Lostagin

I couldn’t work out where to run this morning and having poured over the maps trying to decide and seen some new paths in the process, I felt I couldn’t just go & do a standard circuit.

I ran down Junction Road and out on Rocky Lane as far as the tunnel under the railway line.  The last bit where the road twists is perilous and I had to cross the road twice in order to stand any chance making it alive.

The reason for this, in part, is due to the way that the council aims to keeps speeds down on country lanes… by allowing the undergrowth to grow up to the apexes on corners and not leaving a verge.  This narrows the vision of motorists in the vain hope that they will feel less comfortable and slow down.

Actually, I think it scares the pants off drivers, particularly in the dark and in the winter.  The by-product is that you need to take your life in your hands if you want to cycle, whilst pedestrians must be mad to even contemplate walking.

Sad really, in view of the number of commuters who travel between Burgess Hill & Haywards Heath every day and have no real alternative to driving.  I have suggested they install a graded cycle path, but I don’t suppose that would be contemplated any time soon… maybe once the new section of road from Bolmore Village to Rocky Lane has been completed.

On the map there is a path that links the corner by the tunnel to Kiln Wood,  Rookery Way and the Haywards Heath end of Rocky Lane.  Eschewing the road, this is the route I took.

This gave me an opportunity to see the new roundabout at the top of Fox Hill and also to realise that there is a link through Southdowns Park to the Hospital, rather than negotiating the oblique right turn near the Birch Hotel.

I’ve not see Southdowns Park up close so I ran around both that and the hospital grounds before running off along the Lewes Road.

My aim had been to run to Scaynes Hill and then back along the Sussex Border Path, but I missed the path and rather than going back to look again, I continued out towards Chailey as far as Pound Common… despite the verges not being particularly welcoming.

Bearing in mind the hype around being green, there is not much encouragement to travel by foot around here!

At Pound Common I turned right towards Wivelsfield and bore right again onto the Common where I promptly got lost, running hither & thither to try to find a way that took me South or West.

I eventually happened on the road that leads to (and ends at) Holford Manor, but alas the path from there was not obvious.  I ended up running all the way around a very large field (which I hate doing) before I took a gamble and ended up going through Wivelsden Farm from the wrong direction, which meant I missed the path West that I could have taken.

Instead I dropped back onto the road by St Peters & St James’s and headed towards Wivelsfield.  I was way past knackered by this time, but curiosity still led me to turn left onto a path on the outskirts of the village and I ended up taking a circuitous route back onto the same road again where staying on the road would have actually better suited me.

From the Recreation Ground I took a straightish zigzag line back across the Common to the railway foot-crossing and back to home.

This pretty rambling route was somewhere in the order of 13.7 miles and took me 2.24, giving an average speed of around 5.7mph… not bad for all the twists & turns.

Sad to report that I did pause for breath on a number of occasions, although I could probably justify it as stopping to figure out where I was supposed to go next!  And I’ve been banned from groaning around the house (quite right too) so I aim to do the next best thing and sleep it off on the sofa!

Cyclists, please shut the gates

For the second week running I have come across cyclists, out on the Downs, omitting to shut the gates behind them.  I sympathised last week, as it was clearly a race and there was a whole stream of them, but this week there were only a few cyclists out and I’m sure the farmer has enough of a problem keeping tabs on his lambs without the gates being left ajar.

About ten minutes after leaving my folks place, running out towards the radio mast above Woodingdean, I saw that I had missed a message from Cliff inviting me to run from Lewes.  I called him & we arranged to meet to the north of the Newmarket on the South Downs Way… he was coming the other way via Blackcap, which had been my destination.

I ran down past Newmarket Copse, over the A27, up the long hill to Bunkershill Plantation following the South Downs Way, down the steep hill the other side and up as far as the next gate where the old South Downs Way route meets.  It was perfect timing as Cliff and Joe were just coming down the hill in the other direction.

I turned round and we ran together back down the hill, up the steep hill and down the long hill to the A27, then across and up towards Newmarket Copse again, but for the sake of time, then turned left and ran down to the Newmarket Inn.

For simplicity we ran along the A27 towards Lewes, so that they could head back to the prison and I split off right before the roundabout and ran up Ashcombe Hollow towards Kingston… turning right again at the top of the hill to Kingstonridge.

This is a special path as it has a lovely big hill to run up in order to reach the ridge.

The hill, which is about 500m on the map, took me nine minutes… it’s pretty steep, but really good fun!

From there I continued climbing, albeit more gently, past the top of the Castle Hill reserve and on to the radio mast, before I had earned the final downhill section to the end, although with the wind full against me.

10.4 miles in 1.54 is only an average of about 5.5mph, but this is not bad bearing in mind all the hills… overall it was a really most enjoyable run!

Foster walks again!

It took me about 25 minutes this morning to walk quasi-normally. In fact, Kim and Karen were laughing at me half the afternoon and all evening yesterday as I hobbled around.

And yet my run with Mark yesterday was not particularly out-of-the-ordinary.

The missing link is my playing tennis on Saturday. At the risk of sounding smug, I am pretty good at hitting a tennis ball, as was evidenced by the three that I hit not merely outside the court fence (I hit loads of those), but over the hedgerow as well and into Rachel & David’s neighbour’s garden.

No, tennis is not my game, but I thoroughly enjoyed trying, despite falling over twice… one of which even tested my ability to roll to order. And when Rachel went off to tend to dinner and Kim went with her, I was left playing solo against both David and Pauline, which meant that I had to run around the court at double time!

All of which counted for only a poor excuse yesterday morning – although to be fair, at that stage my legs had not yet seized up.

So the run started with Mark just after 9am at Jack & Jill with the aim of doing our (increasingly) normal 14-mile route, but with the likelihood that we would bump into Cliff running in the opposite direction from Falmer. This we did on Streat Hill and it was great to see Andy and Paula (on her bike) too.

After a quick discussion we decided to follow Cliff’s nose, which took us down past Streathill Farm to St. Mary’s Farm, then east in an off-piste manner in order to pick up the path that then took us to the top of Waterpit Hill. Here we parted again, after a quick team photo, Mark and I running up the hill towards Blackcap.

Alas for my legs, rather than run straight back to the cars, Mark insisted on putting a couple of extra loops in, the first being to take the South Downs Way down the long hill of our normal route, albeit only as far as the first (double) gate… and back again. The back-again bit was made more interesting by our swimming against a tide of death-wish cyclists, presumably on a race… and sadly having little thought for the local farmer and his sheep as they were not closing the gates behind them. I say death-wish, as they were scooting past us on a narrow, uneven path at 20+mph, with inches to spare.

When we reached the top of the hill, Mark’s second loop was to take us to the top of Blackcap and back, before we finally headed for home.

Somewhere between Streathill Farm and the Beacon, the combination of tennis and long run reached my head and the internal (and then external) voices started up, with their suggestions that I stop running and start walking instead. I think I managed to overcome them as far as the Beacon road, but then I did actually walk for a while, at least as far as the top of the next hill, before I got moving again.

I had one more short walk, but otherwise managed to keep going to the top of Home Hill where a cyclist thankfully asked us for directions… I was very happy for the conversation to continue longer than was really required (actually, until someone else walked up who actually knew the answer!) and managed to regain sufficient energy to finish the run.

Between Cliff’s off-piste stage and my inability to recognise which field boundary Mark and I ran down the hill to, I’m actually uncertain how far the run was… between 13.3 and 14 miles is my best guess… I’m going to call it 13.5 miles for simplicity. The time was 2.28 which makes the average speed about 5.5mph… about right given the number of chat stops and my slow return pace.

It was a great run and a really fun weekend and judging from the effect on my legs after playing just a bit of tennis followed by a pretty normal run, it shows how right Cliff is… I need to find a regular circuit training class to attend!

Weedy wheezie

I have been suffering from a tickly cough for a while and in an attempt to clear it have been taking Antihistamine, despite the fact that it tends to send me to sleep the moment I sit down to relax!

On the whole it has started to work, but the exertion of running was always likely to bring it back… and so it was this morning!

It had been raining overnight and I chose to do a road run for a change, taking the 5.5 mile route to Clayton followed by the 5.5 mile route back again.  I always have a challenge remembering the time at the mile markers, so I decided I would take a quick photo and let my Blackberry do the remembering.

In light of the sticky experience with the gel last week, I decided to test two things: whether it made a difference (slightly subjective as experiments go) and whether I could use it without getting sticky fingers.

At this point I had just managed to catch up with another runner, David from Hurstpierpoint and was finding the going pretty tough, particularly wheeze-wise.

In lieu of any sage advice on using gels from readers last week, I squeezed the whole lot into my mouth in one go and stuffed the packet back in my pocket before it could leak over my hands.  95% success in this department just left me with one challenge… swallowing the stuff!  YUK!

I think it’s clear that the gel really did help, although by the time I got back to base I could hardly breathe.  Still, not a bad showing for a muggy day: 11 miles in 1.42, 6.47mph or 9.27 minutes per mile, even counting in the gel-stop.

One thing you may unfortunately deduce from my pictures is that the verges of Burgess Hill are full of weeds and in need of more than a little trim.  Is the grass cutter on holiday?

Sticky Fingers

I was at my folks’ house for 9am yesterday, ready to run, despite the fact that I had not yet decided which way I was headed.

For those of you without the benefit of a map, or even a vague sense for the world around Woodingdean, I went for a run of downs and prolonged ups, in the countryside.

For the very small number of people not fitting into this group, my route was as follows: up Falmer Road, Drove Road, Newmarket Hill, Juggs Road, Swanborough Hill, down to the pretty village of Iford, Northese, up, up the long White Way, down into Breaky Bottom (nice farm!), up, up and then down into Standean Bottom, around Cross Dyke, up, up, up Bullock Hill, Norton Drive, down Falmer Road.

It was a windy day, but otherwise bright and warm, and the running was a pleasant following of my nose on some paths that I’d not previously discovered.

On the hill above Breaky Bottom, I decided to try the gel that Kim’s sister Linda had given me from her leftover London Marathon stash.  I didn’t really feel the need, but felt that I should at least try one.

It was about as disgusting as I had expected it to be, but nothing had prepared me for how sticky!  Maybe the manufacturers expect you to throw the package straight away (seems unlikely) but even before I had rolled it up to go back into my pocket I had coated my fingers in the stuff… and my phone… and my water bottle… which contained Powerade so no, I couldn’t use that to wash my hands!

Maybe there’s a trick… if so, please DO tell!  I’ve got a small bag full of these things to get through!

I was finding the running easy anyway, but whether the subsequent long uphills were equally as easy due to the gel, my current level of fitness, or the distracting effect of my sticky little fingers, is difficult to determine

Overall, 11.4 miles in 2 hours, 5.7mph and washing my hands has seldom been such a relief!

Discombobulation

It had been a strange week, with several of the days masquerading as others which, among other things, meant that I berated myself for missing an important anniversary… only to discover the following day that it had been the previous day… and that now I had.

Some less usual activities on Friday and Saturday, bending under rafters whilst carrying things in a loft, wielding the hedge trimmer at shoulder height etc, left me with knots in various muscles… particularly in my buttocks.  And before your mind goes into a tailspin, Mark has already cracked most of the possible jokes about that, believe me!

Sunday morning found Mark and I back at Jack and Jill for another 9am run… and it was going to be a hot one!  We ran the same route as last week, along the ridge almost to Blackcap and then right and down to the A27, following the route of the South Downs Way.  Once more conversation flowed freely, although this week I was finding the running to be way more difficult.

We passed a myriad of people en-route and as per normal, I hailed pretty much each one… people are much more sociable up there than they are on Brighton seafront and most people responded in kind.

One group of walkers quipped that they thought they themselves were mad until they saw us… I said to wait until we ran past them a second time going the other way before they decided just how mad we were!  Having turned around and run the two or so miles back up to the ridge, we eventually caught them up… the picture tells the story.

The caption should be what they shouted after us as we ran on: ‘you don’t have to be mad to do the South Downs Way… but it helps!’

A combination of heat, tight buttocks etc meant that I was struggling pretty much all the way around and particularly on the home stretch.  I was quite delighted therefore to learn that, although we were slower than last week, it was the outward leg that took longer, meaning that we must have returned at pretty much the same pace on both runs.

So 14 miles in 2.25, 5.8mph.

It’s the Three Forts Marathon next week… not that I have any intention whatsoever of joining Mark, Cliff & Andy in doing it!  I’m just hoping that I will have figured out what day of the week it is by then!

J&J 9am

A  text from Mini-me Mark on Saturday night settled any question about where I was running this morning.  Jack and Jill, 9am.  Alas, the balance of the text outlined how far we would be running: 14 miles.  Ho hum!

It was a beautiful Spring morning and I couldn’t help but feel sorry for the London Marathoners who might be dehydrating if it stayed like this.  Mark & I had no complaints on the matter though!

Our run took us along the route of the South Downs Way as far a the A27 and back again, though as other runners and regular readers will know, there are a couple of challenging aspects to this route.  Somewhere after the six-mile mark, there is a steep hill that really belongs in the mountains… and it becomes a tortuously steep descent on the way back… though, mercifully it is relatively short.

Worse, is that the first two miles of the return leg, barring the aforementioned, is a draining uphill slog, after which there’s another 5 miles to complete.

Still, Mark is great company and the miles fairly whizzed by, especially as he agreed to let me practice a presentation on him, as best as I could remember without the slides, for work next week.  Despite helping the time pass more quickly, this actually makes for a harder run since the dialogue is controlling the exhalation… I had the stitch for quite a while early on.

Our discussion inevitably got around to marathons (for the avoidance of doubt Mark, NO!) and ultra marathons (DEFINITELY NO!).  Mark has completed about 44 marathons (including Ultras) so far and is thinking about a three-day event later in the year which would add three to that number… circa 35 miles each day.  C-R-A-Z-Y!  Count me OUT for that one too!

So our 14 mile run took us 2.20… a shade slower than the leading woman took to make it round the London marathon course… but hey, we had more hills, and probably more fun too!

Brighton Marathon day

It was the day of the second Brighton Marathon and a rare thing happened. Despite setting off running at the same time, I managed to get to the 26 mile marker ahead of Cliff, albeit only by a few minutes.

I’m not seeking to mislead you though, so I should ‘fess up that my run started from home and only lasted 108 minutes, after which I breakfasted, showered and caught the train to Brighton with Kim, finally reaching the afore mentioned marker not five minutes ahead of Cliff.

It was a glorious day, but at 9am it was still fresh as I ran off in my shorts and t-short. My route was circuitous to say the least, my aim being to cover ten miles without straying too far, if that makes sense. I took in Wivelsfield, Hundred Acre Lane, Streat church, Spatham Lane & home. Roughly 10.9 miles in 1.48 is about 6mph.

Hurrying through Brighton we bumped into Clive & Nat & stopped to chat for a few minutes. We then wove our way slowly through the crowds to find Penny standing aloft on a concrete ball and then we deafened the people in front of us as Cliff ran by.

A little later we managed to find Cliff again on the other side of the finish line, and then Mark Johnson too, both surprisingly mobile given the rigours of the day… Mark actually danced a jig!

Penny, Kim and I then set off for a gorgeous walk to Rottindean along the cliff top, almost reaching the village limits by the time Cliff picked us up, he having retrieved his car in the meantime.

We then supped beer and ate comprehensively in the White Hart before wending our ways home.

Aside from currently sporting the kind of headache that comes from being dehydrated, sunkissed and hayfevered, it was a most brilliant day!

Beacon and back

After visiting Wakehurst Place with Lucas and his daughter (and thanks to Steve for a brilliant mini-tour!) and then spending the rest of the afternoon tending the garden, my hayfever had a wild time last night and first thing this morning.  By the time I finally got my nose under control to get out running it was almost ten.

I ran to the Beacon and back, outbound via Ditchling Common and the chicken farms and inbound via Lodge Hill and Oldlands Mill.  It was the first proper t-shirt & shorts day and although it wasn’t really that warm, it was still quite pleasant.

5.75 miles to the Beacon took me one hour (er, 5.75mph), while the 5 miles back took me 50 minutes (6mph).  Overall 10.75 in 1.50 (average 5.86mph).  Really, very pleasant run.

A beach of a run

By the time I had got up, got my nose together (my hayfever started with a vengeance subsequent to that gorgeous morning I took off Wednesday) and changed all the clocks this morning, I could have happily skipped my run.  But skip it I did not.

I ran from my folks and once again wore shorts despite a slight chill in the air, uncharacteristically complaining about the temperature to a couple of runners I overtook before I warmed up.  It was slow going and I felt that I had to work hard even going downhill to Rottingdean, let alone the drag along to the Palace Pier.  Several times I thought about turning round, but I wanted to do at least ten miles & couldn’t remember where the 5 miles marker was.

Strangely, despite the snail pace, I managed to get to the pier in 55 minutes, quicker than last week and an average of 6.8mph.  This changed my perspective a bit and wishing to do more than simply retrace my steps, I set off along the beach for a little additional work.  I paused to chat to Andy, Paula & Martina at the Martlet Kayak Club (for about ten minutes, in fact, though I didn’t make a note) before resuming my beach run to the groyne by the Marina.

From here I rejoined the top road, turning left at Roedean School to take the track that skirts the back of Ovingdean and climbs steadily to the racecourse.  From here it was a simple case of running down the Warren Road back to base.

Excluding the estimated ten minute chat time, I ran for about 1.55 and covered 11.1 miles, averaging 5.8mph or 10.36 minutes per mile.  I had thought that the 1.25 mile beach run would leave me legless, but it was okay… maybe it would have been different if Cliff had been forcing a little more speed into proceedings!  Overall a very pleasant & sunny run… and with no hayfever effects until I got back north of the Downs!