Saturday, 31 August 2019

Harvest Hobble 26m 2019

This was a new event for us, neither of us had been to this area of the Lincolnshire Wolds before. The event started at Ludford, near Market Rasen and headed north west and then was a rectangular route. There was a strong breeze from the south west that blew us along in the first half, but it was hard going into the wind when Melanie and I didn't have the protection of hedges which sometimes helped.

The event HQ was the village hall and this being an LDWA event, it was cheap. Free tea or coffee at the start. The first checkpoint (3 miles) had biscuits, but after that there was sandwiches, cheese and sausage rolls. At the end there was tomato soup roll followed by rice pudding with peaches. A good day for eating !

We started off and headed for a long section of the Viking Way. Initially there was a few flat field edges, but we did come across some sunflowers.




The route then started to undulate





Before a descent to the first checkpoint (3 miles)


Then it was up and on to the edge of the wolds with lovely views to the west





Still more undulations


and into an area where there were deer


We passed many lovely churches, this one was in Normanby-le-Wold






We made a slight error when we came off the Viking Way, the path forked and we took the left one instead of the right one. We had the route on our Garmins and the paths were very close so it was hard to work out the correct way. Luckily, runners behind us let us know we were wrong so we were able to quickly backtrack.

We then entered some woods (a long way from anywhere) close to some old workings (according to the map). We came across three of these, which may apparently be airshafts.


More typical wolds countryside, lots of the route reminded us of the Golden Fleece Circuit route on the other side of the Humber







Late on the route was telling us to go straight across a field of potatoes. Not easy and we gave up in the end and headed down one of the valleys between the potatoes.


After the last checkpoint at 21 miles, there was a long drag upwards into the wind, which was very hard going and I would say this was the least attractive part of the route.

We were pleased to get back to Ludworth to our soup, roll and sweet - if you have never done an LDWA event, go for it they are fun !





Monday, 5 August 2019

Hardmoors Farndale marathon 2019

I was running this one with Melanie who is new to this route although she had covered quite a bit of it on other runs we had done when on holidays. We had picked up from Facebook that the route was very overgrown this year and it certainly was compared to the previous two years (when it was called the Hardmoors Rosedale marathon, but the same route). In spite of this I managed to pick up a 25 minute course PB (thanks to Melanie for this). But was hard, it was very humid and warm. There was a nice breeze which helped, but there were times in the valleys when we couldn't feel it.

The start was from the Village Hall in the lovely Hutton-le-Hole.


The route undulates almost immediately. I think of the route as roughly triangular. The first time I did the route, it seemed to take for ever to get to the point where we change onto the second side of the triangle (about 11 miles in). There are lots of twists and turns, but the compensation is that the scenery is just outstanding and very varied - woods, moors, fields. Thanks to Melanie for many of these photos















It did not seem too long before we got to the corner of the triangle and out onto the moors. I was feeling pretty good at this point.




This is the side of the triangle where the hills kick in and by about 15 miles in I started to tire. It was warm and I was struggling. But the compensation was the scenery


The abandoned Stork House




After Stork House the bracken became a bit overwhelming !




Thanks to Nicky Jenkins for these photos (where I looked happier than I was...)



This was followed by what felt a long road section and then we turned on to the third side of the triangle and climbed towards Dickon Howe


Then down the other side towards High Mill where we stopped for an ice cream at the cafe. This was a real bonus ! Along to Low Mill and the start of the very big climb, which was overgrown and a bit muddy. Lovely views from the top



The last checkpoint had cut up oranges and lots and lots of them. Just lovely ! As we left it started to rain a bit which was lovely and cooling. Through the woods and the final tarmac climb and the run down into Hutton-le-Hole to applause from runners sitting outside the pub.

As usual Jon and Shirley had the whole event very well organised and the marshalls and helpers in the Village Hall did a great job !

2018 blog of the previous event (now with a change of name)

Sunday, 14 July 2019

Duncombe Park marathon 2019

A short summary : Melanie had a great run and was second lady 😀😀


I had a not so good run...

This was our second It's Grim up North (IGUN) event. They are well organised events and often lapped events. Today was four laps.

There was a nice start



downhill along a Duncombe Park estate road into Helmsley. Some good views of Helmsley Castle



Into Helmsley and a long a road to the start of the Cleveland Way



It was then a long drag up the Cleveland Way to the checkpoint 2 miles into the lap. This included a dip down and out again so a few steps to do each lap...

From checkpoint 2 outside a small but lovely house


we continued along the Cleveland Way but turned off before we reached the Rievaulx road. Now the path go a little muddy in places and there were some steep climbs before we reached a viewpoint looking down on to Duncombe Park





Then south past the house and a steep road descent to a very long flat couple of fields before a steep climb back to the start/finish. Repeat three more times.

I had not felt great the last couple of days, a sore throat was gradually getting worse and my throat felt a bit like sand paper at the start. Lozenges helped a little, but I was struggling a bit at the end of the first lap and in my head I was saying there more hills than I expected and you have to do them three more times ! It was warm but not stifling and a bit of a breeze so that wasn't a factor. I slowed a bit in lap 2, but a quarter of the way in I realised I had not put any vaseline on my nipples (I normally run with a race vest so I rarely need any) and we had both left our tins at the start/finish. Luckily a fellow runner overheard us and offered me some which was lovely. Too late though and I arrived at the end of the lap looking like I had been shot. I changed my shirt and a marshall kindly came along with some plasters which solved the issue.

Into lap 3 and I was slowing so we agreed Melanie should go ahead. It was good timing, if she had stayed with me longer she probably would not have won her trophy.

I was getting some attention through wearing a Hardmoors shirt


One marshall commented - you're a Hardmoors runner this should be a walk in the park ! That pretty accurately described what I was doing in most of laps 3 and 4 !

Finally I finished, 45 minutes ahead of the cut off so no problems there. The usual finishing goody bag, beer, chocolate and a medal.


This may be the end of my lapped marathons... Definitely no more this year.