| Back in the car and knowing I did my best |
Well well well. I’m not even sure where to begin. This event is the longest, most technical and most challenging run I’ve ever done. I really enjoyed myself and learned a lot about running in the process (and myself), but boy was it tough.
Even Henk, the Race Director, was rather different
The line up
| Some of the fellow Midnight runners |
The course
- Steep up-hills with loose stones / rocks of sharp flint
- Soft grounded single-track heathland (this was lovely)
- Twisty paths (with seemingly more left turns than right)
- Steep downhills (with a variety of finishes from rocky drops to mud-wrestling slop)
- Combination of the above with a special ‘trip hazard’ dressing
| This was me at the start |
The last section before the race HQ checkpoint was great. Nothing technical (though I still tripped once), low elevation difference and soft absorbing ground to run on. Pity it only lasted a kilometre or so.
The laps
Lap 1 was done in 1:37 and I loved it and felt great. I bombed it around and although the legs were still feeling the effort from the Greensands marathon, I still felt fresh enough to try another fast lap. Something I didn’t expect were all the 50 and 100 milers to check that I was on the 30. Worried that some super-human was running the 100!
| End of lap 2 |
Lap 2 started well and I was in first place until the half way mark, but quickly took a terrible turn for the worst after an ankle injury basically stopped me from running. Hills, up or down, had to be walked and I could barely shuffle along the flat. I wasn’t sure of the damage and didn’t want to risk my ankle. I hobbled into the HQ and after a tablet of some description, I was ready to go again. The second lap I believe took 2:01 in total.
Lap 3 was a mess. It took a good 4 miles for the tablet to kick in and those first miles were done at a walk in most places. I met up with a guy doing the 100 miler and we got chatting. It was he who had recommended the tablet at the HQ and I believe it was his lovely caring wife who provided it. It was a real insight to run / walk / hobble next to someone who had already done 70 miles.
| At the end. Didn’t mean to look so shocked |
Things turned downhill and all of a sudden my legs came back. The ankle pain was gone and in the 100 miler guys words later on “I took off really fast”. I ran the rest of the route at a good pace and came in at 06:01. Lap 3 was a slow one at 2:23.
The finish
- Call out my race number (47)
- Have my race number scanned
- Shake the hands of Henk, Nicky and the team (see, he is a nice guy)
- Politely ask to sit down
- Get offered a tea (win)
- Be offered a mini Mars bar (double win)
- Go put on warm clothes
- Fin
- Eat soup and jig to Henk’s banjo music (see above)
- Welcome back other runners
What did I learn?
- Bring paracetamol and ibuprofen (tablet and cream form) with me
- I can turn around my negative mental attitude even when things are grim and slow
- If my body is feeling good I could do more than 30 miles
- I love running on single track
- If I’m warm standing around with a t-shirt and a hoody, I’ll be warm on the run with just a t-shirt
- Bring water and leave the salts for a handheld
- That I should stretch more often after races (I’ve learned that, I still haven’t put it into practice!)
I think I’ll need them for my next run in December. The Coastal Trail Series Ultra in Dorset.
