Archive for October 2011
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Update
31/10/2011 by admin.
I am writing this 24 hours after completion. We have had a glass of red wine in the Beefeater adjacent to another Premier Inn in Portsmouth and are due out shortly for a Chinese meal.
Yesterday we had the usual start with Nicky working on soft tissue for 20 minutes and the Doc taping the feet for half an hour. During all of this Sally prepares a bowl of porridge with additional honey and chopped apple and I write up my daily diary… the last run on the mainland! This morning the Channel TV cameraman, Andy and reporter Tamara were filming the day’s events including the morning preparations.
We gathered and packed the vehicles and headed for the start at Godolphin House, an important local National Trust property. I confess not to having appreciated just how emotional the start of the run would be however, I have a few verses of Isaiah to read (chapter 40, v28-31 – do look it up) and I find that humbling, inspiring, wonderful.
After doing the warm up stretches and exercises, I headed off down the Cornish lanes wearing an additional showerproof jacket and waterproof trousers … these are more to be worn whilst warming up than because of the rain, and after a few miles, they are discarded and collected by the team in the Volvo. Taking them off and storing them is a performance and with an efficiency as good as any Formula 1 pit-stop.
The run took us down to the coast - Marazion, St Michael’s Mount, Penzance and up the hill through Newlyn where Tamara joined me. It was very windy along the coast and from here to the end, there being no high hedges for protection.
As you will gather the weather was grey and overcast rather than wet, and windy. There were kitesurfers in Mounts Bay and at the Penzance heliport the windsock was horizontal. Peter reckoned force 6, gusting force 7. Certainly up near the finish it was pretty wild.
Andy, the cameraman, worked hard for his money in and out of their hire car, filming from the tripod as we came up hill and past him, filming out of the back of the car and filming as he ran beside and around me. By the end of the day he was pretty tired. Because of the wind, all the recording that Tamara attempted was lost.
The previous evening the team had tried to establish a marathon-length of run to conclude at Land’s End. It will not surprise you to know from our past record that we made a wrong turning close to the end. As a consequence we doubled back on the route we had been running to ensure that we finished running the required mileage. This was an executive decision I made on the hoof and am told that I went all silent and determined. The error in the route took me past a sign that said ‘Lands End 1 ¾’ but I knew I had 2 miles more than that to do. Sally and Nicky tried to direct me back down the original route, but I told them just to take me back along the route for 1 mile and turn around, as I was going back to the sign and along the main road to the finish no matter what. And having returned there, I was met by a professional photographer we had engaged to snap the conclusion.
Having got back to the Land’s End road sign I upped the pace. With about ¾ of a mile to go, we passed a lovely little church and once again the emotion and the enormity of it all struck home. In the distance were the Land’s End buildings and although it was a steady uphill climb with the end in sight I fairly ‘sprinted’ to the line, where there were lots of photographs, hugs and kisses. Of course the current members of the team were all there with broad smiles and high fives. Kevin Oliver, wife Julia and daughter Rosie were representing the Cornwall Region of Wooden Spoon and there to meet us all. Great to see them, and thank you for waiting for us in pretty terrible weather.
At Land’s End there is a line with ‘Start’ and ‘Finish’ written on it, some distance from the well known signpost. We took the line as our concluding mark. After than we piled back into the vehicles to escape the wind and headed back to our next accommodation – the Longboat in Penzance.
With the adrenaline still pumping the usual routine went out the window and interviews with the Guernsey Press and with Kevin Oliver for Wooden Spoon were completed prior to Doc attending to my feet and my hot bath – the cold baths are history!
Then it was back downstairs when the party really began. Gary Lewis, who had earlier completed 6 ½ marathons in 7 days when we ran together in the Midlands, provided the celebratory champagne. We had an excellent meal together in the hotel with the Olivers and the Channel Television crew.
Happy and satisfied we had completed a job well done, some of us retired to bed around 10, the hard core continued.
Today, Sunday, it was great to have an extra hour with the clocks going back and the opportunity for a lie in as well. We all had a cooked breakfast and it made a real change for me not to be worrying about both the quantity and the substance of what I was eating.
We have received many phone calls, texts and emails of good wishes and congratulations although amongst these was the news that John Inverdale is unwell with pneumonia and will not be attending the Welcome Home Party on Wednesday. Since we have been able to deal with adversity from as early as my being diagnosed with a hernia 6 weeks prior to departure, to the realisation that the shoes I trained with were inappropriate 2 days into the run, and having to re-jig the route on an almost daily basis, we are used to having to adapt. Alex Bridle at The Guernsey Event Company is in control of the situation which I discussed with her this morning.
BBC Radio Guernsey interviewed me at about 9.15 and then we all had interviews with Channel TV before saying our goodbyes as Sally and I took Nicky to Bristol Airport and Doc and Alan took Peter to Southampton and the TV crew headed to Exeter. It was interesting driving back to Bristol passing locations that we had so recently run though. The weather was beautifully sunny and the autumn colours really quite splendid.
Doc, Alan, Sally and I met up at our last Premier Inn in Portsmouth before catching the boat back to Guernsey tomorrow. Over the course of the coming week, we have got interviews with Radio Guernsey and others when we arrive back in Guernsey, we have the Welcome Home Party on Wednesday, another function to attend on Thursday and on Saturday we have the run relay to complete. Details of this last event can be got from Chris Griffiths at Two Degrees North. Details of the Welcome Home Party can be got from Alex Bridle at The Guernsey Event Company.
I do not propose doing another Update until next Sunday evening when I will review these last events and try and give some thoughts on the whole challenge.
Best Wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) : Lands End
30/10/2011 by admin.
Congratulations to Stuart Hardie upon reaching Lands End at 3.34 pm yesterday. What a superb achievement.
Please join the marathon relay on 5 November and contine to support the fund raising efforts for Wooden Spoon Charity.
Relay Marathon
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 39
29/10/2011 by admin.
A glorious autumn day in the Kingdom of Cornwall where, and we should have mentioned this yesterday, the signposting of places and roads is far better than in Devon, making the job of the navigator so much easier. Although we work out the route the evening before, it is always a theoretical thing and much revised during the day’s travels. As a consequence, we are finding the navigation much more straightforward in Cornwall.
It is still not easy and requires considerable concentration. Dependence on satnav never a good idea, and it resulted in having the caravan up a country lane that it should not have gone up. Extrication was complicated in the extreme.
Peter Macgill ran with me from the start, though most of the morning seemed to be a walking tour of Cornwall because everything appeared to be running uphill … which obviously it was not but it just felt that way. We headed from London Apprentice, southwest of St Austell, and headed across the Roseland Peninsula towards the River Fal and the King Harry ferry crossing. We had a 10 minute wait for and crossing on the ferry, and in that time we distributed leaflets to the waiting cars and I had a few rice cakes and pate for my second lunch, having had one of Doc’s special rolls earlier in the day.
We were met on the other side of the ferry crossing by Channel TV and Andy Will and Tamara Timothy followed us for the rest of the day until they lost us!
We made really good time on the second half of the run and Peter did exceptionally well keeping with the pace. Even with the break at the ferry we finished in something around 6 hours 30 minutes. Peter completed his first marathon.
Back at the hotel, we met up again with the Channel TV team and they interviewed members of the team and recorded Doc removing the dressings from my feet, and Nicky working on the soft tissue massage. They also filmed me in the cold bath!
Sally, Alan and Doc went on a recce of the route for tomorrow’s run. I really do not want to be doing much more than 26 miles so they needed to work out precisely from where we should start.
I had a phone call from Peter Scott, one of the founders of Wooden Spoon, this evening, wishing me the best for tomorrow and I have had many other cards, emails and texts which is great and much appreciated.
The whole team, including Andy and Tamara, broke free of the Premier Inn at Alan’s insistence, and we had a fabulous meal at Blue Haze in Porthleven.
Best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 38
28/10/2011 by admin.
After our experiences on Dartmoor we were better prepared for tackling the wet weather elements that we experienced today. Though it was very wet, it was not cold or windy. I started out wearing a base layer longsleeved top and leggings, shorts, T shirt, running top, showerproof top, waterproof trousers, serious long waterproof coat with hood, cap underneath the hood, and gloves. To ensure a better fit with the shoes, we have Doc’s taping of the toes and other support strapping to insole and heels along with two pairs of socks. Thus prepared we set out for a wet morning’s running. And it really was very wet for the first 15 miles, with drains overflowing in the roads and some hug puddles forming minor lakes that we have to make our way through.
Also the route today took us on to some very busy ‘B’ roads. This was a complete surprise after the preparation work done the previous evening which tries to avoid the sorts of problems this throws up. It has become apparent that some of these roads are used as ‘rat runs’ and they are too dangerous to run on. As a consequence today I got into the back up car and we motored for half a mile to safety, which is why those of you following the run on Endomondo will see that we have gone further than usual today … we added the mileage whilst I was in the car to the end of the run.
Another serious issue today was that of the safety of the campervan. The ordinance survey maps are terrific in the amount of detail they give apart from advising on precise road widths. Doc, Alan and Peter found themselves down a little Cornish lane on a steep gradient with no way out but forward and with literally millimetres to spare they made it. Very stressful for all concerned.
Today’s food and water intake was pretty much as needed. A banana after an hour and a half, half an oat and date slice as a reward after a tough hill about 15 minutes later, the other half in the car after fleeing the B road, 2 small ham and tomato rolls after about 3 ½ hours – one eaten on the road and the other eaten during a pit stop to change sodden shoes and socks. I had an energy bar about half an hour from the finish and a banana and another oat and date bar when I finished. I drank 2 litres of electrolyte drink during the run, but it would appear that this was still not enough. When Doc checked my blood pressure after the run, it was unusually low and we put this down to a loss of salt due to excess perspiration from wearing the well-sealed waterproofs. Consequently I have been given another litre of electrolyte drink to finish by the morning.
This evening we were reviewing the routes for the last 2 days. Hard to believe that we are so close to completion.
Best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 37
27/10/2011 by admin.
Once again the forecasters got it right and we had a lovely run in the autumn sunshine. We did get caught in a couple of heavy showers but we survived.I had no support runners today, though Peter Macgill accompanied me across the Tamar Bridge, and Nicky and Sally accompanied me at various times up some of the hills.
Made really good time initially as we ran downhill into Plymouth. The downhill was so inviting that I did not do my usual warm up of miles of walking. The team was terrific in seeing me through the busy streets of Plymouth. We had the odd hiccup and misdirection but nothing that delayed us to any great degree. Somewhere in all of this was a mightly climb with a gradient of 17+ degrees - a hill that seemed to go on forever. I think it is on the hills in particular that the Nordic poles are such a boon, helping me power along.
After Plymouth, the Tamar and Saltash, we moved off the cycle tracks and pavements into a rural environment such as we had experienced in the days before in Devon. Doc tells us that in Cornwall we are of course in another country - the only thing missing being the passport controls at the border. (We are down to our last 4 ordinance survey maps out of large box full).
Usually when i am running, I complete the second half quicker than the first. Not so today, when both took something in the order of three hours, about which I was mildly disappointed. I put it down to the long hills in the second half of the run, with particular reference to the nasty little creature coming out of Notter Bridge. I had just passed Doc and his cafe/campervan and had been handed one of his super rolls but I quickly handed it back throught the Volvo window when I saw what was ahead of me. I reclaimed it when I got to the top of the hill.
At the end of the day, we fininshed down another country lane where the encampment we set up for the finishing line caused a deal of consternation for the local domestic traffic but little problem for the TNT wagon that simply folded in its wing mirrors and went sailing by with an inch to spare advising the troops that I was hard on his heels.
After that, it was into the campervan and back to Liskeard Premier Inn and our experience here of staff and food is far better than we have recently received.
Alan Le Poidevin re-joined us late this afternoon, so for the last few days we are now a team of 6.
I had a long interview with BBC Radio Guernsey after today’s run and that should hit the airwaves tomorrow around lunchtime.
Another food parcel has been received for which many thanks Amanda.
Thank you for your cards, emails, texts, tweets and facebook things. All are very much appreciated. Sorry I am not able to respond to you individually at present.
For those of you who have only recently received the daily updates, the older ones are on the website www.jogtole.co.uk. Please follow the links ‘Daily Updates’ on the left hand side, if you have time. A satellite tracker also follows me live on the website.
best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 36
27/10/2011 by admin.
The weather looked promising this morning. A beautiful autumn morning, very clear and fresh rather than cold, although we did know that showers were forecast.
Despite the lovely weather, I felt a bit leaden this morning. I was unsure as to whether that was a residue of yesterday’s efforts or from having eaten a delicious but late breakfast at the Sportmans Inn in Ivybridge.
The first five miles was uphill again so I walked. I used my Nordic walking poles. I was quickly warm and cast off the extra clothes I wear at the start. Running was difficult because of the gradients of the hills – very steep up and down. Up to this point we have been fortunate in that we have had a steep gradient going up and a gentle descent making running an easy option, but not so today.
After about 6 miles Nicky joined me on the bike, Peter being hors de combat and hoping to join in the exercise tomorrow. Despite pumping up the tyres of the bike, the front wheel must have a slow puncture because shortly after we had to leave doc because of narrow lanes, it became clear that it could not be ridden and Nicky had to push the bike for a couple of miles tackling the hills on the way and it took her an hour before she was reunited with the campervan.
I think I have said before that we look at the route each evening and plan the following day’s run. Despite this it is often the case that we have to alter things depending on the real conditions as we meet them when we are running. This proved to be the case today. An innocent little road that appeared to be quite minor proved to be very busy and dangerous for running on and we had to change our plans. This impacts on what we do because it means that we are left with little option but to use the tiniest of roads that make access for the campervan virtually impossible. The back up car and team are always about but linking up with the camper is reduced to perhaps two or three times during the day.
Shortly after the midway point of the run it started to rain and the wet weather gear was quickly reintroduced! It was the normal wet weather gear – not the serious fleece lined clothing I had to wear yesterday. For the next 5 or 6 miles the weather closed in and I got pretty wet, but it eased over the home straight and I just kept going as quickly as I could to stop myself getting cold as I knew I was on the verge of this happening.
But the real killer today was the steep hills. Over the last 5 or 6 miles when I am already quite tired, the hills down into and up out of Ledstone and Loddiswell were difficult. Nicky rejoined us between the 2 villages and accompanied me up the hill out of Loddiswell as she could see I had lost the rhythm of my breathing and my stride pattern.
Anyway, I got over the finishing line in something around 6 hours 40 minutes which we thought was fairly creditable bearing in mind today’s conditions and terrain.
We are spending a second night in the Sportmans Inn in Ivybridge where Sally and I have been upgraded to the master suite which has a bath .. last night I had to forego my cold bath. Tonight I was so cold the doctor advised against it and I had a fabulous long, deep hot bath.
The folk at the hotel are hugely hospitable. The food is great in quality and quantity, with a very generous host who in his earlier years has done Lands End to John O’Groats by bike.
Thank you to everyone who has sent us messages to which I am sorry we do not have sufficient time to reply. I will be in touch in the weeks to come. Apologies to those friends who were inconvenienced by our changes of route and hotels. From tomorrow, we are sticking to the scheduled hotels though for the reasons indicated, the route may change daily.
Best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 35
25/10/2011 by admin.
Dear All
Well I don’t know about you, but I thought with 6 days to go it would all be plain sailing. Wrong!
Today was one of unremitting toughness with the weatherforcaster getting it absolutely right when he said there would be high winds and heavy rain in the area with the possibility of flooding. We had it all.
We had the usual sort of start with Nicky working on my feet and then Doc applying tape to the toes and strapping to the instep of one foot and the heel of the other. While all this was going on I had a bowl of porridge with honey and fruit and wrote up my diary of the previous day’s events.
We drove to the start at Crockenwell and Peter and I set off with waterproof trousers and tops but by mile 10 we were soaking. By mile 12 we were starting to get quite cold and by mile 14 we decided that we had to stop for a complete change of clothes and to warm up. Because the roads on today’s route were so narrow, Doc did not follow us on to the routed this morning. He went off to reorganise our accommodation as we had a very disappointing experience at the restaurant adjoining the Premier Inn Exeter last night. It was a shame since it had been reasonably good the evening before.
When we called Doc for backup, we were unable to get a mobile signal so headed for the nearest pub according to the map, which was about 2 miles away and had a great welcome at the Kestor Inn in Manaton. We rang Doc from there – fortunately he had a signal – and then had hot drinks and a cream tea generously provided by the Inn, so we put the cost in the donations pot.
We had already had a route problem as we were diverted off the agreed route by Sally and Nicky so they could pick up something for our lunch in Chagford. They misread one turning on the way out (signposted to somewhere not on their map) and we found ourselves running back into Chagford from a different direction. Sally and Nicky told us to turn around and run back they way we had come (up a big hill) whilst they unsuccessfully asked for directions from locals who appeared not to know where they were. In the process, their map was soaked and almost disintegrated and had be dried out on the dashboard.
When we left the Kestor Inn, Peter retired to being a passenger, but he lent me his waterproof trousers which were drier than mine, and I headed off back into the miserable wet with the Volvo close behind. As we re-started at Manaton which was not on our original route, we lost the protection of the valleys and were out on the exposed moor, which was appalling – windy and misty with driving horizontal rain.
We met up with Doc again on the moor. At one point the Nicky told me to run in front of the car, which was very difficult. I did not realise at the time that this was because even in my high visibility gear I could only be seen from about 20 feet away.
I just had to knuckle down and get on with it. I had a great sense of satisfaction at the end, but it was a very tough day.
We got back to our new accommodation at the Sportsmans Inn in Ivybridge, where the place looks like a Chinese Laundry with clothes drying all over the place, including the radiators in the corridors.
Tonight’s meal was great and we are pleased not to have to pack up tomorrow morning as we are here for 2 nights. We have just heard driving rain outside and hope it will all pass over by the morning.
Best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 34
24/10/2011 by admin.
Once again it was the foot clinic with Dr Andrews at 7am. Two new blisters developed yesterday caused by wearing shoes that are too big now that there is less bandaging required for the protection of the toes. Unfortunately we cannot use the original shoes as they are too tight, so we have reverted to the Innovate despite the lack of arch support. Doc gave me more arch support today and when he has finished with me there is a lot more white tape visible than foot. In fact he started a new roll today and said he had used 10 metres of zinc oxide tape to date on the toes alone.
Today was a really hard day. Running with so much company yesterday was great, but it really took it out of me. Today was very hilly through and beyond Exeter and it was seriously hard work.
Heather ran with me from the start, but she had a problematic hip and stopped after 5 miles. Peter joined me at that point and ran with me for the next 12 miles. Then I asked him to leave me but rejoin me for the last 4 miles. I needed to be on my own to concentrate on the hills because sometimes all you can do is simply grind them out by thinking about your breathing and your posture. Nicky also worked some hills towards the end specifically to help with the breathing a posture. She has to be careful because when she was with us last time she did too much and she has a suspect knee.
Peter’s run was more than we expected him to do and we hope he is fit and well in the morning.
As ever, the help and support of the team, including Dick McIntosh and others back at base, makes the whole thing possible. Regular water and food intake is essential and at the end of each day we know exactly where we are with calorific and liquid consumed.
My weight is consistent every morning at 78kgs, as is my blood pressure and temperature. Because I am using Nordic walking poles, it is really helping my balance, helps me power up the hills and I carry them when i am running because they are so light and and they help with my posture … too bad they can’t mend the feet too!
Today’s weather was good - cloudy to start but brightened up and becase quite warm - about 20C at times. The forecast for tomorrow is grim with potential flooding in this area and high winds expected.
Pleased to be able to say today that it is the last Sunday on which I will be doing a marathon. This time next week I expect to be driving to Portsmouth to get the boat home. A few tough days ahead across the moors before that.
best wishes
Stuart
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Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 33
23/10/2011 by admin.
This morning we left Tony and Judith Richard’s house after a lovely stay to go and meet up with our fellow runners from Garenne Group, and also Heather Andrews and Andrew Hardie ran with me today.
We met at the Premier Inn, Taunton, and went to the start line in Stoke St Mary. It was another lovely morning, but cold. I started out with extra trousers, fleece, hat and gloves on.
We started off with 3 runners from Garenne, Andrew Hardie and Heather, and it just seemed to be uphill for miles. I rather lost count of where it evened out. Despite this we still managed good time and we were close to a six hour 15 minute pace at the half way mark, where we picked up 4 more from Garenne. Every uphill has the bonus of having a downhill, but not necessarily on the same day, though today it worked in our favour.
We seemed to cross a plateau at which point Andy Hall joined us for the last 10 miles. His fresh legs injected some pace, and consequently we made better time in the second half.
Doc did his best to feed the 5,000 and succeeded. Paul Birtwistle was manning the route, directions, water station, refuelling of personnel, and photographs - normally jobs for a team of 4 - as Jannine and Guthrie had gone to the airport for Guthrie to fly home to Guernsey and to collect Nicky, Peter and Sally who joined for the last week to Lands End. They all arrived at Broadhembury, about 3 miles from the end, where they had a quick alfresco lunch outside the Post Office in the pretty village centre, whilst waiting for us to appear.
Richard from Garenne and I were not popular for picking up the pace near the end, but it meant we made the fantastic time of 5 hours 48 minutes. We finished outside the pub in Payhembury. Sadly it was closed and remained closed despite the keen interest from the thirsty runners!
Unfortunately my schedule means that I cannot hang about at the end of a run as I need my feet unwrapping, a cold bath, then a hot shower and the tender ministrations of a good sports therapist to ease aching limbs and make sure I can move tomorrow.
We had to say goodbye to Paul and Jannine there, and to Andrew Hardie and the Garenne boys. The guys were good company and they have done a great job in raising considerable funds for the cause.
Tonight we are staying at the Premier Inn Exeter, Countess Wear. I had a surprise visit from Celia and Tony Meadley, who are Scottish dancing chums from Charmouth, with whom we usually meet up in Brittany when we go to the annual Scottish Country Dancing Ball in St Quay Perros.
Celia brought me some delicious homemade healthy oat and date slices all beautifully individually wrapped so I can take them on the road. Please don’t tell the others else they will all be wanting some!
Tony and Celia were able to stay for dinner and we had a very convivial evening at the adjoining Beefeater Grill - great steaks!
The Premier Inn gave us complimentary desserts and coffee today. We are very excited about the luxury of staying in the same place for 2 nights running so that we don’t have to pack up when we leave for the run tomorrow. Also our room has radiators and a heated towel rail. So useful when you have kit to wash and dry.
Tomorrow we are into our last week. Exhausted this evening. Off to bed now.
best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk
Jon O’Groats to Lands End (JOGtoLE) Day 32
22/10/2011 by admin.
Today’s run started near Bridgwater . Weather lovely again, sunny at first but it clouded over a bit later.
Guthrie ran with me to start with. He did about 10 miles and then swapped to cycling. It was so warm in fact that he wore his shorts. At one point in the run the temperature got up to 20C.
Now that we are away from the canal system, we are pretty much sticking to our original route as published on our website, running along minor roads as much as possible. Again it was really picturesque today. The vistas from some of the high points of land are terrific, the weather has been super, the autumn colours are coming out and we pass through little villages with village greens, and lovely local stone and it has been a fabulous experience.
There was one very big hill today it was about a mile long and very steep. I think I am getting quite good at hills now and I really attack them.
After about 12 miles a local runner joined us. He was Mike Griffiths, a butcher, who happened to be out running and spotted us. He did a few miles with us and it was very nice to meet someone new.
Chris Griffiths (of Two Degrees North, in Guernsey), a member of my organising committee and his wife met us about 5 miles before the finish and Chris ran the last 5 miles with me. The very kindly brought with them the Guernsey Press, some Guernsey Fudge and some Guernsey Gauche in case I was getting homesick from being away for so long. Only just over a week to go …
Today’s time was 6 hours and 20 minutes. I was a bit disappointed as I had done a better time yesterday, but after about 20 miles today I was really exhausted. I know exactly why that was and it was down to eating some of the wrong foods. It is very tempting to think you can eat what you like when you are burning so many calories but you have to be sensible and eat healthily otherwise your energy is sapped.
This evening we are staying at the home of Tony Richards from Wooden Spoon and his wife Judith. They are terrific hosts and it is lovely to be in a home rather than a hotel.
We could not get the campervan parked at Tony and Judith’s so it is a couple of hundred yards away in a pub carpark. As Doc was organising that I was left to take the dressings off my feet which Doc usually does as part of the after-run routine. By the time he came back to the house I was already soaking my legs in the cold bath so it was too late for my temperature and blood pressure post-run to be taken. However, generally my weight continues to be consistent, as do my temperature and blood pressure.
Eight guys from Garenne Group from Guernsey are joining me tomorrow; 3 to run a whole marathon, 4 to do a half marathon, and one to do 1/4. Doc’s wife Heather - who ran several times with me in Scotland all that time ago in week 1, including a whole marathon - and my nephew Andrew also hope to be join us, so it should be a very sociable day.
Tony and I went to find the Garenne Group guys this evening. We knew they were staying at the Premier Inn in Taunton. We found out that there are three Premier Inns in Taunton and we went to their one last, and they had not yet arrived. We caught up with them by phone later and have agreed our rendezvous for tomorrow.
Tonight was our last evening with Paul, Jannine and Guthrie. They have all been super - helpful and willing to pitch in with whatever needed doing - and I greatly appreciate their support.
best wishes
Stuart
www.jogtole.co.uk