Archive for the ‘My Race Reports’ Category

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The Movember 10K 2009 Race Report

November 16, 2009

To be honest, I was going to have to pull out of this. I’d spent the last two weeks with both a sore neck, and latterly, a cough and cold with a mild fever. Plus I hadn’t been out properly running for 3 weeks and had only done a little run two weeks earlier. I was disappointed, because I didn’t want to let this great opportunity to race Steve (husband!) go.

However, I spoke to the doctor on Wednesday and he said that so long as I didn’t have a fever, I would be good to race. My cough was still a bit dodgy but the doctor had listened to my chest and declared it clear. I ran up to the hairdresser (half a mile there) on Friday evening and didn’t seem to be suffering too much so I decided to go ahead with the race.

Steve, you have to remember here, has done ZERO training for this. In fact when he ran with me with the pushchair back in August and did 2.7 miles without stopping, that was the furthest he’d ever run in his life. Let alone the 6.22 miles of a 10K. He doesn’t *do* running. He doesn’t do any fitness activity in fact, short of carrying the children round lots and walking to the station and back. He eats healthily, although he does like the fat on meat and pork scratchings and the odd can of beer of an evening. Despite all this, he is an ideal weight with no extra fat and super strong. It is Unfair. He doesn’t even have proper running shoes so I lent him my old Nike Pegasus ones (we’re the same size) which may not even be right for his gait, but given his ability to deal with whatever I figured it wouldn’t matter.

Saturday morning dawned.. well, it didn’t really. It was raining so hard and the clouds were so black I don’t believe there was a dawn! All the weather reports were for vile storm conditions with huge gusting gale force winds and torrential rain. Which was what we could see out the window, along with thunder and lightening almost overhead. Plus, my temperature was slightly raised (by less than a degree) and I didn’t feel 100%. I made the decision then and there to not push it.

So we got ourselves dressed, and very wet en-route to the train station. We met up with Kim, a friend who had extremely kindly offered to look after the children for us whilst we ran. As the weather was so dreadful, she took them back to her place nearby. The run itself was taking place in Greenwich Park, one of the royal parks in London and also coincidentally near the start of the London Marathon. Greenwich Park has the Royal Observatory at the top, and the meridian line (GMT) runs through it. It also contains a very steep hill.. short, but steep.

I tried lightly jogging up the hill en-route to the start to try and determine if I should wear my new bright red tracksuit top or not. It was still raining at this point so I decided I would. We reached the top of the hill and the start line and met up with Jacqui, who I had done the London Peace Run with a few months ago.

Click on any photo for the full-size version. Note: There are quite a few official race photos in this lot simply because I didn’t have Steve to take photos this time! All official photos are (c) IES Photography and marked as such.. I have purchased a license to use them in this context for personal use so please do not redistribute them although why you would want to outside this race report I have no idea!!

The whole point of the Movember 10K was to wear a moustache, on behalf of the Movember charity which supports prostate cancer (or more like unsupports it but you get what I mean!) And for those of us ladies who don’t have the ability to grow a moustache, we had to draw one on. So we did! Mine wasn’t very clear, a sort of ginger/purple affair after the ginger lip liner I’d brought along snapped and Jacqui lent me her purple liner!

Photo taken by Jacqui on my iPhone!

After queueing for the toilet, I noticed it was raining less. In fact, it was bright sunshine. And no gales. Completely random! So I made the decision to run without my tracksuit top on after all.

We left our bags at the baggage drop, and lined up at the start. And we were off!

Here’s the route. It was pretty complicated, and we needed to run up the steep hill three times, but there were no problems running it as there were plenty of people to follow!

We’d deliberately started near the back as we all knew none of us were likely to win that day. Within a few hundred yards Steve was not enjoying himself.

Shortly afterwards Jacqui dropped back a little, and Steve and me were left with a gorilla in a Mankini to stare at for the next 5K! However, before too long Steve settled down and said he actually felt quite comfortable running at this pace. Which was good, as it was a full minute a mile less than my normal running pace and I was not feeling good at all!

We did the first mile in 10:28, but to me it felt more like I’d done it in 9:28. The first half of the course was two laps around the top bit, although there was a super steep hill not long after the start going up alongside Maze Hill. I did manage to run it at least. There were also water stations which was good. Steve discovered how you get cramp after you drink water. I discovered it’s not easy drinking out of cups either when running. My moustache started to fade!

The second mile was 10:12, a little faster. But then it was flat! I probably felt the best during this mile. The third mile I was starting to not feel great, and we did it in 10:37. Steve was staying with me because he’d never run this far before so he was wary of running out fast and then being exhausted so I was pacing him. At the 5K point I think my time was something dreadful like 32 minutes, the second slowest 5K I’d ever run even in training besides my first 5K.

The second half of the race was running around the bottom section of the park. The weather turned a bit and it started to rain. By mile 4 (10:22 thanks to the downhill!) I was starting to feel hot and I knew it wasn’t just sweat. The low grade fever I’d had earlier in the week was coming back. It was getting harder and harder to run. And then the winners ran past us in the opposite direction at quite some speed.. heh, I doubt I could sprint that fast!

Mile 5 (11:38) had a massive hill to climb. And for the first time ever in a race, and for the first time in months, I walked. I made it halfway up, but I was already running at a 13 minute mile pace and so I figured I’d be better off walking at a 14 minute mile pace and conserve a lot more energy. Steve sprinted up to the top. I walked and felt like crap. Hence the slow time for that mile.

At the top of the hill, the route turned back on itself so we could run down the hill again and we passed Jacqui who wasn’t that far behind us at all! Once we were on the straight again, we were so thinned out by this point that regular park users kept wandering on the path. Some pretended to run alongside and were being patronising “Oh don’t do that and make them feel bad” – I can assure you I did not feel bad – I’d covered 8K by this point and was suffering from a fever so the fact I was keeping up with them, fresh, was hardly something to feel bad about.

Mile 6 (12:11) was horrendous and the slowest mile I’ve run, even with the pushchair, since August I think. Most of it was uphill. I’m afraid to say I walked most of the uphills. Steve sprinted up them and waited for me at the top. My fever was quite clearly there and if I hadn’t been near the end I’d have walked the rest of the way. I was feeling extremely rough indeed. And there was one final hill.

As you can see from the elevation of the course (click the photo to open full size in a new window), the hills were pretty steep. And the final hill came in at 9.5K! Yes, I walked half of it and yes Steve waited at the top again. He was very good – basically I’d told him that if he went off without me I’d probably (such the idiot that I am) try and catch him up and do myself more damage. Plus I was a bit worried in case I collapsed and I’d rather want him to be there if I did! And given he’d been alongside me for most of the race, we figured we might as well finish as we started.

So, top of the hill, 200m to go, we “sprinted” across the finish line together!

Here’s the official result: (click to see full size in a new window, or click the link to the left to see “live” on the site)

Unfortunately for Steve, it appears I won but only because my number was less than his – our other two times (gun time, from when the gun was fired, and the chip time) were identical!

We picked up our medals, and our free razors and shaving gels and stuff(!) plus our free bananas, vitamin water and jelly babies. And Jacqui (who finished only 3 minutes behind us!) took another photo of us:

So.. brief interlude for some statistics!

Here’s the mile split times – appalling for me!

Yes, I finished in 67:26. My first ever 10K in training was 67:12. Heck, the second 5K was 35:26, slower than my first ever 5K in training which was 33:41.

A month ago, as part of an 8 mile run, I did 10K in 57:54. I was a whole TEN MINUTES slower this time. Look at the speed comparison (red was Movember, blue was the training run. Higher is faster)

That, ladies and gentlemen, is what a low grade fever, a cough, no proper training for 3 weeks, and a sore neck will do for you.

Where did we finish? 520 and 521 out of 620 competitors. If I’d finished in my personal best time from a month ago, I’d have been around 320th or so.. and in an ideal world I’d have improved upon that with an extra month of training. We were beaten by tons of old people and people dressed in bad running gear and all sorts. Here’s the official results table.

Ultimately, Steve could have finished a lot faster and would have beaten me.. but he doesn’t know by how much as I held him back! And if I’d been in peak fitness, I may well have beaten him. We just don’t know. So we will need a rematch when I’m fitter for sure!

As for the race itself as a 10K? Very well organised, very friendly people and apart from finding it hard going, I couldn’t fault anything at all. The race organisers were the same people who did the Epsom 5K Dash where I finally broke 30 minutes for 5K a few months back, and the organisation had been great then as well. The layout of the course was good (got to be tough fitting 10K into Greenwich Park) and the marshalls were nearly all very supportive. The atmosphere was very friendly altogether in fact. So I will definitely look out for these race people in future – great work! The weather had been perfect when it mattered too, although nobody can take credit for that!

The story doesn’t quite end here. As we headed over to Kim’s house to pick up the children, I was feeling a bit odd. After we’d picked the children up, got changed and had a chat, we started walking to the DLR to get home. It started torrential rain and galing again, and this time the low grade fever came back with a vengeance. I was shaking violently and white as a sheet and had nowhere to sit down. We got on the train and I honestly thought I was going to collapse. We had to change trains at Greenwich and there isn’t much shelter on the platform there either. Fortunately the wait was only 7 minutes. After that instead of walking home from Woolwich station as I had planned, I caught the bus on my own and Steve walked back with the children.

I never did find out what my temperature got up to because I was so cold when I got in the reading wasn’t accurate and by the time I had warmed up, the ibuprofen had kicked in a little. Anyway, it read 38.5C at the highest but I am sure it felt far more like a 39.5C fever (103F and above) as I was feeling so absolutely horrible and shivering so violently. It felt like full on flu.

Anyway, the good news is that after some rest, a little bit of food and so on later that evening I felt a lot better and, touch wood, the fever has not returned. I think it was just my body saying “errr, what was all that about?” and warning me not to run when I wasn’t totally healthy. I will heed that lesson!

So, I probably won’t go out training for a bit until my cough is better and I am sure my fever has gone as I’m sure it won’t speed up my recovery. So no training again for a while. I am seriously worried if this sort of stuff happens early next year when I am doing my proper marathon training. I can’t afford to take a month off.. the training plan I have chosen requires 3-4 times a week for 18 weeks.

Hopefully I will feel better soon! Interestingly my muscles did not hurt today and they clearly had loads of strength left yesterday when I was going up hills – it was my heart and lungs that hated me.

You may be interested to hear that Steve had a slight blister from the Nike Pegasus shoes of mine he borrowed right where I had the blister. I knew those shoes made blisters!! Nowhere near as big as mine were from it though, and only over 5K. Typical!

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Petts Wood 10K Race Report

October 11, 2009

So, exhausted from holiday, fighting a virus, not much sleep and aching from several unfortunate encounters with a cable ski, some violent flumes and a whole lot of pole climbing, I was never going to be on top form for this race, my first ever 10K race! It was also a hilly race, through bits of woodland with narrow paths.

Fortunately, I wasn’t under any illusions I’d be thrashing any personal bests which probably made the race a lot more enjoyable than it could have been! Got to the start with plenty of time to spare (only a half hour drive, this one – much nicer!) and was surprised to bump into B’s nursery manager and one of the ladies who used to take care of her when B was really tiny (and also ran the London marathon last year!) I guess I won’t feel so bad when I show up sweaty at nursery any more, heh!

Didn’t have enough time to do much at the start besides grab some photos with my proper camera. Rather unintentionally, not only has Steve captured the almost pre-requisite nee-naw, but unexpectedly the Mayor of Bromley too, who was there to start the race I assume!

As always, click on the image for a much clearer, larger one. I’m below any red arrows in the images too! And all images except the medal were taken by my husband Steve, and post-processed by me.


Me, the Mayor of Bromley, and a nee-naw before the start

Rather ominously, the nee-naw this time was a High Dependency Unit one, as opposed to the usual St. John’s Ambulance offerings. This race was clearly Serious Business.


Time vanished quickly, and after hastily and clumsily pinning on my race number (this never gets any easier) it was time to line up at the start.


Me lining up at the start

As I’d left it a little late, I was rather near the back of the pack. There were an estimated 750 runners according to the website, so I guessed I was around 600 or so. It didn’t take long before we were off!


And we’re off! Heading towards the start line

In fact, it took me a good minute to reach the start line. Good thing this race was chip timed!


Still nowhere near the start line.. but look at all those white shoes!

This was a 10K race – 6.22 miles in English. Remember how much work it was for me to complete a 5K in 30 minutes? Well, there was no way I’d be able to keep that pace up through this course. It was rather muddy for starters for the large parts not on the road. Take a look at the satellite view of the route:


Satellite view of the course

And you can’t even tell the elevation from that view either. There was 215 feet between the highest and lowest points, and three big hills (including one very steep one just after the two mile mark) and several little ones too. I have very little experience with hills!


Elevation of the course


So, back to the race. Over the start line I went, and first up was a lap of the recreation ground which we started in. As you can see from this photo, I am pretty near the back. This was deliberate as I was fed up of feeling humiliated as everyone streamed past me with other races, even if I was planning on catching people up later on!


Runners streamed out around the recreation ground

And that was the easy bit over. Time to leave the recreation ground, and run along the (very thoughtfully!) closed roads. I looked wistfully at the finish line as we departed the field.


On my way out of the recreation ground

As I left, a marshall helpfully suggested that I “enjoy your run”. Err, what? People do this sort of thing for enjoyment? The lady behind me snorted in response to the marshall’s words so clearly she felt the same way!

First off, a slight climb along the road. As I’ve got used to in races now, there’s the usual jostling whilst people settle into their pace.. this time made harder by the hill as it gives a false impression of pace. A few people ran past me, but I ran past far more. My pace was not that great though due to the hill.

Then, disaster! After we’d turned off the roads and along a tiny narrow footpath, the pack slowed down.. to walking pace! Yes, there was a set of stairs (I hate stairs after the London Peace Run!) for a railway bridge ahead. I must’ve lost at least a minute here.

The other side of the railway bridge, we ran through open parkland before reaching the main road and streaming down a hill. Finally getting a decent pace up! Then, the first water station. This was my first ever race with water stations, and I’ve never, ever been able to sort out drinking through sports bottles. Still, I gave it my best go, but only managed about 5 sips which half killed me as I choked on them.. then realised I had to discard my bottle quickly or it would be all on its lonesome for the organisers to clear up.

After the water station came.. The Hill. What a long and steep hill it was! Lots of people were walking. I did not.. but I question my wisdom a little because most of the people I ran past who were walking, ran past me later when we were on the flat again and I was gasping for breath with a soaring heart rate. Need to work out the best way to tackle hills I think.

After the massive hill came a similar hill only going down, so I got to overtake a whole bunch of people. Not long after that, it was the halfway point. 5K down! My split time was 30:46, so 2.5 minutes slower than the 5K I’d done the previous weekend but bear in mind I was pacing myself. I’d have dropped dead if I’d kept up my 5K pace from the week before for much longer! As a matter of interest, here’s the first 5K of this race compared to the 5K of last race in terms of pace. This race is red, that 5K race is blue.


Last week’s 5K run (blue) versus the first 5K of this run (red) The bold lines are the average of the jiggly thinner lines.

As you can see, not only is the pace a lot slower, but I started out a lot slower on this race too. The 5K last week had a fairly steady pace, going up and down a bit with the hills, but the red lines on this race have two dips – one around the mile mark for when we were stuck going over the railway bridge, then another just after 2.2 miles as we had to head up that awful hill!

Don’t forget you can click on all images for much bigger and clearer ones.


So, halfway point out the way, and still lots of running around in the woods to do. The marshalls were very enthusiastic and applauded us all, with a slow clap which made me feel they were being sarcastic, but of course nobody is going to do full-on applause for half an hour! They were very supportive, warning us about hills (or the lack of!) and how much further we had to go.. some even told us the time. Great job marshalls, if you’re reading this – best marshalls yet!

Bystanders cropped up from time to time – one woman called out “Come on Rosie!” (my nickname!) and seemed to be looking at me which confused the heck out of me, but later I discovered a woman who finished 30 seconds after me was called Rosie so that must explain it. A long, slightly less steep hill had me seeing stars. I noticed my left foot was getting really sore under the arches, and my right foot was going numb of all things. Something to investigate. And my toenails were getting sore which would mean another black toenail if it wasn’t black already! And it felt like a blister was considering putting in an appearance on my right foot too.

My heart rate was waaaay up, something I am putting down to the cold virus, as normally when it’s that high I am about to collapse. Okay, I wasn’t far off collapsing, but I was able to continue whereas normally I would not be. Interestingly the maximum at the very end was the highest it has ever been, and a good 4bpm over the Epsom 5K last week, and a good 16bpm over my easy training pace.

Finally a marshall said the words I wanted to hear – “It’s all downhill from here!” and it was! Back on the road at least too. I do well on downhills, and that’s usually when I pick off most runners. I managed to get past most of the people I’d been level with for the majority of the race as I ran down the road for the final 1.2 miles. Steve was waiting with the children, and B was getting rather restless waiting for mummy to run past!


B getting bored in her pushchair

Finally I showed up.. and I hadn’t even spotted them! By now I was a good few seconds clear of the lady who had been in front of me for much of the race, but still behind the dude called Steve that people kept cheering on as he’d written his name on his shirt, and people kept confusing me by yelling “Come on Steve!” and I was thinking my Steve had secretly entered and was stalking me round the course.


Me, running past houses we can never afford, halfway between the people I’d kept pace with

Note the mud on my leg if you can! My first race mud.. heh! Anyway, it turned out the marshall saying it was downhill all the way had lied because there was still another hill to climb. Not a big one, thankfully, but it was polishing people off. I went past a couple of people who were walking at that point. A few bystanders demanded sprint finishes, and there was still 600 yards to go.. not on your life!

Finally, I rounded the final corner, and did do a “sprint” finish towards the line. It was at this point I reached my maximum heart rate, it is safe to say. A pace I would be unable to maintain for more than 100 yards!


The home straight

I was pretty clear of all the people around me as there weren’t many people ahead of me, and I’d got past all the ones behind. The finish line came up faster than I was expecting (thank goodness.. normally it’s the other way round!) and I hurtled towards it.


Me at the finish line. Note the time (remember I crossed the line a minute after the gun!)


As before, quite frankly I felt I was going to puke. And we had to take off the chips when all I wanted to do was keep walking to stop myself from collapsing! Those last few hundred yards at a good pace really do the damage. Check out my speed for the whole race and see how it rises at the end!


My pace over the whole course

A small child handed me a medal (this seems to happen a lot!) but alas it turned out I was too slow to get a goody bag *sulk* I did, however, get a banana and a £5 gift voucher for the running shop in Bluewater. I located Steve and the children, and after a few minutes of going “blurgh” it was time for the official finish photo.


Me, with my medal, after finishing

Note the nee-naw and the burger van. Real shame I never want to eat anything after running! Anyhow, I wasn’t ready for the drive home yet as I needed to walk around a bit to stop my muscles from seizing up. So I did a bit of running with B.


Running in the park with B. She is winning.

Thoroughly exhausted, we got in the car, went shopping in Bromley (clearly I was not that exhausted!) and then drove home.

A very enjoyable race, extremely well-organised (for starters the results were up before I even got home!), lots of nice cakes for sale, even massage and running gear for sale too! A nice atmosphere, wonderful marshalls, extremely well laid out course (except for the railway bridge) with no chances of getting lost, beautiful scenery should you be with it enough to appreciate it, good atmosphere, supportive locals, easy access and parking, okay, maybe not enough toilets but you can’t have everything! If you’re reading this and are considering doing this race next year, I highly recommend it!


Of course, what you would like to know is.. how did I do? Well, yesterday I said:

I would be pretty disappointed if I finished in over 75 minutes, a bit disappointed with 70 minutes, and thrilled with anything under 65. 60 I am not even going to think about as I don’t believe I am capable of it right now, except maybe, just maybe, in perfect conditions and health and training which is not going to happen at this race!

I’d intended to try and keep to a pace of around 10 minutes per mile more or less, which was pretty tricky with all the hills and people. But what was my time? Well, I can’t trust my Garmin too much as I stupidly left it on auto-pause-when-stopped and of course we were stopped on the railway bridge.

So, my chip time [official provisional results pdf here] and therefore my actual time was 62:28 – curiously enough, a pace of exactly 10 minute mile, or 6mph!

Given how rough I was feeling (and indeed I felt awful this afternoon, and even had a mild fever) I think I can be pleased with that! Here’s the splits:


My split times per mile (8 seconds missing due to auto pause when walking)

So I started out slowly (thanks, single-file walking at the railway bridge!), had a good second mile as a lot of it was downhill, didn’t do nearly so well in the third mile thanks to the steep hill (in fact I was down to a 13 minute mile at times!), then another really slow fourth mile thanks to yet more hills.. and exhaustion. The fifth mile was a little better as there were downhill bits, and in comparison for my final mile it was a positive “sprint” considering! Then a “sprint” for the final few hundred yards over the finish line. If it wasn’t for the slow fourth mile, it would have been a classic negative split (which is where you start out slower than you finish) but the hills put paid to that. 30:46 and 31:32 5K split times. Ran all the way!

What about my position though? Well, not as great as the Epsom 5K Dash, it has to be said. Maybe this race attracts more club runners or more serious runners or something, because I never really improved on my starting position overall! Nearly everyone seemed to be a Proper Runner and most were affiliated to clubs.

According to the website:

724 entries processed 448 Male Runners 276 Female Runners

And I suspect not everybody who entered ran on the day, although there were some late places available. Interestingly I know full well that there were finishers after the official times which went up to position 649 on the website because not only did I see them, but I know them too, as they were the ladies from B’s nursery! So I am sure more than 649 people were running.

I came in position 521 according to the chip, or 531 by the gun, but it’s the chip time that really counts. Looks like I finished in the top 75% at least. I guess not bad for my first 10K.

To cheer myself up a little, I counted how many women finished in front of me, and I was number 135 or so (give or take, my brain was going funny counting them all on the pdf!) which if there were 276 female runners, puts me in the top 50%.. just!! I was in the top 40% overall, including the men, at the Epsom 5K (17% just women) so unless I suddenly got a lot more crap at running in the last week, I think it just proves that the type of runner at this particular race was a lot more serious. Can’t “win” them all!

So, I leave you with a photo of my medal. It’s a pretty spiffing medal, the nicest I have in my collection so far!


The medal!

And next? Well, I’d like to beat that hour target, although it will be hard work. Time to find a 10K which isn’t too far away (the 75 minute drive to, and the 100 minute drive from Epsom just about finished me off!) but is also flat and good for personal bests. And within the next month. Yeah, not going to be easy.


As an aside, I suspect many of you are wondering why I am so desperate to beat these targets. Well, I want to have a good base to marathon train from – I don’t start my proper training until January. If I’ve got the speed, then the distance should follow a lot easier! I don’t intend to merely complete the London Marathon, I intend to run it, and I intend to run it in as far under 5 hours as I can manage. I’m hoping the harder I try, the more people are likely to sponsor me – I want to stand out from the sea of other people who need sponsoring. I want to raise as much as is humanly possible for this wonderful, small often-overlooked charity, and really make a difference to those who weren’t as lucky as me and didn’t get to keep their babies.