Why?!
One of my aims at my 24-hour race in June was to beat my Personal
Best of 130km. That race turned out to be ridiculously hot, so I moderated my
plans and whilst I won the race I didn’t increase my PB.
I had said before, and during, that race that I wasn’t going
to do a 24-hour race next year, but with my objective unmet, I resigned myself
to having another stab. Then it occurred to me that it would be easier to
maintain my fitness and endurance, than to rebuild it next year, which is what
saw me enter this event taking place just 3 months later.
Weather
The weather forecast two weeks out was for wall-to-wall
sunshine and 18 degrees. By two days out it was wall-to-wall rain. Two hours before
the start, we were down to just two hours of rain and one of showers in the
afternoon, with a middling probability of a couple of hours of showers
overnight.
Given that forecast, we were unlucky with what we actually
got. Somehow, with no suggestion of any remarkable windspeeds in the lead up, mid-afternoon
the Met Office suddenly issued a severe weather warning for high winds,
effective immediately until the early hours of the morning. It was as if
someone had said “You do know that it’s jolly windy out there, don’t you?” and
the Met Person said “Blimey, best get on and warn people about what’s currently
happening!”.
As much as I like hot weather, I have to concede that the
wet and windy conditions were more comfortable than 30+ degrees. But, oh, the
mud! There were sections of the course that became pure comedy mud-baths,
through which slow teetering was the only option. It was going through one of
these in the pissing rain in the middle of the night that I suggested to the
person slip-sliding next to me that we had made an odd choice of a fun way to
spend a Saturday night out!
How it went
I know it sounds silly to say that I ‘only’ managed 120km,
but that wasn’t my goal and it feels like I put in an awful lot of effort, and
endured some pretty grim weather, only to fail in my objective. Relatively, I
did reasonably well, coming 2nd out of 89 in my age category and 11th
out of 297 solo women, but a good placing also wasn’t my objective.
It would be easy to blame being poorly in the week leading
up to the event for my failure, but as I felt fine (if I overlook the
persistent indigestion) for the first 10 laps, I really don’t think that was
the problem.
It would also be easy to blame the weather – and certainly
the solo winners’ distances were down on previous years – but as I was still on
target when the sky cleared and the sun came up, I can’t blame that either.
I think the reality is that I didn’t eat enough, I lost
focus on what I was trying to achieve and somehow convinced myself, with 5
hours to go, that I couldn’t fit 3 more laps in when, in reality, I clearly had
time (this event works on the basis of ‘if you’ve started you can finish’ on any
lap started before the noon cut-off).
It was in Lap 11 that the wheels fell off. I felt awful and really
tired. Thank goodness for a woman called Jayne who distracted me nicely, and
undoubtedly sped me up, for the second half of the lap.
Somehow between Lap 11 and Lap 12, I spent 2 hours and 14
minutes in camp. How? What was I doing? I know I ate a bowl of porridge and a
can of soup, but I cannot now account for the other two hours. And, yes, I felt
pretty rough, but that’s hardly surprising in the circumstances, and it wasn’t
a good reason not to carry on.
I did eventually drag myself back out, and felt pretty good
for the first 4km of Lap 12, but then off came the wheels again. I felt so bad,
seemingly unable to maintain a straight line, that I gave serious consideration
to declaring myself unfit to continue at the second Marshal Point. I’d heard someone at the water station mention that they had
water and sugar and thinking that a bit of pure sugar might sort me out, I continued
on, and at the water station I asked if I’d heard correctly. They pointed me to
some cups, where I expected to find a few teaspoons of sugar, but instead found
four fizzy cola bottles.
I put the first one in my mouth, it tasted absolutely
fantastic and before I’d even swallowed it, I felt so very much better, thus
demonstrating that the ‘I can’t do this’ was entirely in my head. I stormed down
the next hill (the steep one) passing people inching down sideways, and managed
a power-march back up the other side (okay, that was more to do with the
photographer at the top). The pep in my step lasted for most of the rest of the
lap.
Finishing Lap 12 with an hour still available to get back
out for a final lap, I could undoubtedly have managed to equal my PB of 130km,
but I couldn’t see the point. I was going to make my right shin worse, and
having already had the experience of covering 70k on a painful shin back in
June I wasn’t in the market for doing the same again when it wasn’t going to
net me even a PB.
So, with time to spare, I called it a day.
In hindsight, it was a sensible decision to stop … it might
have even been the right one!
That’s it, I’m done with 24-hour races…
It’s amusing to now read the messages I sent to a friend about
3 hours after the race, in which I was still sure that I wasn’t going to be
doing another 24-hour race any time soon.
Three hours later Ali & I were plotting to return next
year.
I’ve since decided that I need the opportunity to have two stabs
next year (as I’m still convinced that I have 140km in me) so I may well be
doing both June and September again.
Photos:
Lap 1:
Lap 2:
Lap 3:
Above: Lap 4 (Blogger won't let me insert anything above it); Below: Lap 5
Laps 6, 7 and 8 (yep, Blogger won't let me insert text between the next 3 either):
Lap 9:
I got so very cold on Lap 8 and shivered my way around.
Lap 10:
On this lap I set out in a long-sleeved base layer, fleece, two waterproof jackets, hat, gloves and buff. I must have gone 7 or 8k before took off the hat and gloves and opened some zips.
Lap 11:
Final lap, about 2km from the finish, after the weather had belatedly come good