what we'd do if he didn't reappear, then, when he did, set off shivering down the tourist path.

All we had left was the descent I had done in 40 minutes on a sunny July day two years ago when I ran the Skiddaw fell race. Today was different though and it took us two and a half hours to drop down to the lights of Keswick and back to the waiting supporters and the race team.

We got back in 21 hours and a half hours in joint 54th place. This was pretty irrelevant to me as all I had wanted to do was finish within the 24 hours limit and to enjoy the experience. Next year however.... 

  

Saturday 22 June 2013

Life's Too Short

 Despite the ideal training for the 10 Peaks being long days out running in the Lakes, I have been unable to resist sneaking in as many short fell races as possible since the beginning of May.

On most mid-weekdays during the summer there are little races held in Yorkshire within easy driving distance and the atmosphere, the chance to catch up with friends within the small fellrunning community, and the opportunity to run up a hill and back down have driven me to travel to several of these, (as well as one weekend one.)

Kildwick - 15th May

A warm summer's evening, and a very fast race visiting a weird plaster cairn overlooking the Aire valley (twice). Afterwards everyone piles into the local pub for prizegiving and a race debrief. Perfect.


Farnhill Pinnacle 

Me disappearing off across the moor after my first climb up to the summit

Otley Chevin - 5th June

One of the oddest fell races in the calendar as it starts on a cobbled street near the centre of Otley and simply runs straight up the hill to the Chevin Surprise View taking in a large staircase and then plummets back down to the town partly on a painful tarmac section.

Being hunted down by a fellow club member with marathon training in his legs forces me to try to keep up my speed on the downhill making it even less enjoyable.

This race is the exact opposite of the 10 Peaks.
The last section of uphill above Otley with me pulling what my son calls my 'fell running face'

The downhill starts

Buckden Pike - 15th June

The fell running English championships visited Yorkshire for the short up and down of Buckden Pike in Upper Wharfedale. I have not a chance of a sniff of getting any championship points, but I drag my sons up to the gala attached to it anyway.

I describe it to my eldest as the chance to see the top hill runners in the country, and he seems a bit dismayed to see registration being carried out between a bouncy castle and a sheep judging.

The weather stays fine and we all have a good day, first watching the Ladies' race, then the boys play in the stream while I crawl very slowly up the hill and barrel slightly more quickly back down.


The Ladies line up for their race, nearly all watching the starter intently, with the odd one making adjustments to laces.  

The initial stream crossing. I just manage to stay upright on the slimey rocks 
The start of the long painful climb

On the way back down

Beamsley Beacon - 20th June

My final race before the 10 Peaks is a fast up and down on Beamsley Beacon, close to Ilkley. It's organised by my old club, and so is a great chance to catch up and to inflict more pain of questionable value during the 30 minute climb to the summit cairn.

The climb is gradual enough for there to be no excuse to stop running.

And to make it worse, if you don't keep up the speed, there's always the chance the sumo will beat you.



(Most of the photos are taken by the amazing husband and wife team of Dave and Eileen Woodhead who, when they're not organising them (and developing talent like the Brownlees), go to most other races in Yorkshire to take photos for people to use for free.)