Tuesday 24 March 2015

parkrundayparkrundayparkrunday


It never ceases to amaze me how parkrun continues to grow and grow. Even in areas where you think you might be hitting saturation point - like the South East - new events continue to pop up on a regular basis.

As a result, I've been involved in helping set up a couple of new events in the M4 corridor and had the benefit of seeing one such event get across the start line (geddit?) on Saturday.

The event in question was in Maidenhead and I first met the team back in October  - along with Kerri French and Ian Cockram we went along to check out their proposed venue and agree on the course route. Fast forward 5 months and I rocked up on Saturday morning wondering what it ould be like.

It was my first inaugural  - for those unaware, inaugural parkruns have become a big thing in parkrun world which has led to some issues. Just imagine that you're a new event director or first time volunteer at a new event. You've done the training, helped out at other events, done the test event and then.....

.....come inaugural morning you get hundreds of people turn up.


Yeah - it's a bit daunting. I get 150ish at my own event, so if I got 300 next week I'd panic, never mind a brand new team!

Maidenhead turned out to be a classic large inaugural with 303 runners in total. A large contingent of tourists (due to a 250 club entry), plenty of familiar parkrun faces and even King Danny of the parkrunshow podcast  - which this week featured Maidenhead and even included an interview with yours truly. You can listen here

Despite the crowds the team did a fantastic job (well trained, clearly) and it all ran smoothly. I even spotted one of the core team with tears in their eyes watching the masses of runners....seeing it come to fruition can be quit emotional, and I confess I felt quite proud to be involved in that.
 Happy event team (and a glowing laptop!)



Oh, wait - the course. Prob should mention that - it' s essentially a 2 lap course which loops through a little nature reserve on gravelly paths and includes a nasty little short hill. It's nice and sheltered for most of it and has a lovely section by the side of a canal that will be particularly tranquil in summer.

The event also benefits from a Toby Carvery pub on site with a £3.99 all you can eat breakfast plus £1.99 for unlimited tea. Needless to say I took full advantage :)

Me and co-ED and fellow Ambassador Ian
 
A triptych of Ambassadors - Ian, Kezza and me
 
 
That wasn't the end of my parkrunday though - oh no. That afternoon it was off to another new event (with Ian and Kerri French - ED at Woodley, Ambassador extraordinaire and fellow marathon blogger - check her blog out here) to do their test event in Bracknell (redacted for security reasons). Test events are critical parts of a new team's evolution. It's essentially a full dress rehearsal with 30-50 runners...checking the course is ok, no major issues with the route, getting the team familiar with timing, scanning and processing results just like a normal event. It was again good fun to do that and then relax in the café with bacon sandwiches (cos I hadn't eaten enough earlier!) running through training slides and talking parkrun
 
After leaving the house at 8am I finally got home at 4pm. A mammoth parkrunday but a thoroughly enjoyable one
 
P.S. Oh and I ran 20 miles the next day. Marathon training and all that...but parkrunday was much more fun to do and write about.

Monday 16 March 2015

Tales from the Start Line - Kingston Breakfast Run


Alternate Title - "How to mess up your race prep and get away with it"

One of the hardest things about this stage of marathon training is how much it dominates and affects your weekend. Particularly Saturday night - which becomes, well, a bit boring. No booze, no going out, nothing too exciting as you conserve your energy for the Sunday morning exertions.

Still, it at least gives you time to get all your prep sorted for the next day, especially if you're heading to a race.

Well, that's the theory anyway.  The reality this week was a little different though......I did have my kit sorted and race number attached OK the night before - but managed to forget my Garmin watch, realise way too late that I had no gels and then discovered my iPod shuffle was out of charge.

To cap it all my well-planned timeline for pre-race eating and travel turned out to be a little tight for comfort. Frantically searching the roads of Hampton Wick 20 minutes before race start looking for a parking space was not what I had anticipated.

Still, I made it to the start in time (after a warm-up of running hard from car over Kingston Bridge!) and at 8.35 or so I was off.

The Breakfast run has 8, 16 and 20 mile options....I was doing the 16 mile variant and, as always, it was a reminder of why races in a training calendar are both important and helpful. Important as they provide a handy status check on how the training is going and experience of running with hundreds of other runners (as opposed to a handful, or none), and helpful as they are essentially easier than a solo training run of the same distance. Water is provided (no need to carry extra weight), the course is marked (no worrying over route or risking getting lost) and you get plenty of support and encouragement from the marshals and crowds.

The route itself consisted of 2 x 8 mile laps. Started out in Kingston's town centre by the town hall, before heading over Kingston Bridge and down left onto the towpath. This takes you ~3 miles to Hampton Court Bridge and is probably the nicest portion of the race. Once at Hampton Bridge you go back onto the roads (so running on footpaths etc) and follow the A309 down through Thames Ditton. Eventually you intersect with the A309 / Portsmouth Road and follow that back into Kingston itself before looping back out on the second lap. It's a nice flat course but the section coming back into Kingston is a bit tricky - narrow paths with uneven camber which is always a concern for my glute.

All in all it was a comfortable race - plenty of support and it was good to see several of my extended running group there...before, during and after the race!

 
Sore legs? What sore legs?

I was quite pleased with my pace given the missing Garmin (finished in 2:35:09, pretty much perfect LSR pace of 9:40 min/mile) and felt in good shape all the way through - with 5 weeks to go till marathon day everything so far is going to plan. Next stop is the longest one - 20 miles at "Not the London Marathon" in Bushy...after a day of parkrun Ambassadoring on the Saturday!

As for the Kingston Breakfast Run - I'd do it again - but ideally with some better prep :-)



Sunday 1 March 2015

You've got to pick a parkrun or (twenty) two. Minus one.

So it's Saturday night, I'm sitting at home drinking tea ahead of a 15 mile LSR tomorrow and trying to ignore the siren song of the cold beer in my fridge.

Probably a good time for a blog post then........and I've decided to go through all of the various parkrun venues I've run at (21 of them - hence the title. Oh, I'm so witty) and give a brief description. To avoid accusations of favouritism I'm doing them in chronological order from my first on in 2009, to my latest "new" event on New Year's Day 2015

1) Richmond parkrun - A one lapper and one of the most scenic, especially on a clear day. Not as tough as its regulars may like to claim, but not a PB course either. Getting the train and cycling up Richmond Hill is a good warmup! My most run at event besides Bedfont. Watch out for deer...

2) Bedfont Lakes parkrun - the bestest parkrun in the UNIVERSE! (Biased, moi?) Mine own parkrun  - a lovely 2 lapper in a park I didn't know existed before parkrun. Parking can be an issue and you better be OK with getting wet and muddy due to the interminable winter puddles (a legacy of the park history I think). Averages 120-170 runners and has 2 amazing Event Directors.

3) Reading parkrun - Ran it when covered in snow and ice over Christmas. Great location next to the Thames, a mix of grass field and wood paths. Currently relocated due to flooding though (that's the issue with starting next to the Thames!)

4) Woodhouse Moor (nee Leeds) parkrun - newly renamed and one of the oldest events. A 2.5 lapper in a small park in the middle of Leeds all on tarmac and pretty flat

5) Malahide parkrun (Ireland) - my first parkrun outside UK, and the first in the Republic. Superb setting in the grounds of Malahide castle, a meandering course on tarmac and gravel paths. Gets big turnouts

6) Gunnersbury parkrun - another West London one near the M4. Starts on grass then follows the outside path around the park before diving through and around the wooded section, finishing on grass. The paths in the wooded section are a little tricky due to poor maintenance by the council but it's as flat as you can get

7) Little Stoke parkrun - On Bristol's outskirts, a small little 3 lapper, all bar the last 250m on grass. Flat as a pancake, plenty of parking and a refreshment van waits at the end. Due to layout you get plenty of encouragement. Bizarrely, the first person I saw there was a Bedfont regular.

8) Poole parkrun - I ran this while on my annual drinking camping weekend in Swanage so extremely heavy legs! Another pancake flat course with a bug turnout. 2 laps round the boating lake with soe narrow spots (and a nagging fear the adverse camber will lead you into said lake) before a (seemingly never ending) loop of the cricket pitch. They have a smart funnel system and use the cricket pavilion for storage / refreshments etc. Have to pay for parking, but it's very cheap

9) Barnstaple parkrun - A cracking event in North Devon, hard on the banks of the River Torridge. 2 and a half laps of a figure of 8 style course  - be careful at the pinch point! A very friendly event team too, and one of my multiple events

10) Castle Demense parkrun (Ireland) - The closest event to my home town of Ballincollig, I was delighted when this started. Wore my just received 50 t-shirt and was accorded semi-celebrity status as a result. A tricky little course with a lap around the GAA pitch then a dive into the woods, and under a low gate (watch your head if over 5' 10"!) before a sharp uphill shock, the out and back though the golf club car park. Repeat the loop through the woods and golf club before a run into the finish with a  nasty incline before the finish. The golf clu car park brings an interesting dimension to it! Loads of free refreshments in the community centre afterwards and a great event team

11) Worcester parkrun - Drove 50 miles from the Cotswolds to do this on New Year's Day. Due to heavy rain the course was a mud-bath, especially the start/finish area in a field! 2 laps through a wooded country park - would be much nicer in summer!

12) Leamington Spa parkrun - Another wet/muddy one. One lap round a golf course, with a horrendous hill at ~1km. Thankfully after that it's downhill the rest of the way. Plenty of parking

13) Whitley Bay parkrun - Gloriously scenic event overlooking the North Sea Coast. All on tarmac with various uphill and downhill sections and a great finish on the promenade. Slower runners may get annoyed with having to plough through already finished runners though. Piad for parking but again not expensive

14) Upton Court parkrun - Technically the closest parkrun to my house, this is a great little event with views of Windsor Castle on a good day. A 2 lap course on a mix of grass and tarmac, I set my parkrun PB here recently. Good food in the rugby clubhouse afterwards as well

<EDIT - overnight break, 15 mile run and new car later>

15) Royal Tunbridge Wells parkrun - A fantastically scenic start overlooking the large boating lake with a handy downhill first 0.5km. Lakeside, forest-side and field-side views before the realisation that you have to go up the bit you went down. Bad enough on first lap but 10 times worse on second lap when you have to go up even further. Thought my heart would explode but a great event.

16) Tymon parkrun (Ireland) - Another Dublin parkrun that I ran on the same day the BBC piece on Bedfont aired. Got bus from central Dublin and basically spent 30 mins wandering around waiting for everyone to show up! 2 lap course in a very nice park next to the M50 and pretty flat. Now my brother's home parkrun

17) Wycombe Rye parkrun - First of my ambassador visits. A quirky course meandering mainly on tarmac on the outside perimeter with some grass sections. Includes a steps section which can impede PB hopes, and a two way section for encouraging others. Parking paid but incredibly cheap (60p for 3 hours!)

18) Black Park parkrun - Another Ambassador visit - a one lapper in a big park that borders Pinewood studios. A series of long straights and sharp turns on forest paths and a large turnout. A  highly organised and efficient finish funnel and scanning setup. Like all of my events, a great team :-)

19) Bushy Park parkrun - The one and only, the original parkrun. Iconic and unique, from the >1000 turnout to the double (triple) funnel. Flat as flat but not a PB course unless you get to the front cos you lose 10-20 seconds just getting to the start! Must be done at least once in a parkrun life.

20) Eastbourne parkrun -  A Christmas visit (with Dolly actually) - ran their alternate winter course which was an out and back on tarmac

21) Kingston parkrun - second part of my first new Year's Day double. Another out and back on the banks of the Thames with a loop at the turnaround point. Can be soggy at that point, and rumoured to be short (I stress, "rumoured". Ahem)

So there you go. 106 runs at 21 events over nearly 6 years.

Plenty more to come.............