Sunday, December 25, 2022

A World of Running

Over a slippery stile.
Thought I should get back to doing some of those long fell races that I used to enjoy so much. November sees the umpteenth running of the Penmaenmawr Fell Race referred to those in the know as "The Pen." This was my sixth Pen race in 18 years and by far the slowest, in part due to the very wet conditions but also because of a poor route choice half way round which cost me a few minutes - oh and I wasn't really pushing it! It's eleven miles of steady climbing with a long stretch of high altitude bog trotting - what joy! I followed this up with my fourth go at the Cardington Cracker, a tough eight mile race in Shropshire featuring some fearsomely steep climbs. Here's me climbing a stile towards the end, legs almost finished after the endless uphills. I was happy to complete both events and get prizes for being the first over 70 runner (in fact the only over 70 runner!) A week later I was hoping to have a crack at the Sea to Summit, an uphill half marathon along the Offa's Dyke Path starting on the seafront at Prestatyn. Snow, ice and sub-zero temperatures knocked that one on the head as the wise decision was made to call the thing off. 
Offa was an early King of Mercia an early middle ages monarch who built an earthwork barrier to keep the Welsh out of England (or was it the other way round?) The Offa's Dyke Path runs southwards for 177 miles from Prestatyn in the north to Chepstow on the Bristol Channel. Our half marathon route ranges over the Clwydian Hills in Denbighshire but what most people are unaware of is that this northern section of the path doesn't follow the line of the ancient Offa's Dyke at all. Some of the remains of the original earthwork can be seen over to the east in Flintshire - if you try to follow that line you'd end up trogging through an industrial estate in Mold. Clearly this would have been not so attractive for visiting tourists and long distance walkers so when the long distance path was mooted some years ago a more scenic line over the Clwydians was decided on.

From a deep and dark December in the Northern hemisphere with its freezing temperatures to the almost tropical midsummer of Brisbane, Australia - what a shock to the system. This was what we encountered at the beginning  of our first trip down under for three years. Even at 7 am, which is the parkrun start time in Queensland, we experienced 22 degrees and sapping humidity. Added to that we took a wrong turn just before we arrived at Warner Lakes parkrun starting 5 minutes late and, being not yet acclimatised to the conditions, I felt I was running through treacle. As with our recent parkrun experiences in Southern Africa we noticed far more parkwalkers than we would normally see in the UK - maybe the weather has something to do with this I would respectfully suggest.

Follow the leader? Not really, the real quickies were well ahead!
 And what did Santa  bring us for Christmas  this year? Two park  runs of course! One on  Christmas Eve and one  on Christmas Day.  Here's me leading the  field at Petrie parkrun a  pleasant there and  back gallop through the  Sweeney Reserve,  named for Thomas  Patrick Sweeney who  lived here in a  ramshackle hut with his  family. They kept emus and kangaroos and had a refreshment kiosk serving fruit and soft drinks. If they'd still been open today they'd have done a roaring trade refreshing thirsty park runners!

Hello back home!
The following day, i.e. Christmas morning, we toed the start line with a couple of hundred other early birds for a parkrun along the Enoggera Creek at Kelvin Grove, Brisbane. A local running club had elected this as their Christmas run and most of the fast first dozen or so finishers were wearing distinctive pink running vests. The course was fairly flat and sheltered by leafy trees some of them containing large colonies of roosting bats with their distinctive pong. Here's a photo of us with our distinctive post race smiles (grimaces?) together with another parkrunner - he explained delightedly to us that he's going to be in the UK in a year's time and is looking forward to a White Christmas - what do you think are the chances of that?

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