My race here was with one eye on my first ultra in 2 weeks time and I came in to the race having attempted to train as much as I could between my last mara and this one, which included a final run of a 10 miler on the Thursday evening preceding the event with my spaniel Heidi roped to me, the closest to a race that I have been out and done a decent distance.
Having watched the Champions League final where Real gubbed Atletico 4-1 after extra time in the all Madrid final, I drove down to the event base arriving at around 1am due to the game's overrunning, and parked around the corner for my night’s kip.
Awaking early on the Sunday I parked in the event base, a field a little way up the hill from the estuary. I made sure I reversed in towards the perimeter hedge as I had brought a new toy with me to use today: a solar shower. The shower works through heat conduction from the sun through a special membrane in a 20L bag of water, with a hose and a rudimentary shower head on the end of the bag to turn on and off to let the warm water flood out. According to the manufacturer, all you have to do is leave it out in the sun and it will heat to a usable temperature even without strong summer sun, so the plan is to leave it on top of the van whilst I run to warm up over the hours. I have also sorted out a tarpaulin that wraps around the open rear doors of the van with the help of some bungee cords to create a cubicle for a spot of privacy, as the last thing people will want to see after enduring a long exhausting run is my fat hairy arse being lathered up!
This year the course had been reversed from last due to tide times, which meant that rather than running 3/4 of the course before hitting the evil coastal hills between Bigbury and the event base and crossing the estuary before the final mile, you pretty much ran across the water like a herd of Jesus’s at the start before tackling the hills immediately after - far better in my book to get the hardest part out of the way at the start on fresh legs rather than encountering them when near exhaustion at the end!
I had decided to take some new running techniques in to the race and see how they panned-out, mostly making the most of the downhill sections when I can. Being a fat bloke, once the belly gets momentum its great for getting down hills pretty damn quick, so after reading up on descending techniques, it seems you should lean forward and go for it!.. However the inverse is true on the climbs and my belly seems to hold me back as I struggle to ascend with any form of pace or consistency… So I’ve decided to try swinging my arms in time to attempt to gain more momentum and leverage when going up hills.
From the off it was a downward mile to the estuary, where I decided to put the above in to practice and soon I found myself cutting through the field as the estuary was reached and I marched through the knee-deep water towards the head of the field.
Cooling off before we had a chance to get hot! |
Up on to the cliffs. |
Heading East. |
The mighty thistles! |
Looking back over a couple of the hills. |
Beach combing. |
Traversing golf course, country lanes and woodlands, after checkpoint 2 the marathon course soon merged with that of the half and the trail began to fill-up with more runners in front of me… The good and the bad of this was at over half distance gone in the marathon, a load of speedier runners are introduced in front of you and your natural instinct is to try and keep up or catch them, even though they are racing on a shorter course and therefore have burnt a lot less energy and naturally will be quicker. That said, I couldn’t help but catch them without seeming to make an increase in my pace and as we went through a lovely section of single-track woodlands as it overlooked the trail as it followed a path up the Erme estuary and I found myself being held-up by them so ended up overtaking as and when the trail allowed so I could keep on at my own pace. I soon found myself caught up with Gary again who had had the same experience, so we ran the next couple of miles over the estuary bridge with its beautiful bouquet of rotting seaweed from the tidal marsh and along to the third checkpoint.
Looking up the Erme. |
At this point I found myself on my todd for the first time in the race, not bad considering that it was now around 2/3 the way through, so I thought I’d put some tunes on to while away the next few miles before I caught up with humanity in one form or another.
After a couple of songs I passed the course split where the halfers head back in to the finish and us more hardy of souls head on for the final 10k loop. This split took us up an enclosed path that at some point had been a raging torrent in the recent floods; you had to pick your way through the rocks, pieces of tree and general detritus that had been deposited there by the water as it scoured its way down. The gradient was unforgiving and with the trees closing over head it seemed like an endless tunnel through which to plod… At this point the next song on the iPod began to play and the low-slung baseline of 'I Wanna Be Adored’ by the Stone Roses began to fade in from nothing and fill my ears, and instantly my spirits were lifted.
Picking your way along the path. |
Out at the top of the hill it was a winding way through country lanes and across farmland, crossing stiles and opening and closing plenty of gates - one of which had been re-chained closed by a previous runner and I could not slip it off, spending a few minutes wrestling with it and tearing my hand on some barbed wire before I managed to free the chain to walk through it - hindsight tells me ‘why didn’t you climb the gate you numpty?’ but at that distance, the last thing I wanted to be doing was anything more than necessary to get to the finish.
Once over the farmland with the sun beating down as the afternoon sun was reaching its full power, we found ourselves in a welcomed avenue of a farm track, the trail being one of mud and water under foot… I soon found myself catching up on a handful of runners in front as I took the principal of just ploughing through the mud and puddles in a straight line rather than those in front who danced around from side to side of the track trying to avoid them. The muddy water was a welcome coolant to my overheating feet, thoroughly refreshing them by the time the final checkpoint was reached at the end of the path.
Through this checkpoint and it was back on to the sun drenched farmland and narrow winding country lanes, until all of a sudden we crossed a road, funnelled down a footpath and without warning we were confronted by this:
I see the sea! |
A few tricky twists and turns traversing the narrowest of paths worn in to the cliff-top, the long grasses obscuring everything and battling our way through chest-high thistles again and we were on to some open pasture and with the bright sun and its heat taking full effect again, the most wonderful of sights in front of me on the path… A full cattle trough.
I poured the fresh cold water over my head, enjoying the instant cooling effect, revelling in the relief… For all of 30 seconds... When the water began to wash the salt from my sweat into my eyes and run off my brow and over the lenses of my sunnies, giving them a smeary outlook that I was unable to do anything about as I had nothing about my person absorbent enough to clean them, so cursing cruel hubris I continued this last 10k stretch with the choice of impaired shaded vision or unimpaired squint-worthy vision through the glare of the sun.
Where does the land end and the sea begin? |
Going back in land for the final stage. |
I summoned up what I had within me and jogged the last few hundred metres, turning round the corner and in to the field for the finish… And a kit check.
I knew I had raced a strong race for me, but I was not able to revel in my own personal glory there and then… These events come with a mandatory kit list which you must carry with you - and I was taken aside along with the lady who had just finished in front of me to have our packs checked to ensure we were running in compliance with the race rules. The kit they require you to carry is a good sensible safety measure: medical kit, foil blanked, emergency whistle, food, drink, cash, hat and a windproof jacket.
I always ensure I comply with all the medical and safety kit, as the last thing I want to do is DQ having driven all the way to the event and hauled my sorry arse around the marathon course, but today with it being summer(ish) I did not take a jacket with me as I felt the weather made it unnecessary, but it is on the mandatory kit list and as such I was marked down, but fortunately not DQ’d… This is the first time in 14 of the CTS races that I have had my kit checked, and I have no problem with this as it is important that people do run whilst prepared for the worst, it would just be better all round to do random sampling of entrants before a race and with the shop on-site there is an opportunity for people to purchase anything missing from their list to ensure running with total compliance.
After the baggage check I walked through to be given my print-off of the time, medal, Cliff builders bar, and a hearty congratulations and a handshake from James the race director, as I had managed my second successful 7x challenge in the series, which I felt was a nice touch.
I saw behind at the finish queuing to have his kit examined was Gary so I went over to him and congratulated him on his race, thanking him for the conversation and companionship during the run, which is what these events are about, being able to chat with the like-minded, finding out about their personal journey that has led them to be up stupidly early in the morning and running a marathon across mud in the middle of nowhere!
Breath now caught and my body calming down I staggered over to the van and had my first post-race shower at a CTS event - and refreshing it was too. The water had warmed a little, but not a great deal, but it was good to be able to wash the sweat and grime off you after the race, get changed in to clean clothes and not wander around smelling like something had just died, with a sickly aroma of body spray applied way too liberally in a vain attempt to camouflage it.
I wandered back to the finish line to clap fellow runners home and enjoy my post-race protein shake and scotch eggs. I soon noticed sitting there having not long finished were James & Dan, so went over and had a chat with them and how we were all looking forward to the big one in a few weeks: The Classic Quarter. After a bit of a rest it was time to leave sunny Devon and this season’s Coastal Trail Series behind for home.
It turned out that I finished 37/76 starters - my first time in the top 50% of a marathon field! Naturally I was elated at this, although I reckon I could have gone around 10 mins quicker if not for my dodgy quad but hey, I really can’t complain with the result and time and I’m really looking forward to the forthcoming Classic Quarter although with trepidation seeing as it will be my longest distance covered by nearly 15 miles… Or another 50% extra distance!
For the record, here's the mix of music that shuffled along as I shuffled along:
Polly - Nirvana
Les Filles de Redon - Tri Yann
X-Files - Music Sculptors
Tri Martolod - Tri Yann
I Wanna be Adored - Stone Roses
One Night - Travis
She’s So High - Blur
Nes Sous La Meme Etoile - IAM
Where the Streets Have no Name - U2
World in Motion - New Order
Heaven - Frazier Chorus
Open Heart Surgery - Brian Jonestown Massacre
Winning the War - Carter USM
Are You Out There - Crescendo
Planete Mars - IAM
Wallpaper - My Life Story
Come On - The Verve
I’m Too Sexy - Right Said Fred
Dumbing Down - Chumbawamba
I Will Survive - Diana Ross
The Word Hurricane - Air
Poison - The Prodigy
The Sound of Silence - Simon & Garfunkel
King of the Road - The Proclaimers
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