"We're in a lovely spot here in Church Stretton, the heart of the
Shropshire Hills. We're directly in the valley between them all, which is great
because it means no matter which way we sent you, it's going to be up".
This is the opening line of the race briefing. It's a fifty minute
affair, which sounds far too long normally, but this race is a little
different. The concept is simple. Well, relatively. We're about to take on all
twelve of the labours that Hercules did in Greek mythology. So there are twelve
legs of this race, in ascending order. So Labour One is one mile, Labour Two is
two and so on up to twelve. The Holy Grail at the end is seventy eight miles.
The Labours are mostly out and backs to 'Olympus', the school we're now
in, and at the end of each, or somewhere along the way is a task. Some are as
simple as just dibbing the timing chip in, others you have to retrieve
something and others still you have to complete some other random act we won't
find out until we get there. Richard Weremiuk, the Race Director, takes us
through the navigation of each one in detail. He then explains the course is
malleable and we can choose any route we please to reach them.
My plan is to do the only Labour with a time limit, Five, then go down
in descending order so that each Labour gets easier as I get through the twenty
four hours, thus slowly giving me less reason to give up. At the last minute,
when I get up to mark my name next to the Labour I'm heading out on (we have to
check in and out each time so they know which part of the countryside to look
if something goes wrong), I have a split second change in heart and write 10:00
next to Labour Three. Duane mentioned he crashed on that in the night last year
so was getting it out of the way in daylight, the task on Labour Five doesn't
open until eleven and I'm worried I'd arrive too early so at the last minute I
decide to add Three in first.
It's a very detailed briefing. By the end I feel like I'm entirely in
safe hands, despite not really having any idea what I'd got myself in for until
an hour ago. It looks like a beast, but a bloody fun one. It also looks like a
logistical nightmare to organise, so I'm already in awe of what these guys have
achieved and the race hasn't even started...
Last night I arrived to Church Stretton. As I caught the train and pre-booked
a taxi all went smoothly and I didn't even need to take time off work. The
campsite was nearby and I got the same taxi to pick me up this morning. The
race doesn't start until ten o'clock so it's no rush.
When I arrive, the first competitor, I'm greeted and find a spot to
perch my stuff. The cafeteria is just off the main hall so I pitch up on the
table closest to the door. Slowly other people start arriving as well and I get
chatting to a couple of them.
Kit check time arrives and I'm a little worried. I forgot the reflective
gear listed, I had a visibelt sat at work then forgot to add it to my pack. One
of the other guys I'm chatting to, Duane, has kindly offered for me to borrow
one he has. Phew.
Then I actually get my kit checked and I'd completely skimmed over the
necessity for a spare head torch. The first person to check me is unsure what
to do as I have a strong head torch and the charger, and was planning on using
my phone torch as backup as I have used that in a pinch before thinking it
wouldn't pass a kit check but that was fine as it wasn't on the kit list.
Wrong.
Lorraine, who is actually Duane's wife, goes to get Wendy one of the
organisers to check me again. I explain my situation and apologise. Then we
have an extremely British moment of both sides profusely apologising. She's
sorry to be strict but wants to make sure competitors are safe, I'm sorry for
causing them all hassle. It's very British, but at the crux of it we both know
it's completely me in the wrong, being a pain in the backside and giving them
extra hassle.
In the end not one, but two people offer me a spare torch they have
brought along and the problem is solved. Thank God I happened to meet Duane who
fully saved my arse here lending me his kit. I'm annoyed with myself though, as
following the kit list is something I always try to be strict on and I frown
upon people who try to dodge carrying everything. Shame on me, wrist firmly
slapped.
Labour Three: Cattle of Geryon
After my self-inflicted disaster narrowly averted, we're all stood
outside the Church Stretton primary school, and for the first time in a long
time on a start line everyone looks relaxed, happy and jovial. A couple of minutes
later we're off.
I happen to fall in next to Duane as we go out the main entrance and
turn left. As we double back around the school, a few competitors have cut out
next to the building, saving themselves doubling back like we mugs have, so
straight away I see people are definitely planning on using the option to cut
corners wherever possible. A wry grin settles over my face. For something
notable to happen three seconds into a race, it's got to be interesting. It's
going to be a good day.
A few hundred metres up the road, we take a right turn to head up
towards the National Trust Park at Carding Mill Valley. It's quite a lengthy
road up to the car park, and by then Duane has shot off, so I settle into my
own rhythm. After the Coastal Trail Series finishing, my training has been
haphazard at best, non-existent at worst. Actually, I may as well be
honest, it's been the latter. I managed to blag my way through the Three Rings
of Shap a month ago with no training, but in that month since I've only gone on
one proper training run and I nearly snapped a tendon so I'm feeling fat, slow
and ultimately...under confident.
But I'm here, I've started and I'm going to have a crack at it. Because
there is no such thing as failure at this race, everyone who completes even the
one mile labour gets a medal and onto the leader board, there is absolutely
zero pressure. After my last major failure at the Thames Path 100 last year,
and the subsequent one at the Wealden Waters where I just quit because I
couldn't be bothered, I've spent months doing the series and now trying to
build up big in the hopes of getting the experience to tackle and actually
finish a hundred miler later in the year. Which means no DNF (Did Not Finish).
One of those would knock my confidence a bit; despite entering races I'm unsure
I can finish. So it's nice not to have that pressure as, to be honest, lately
I'm skirting a fine line between dedication to the cause and burning out.
But I hit the carpark at the top end of the valley. I'm in a good mood,
today. It already feels like this race could be a little something special if
only I let it. So I try to open myself up to do exactly that. No misery, just
fun today. The gradient has been ever so slightly uphill along the road so I
can already feel my calves burning as I take a turn off the road and start my
way up Cow Ridge.
I go around the back of a tree then straight away it's hands on thighs
territory, meaning it's bloody steep straight away. I look up ahead of me and
it really is just a ridge line up to the tops. There are a few of us who've
decided to do this one first, but most of them push on ahead of me. I'm happy
to let them go. Within a couple of minutes I'm already up quite high above the
valley and a few more minutes later I turn around and get a fairly lovely
view.
I turn back around though and see a fair bit more hill ahead. Nothing
much for it other than just slugging it out. I try to keep the pace steady and
most importantly manageable. The last thing I need ten minutes into the race is
to be struggling to breathe because I've pushed myself too hard. I find my
normal and just carry on. Another five minutes or so of scrambling up rocky
little outcrops, already on hands and knees, I start to notice it flatten out a
little. Duane comes back down my way. I grin and applaud how fast he is as he
gives me directions then bosses down the hill intently focused. He clearly
doesn't want to slip again this year.
The ridge flattens out and I take a slight diversion over to the side
and see the lone tree I'm looking for. I make a beeline, or as best I can with
dodgy trails underfoot, and head over to it. When I arrive there is a little
laminate card attached to the tree with a quote about Hercules obtaining the
cattle of Geryon. I'm then directed to obtain one for myself in the biscuit tin
down in the roots, but to beware for enemies. I open the tin and there are
dozens of little plastic cows.
There is also a few lumps of dried cow poo. I laugh, and debate whether
or not to bag one up and retrieve that for them, but decide against it. I don't
really want to carry around a bag of shit just for a laugh. Plus there's the
risk that I take it back and on presentation of said poo everyone looks
disgusted at me and tells me I've taken the joke too far, branding me the
weirdo of the event.
I grab a plastic cow instead and am on my way.
I turn around to head back down the valley and am presented with a
brilliant view out across to the hills on the other side and many more further
away fading into the distance. It's just beautiful here. I've climbed a hundred
metres in only the distance of six hundred metres since the road and seeing
this view makes it amazingly worth it, despite feeling knackered barely three
kilometres into the race.
I dally no more, though, and make my way back over to the ridge to go
back to Olympus. Coming up I hadn't really appreciated quite how much of a
ridge Cow Ridge is, but coming back down it's enthralling seeing the hills drop
away casually to either side of me. It's not a knife-edge, or even a narrow
ridge, but it's definitely a ridge. Now having reached the Labour and obtained
the cattle I can also appreciate the irony of the name a little more.
It's a fast descent, but not too fast. After struggling with mad
blisters at the Shap race with my Inov8's, I've decided to risk running in my
Skechers GoRun Ultra today from the beginning. The positive of this is my
muscles will fatigue more slowly and I won't suffer blisters (helped along by
the fact I actually taped and lubed this morning before putting shoes on). The
negative is proprioception will be severely diminished and as the stack height
is so high on these shoes I'm twenty times more likely to roll or snap an
ankle.
Coming downhill I notice this lack of control rather distinctly. I have
to focus a lot more on foot placement to make sure I don't roll, but still do
my best to keep an eye out on the lovely scenery. As I take a glance up to do
exactly that, the ground drops out from below me.
I've come to a gap in the ridge, where there is about a metre drop and
then the ridge continues as normal over the other side a few feet away. Kind of
like a mini valley. I manage to just about right myself before I slip down into
it and smash my patella into several pieces on the other rocky side of this,
then gingerly take a step down into it then over. I'm guessing this is where
Duane fell last year. I'm not surprised, in the dark there is no way I would
have noticed this very quickly at pace.
Luckily the only thing slightly bruised is my confidence, but that's
fine. That's a good thing. I make my way down the rest of the ridge to reach
the road again and start back to base. It's good to have tarmac again to give
some variation and is another area where these shoes really come into their own
so I get a wriggle on down the Carding Mill Valley, turn left at the main road
and then go into the school.
I head over to 'Zeus', the electronic dibber here and put my chip in,
cross of the 10:00 I wrote next to Labour Three, and put 10:45 next to Labour
Five.
Labour Five: Capture of Cerberus
I don't wait around at Olympus at all and head straight back out the
door. There are other competitors coming in from all directions having
completed various labours to begin with. I head out towards what most of us are
expecting to be the most fun labour of them all. This labour has to be
completed between eleven and one o'clock as that is the only time it's open,
which is why we all have to make sure to fit this into our respective schedules
for the race.
First up I turn right out of the school and follow the road for a
kilometre. It's a main road so I'm a bit careful of traffic, but that also
means that it's nice and easy to get a bit of speed up for a bit. I turn off
the main road and head down a quieter one in towards the eastern side of the
hills, which I can see looming ahead of me now.
I meet up with a pair who are running together here and get chatting to
them for a bit. They're part of a team, but wanted to do this section as two
rather than one, given the nature of it, and we all talk about our plans for
the rest of the day. Given they're a team and they'll have a lot of downtime,
their plan is rather different to mine. It's nice to get a chance to talk to
people, but, as I imagine the field is going to spread out massively over the
day and I'm likely to spend most of it on my own.
I cross the main trunk road, then it’s back onto trails. There are a
couple of fields to cross. In the first one I find the race medic who has
decided to do this labour himself with full gear since he knows the whole field
will be concentrated around here for the next couple of hours. As there are
several of us around it's not hard to follow others while trying to keep an eye
on my GPS tracking, the Route Oracle printout and ultimately my common sense to
make sure they're going the correct way.
There's a field with a handful of cows in the middle which makes me wary
so I take quite a wide berth to approach a stile on the other side at the same
time as a couple of other solo runners. They're looking a little confused as
the description of the route doesn't match what we can see in front of us. I
take a check, though, and see that we've exited the field in the wrong place so
we just need to go a bit further up which we do, and find the path okay.
We go around the side of a little reservoir then reach another dead end.
The path is leading us to the reservoir and nowhere else. I check the map again
and realise we're still a little down the hill from where we need to be and as
there is a gate behind us leading up I head through that. A little further on
and we find the correct path to follow, confirmed by official waymarks straight
away for peace of mind. It's a flat section skirting the base of the hill and
leading towards some woods.
I start to feel like I'm warming up. Like I'm ready to have a good day.
Then I roll my ankle and hear a crack.
I fall to the ground and a shooting pain stabs at the tendons in the top
of my foot. God damn it. It's always the flat bit that gets you. Those
surreptitious moments of complacency where you're not watching as rigidly for
potholes until you step in one.
A couple of other guys come past and ask how I am. I can't talk normally
because it hurts so much so take a deep breath and in a couple of staccato
sentences tell them I'm fine and not to worry, thanks. They carry on. I'm not
fine.
It feels exactly the same as what put paid to my attempt on the Thames
Path 100 last year, which the medic then thought was either a horrible sprain
or a stress fracture. Tears come to my eyes when I realise that I might have to
go home with my head in my hands having done all of six miles at this race. I
take more deep breaths. Several. Dozens. It's not helping, but the shock of the
pain has subsided so I can look at things a bit more rationally.
I've had sprains many times before in a race. They've never once been
close to this bad, but every time apart from one I've been able to carry on.
And even then I got to eighty miles, which is all I'm after today anyway. I
just stay seated and a minute later who should pop up but the medic.
Two possibilities cross my mind. One is that he'll tell me I'll be fine,
give me a magic fix and tell me to be on my way. The other is that he'll tell
me he can't fix it and pull me from the race. I'd understand of course, and
there would be no hard feelings, but it would still be humiliating this early
on.
He asks how it feels and whether it's okay to take my shoe off, which we
do gently. He check around key pressure points, informs me he thinks it's a
sprain but that I can carry on if I feel up to it. With the advice that I go
very carefully and am lucky it's a nice hill so I don't have to run for a
while. He offers me some painkillers, which I decline.
I've never been a fan of painkillers. There's a lot of debate around
about the topic, but I'm of the opinion masking a potentially serious injury is
not a bad idea, especially if it's with the strong NSAID's that can wreak havoc
on your insides. I'm not sure if it's out of wanting to make sure his
professional integrity is clear or whether he thinks I'm being disapproving,
but either way the medic mentions it's fine to take paracetamol as they're not
NSAIDS so don't cause internal damage.
I think I had assumed that's what he meant anyway, so hope I didn't seem
disapproving, but it was nice to see someone who clearly cares enough about
what they're doing to make these things clear. We're clearly in good hands
today if we can have a random fall on a hillside and a medic arrives to gives
quick, succinct but obviously still thorough help within a couple of minutes.
I get up and move along my merry way, feeling a bit better having been
lucky enough to have it checked. Each step is a stab up my nerves, but I move
through the gate into the woods and am bloody careful of the tree roots popping
out everywhere.
I come out the other side and take a turn upwards to begin the ascent.
Straight away it's an extremely steep section of rocks, to get up to the ridge
taking us up Three Fingers Rock. It's very slow and as always I monitor my pace
to make sure my breathing is okay. Even more so now that I've got a throbbing
ankle to worry about as well.
I reach the top and get a good view back towards Church Stretton then take
a turn up the direct ridge that takes me up Caer Caradoc Hill. There are a few
little bumps here and a lot of rocky outcrops. The problem is the Oracle is
telling me to follow a faint path when I reach the biggest rock at the summit.
I don't know which summit I'm looking for.
My watch tells me to follow a faint path that I can see off to the left
and there is a rock to my right, but I'm not really on a summit and two guys
ahead carry on up the main distinctive path. I follow them, hoping I'll get a
clearer idea soon.
The other problem is that Richard was very insistent in the briefing
that if we follow a path too high, we will definitely not see the cave where
Cerberus is hiding as it's not visible from above. I start to get a feeling I'm
going wrong and make my way over to a path I can see lower down. Looking ahead
of me I can see half a dozen people strewn about the hillside staring as
gormlessly as I now am.
Everyone is looking around, knowing we're nearly there but not being
able to work out exactly where we're supposed to be. From what
I can see on the GPS we're still a little too high up and a woman ahead points
down to a little outcrop back and downhill a bit. Well, the Oracle did say
that we need to lose about thirty metres in height so I think she's onto
something and start scrambling my way through the tussocks on an increasingly
steep gradient. This is hell and agony on my ankle, but I guess that's what
Cerberus wants.
I'm nearly at the outcrop when above the same woman shouts again that
she's found the cave. I look up and she's about five metres from where I was
only a moment ago. I clearly need to open my eyes a bit more. For a second I
don't want to believe her looking at the outcrop I'm now just beside, then
sense gets the better of me and I start the clamber back up through the
tussock.
At the top there is a cave that's about two foot high, with a control
point and a tiny soft toy of Cerberus attached to it. You've got to love the
irony of this race. Safe in the knowledge I've now found the correct place
after now having two navigational errors in a very short space of time, I make
my way back up the hill to the actual path above. At the top there is once
again a stunning view back across the countryside. This time I've climbed two
hundred metres in the space of a bit over two kilometres in half an hour.
Once back on a far more secure path I start my decent down the other
side. This labour is one of only two that aren't a straight out and back. We've
still got the task to complete. There are a few people heading back roughly the
same way we've come, but I'm pretty sure we were advised to go down the hill to
join a road rather than follow the ridge. I'm keen to follow the suggested
routes where possible today, more for simplicity's sake than anything else.
I see the medic standing on the ridge line looking down over the
countryside and he asks how I am. I say I think I'm fine thanks and I hope he
enjoys the rest of his morning. He gives me a thumbs up, a cheery fellow, and
I'm on my way.
Some other people, including the woman who finally found Cerberus for us
all, have the same idea and start descending down a faint path so I tag along.
Downhill is quite painful still so I'm not particularly speedy here, making
sure to be desperately careful not to twist my ankle again and we reach the
bottom in one piece.
It's a well-kept gravel road so I'm pleased to be able to follow this
along after the worries on the hill and start putting it behind me. We divert
down another road, past a farmhouse and through between the outbuildings and
come down towards the task ahead.
I'm the first of a group of half a dozen to arrive, having utilised the
flat ground to go a bit faster and I round the corner to see a row of archery
butts across a field. I go over to the desk and am told to put on a wrist
guard. I've no idea what I'm doing, never having seen one, so I just try to put
it on and ask if I've got it right. I'm met with a resounding no that suggests
I'm the closest thing to an imbecile he's seen today. He starts to tell me what
to change then gives up and tells me to remove it altogether so he can do it.
I'm taken over to the line and told how to stand, how to hold the bow
and am guided into my first arrow's flight. It's not great, but I manage to get
it in the red circle, just outside the gold, so am pretty pleased with that for
a first ever attempt. The second one is outside the circle altogether and my
third is not much better.
I thank the trainer, who is apparently an Olympic trainer, and go back
to drop the bow off. Richard is there, asking how I got on and I point. He tells
me someone else has beaten my as far as the spot prize is concerned but that I
did well. I grin away then head off, thanking everyone as I pootle along to the
main trunk road.
From here it's pretty straightforward heading back to the quiet road I arrived
on then back to the main road, Ludlow Road, through Church Stretton back to the
school. I dib into Zeus, cross off Labour Five, then put 12:15 next to Labour
Twelve.
Labour Twelve: Golden Hind of Artemis
I grab a few snacks and then I'm out the door again for the big one. I
want to get this one done and out of the way given the size of it. Again, it's
a left turn although this time a spend a minute or so trying to find the
shortcut the other competitors took when we were heading out for Labour Three
earlier.
I head up past the earlier turn off and this time into Church Stretton
itself. I take a turn east down through the main road to the train station,
then over a bridge crossing the trunk road. The directions say it's a right
turn here so as I'm waiting for that I notice I've gone a bit far. Again. I
double back and take the turning through the residential area, then go steadily
uphill through the 'burbs of the town until the road ends and a path starts
through the woods behind the town.
There is another guy ahead of me, who passed me on my little detour
earlier. I try to keep a steady pace to catch him for a chat, but he stays
firmly in front. It's as expected, quite a bit of a hike up through here at a
decent gradient, but it's nice to be inside some woods above the town.
Soon enough I pop out the other side of the woods and the sun is really
out now. I follow the fence line for a bit then take a sharp turn up the hill
to the first summit. At the top here I see yet another wide ridgeline across a
small col to the top of Ragleth Hill about a kilometre away. Again there are
just lovely views across in every direction I can look so I just potter along
the extra kilometre or so until I'm climbing up to control point Twelve A.
There is a summit mast here and luckily I've seen the guy ahead looking
around as the instructions are again on a laminated card, which is rolled up
and shoved up a pipe. I pull it out and find that the first task on this
section is to remember the number One.
I roll it back up, take a look around the hill from where I am, then try
to work out where I'm supposed to go as I can't see a clear path leading away.
The map looks to be pointing me west so I start that way, then doubt myself and
double back a little before realising that I'm supposed to be heading east and
I'm looking at the wrong bit of the map. Oops.
I descend down the hill to pass through some technical little bits with
long grass and bushes hiding potential pitfalls so I take it carefully until
I'm over the stile and onto the path that takes me past a few houses and back
down to the main trunk road a few kilometres further down the line.
I cross it into Little Stretton, then go down the opposing road to find
myself at last night's campsite. It's a lovely little place, tucked in another
valley, though there are some pretty vocal sheep all around that aren't
bothered about waking up campers at five in the morning. All part of the fun.
Instead of going into the campsite, though, I take the driveway up to the
main farmhouse then behind it to the path taking me up into the valley. There
are some mountain bikers here taking a break so I smile and say hello before
starting the climb back up to the tops.
It's a pretty solid ascent, not really changing other than going up. I
know there are two labours that use this section as well so I'm going to have
to come back for another visit later in the day. Near the top I see the marker
to help divert people to the right direction for the labour they are on.
Unfortunately I'm on the one that instead of saying to follow the path around,
just says carry on straight up.
The gradient increases yet again to the point where I'm now actually
just crawling on hands and knees as it helps give a bit of better purchase and
spread the load. After a few gruelling minutes I'm at the top of Callow
searching around for control Twelve B. I find it, number Five to memorise.
I come down off the top, trying to find a path that isn't there so just
aim roughly west until I come down onto the same track that I left to ascend
Callow. The good news now is that there's no navigation for a while, just
following this path for two and a half kilometres or so. It's still moving up,
but at a small gradient so more than easy to fast hike up until I'm back on the
tops.
There is now someone else ahead of me, a woman now, who looks to be
feeling about as good as I am. After a kilometre or so I catch her and stop to
talk for a bit. She did the race last year, and did around forty miles so is
just hoping to get further than that today. It's nice to have someone to talk
to for a bit and we approach a tarmac road and see the checkpoint gazebo in the
distance. This is the only checkpoint available, mainly to help give people a
bit of a boost on the longer section.
We arrive smiling and asking how far it is. I'm told about half way on
this loop, which is fine by me. I grab a couple of cups of Coke and a few
crisps then start making my way along. I follow the road very briefly then as
per usual miss the slight turn off to the path I need. I notice fairly quickly
though so make my way across to meet the path.
There's more of a climb up and apparently somewhere along the way I'm
supposed to pass the dibber for Labour Six at the highest point of the Long
Mynd National Trust park. I don't notice either and just plod on. Once over the
top it's a very well kept gravel path, the Shropshire Way for a few kilometres
along the tops and is a really lovely stretch. Up on the tops so great views.
Quite windy but the sun is out so the conditions complement each other for a
nice temperature. Easy path to follow, so I just drift off into my own little
world. The only slightly discerning thing is that at five hundred metres
or so I've a good view of all the hills around and there are a hell of a lot of
them that I'm going to have to climb.
There is another race going on at this time as well using some sections
of the same course as us. Both organisers have been in touch so there's no
animosity or anything and at this point I come up to one of their checkpoints
and am passing a handful of their runners here or there. One joins me for a
couple of minutes and we trade stories on our respective races, which is quite
a little buzz for both of us before he heads off to finish his marathon.
At the far end of the path I reach another road and join it for a few
hundred metres until I come up to a cattle grid with control Twelve C. Number
One again. One, Five, One. Must remember that or I'll be in a right state if I
have to repeat the labour.
I take off down the hill, double check the map and double back as it
says to take a right rather than cross the grid. I take a right turn then
realise it's right from the other direction so sheepishly double back again,
with a couple in a car parked up probably wondering what the hell I'm doing as
I finally cross over to go the correct way down the path.
It's easily followed, the path on the other side and takes me down off
the tops to another road to follow briefly before the final drop down to a
couple of quaint houses and the final control at Twelve D. Here there is a box
with a padlock. The laminate card tells me the final number is Two, so I open
'Pandora's Box' to find a bag of jelly babies and some transfer tattoos with
the Beyond Marathon, the race organisers, logo on them. This is to represent
wearing the mythical Hind. I apply one as the item I'm to retrieve, putting it
on the inside of my bicep to avoid a Beyond Marathon shaped tan line.
At this point the woman I had been chatting to briefly arrives as well
so I explain the tattoo and offer to wait, but she tells me to go ahead as
she's going to have a little break for a couple of minutes. There's a short
section on a country lane before reaching Ludlow Road again and the final two
kilometre stretch back into town. Having left due south, I'm now approaching
from the north.
When I arrive I take a seat and find some food. A few days ago the team
released the menu for the full twenty four hours of the race and there is some
nice pasta available. I grab a plate and wolf it down as quickly as possible,
then grab a couple of sweet snacks, swap over my Oracle notes and repack food
before dibbing into Zeus.
I cross off Labour Twelve with pleasure at a nice journey, then put
15:15 into the box next to Labour Nine.
Labour Nine: Augean Stables
Now, despite saying I was going to take these all in descending order, a
few things have been playing with my head over Labour Twelve. There is the fact
that Labour Eleven is entirely road so there is no navigational and therefore
much more suitable for a night section. That said, there is a checkpoint that's
only open until nine o'clock so I kind of want to break that up. There is also
the fact that both Labours Nine and Seven are recommended in daylight. But
mainly there is the fact that Labour Nine has cows and that's why it's
recommended.
Because of that I change the game plan for the second time today and
head out for Labour Nine. The first section is the same as Labour Twelve,
heading through the town then east over the trunk road bridge to the 'burbs.
This time I take a slightly earlier turn off, but still going up the same
hill.
There are a couple of older guys ahead and it looks like this is just a
lane straight up through the back of the roads so is straight and narrow. I
stop and chat for a couple of minutes and it turns out one of them is Richard
the RD's dad. He's having a nice time just walking the course and planning on
getting a few labours in across the day. Seems like a nice bloke, but soon
enough we reach a gate and he tells me I better head off rather than sticking
to their walking pace, which I do.
I'm off the lane now and onto a path that is just as direct up the hill
as the last labour was, albeit on the other side of the same woods. Slow and
steady does it until I pop out at the top for a nice view over where I'm going,
not that I can really tell exactly which parts without taking a while to study
the map so I just make my way down the track to a road, which I follow briefly.
I then take a turn down another road which has a nice steep descent for
quite a while. Somewhere near the bottom I know there is a shortcut but I can't
tell where. As I'm going at pace I notice as I go past another guy coming over
a stile that I'm passing right by the shortcut. Oh, well, I'm on the road so
that will take back a little of the time as I double back at the bottom. I'll
catch it on the return journey.
I come off the road, luckily keeping an eye on where I'm going as the
turn off is just what looks like a driveway. The gradient has flattened out now
so there is a nice seven hundred metres or so through the woods with no stiles
or anything so a good chance to take a casual few minutes plod.
Again I reach another road and the Oracle tells me to cross it and find
the slightly obscured stile behind a hedge. Directly opposite is a gate, but I
don't think that's it? A little further along is the intersection with a more
established road but all I can see there is the gate to a farm. I wander back
and forth between the various options for a couple of minutes, find a sign
pointing at a tree by the farm gate.
Where the hell is this stile? |
You're kidding right? |
Nope. |
Yeah, of course it's easy to find from the other side. |
I dig around behind the trees and find a stile. In this instance,
slightly obscured means about as hard to find as the entrance to Narnia. Again,
another little mind game on this race that seems to be full of them. I love it.
I clamber over it, dodging the overgrown trees and make my way into the
adjoining field.
There are a few horses in this field but they're behind a bit of tape
strung across the field to give them a barrier and people a chance to pass by.
They're right up by the tape, which they could obviously push through without
hassle, but I'm fine with these beast being that close. It's weird, the tape is
literally no more than a fabric tape measure yet it serves as an acceptable
barrier. Odd.
I climb the stile at the far side and make my way into the next one.
There are a couple of other runners passing through the opposite way. It's
quite tall grass here which makes for slower moving despite being flat. I wave
a hello to both of them and at the other side of the field is a herd of cows.
They're right by the stile I need to cross. I feel pretty thankful I've
just seen two other guys go through without issue, raise my arms wide to appear
bigger and walk directly towards and past them. They're really close but look
more like they want some company than to kill me like I'm worrying about. I
climb the stile and wave at them as they stare back and approach closer.
I get a bit confused which hedge line to follow yet again before going
in, unsurprisingly, the same direction. Over another stile and I'm in a field
full of loads of the buggers. And these one have massive horns. I spot the
stile at the opposite side of the field directly through the herd.
Unfortunately they're quite spread out so I have to take quite a wide
detour to skirt them and end up getting quite close to one who stares back at
me confused and wobbles its horns. I scarper over the fence. Over the next
field there isn't much of a path so I just take a rough bearing for the corner
of the field I think I'm supposed to be going to, then tucked away in the
bushes around the corner is another stile with the control. I dib in, read the
instructions and this one is a collection labour.
It's a horseshoe with a joke about how lightweight they are, so I grab
one from the 'Stables' and turn around to head back. Over the field and I'm
back in saying hello to the horny cows. Minds out of the gutter, please.
Unfortunately this time they've all moved so my previous route has been blocked
off. This means I have to detour around them the other side of the field with
much more distance between me and the fence if one charges. It also takes me
around the ones with calves.
I take it cautiously and as anyone other than me would expect they just
look at me bemusedly. I get to the fence and find the woman from Cerberus and
her pals coming over, point out the stile with a smile and carry on over the
next field and onto face the next cows. They also have moved, and are now in
the middle of the field so much further away and much easier to avoid. I still
give them a wide berth, but am less nervous as they were so placid last time.
Past the horses and onto the path through the woods again I take the
time to do a little mental check of how I'm feeling now, being about a marathon
through the race. Everything actually feels fairly okay. My legs are definitely
feeling it, but I'm still within my pace schedule of trying to go around seven
kilometres an hour to build a slight buffer for the night section. Who knows,
maybe I might get close on this one?
Out the other side onto the road and I start the ascent back up the
hill. As I'm too busy daydreaming I forget to even look for the short cut until
I'm already half way around the long cut so don't bother. As I remember how
long the descent was here I just settle into a rhythm and potter my way back.
It's a relatively steep gradient but easily doable if you take it at the right
pace, made even more so by the fact that it's on road.
I get to the top, go along the road a bit and take the first turn back
up towards the woods. It's called Wagoner's Way and for some reason that makes
me laugh and I start humming a little made up ditty about wagoners. I get near
the top and don't recognise where I am. Uh oh.
I fancy a rest anyway after climbing for the last half hour or so. I
perch on a stile and see I took a turn off too early. I could go on ahead and re-join
the path from another labour back, but the stickler in me wants to go the right
way so I run back down the three hundred metres to carry on up the road to the
right turn off not far away. As I reach the signpost I curse the wagoners. To
be fair though, I'm still finding the word funny. Try and say wagoner ten times
and tell me you don't giggle.
I make my way up the correct path to crest the hill then boss down the
other side happily. This labour has been quite fun and straightforward so I'm
in quite a good mood. I can't stop thinking about how much fun this event is.
Such a basic and simple concept but it really adds a huge amount more to the
fun.
I come out the bottom of the woods and on to the lane down the road. The
sharp and constant downhill starts to make my legs and feet feel a bit wobbly,
but I try to take it easy and soon enough I'm at the bottom plodding along back
through the town to the school.
I grab some more food and take a bit of a break now. I know I shouldn't
take too long, but if I give myself twenty minutes I'll be leaving fresh for
the next one, so I do exactly that. I want to make sure I refuel between each
one with solid food and most of all I want to have fun, which means taking some
breaks here or there.
I dib into Zeus, cross out Labour Nine and put 18:00 next to Labour
Eleven.
Labour Eleven: Mares of Diomedes
I've been tossing up whether to do this one or Labour Seven next for a
while, as that one should be good for daylight, but this one has a checkpoint.
In the end the thought of going out for eleven miles with no food or water
refills in the middle of the night just seems a crap idea so I opt for this
now.
Again I head down the now familiar road into the town proper. When I get
to the normal eastern turn off, I instead head west. There is a small flat
section before going over a cattle grid and a car with a bunch of
teenagers get stop to ask me if they're going the right way for the Long Mynd.
I tell them I don't know I'm not from around here. One of the girls in the back
shouts something, either abusive or supportive I'm not sure, and they drive off
without a thanks. I then see the National Trust sign indicating I'm now heading
into the Long Mynd.
The road curves around then starts a very steep ascent. I should have
seen this coming. I look down below me and see Carding Mill Valley and all its
bumps and think about how many times I'm going to be on a part of that over the
course of this event.
The climb really takes it out of me, but I just press on at a slower
pace and manage fine. It levels out slightly, but not much as it winds away for
Carding Mill and towards Pole Bank, near the checkpoint. Over the space of five
kilometres I only climb three hundred metres, which is not so bad when on road,
but what I now notice is that this is a desolate journey. There are not that
many distinguishing feature that you can't see for ages around, and the
gradient doesn't change much at all.
Basically it's just one long slog up a hill for ages. Eventually I get
nearer what I think is the top and it slowly starts to flatten out a bit. I
have to hand it to Richard, he managed to make even the simple easy road
section sadistic by making it mind numbingly boring. Had I not realised this on
the slog up I think I would have struggled a lot more, but now I'm just
thinking it's funny and quite enjoying it. There's no new directions really
from the Oracle so it's just a matter of pressing on and not letting the mind
get too down at how much you're not enjoying the hill. Conversely, I think it
makes me enjoy it more.
By the time I get back to the checkpoint, which I've only just now
clicked is the same one as earlier for Labour Twelve I'm actually grinning and
joking with the volunteers about how beautifully sadistic this labour is. They
agree and proffer the thought that Richard's mind works in a slightly different
way to the rest of us. Brilliant.
I'm not actually feeling that hungry so just have a cup of Coke or two
and put my cup aside to use on the way back to save on rubbish. I thank the
team and tell them I'll see them soon. Next is quite a lengthy flat section
similar to the gravel path of the Shropshire Way behind me that I travelled
earlier, only now it's on road.
It's not flat, but it's not hilly either, so again I just drift off and
take my mind away from things. When there is lots of navigation or hard terrain
to worry about it's easy not to think about how much it hurts or how much is
left, whereas in this situation I've got loads of time to think about
those things if I so choose. Hence the sadism, mainly in the
juxtaposition of going from one to the other.
I meet the other guy who was going to lend me a torch coming back with
his dog and say hello. I then make my way a bit further along to a point where
the gradient suddenly drops hugely. There is a massively steep long downhill,
which I boss down, knowing I'm going to pay for it later but figuring it's the
lesser evil than going down tentatively.
Each step slams my quads but by God I'm enjoying knocking down the hill.
By the bottom I'm really hurting but I don't mind. It was quite a good release
for some of the pent up energy I've had building for a while. I take a turn at
the bottom into an area called Handless, find the dibber and again find I'm to
retrieve something. As the Mares of Diomedes were flesh eating and this area is
called Handless, they thought it fitting that the item to retrieve is a plastic
severed finger, complete with sugary blood water.
I sit down for a second, then out of nowhere my left hamstring cramps
harder than a vice on wood and I'm in agony. I sit there with a voiceless
scream on my face trying to breath but not able to until slowly it subsides.
Best not sit down again for a while. As soon as I can I get up and head on my
way.
As always, given the lovely downhill was only around the corner and I'm
still hurting from it, it now becomes a massive uphill and painful. Apparently
last year this bit took someone an entire hour. Over the next two kilometres I
climb nearly two hundred metres. Again, I just have to laugh at how perfectly
brutal this labour is. Turning friend into foe within the space of minutes the
way this hill now has done takes a special kind of planning.
I get to the top and find there are two or three other people coming
along towards me. I'm smiling and saying hello as I potter along and soon
enough I'm back at the checkpoint still grinning away. Again I'm not terribly
hungry as it's mostly sweets here so I just have a cup of Coke, chat and head
on my way with a thanks.
Soon enough I'm over the hill and on the descent. It is definitely much
nicer than coming up it, but it still has quite an impact on my quads. Most of
the time I'm used to short sharps bursts of any type of running, but this is a
five kilometre stretch of descent and that takes a toll. By the end where the
really steep bit is, I'm having to take a break here or there just to stop the
burning in my quads. I pass a few others coming up at this point and stop to
say hi and good luck on this beauty of a section.
I reach the bottom and head back into town for another quick rest. I
again don't stop too long, wanting to keep the buffer I've built as much as
possible as I know I'll be needing it soon. So I scoff some food and take a few
minutes to sit and get ready. I decide to leave Labour Seven, not worrying
about the daylight as, if I leave Ten now, he'll become the elephant in the
room.
I cross off Eleven next to Zeus, then put 21:00 next to Labour Ten.
Labour Ten: Lernaean Hydra
I head up again to the National Trust car park in Carding Mill Valley, a
little slower than last time I was here. When I get to the turn off for Cow
Ridge up to Labour Three, I instead carry on the way I'm going up the valley.
There's still that same easy uphill gradient, but I'm okay with that, I'd
rather have it now than later on the way back when it would hurt all the more.
The valley is quite peaceful. Being that this is the family friendly
part of the park, the path is quite easy to follow and well-kept and literally
just runs up the middle of the valley. When I reach the end of it, there is a
signpost with a left and right fork. I take the right one. This leads me
straight back up the hills over the back of the valley and up to the top of the
Long Mynd. It's quite a steep little bugger, but luckily not too long so I'm
over the back of it pretty quickly. It's definitely taken a fair bit out of me
getting up to the top and as I do another runner comes down towards me.
As he passes he asks which one I'm doing. When I tell him Ten he says
that's most of the vert for a while and it's a nice easy stretch ahead. Great.
I reach the path and turn right, realising this is the same gravel path I was
on earlier for Labour Twelve. This course is becoming second nature now. Best
not get too ahead of myself though. I'm likely to still get pretty lost
ahead.
The sun is starting to go down so the temperature is dropping a bit and
now that I'm back on the tops I'm definitely feeling the wind a bit more. I put
an extra base layer on between the last two labours and I'm pretty glad for it
now.
I reach the road and make my way back down to the cattle grid that I
took every exit except the correct one from earlier. I see that control for
Twelve on the post, but know that this time I actually am turning left. I take
a little short cut down a small rise then back up the other side to find myself
on a farm track through a field.
This goes through several fields, with a lot of sheep. It's actually
quite steady in terms of gradient so I manage to keep the pace as mostly
running, though visibility is starting to fade a bit. I count the fences I go
through, as there are supposed to be five and on the sixth I'm supposed to
change direction.
I'm quite liking this little bit, despite there not being much going on,
and start playing a game that I want to try to get to the control before having
to put my head torch on. It's quite short lived, though, as I come around the
back of a shed and head to the final gate only to find there is no gate, just a
barbed wire fence in the corner.
I get out my torch, which leaves me none the wiser, then see another
torch coming up from ahead. It's someone on the other side of the fence so I at
least now know where I need to be. The problem is getting there as it's barbed
wire and there are some stabby looking bushes on the other side. Plus my legs
aren't exactly up for too many contortions at the moment.
So I find a place where there is a post to make sure I'm steady and
won't damage the fence, flick my legs over then jump into the bush on the other
side. Correct, they are stabby. I come away with a few minor scratches, though
it definitely could have been worse.
Finally I'm on the right path, having chatted to the lady coming up the
other side and getting a few more directions I know where I'm going. I head
further down the track, through a couple of gates and find the finger post
signing me off to the left. I take that and find myself on a gradual but
cambered descent on slightly slippy ground with low visibility, seemingly a
recipe for disaster. I take it easy as I also can't see a definitive path and
as I seem to have a pretty big penchant for getting lost today I figure I best
keep an eye on my watch as to how far off course I may be going.
After a few minutes I find the path which winds down through some woods
and over a footbridge to the bottom of this hill in the Golden Valley. I nearly
miss a sharp right turn but as I'm being a bit more vigilant on the navigation
side of things I manage to stop myself pretty quickly and go the right
way.
There is an eerie field to cross with a couple of trees looming out of
the gloom of the finality of dusk and I wonder briefly if the boogeyman is
about to jump out and get me. He doesn't. I pass by the trees and see something
glinting over by the fence. It's the control.
I sit down for a few seconds on the stile, feeling pretty good. When I
started this morning I wasn't sure how well I'd manage these longer sections,
and I'm now in a position whereby I know I'll get through all of them. I'm
feeling rough. I'm hurting. Darkness has descending which will take my vigour
with it, but I'm at the very least going to make it to the fifty mile mark when
I get back from this labour. Even if I can it a day now it'll be okay.
I have to admit the idea has crossed my mind a few times earlier in the
day to give up. As my training has faded quite a lot, there's of course a
reason behind it. Motivation. I've quite simply got a bit burned out. It's been
a full on year and it's taken a lot of blood, guts, glory and failure all mixed
in together and sometimes I just feel like it's time to call it a day for a
while.
But that day isn't today. I've got to a good place, and hopefully I can
get to a better one. All fodder for the bigger races I'm hopefully going to be
doing later in the year. If I don't test myself now, I'll have no hope then. So
I get up and push on. I pass the eerie trees, go over the footbridge and start
my way back up the Golden Valley.
I pass a barn through a field of sheep and it doesn't look all that
familiar. The route guide is still taking me the right way and the GPS says I'm
in the right place but something just doesn't feel right. I get near the top
and I just don't quite recognise where I am. Then, for the second time I find
myself facing a barbed wire fence. Bugger. It looks like I'm a little to the
right of where I need to be, so I move over and find the corner of the field
with the track on the other side of it. I've obviously just cut a corner.
A hop, skip and a jump and I'm over the other side heading back up the
track. I see the other barn I passed on the way down on the wrong side and see
the gate ahead of me with the way marker on it. I'm just about to go through
when I see a whole pile of eyes glinting back at me. There are dozens of cows
all sprawled over the track.
Nuh, uh. I ain't going in there. Especially when I know there is a
really simply route through the field next to me. I go through that gate
instead and follow the small path on the other side of the fence, past row upon
row of cow eyes glinting evilly.
There is one sheep in the second field who seems particularly perplexed
by my presence at this time of night and starts bleating profusely at me. She
doesn't move or anything, just bleats loudly. I move on so she can get on with
her evening.
I'm starting to feel a fair bit of fatigue now, probably because night
time has set in. These fields that I quite enjoyed on the way out aren't quite
as nice going back, though I'm still not minding them. More indifferent.
Then it starts raining. It's only a drizzle, but enough to make me a bit
concerned. As far as I remember, this is supposed to stay all night as well. I
just push on for now and deal with the wet and wind until I'm back at the dip
and rise that takes me back up to the cattle grid.
One there I turn back onto the tops proper and face the wind and rain.
Okay, it's not just a drizzle now. It's getting a little blustery. I'm not
feeling too cold or anything yet, but I learned the hard way that once cold
gets in it stays in. I don't want to risk anything like that, so I get my
waterproof out and whip that on.
Instant gratification. It's still a bit crap running dead into the wind
and rain, but I can't complain as it's not cold. I reach the path diverting off
the road and make my way down. As much as I liked this path earlier in the day,
it's not so nice at the moment so I'm keen to get off it.
But the damned fatigue is here to stay. I run a hundred metres then slow
to a walk. I chastise myself and run another hundred then stop again. This continues
on for the whole kilometre or so until I reach the turn off and triumphantly
punch the rain.
I turn down the hill and straight away the weather stops being so crap.
It's quite treacherous coming down here now, not to mention a bit painful on my
legs who are suddenly starting to give up. I just take it a bit easier. I've
got time. It's okay. Fifty miles nearly in the bag so it's fine.
I hobble and wobble my way down the steepest bits to the finger post at
the base of the hill in the Carding Mill Valley and there is another guy not
far behind me. I expect he'll catch me pretty soon as he was a bit behind me
when we passed as I was leaving and he was approaching the control a while ago.
For some reason he doesn't catch me even with my slow pace down the hill. Maybe
he's feeling just as bad.
Going up the valley on the outward journey. |
I break into a bit more of a normal pace once back on the easy descent
down the valley towards the car park and again enjoy this little section. It's
still as peaceful as going up it earlier. I reach the car park and not long
after the guy behind finally catches me.
We run together for a while. He's a few miles ahead of me and looking
strong. I realise at this point that my pacing is fine to finish, but as I've
gotten lost so many times I'm now behind schedule. Bugger. We chat away and
it's nice to have a bit of company as we make our way back in to the school.
I sit down for a bit and get some food. I think I'm ready to give up.
Fifty miles is enough and I can't really be bothered going back out there again
today. So I sit down and get some food. I chat to the guy who I ran in with, we
get chatting to some other people and all around it's a nice vibe.
Everyone is feeling happy and enjoying the event, but most of us are now
at the point where we realise roughly where we are able to finish up at the end
of the day. The guy heads off again to knock Nine on the head but I stay here.
I've been chatting to a couple who are working as a team, but a bit behind
their own schedule. I keep saying I'm going to call it a day but they keep
encouraging me.
About an hour has passed before they get up, pack and go out for Seven,
telling me I can still do this and to carry on. I smile and wish them well.
Then finally it clicks. My brain goes from miserable can't-be-bothered man to
why-the-hell-not man.
I mean really, what else am I going to do? I wouldn't be annoyed at only
fifty miles, but I would be sat here all night thinking I should get up and
carry on. So with that I do. I quickly pack my stuff up and head out the door.
I plug into Zeus, cross off Ten and write 00:45 into the box next to
Eight.
Labour Eight: Symphalian Birds
I set off from the school, this time heading north again the same way as
I did on Five. Because I sat down for so long, I find that I now have a huge
amount of energy. As it's a flat section, I end upsetting off at the same pace
I did on Five all those hours ago.
Then I grab at my bottles. Oh no. I forgot to fill them. I was sat down
for an hour and I didn't even fill my bottles up. What an idiot. But I'm quite
far up the road now to turn around. Should I? Eight miles is a long way. But
the couple that I was speaking to said that Eight was pretty much boring
annoying road all the way to the base of a hill then just straight up and
down.
Hmm. Screw it. I'm going to just try for it and be damned with the
water. It's going to hurt, but hopefully not too much. I pass the turn off for
Five, then another kilometre up the road I find mine for this labour. I turn
right and make my way down another quiet road. I know I'll be on this for a
while.
Team Couple, as they shall hereby be known as I forgot to ask their
names, mentioned they thought this route looked boring and they took a trail
route, but after such a long sit down a few kilometres of long open road is
brilliant for me so I'm more than happy to keep cracking on this way. I cross
the busy trunk road and there is another couple of kilometres, this time a
little bit bumpier, but still very much runnable and I'm flying along.
This is great! To think only twenty minutes ago I was contemplating
giving up. What an idiot. I need to remember to focus more on how much I am
actually enjoying this thing. I pass the odd runner but only a handful.
Possibly Cerberus woman, I'm not sure.
View from Twelve |
I go over a particularly lumpy bit, then drop down to an intersection. A
couple of hundred metres further along I see the sign to take me up the hill.
Off the road I go and up through between some bushes until it opens out onto
the hillside.
I go up a bit further and the next and final instruction from the Oracle
is to go through the wooden gate then up to the summit. I find the gate soon
enough, but it's broken and leaning up against a fence with a proper gate on
it. I assume it's just been taken down and replaced so go through the metal
gate.
I'm feeling quite pleased as I'm now only a short while from the summit,
less than half a kilometre. The track peters out a bit then pretty much
disappears altogether so I end up getting a bit confused and moving between
various sheep tracks trying to find the correct one. None of them seem quite
right.
I then come up to another one that looks a bit more firm so am pleased
to get off the others as the weeds and bracken were starting to get a bit
annoying. A bit further long and I see a fence above me on the hill, so assume
I must be going around the base of it before coming up to the summit.
It then dawns on me I'm in completely the wrong place. Again. The summit
is directly above me. To the side. I'm supposed to be on the ridge on the other
side of the fence. Damn. I make my way up to the fence and follow it along, but
can't really see anywhere that is going to be feasible to traverse as there are
trees in the way and quite dense bracken.
I go back and forth a bit then just pick a spot and hurl myself over.
It's an honest mistake, but I don't think I should be this side of the fence and
feel uneasy, so try to get out as quickly as I can. The bracken is extremely
dense. It's also extremely steep here.
I have to get right down onto my hands and knees at quite a few points,
picking up bits of sheep shit along the way. And guess what? Climbing steeply
uphill is really tiring. The sort of thing that really makes you need a slurp
of water.
I am my own worst enemy most of the time.
I scramble my way up. Not really understanding exactly how far I need to
go, but presuming I'll find the correct path at some point soon. It takes quite
a while, but eventually I do. I sit down on the ridge, huffing and puffing and
stare back at the hill I've just come up. What a pain in the arse that was.
I get up again and move along the ridge a little further, over a false
summit. Then out of the darkness the real one looms out at me. It looks like
one out of a ghost movie in the three o'clock mist and is really quite
haunting. It kind of adds to the drama of my own stupidity only a few minutes
ago.
I climb up to the top and find the summit mast with the control.
Brilliant. I punch in. I think there is supposed to be something relevant to
the labour here, something about the birds, but as it's pitch black and I'm
buggered I fail to notice what it is.
Another view from Ragleth Hill on Twelve, since I couldn't take any of the hill I was on in the middle of the night. |
Like the fat kid on school camp who hides a Twix until the last day when
the craving becomes too much, part of my brain has been avoiding thinking about
the fact there is one small sip of water left in my bottles. As it's now time
to celebrate I have a go on them.
Yes, that's right. My idea of fun is making my shins bleed scrambling
through bracken collecting sheep shit at three in the morning then celebrating
with about four millilitres of water. Boom, take that Ibiza.
I really want to get this over with. I actually am enjoying this labour,
but I know I need to get back to some water pretty quick as it's going to start
to get uncomfortable pretty soon. I start to make my way back down the hill.
Unsurprisingly, if you follow the correct path it's actually considerably
easier.
It's quite an easy trip back down, though again the pounding really
slams my quads quite hard so it is relatively slow. Not as slow as it was going
up, of course. The ground is a bit uneven as well, so even though I'm not going
that fast I'm also wary not to twist an ankle as the sprain has been giving me
the odd bit of grief every now and again through the day. Just the odd reminder
not to do that again.
I hobble through the correct side of the wooden gate and this time
notice the post, connected to nothing a few feet away, which is what it should
have been latched to. There must have originally been a fence going away from
this, so it now makes sense why there are two. A little late now, though.
I get back down to the road and start moving back. The firm ground again
is quite a relief after the unexpected extra complications of the last while,
so I'm able to get a little bit of pace again. I walk the bumpy bits to try not
to make myself too parched again.
There's is something odd about running on your own through the darkness.
There's a sort of hazy mist that seems to appear at some point through a
night no matter where you are and it really makes it into quite an in your face
experience. I guess the factor of not knowing what is out there beyond a few
feet from your face.
The road stops being lumpy and I make it back to crossing the trunk
road. I settle back down into the rhythm of running for a few hundred metres
then taking a short walk break. It's annoying as I don't think I'd need to if I
had some water. I can't really blame that on anyone except myself.
I reach the turn off back to the school and now know I'm around two
kilometres from the school. The need for water increases as does the panic.
What if I'm doing damage to myself? What if this really affects me later down
the line?
I tell myself to calm down. I'm being irrational. It's like when you
really desperately need the toilet but are on the tube or somewhere you know
you won't be able to go for a while. Your mind gets so desperate your body
reacts and tells you its more desperate, then as soon as you are near a toilet
you don't need to go anymore. I keep telling myself that's the situation.
I get back and sure enough am fine. I do grab plenty of water and fluids
though, as I definitely need to restock the reserves. I stop again for a while.
Team couple and the guy I ran off Ten with have both arrived back from the ones
they were doing. We all have a little reunion and chat about how our respective
labours went and how we're feeling. Like group therapy in a way. I get myself a
hot dog and a burger. Yum.
Duane turns up as well. I've seen him every now and again through the
day. He's just come off ten and has had a struggle with it, so I leave him to
himself. He's still flying along though, so in fine fettle looking from the
outside in.
Team couple decide to call it a day. They know they can't finish now so
have decided to rest and allow themselves to be ready for the next one quicker.
Before the go, they throw me some more really insistent encouragement that I
can still do this and need to carry on. I've been contemplating calling it a
day again, and mull it over for a while.
Both Duane and the other guy head out again and I'm left on my own.
Again, I've wasted an hour. Should I just give up? No, I'd just sit here
annoyed. I've got loads of time to even just walk a couple more. And the next
one takes me over a hundred kilometres. And Team Couple said I have to.
I dib into Zeus, cross out Eight and put 04:00 next to Seven.
Labour Seven: Girdle of Hippolyta
Again, as I've given myself a break, I feel pretty fresh coming out of
the school and heading south into town. The sun is potentially going to creep
out in the next hour or so and I'm looking forward to it, given it's been
raining on and off all night.
This time I head straight through the town and another couple of
kilometres up the road. Again, I'm able to keep a bit of pace up and reach
Little Stretton and the campsite again without any hassle. It's odd, but even
though I only stayed here for the night before the race, I get a weird, good
feeling of familiarity. Maybe it's my mind latching onto the last time I wasn't
running.
I take the driveway past the house and onto the path up the hill. I know
what I'm in for here, I think, given it's pretty similar to the same section on
Twelve. Only without the painful scramble up to Callow. As I'm walking up this
farm track the sun does start to come out enough that I turn off my head torch.
I can still barely see anything though, as the mist is incredibly dense.
Welcome to a summer sunrise in Britain.
It's steep, but as usual if I keep the pace and breathing, most
importantly the breathing, in the right place it's doable. The fact that this
one is only seven miles helps. That mental game of the descending order is
working its magic. Each one gets that little bit easier. I wind between Callow
and another hill then up ahead see the three trees I'm looking for, where the
control is. Wow, this one is actually going to go without a hitch and be
simple.
Guess again.
I reach the control, and the instructions say I need to turn around and
go through the heather to the summit of Grindle for the task. I turn around.
There is heather. It looks sharp. There is no track that I can see, despite
being told there is one. Not much for it then, best get on with it.
Just as I enter the heather, another runner comes down and we say hello
as we pass. I then see the odd bit of tape tied to the heather so do my best to
follow it. As it's still relatively misty, though, I can't really find a path.
More just lumps of ground that don't have heather on them. I do my best to get
through, and my shoes get soaked from the overnight dew.
The tape is relatively clear, but as the path is not, nor is my mind I
get a little confused. Rather than a straight line, it's more of a drunken
fumble up to the summit, with a break or two to give a lamppost a bit of a
what-for. I do make it to the summit, though, and find a cairn with a few
handfuls of belts strewn across it. The Girdle of Hippolyta, on top of a hill
called Grindle. Seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.
We've been told to collect one and take it back. As it's now five thirty
or so, I decide to wear the bloody thing. I can't look like more of a munter
anyway so I may as well. I turn around and can't see the path I took to come up
here. Or the tape. I can't be bothered to work out why, so I just give myself a
rough bearing of where I think I should be heading and go that way.
I visit a few more lampposts, then get into a pub brawl with a heather
bush before finally finding myself back somewhere near the trees and the
control point. With bleeding, bruised and sodden shins; not to mention a
woman's belt around my waist this is like a drunken night without the memory
loss. I look down the hill, over the track, and it's just a steep fade into the
mist. Best not go that way. I turn left and stumble my way down the hill
instead.
Compared to the heather, the pootle down is a breeze. I have to laugh at
myself thinking this one was going to be straightforward just before turning
around to face the heather. Surely by now I should have learned that this race
simply does not do simple?
The light starts to get ever so slightly clearer and soon enough I'm
back at the bottom of the hill, where I saw the mountain bikers what seems like
an age ago. I pass the campsite for the final time and make my way back to the
main road at Little Stretton.
As with Eight, I settle into a run/walk strategy on the way back. It's
three kilometres, and I know I can just walk it in and still have just enough
time for Six, but the idea of just walking the whole way when I can run some or
even most of it just seems like a waste of time.
Sure enough I arrive back to the hall. I have got enough time for Six.
Now that the sun is up and I know I could walk the entire thing as I wouldn't
have time for any more anyway, the thought of stopping isn't really a bother.
Nor is wasting too much time.
So I have a quick bowl of rice pudding with jam, a few minutes sitting,
then clock into Zeus and write 07:00 next to Six.
Labour Six: Nemean Lion
I actually feel pretty good right now. I know I don't have enough time to
complete all the Labours, but I also know I've given it a pretty good go and
didn't give up despite my recent lack of motivation and training. So this is my
victory lap for the day. I like to make sure I get a victory lap in on every
race as it means that I make sure to enjoy the final moments of running rather
than just the finish and medal. Those things are superfluous to me, which is
why I treasure my race bib numbers far more than my medals. To celebrate the
journey rather than the end.
Duane was in the checkpoint as well, so as I head back into town, then
up towards the Carding Mill Valley National Trust car park once more, he flies
past at a speed I can only imagine this deep into a race. I wish him luck, as
he does me, and then he pushes on like a Terminator.
I keep the run/walk strategy going. I know I could just walk, but I
actually want to run and it feels better. Walking too much when I don't have to
just make things a boring slog. I reach the end of the valley, the same turn
off for Ten, but this time I take the left fork marked 'Waterfall'.
A few people earlier have mentioned that there is a much easier way to
get to this control by following the road up to Eleven. I did consider it, but
I'm not here for a fast time, I'm here to explore so I'm pleased that I chose
to come this way as I'm literally following a small stream coming down the
ravine towards me.
It is absolutely lovely hearing the rushing water next to me. What's not
quite so lovely is the rushing water from above me as the heavens open and
give me a what-for. The path quickly becomes slippery and hard
to get around as there are a lot of slippery rocks and uneven surfaces.
I reach one of these, which is just one massive jagged rock. There are a
few footholds then at the top is one that is solid to launch up and over. I get
up and put my foot on this, then just as I'm putting all my weight on to push
over, I slip.
I continue trying to push my weight up and over, to try to get my centre
of gravity on the right side of the rocks. It doesn't work. So now I'm standing
full height on one leg on a slippery rock and going backwards. I whirl around
like an amputee ballerina and notice something I didn't on the way up.
Directly below me there is one tall, long and sharp jagged rock. I can
almost see an evil smile on it as it await a connection with my back as it
skewers and cripples me. I get an image of myself wretched and broken, in
pieces on the ground. I imagine having to call mountain rescue, or worse still
being knocked unconscious until I'm found in a few hours as carrion.
I snap out of it, stop being so dramatic and fling my right leg out. My
shin connects very harshly with a rock on the other side, but I do get a little
purchase, enough to change my trajectory and I fall on my arse in a heap
halfway down this little group of rocks.
Well, that was intense.
I gather myself and move on. There's no point in staying here wondering
about it or making it into anything more than it is. I screwed up. I managed to
not make it far worse. Now I'm moving on. My shin is extremely sore, but as
with my ankle, I still just ignore it, knowing the throbbing will go down and I
can deal with it once all is done.
I hobble my way up the hill and soon find myself at the waterfall. It's
a few steps extra, but looks lovely so I take a look around. The next bit is
some steps carved into the rock, which in my befuddled mind looks like the road
to Mordor or something similar, but I make my way up it all the same.
At the top of this it flattens out little and I make my way further
along to the tops again. There are more than one option of paths here, so I
follow the one ahead. The Oracle tells me to go straight at the top. There are
three options and instinct tells me I need to fork left. But I don't. I go
straight.
Pretty soon I can tell this is wrong. Everything around me looks the
same on the tops here, but my gut feeling is that I'm going on the wrong one.
The GPS is now telling me to go right so I start scrambling over the heather to
find a path that way.
I can tell after a couple of minutes this is wrong too. The GPS is obviously
struggling get a bearing as it can't tell which direction I'm moving in so is
pointing me the wrong way. I scramble over the heather again for a few more
minutes just trying to find a path so I can head in the direction I was and
find the Shropshire Way gravel path.
I reach a wide one and follow it back to where the GPS is telling me I
should be and three minutes later arrive back at the point where I left the
path off the waterfall. Okay, this isn't funny anymore. At all. I'm getting
seriously pissed off with myself now.
I head back along the path I started on and just aim for the road I know
is there, taking a left fork wherever possible to get closer to the correct
place. Eventually I do find the Shropshire Way and its lovely gravel. I turn
left, knowing I'm still definitely too far north and start to make my way
along.
I pass a signpost telling me I'm at Shooting Box and finally have a
definitive answer as to where on the soaked map I now am. Confident I'm finally
not lost any more, I press on ahead. After another kilometre or so I take the
final climb up to the Nemean Lion at Pole Bank, the highest point of the Long
Mynd at five hundred and sixteen metres. The control point tells me to find the
answer to a maths puzzle within ten metres.
Clent Hills + Titterstone Clee + Nesscliffe - Founders Folly = ???
It's a random, obtuse arithmetic puzzle and I've no idea what it means.
I'm really not in the mood for this right now. Then I see a topo dais. About
five metres away. It's huge. Duh. I go over and find the names of the hills
mentioned. Even this takes me a while to see them all.
I'm not fully confident with my maths so work it out partially then
think maybe it would be simpler to just use a calculator. There's nothing in
the rules to say I can't right? Maybe not, but my phone is soaked, as am I so
can't dry it, meaning I can't even open the damned calculator.
I'm going to be honest, this labour is seriously given me a sense of
humour failure and I start swearing and shouting at this frigging dais. I go
back to the maths, take a breath and work it out. As the answer dawns on me, my
sense of humour is slightly restored. It's 666.
I decide there's no way I'm going back the way of the slippery death
trap and will go back via road. I've worked out the way on the map, and the
first step is a path directly behind me. I turn around and, yep, you guessed
it. Heather.
It's a really narrow sheep track but I'm so tired I don't even care and
just push through shredding my shins. There's even one bit stretched across the
track as a trip wire which gives me a stumble. I come out the other side onto a
gravel car park and start to move along the road. Then I realise I didn't dib
in. This is just too special to even get annoyed at.
I turn around and shred me shins a little more going back up the hill to
the trig point. I dib in. I shred my shins a final time going back to the car
park. I know now that I'm done. The annoyance fades and I move along the road.
I start to think about what's happened over the last day and the people I love.
My two grandmothers pop into my mind at this point. I don't get much
chance to see or even speak to them any more as I'm so far away on the other
side of the world and it's not always appropriate to call elderly people up out
of the blue.
So last year, my Nana had a fall and went into care. I knew I couldn't
call, but all I wanted in the world at that point was to tell her I loved her.
I was terrified she wouldn't know. So instead I had a book of all my photos
printed, one each for her and Grandma and posted it to them to show them I
care.
This all comes into my head at this point as they were both, in very
different ways, extremely supportive of me. I wouldn't have ever been able to
grow into the person I am today without the belief they always showed me, and
gave me in myself. Most big runs I go on I think of them and how I should make
up another book to post out as an update.
A car pulls up to ask what I'm up to. I first get a bit worried then
notice it's one of the team. He's just going around collecting up some of the
controls and stopped to offer a bit of encouragement which is good of him and
gives me a bit of a boost mentally.
There's another guy up ahead, but he stays ahead as I make my way across
the tops to the five kilometre descent of Eleven. I start to take this and
again have the odd stop here or there and then all of a sudden the enormity of
what I've just done hits me. I can't help it, the tear start to flow.
I do this to learn more about myself and to push not just my own
boundaries but also my perceived limitations and today I feel like I hit those
limitations when I kept wanting to drop out overnight so it makes getting here
all the sweeter.
I make my way down the steep section of the hill and catch up to the
other guy. He's also coming off Six, having had the same idea as me to come
back this way. This makes his first fifty miles ever, so we're both in a really
pleased mood and just chat excitedly all the way back to the school.
I've still got Four, Two and One to go, but I've run out of time. If the
time limit was longer I feel like I could go on to complete, but perhaps I
shouldn't have spent so much time sitting down overnight. But then I wouldn't
have enjoyed it anywhere near as much so it's not a decision I regret.
I check my watch and find that, despite officially doing only seventy
one miles, I've actually done approximately eighty two, so well over the
distance I set out to do, just with some of those miles in the wrong
direction... Any other race and I’d be annoyed at something like that, but
today all I can do is laugh at the irony and am genuinely not bothered by
it.
I collect my medal and chat to Richard and thank him for such a brutally
sadistic race. Despite being my worst experience of getting lost umpteen times,
not completing yet doing more than the required miles and nearly snapping both
my ankle and back, this is possibly the most fun I've ever had on a race.
Simple concept, perfect execution. I'll be back next year for definite to knock
the bastard off.
Officially I placed ninth of thirty four, my best ever placing though I
imagine a lot of those people never intended to go for all the labours or even
very many of them so it is proportionate. Massive thanks to Duane, who came
second, for helping me in a pinch with the kit check and also Team Couple for
convincing me I should carry on. Also to all the other people I met along the
way.
My biggest thanks, though, have to go to my Nana for helping raise me in
a way that gave me the guts to turn up to the start line. When I got home later
in the day, I got the call to tell me that about the time I was thinking of her
she passed away. Nana, I couldn't make it to your funeral. But I'm so glad I
made it to your life and blessed that you made it into mine. So this one is for
you.
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