2/2/20 - First up this month was Fort William parkrun. To me this is the hardest parkrun in Scotland to get to since you can't get public
transport to it in the morning and its 6 miles from Fort William town
centre. So, when my Mum and Dad agreed to doing our winter break there, we did it over the weekend so I could get the parkrun in too. To be
honest I was preparing for it to be cancelled due to the time of year and
really saw this as a holiday and if parkrun was on it would be a bonus.
We got to the Nevis range car
park at 9am and it was chucking it down. So, we stayed in the car till
about 9.20 then headed over to the start. Got chatting to a few folks and
then we were off down the forest track. It's a 1 loop course. With the
first half on forest track and then coming back on mainly trails.
The first half is mainly downhill with the second half mainly
uphill. The field did spread out very quickly and although especially in
the second half there wasn’t much space to overtake. Because the field was
smallish this wasn’t a problem. On a small section of the forest track on
the way back someone overtook me, and they absolutely flew past. He was wearing
a ben Nevis race t-shirt and I was half thinking it could be Findlay Wild who
has won the Ben Nevis race for the last 10 years and lives up there. I
thought he must be on his own run rather than parkrun being where I was in the
field. So I checked Strava when I got home and checked flybys and sure
enough it was him. He started 15 minutes late and still finished before me! He
took just over 17 minutes whereas I was just over 33. I thought at the
end of it that this was one of the toughest parkruns I have done. Just because
all the hard work is done in the second half. But it is a very good
course and I did enjoy it.
9/2/20 - Number checker at
Queens
15/02 - For my final 3 runs of
the month I went to Queen's each time. And for each one I had three
different approaches where I ended up getting faster each time. For the
15th I ran there and back on top of the parkrun, adding up to 6 miles. On the
way there I actually started walking after a mile, then I met Joe and we ran
the rest of the way to the park. When the run started, I was walking
after the second hill on the first lap and was run/walking the rest of the
way. So that run I was 36 minutes.
22/02 - Next up I decided for
the first time just to drive to Queen's to save my energy for the run.
This time I started a bit faster as for the first part I was running with
Stuart and Kirsty. I think I pushed the pace a bit on the first lap, then
Stuart went ahead, and I pulled away from Kirsty about half way through the
first lap. Then the second lap I had to start my run/walk for the hills
and Kirsty overtook me. But I ended up finishing 2 minutes faster than
the previous week finishing in 34 minutes.
29/02 - Then yesterday I drove
to the park again and decided to start slower. This worked wonders and I
managed to run the whole way round and finished this one in 33 minutes.
This year so far, I have only
managed one sub 30 minute run and that was at Linwood. I think it does
reflect that apart from Linwood I have been doing hilly courses. Also, my
times for these hilly courses were getting worse up until the 22nd. But I don’t
think that is a reflection on my fitness. It’s more like a learning
curve as to learning what I can do to achieve better times at the moment.
My challenge of running an
average of sub 30 average parkrun throughout the year seems impossible right
now unless I really get my act together but at the same time, I'm not going to
run flatter parkruns deliberately just to achieve it. Hopefully though
I'll get under 30 at Queen's this year. That is my big aim which I feel is
doable with a few months of good training.
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