Sunday 22 June 2014

Whoop whoop over 7 grand

Nothing much going on at the moment. Just settling into training. As I promised myself. More trail than road. Gradually working my way from Blundeston to Norwich, on mainly a trail. Blundeston to Breydon bridge on Angles way

As the title says..... I'm now over £7000, and it feels great








Since last November, I have been in communication with a serving RAF Regiment gunner, who completed the MDS in 2013. His name is Paul (gloomy) Groombridge.He had been giving me tips and info via Facebook messenger and email, but we had never met. Well that changed yesterday. We had decided to have a meet up for a beer and a chat with some grub. He offered to give me a sports massage. Which I desperately needed. Excellent treatment. Very Professional. As I said, he is still serving, so he generally does evenings and weekends. So if you are closer to Bury st Edmunds than Lowestoft here is Paul's website







Press here.... Paul's website
Obviously if your closer to Lowestoft...... Come to me lol

So after my treatment, it was off to grab some grub and a beer. Paul is a top bloke and gave me some top tips and loaned me some kit (pictured below) including a venom pump, heavy duty lighter, mirror, sand goggles and an all important Union Jack patch








Thanks mate. Good to have met you.

fitness tip#13... Sleep sleep. So important for recovery and repair and for mental attitude. If your sleep has been suffering, then pull back on your training. Some one once said to me " rest is best"


Diary of a long distance runner.

9th June 2014- 45min trail run
10th June 2014 - 30 min road
12th June 2014 - 30 min road steady run
14th June 2014 - 30min trail run
16th June 2014 - 30 min trail
17th June 2014 - 60 min trail/road, very warm
18th June 2014 - 165 min trail/ road
22nd June 2014- 60 min trail



This blogs donation roll of honour.

Jo Charles- massage client
Baz Thomas- ex Reggie gunner
Karen Hamilton - massage client

As always thank you so much










Sunday 8 June 2014

Nearly at £7000 mark




Two weeks since I've been back from London to Brighton. Back on the training, doing more trail runs for definite. I'm trying a different pair of shoes, see what these are like. They are Inov8 trail roc 255. These are more like normal trainers unlike the Hokas.





Will let you know how I get on in due course.

I paid in the money that people had paid to me for London to Brighton. Even though I didn't finish, all kind donations and guesses totalled £352. This money and a couple of donations have brought me so so close to £7000





Hope someone or a few someone's will tip me over the 7 grand mark before Monday morning.


Fitness tip #12. If at first you don't succeed. Evaluate, change if you need to. Leave disappointment behind you and try again.

Diary of a long distance runner

Friday 30th May 2014 - 30minute easy run on road
Sunday 1st June 2014 - 85 minutes trail run with Paula



Monday 2nd June 2014 - 50 minutes trail, steady
Tuesday 3rd June 2014 - 60 minutes mixed trail /road steady. Warm day
Friday 6th June 2014 - 65 minutes mixed trail/ road very warm evening
Sunday 8th June 2014- 110 minutes trail run again with Paula, again a lovely sunny day




This blogs donation roll of honour

Viv Hunt - one of my Walberswick ladies
Claire Whittonbury - another of my Walberswick ladies
Ann Pettitt- one of my heart patients

Thank you so so much, I'm getting closer and closer to that £10000.



Sunday 1 June 2014

London to Brighton - my first ultra race.

I tried my best, but didn't manage to complete the 63 miles. I've been spending the last week thinking about how I'm going to record this blog. Every way, i felt it looked like I was making excuses. There are absolutely no excuses. I wasn't good enough on the day to complete the challenge, plain and simple. What I've written below are, I feel,contributing factors to me not finishing. And I want to record them for my benefit and if anyone else benefits from it,brilliant

Ten days prior, I twisted my lower back. This stopped me from running for 7 days. I did get a treatment from the smart clinic, which I think helped.
Whilst travelling to London, it suddenly dawned, that we were going to the capital on Bank holiday Friday, not the best journey, I have to say. Lowestoft to Richmond = 5 hours.
Before going to our Premier inn, I decided that I would register, instead of in the morning. This was a good decision as it gave me extra time in bed.
Once in the hotel, we decided to eat in the hotel restaurant, which wasn't great, but hey it was calories. Race kit prepped and ready for the morning, it was time to retire.

I woke at midnight, with a temperature and a blocked nose. I thought at that stage , that it would maybe be a wise decision to not go ahead with the run. Then I thought about all of the training that I'd done and the quality time with Paula and family that I'd forsaken for my training of this event. My plan was to go stage by stage. Is it better not to start or not to finish? Debate at your leisure.........
Did I sleep till 5am?????? I'm not sure..

Decision made... Light Breakfast done. Time to go..






I don't mind running in rain, however I'm not a big fan of starting in rain. And the weather certainly had it in for the participants. But that wasn't going to stop a pre run Zumba warm up.







Just told I can go at 6.20 instead of 6.40





6.10am Zumba

Time to start..........







6.19am at the start







6.20am.. Time for the off

100+ runners set off on the 63 mile course. Stage 1 was made up of riverside paths and urban paths and roads. Started steady at 10 - 10.5 minute pace. Breathing felt comfortable despite having a head full of snot. I was hoping not to overheat in the bin bag that I had chosen to use, in an attempt to stay dry in the torrential rain that was coming down in Richmond and surrounding areas.









Stage 1


Made the mid stage point, no problem, felt relaxed. Picked up some food. Rain was still coming down hard. I had my eyes on 2 guys in front, going at a similar pace to me. I chose to keep following them. Big mistake. It occurred to me after about 10 minutes that I hadn't seen a pink navigational arrow for a while. At that point the 2 guys stopped and started looking at their map. They too had followed another runner instead of following the arrows. We put our heads together and worked out a route back. This cost us an extra 3 km........







Unplanned re route


Back on course at 20km, the route starting to get more rural.

Stage 1 finish



















The sun came out at the stage finish, so I had a sock change and I got rid of my bin bag protection. It never ceases to amaze me, how just having a fresh pair of socks on , can feel so good. Stage 1 to the mid point was more rural and more hilly. And a massive amount of hip flexor and glute stretching stiles.

I think the following videos sum up the stage perfectly.........







Stage 2







Still stage 2








Stage 2 rain return







Stage 2 stiles revenge







More stage 2







Last bit of stage 2

The halfway point couldn't come soon enough. I needed treatment and there were therapists that gave me a good treatment and got me going again. There was hot food, would have been rude not too. I had a blood blister that needed sorting and another sock change. This was quite a lengthy stop, but one that i needed to do. About 30 minutes and I was back on my way. Stage 2 to 3 was a good mixture of road and rural. I was told by the therapists that I could get another treatment at stage 3 finish. So sticking to the plan of stage by stage... Off I set.

The sun is shining







Over half way








Got me tunes in








Stage 3 midway

I love running but it can certainly be a lonely experience. You pass people, and people pass you and you exchange brief comments or hellos and then it's back into your world. There are massive changes in your thinking patterns, so times really high and sometimes really low.

I didn't stop long in the midway stop. Time was getting on and I became very conscious of Paula and Ryan having to hang around waiting for me at the stage finishes. So I had a quick cup of coffee and half a dozen Jaffa cakes and I was heading for another treatment.







Show me the way to go home








Stage 3 end

I was 200m from stage end, I turned a corner and there was Paula and Ryan cheering me in. I scanned in and headed straight for the therapist area. I felt confident, that I'd have a treatment , some food, last sock change. And be on my way for a slow last 12 miles. I got on the massage couch, I had my hip flexors done, the therapist asked me to turn over, so that they could do my glutes and lower back. All of a sudden I had a really sharp pain in my lower back. It made me feel sick, I had to sit down. The pain went off and I went to get some food down my neck. Before changing my socks, the pain came back again. I knew my day was finished.

The cross country sections were just full of mud and my Hokas didn't deal with it too well. My legs were going in all directions, like Bambi on ice.

This is what my Hokas looked like at the end..




It's not a great feeling, not to finish. It's something I've never felt before and will be anxious for it never to happen to me again.

I know that I made the right decision 100% to stop! but this set in motion a series of " what if " questions.

I have taken stock of the day.. And this is what I've taken away from my "52 mile training run"

. My foot taping was good
. My cross country training was insufficient
. My hydration was good
. My Hokas weren't good enough to grip in the muddy conditions
. My nutrition was good. Food at stage stops and gels every hour
. Not bringing painkillers to take was an over sight.
. Never follow other runners blindly