It turns out that I have been wrong all this time!
Sleep is important and does help prevent injury and assist in the recovery from injury.
For years I have had the attitude that there is plenty of time to sleep when you are dead, and I’ve survived on between 4 and 6 hours sleep a night.
But about three weeks ago I was out training and listening to a podcast (I listen to lots of podcasts when training) about the importance of sleep, and it got me thinking about what I am trying to achieve this year – the fact that I am working to improve my diet, trying to stretch more, and generally just trying to be a bit healthier. But I am still trying to survive on less than an optimal amount of sleep.
So for the last three weeks I have been trying to get 8 hours sleep at least three times a week, and trying to average 7 hours sleep per night overall. I’m not quite there yet, but I already feel better due to the extra hour or more of sleep that I am getting each night, and I think that this is another area that I will monitor over the next six months in the lead-up to the 6 jours de france (Privas 6 day race) in October.
Nutrition:
Four months in to my new healthier eating and it is almost like healthy eating is now becoming natural to me. I haven’t had a ‘heat n eat’ meal all year. I used to eat one at least once a week, if not twice. I have only eaten chocolate twice – during the M25 walk in March and one other long training walk. I hardly drink any coke. I cook a vegetarian omelette (sometimes with the addition of some bacon) for breakfast on days when I have time, otherwise I have porridge – both much better for me than cornflakes. And more recently I have been focusing on eating more fruit including a minimum of two bananas every day.
Stretching:
In January I set myself a target of stretching for 30 minutes three times per week. I haven’t yet met that target but without the goal of three sessions per week I probably wouldn’t even do one stretching session. This month I averaged twice a week.
Training:
At the start of the month I was struggling a little with both my right knee and right hip but they appear to be better now and I have cancelled the MRI that I was booked to have on my knee in early May. I think the additional sleep has helped aid my recovery.
I haven’t done any back-to-back long walks like I had hoped to do during April but I did get in two 50+ kilometre walks as well as a sub 30 minute 5km (my first since July 2014) and I feel that I am in great shape and am looking forward to my first two races of the year – the Continental Centurions race (24 hours) in two weeks time followed by the 145 mile Grand Union Canal Race at the end of May. In theory, from just those two walks alone I will cover 260 miles (418km) during May which will make May my biggest distance month since May of last year. Add to that a couple weeks of light training between now and the Centurion race and I could end up with over 500km next month.
Longest walk: 120 miles (194km) – being the first 34 ½ hours of the M25 circumnavigation.
Races:
None. My first race of 2016 is the Continental Centurions race (24 hours) in mid May and I will follow that up with the 145 mile Grand Union Canal Race at the end of May.
Plans for May:
Continental Centurions Race in Holland 14/15 May.
My original plan was to take this race reasonably easy and just aim to get through 100 miles in less than 24 hours in order to become a Continental Centurion but to save myself for the Grand Union Canal Race two weeks later. However, I feel that I am in great shape at the moment and capable of walking a PB, and hopefully going under 21 hours for 100 miles and over 182.6km in 24 hours to claim the New Zealand records which are currently held by Peter Bailie. We will have to see what the weather is like on the weekend, but at this stage my intention is to walk hard for the whole 24 hours and then take two weeks of almost complete rest before my next race.
Grand Union Canal Race 28/29 May.
I was disappointed with my result in this race last year. I really struggled during the last 17 hours, taking 43 hours to complete the race. This year I want to get under 40 hours but this will be very much dependent on how hard I race in Holland and how well I recover.
And why am I writing all this?
I have huge plans for 2016. Everything is focused around the 6 jours de france (Privas 6 day race) in October, and I am breaking my preparation down in to individual months – April was month four of a 9 ½ month build-up and was all about recovering from some minor injuries and getting back in to my training. May is going to be all about pushing myself through two big races which are both mini goals in their own right, but are also about building mental strength for October. I read a quote the other day that “ultra-distance racing is 90% mental and the other 10% is in the head”. That is what I will be working on during May.
And at the end of each month I will write another review and set my goals/plans for the next month.
Writing this blog post helps me to focus on what I need to do.
Under the QE2 Bridge in Dartford – from where I started my M25 walk
March was all about my attempt to walk non-stop around the M25 motorway, and when I say ‘All’ I mean that I only did three walks in March!
I went in to the month with a minor knee injury which meant I avoided doing any training in the lead-up to the M25 walk except for a 5km parkrun the weekend beforehand.
I’ve written a report about my M25 circumnavigation here. It didn’t go to plan but I completed it.
My knee injury held up but I am still suffering some discomfort and have only done one walk since – which was ten miles last weekend.
I’m still having physio on the knee and have also joined a gym in attempt to strengthen my right quadriceps as the physio thinks a weakness here is contributing to my knee problems. Unfortunately, having joined the gym on the Thursday before Easter, I overdid the exercises and now have a minor right hip injury as well!
Paris-Alsace:
The Paris-Alsace race is an ‘invitation only’ 425km (265 mile) multi-day walking race through France (from Paris to Alsace), and I have been invited to compete in this years event!
I’m the first New Zealander to have ever been invited to compete but unfortunately I won’t be accepting my invitation this year.
After thinking about it for the last 24 hours I have decided that the race is just too hard for me to do without dedicating a year to training specifically for the event.
Here’s why:
The race consists of four stages as follows –
Stage 1: 15km starting at 6:30pm on day 1 (I can do this easily enough)
Stage 2: 203km starting 2 ½ hours after finishing stage 1. Time limit on this stage is 30 to 31 hours depending on how long stage 1 takes. I should be capable of doing this.
Stage 3: 165km starting exactly 2 hours after finishing stage 2. So after walking within 2 or 3 hours of my best time for 200km I can have a 2 hour break and then I have to walk 100 miles – and depending on how long stage 2 takes me, I have between 25 ½ and maybe 27 ½ hours to do that. I don’t think I am capable of backing up from a 200km stage and then walking another 100 miles, let alone completing it within that time.
Stage 4: Only 57km which, if I only just finished within the cutoff time for stage 3 would start only 3 hours after I finish stage 3. The organisers allow a generous 11 to 12 hours for this stage depending on your start time, but this is the ‘mountain’ stage.
I’m proud to have been invited to do this race but I’m also realistic, and I can’t see myself finishing it. At least not this year. But never say never. I’m thinking of targeting this as my big race for 2018 (if I can earn an invitation again).
Nutrition:
My healthy eating diet continues although one of the highlights of the M25 walk was the opportunity to eat anything I wanted for a weekend. Coke, chocolate bars, crisps, cereal bars, etc. All the things I have been avoiding since changing my diet at the beginning of the year.
Having completed the walk I have now returned to my healthy eating diet and when I weighed myself for the first time since July I found that I have lost 5kg and am the lighted I have been since I can’t remember when – probably since the 90’s.
I suspect that the majority of that weight loss as been due to me stopping drinking Coke back in September last year. I recently calculated that at an average of 2 litres of Coke per day, I was consuming 6kg of sugar per month! Can’t that out is guaranteed to reduce weight.
I have also started eating a minimum of 2 bananas per day. In the past, if I was hungry between meals I used to eat a chocolate bar, justifying that I needed the calories due to all the exercise I did. Since changing my diet and eating porridge for breakfast, rather than cornflakes, I have found that I’m not so hungry between meals in the morning, but I’m often hungry in the afternoon. So now I include a banana with my lunch and when commuting home from work I eat another banana rather than the chocolate bar that I would have eaten in the past.
Stretching:
In January I set myself a target of stretching for 30 minutes three times per week. In January and February I managed to average just half of that but this month I did nine stretching sessions – 4 ½ hours in total. This was obviously made easier due to the fact that I haven’t been training so have had extra time, but it is something that I still need to work on.
Training:
Thanks to my M25 walk my March mileage was 194 miles (312km). I had planned on taking a complete break for two weeks after the M25 walk but it is time to resume training now as I had planned a high mileage month in April before the two long distance races I have in May – the Continental Centurions Race and the Grand Union Canal Race (24 hours and 145 miles respectively).
With the two minor (hopefully) injury problems I currently have though (right knee and right hip) I don’t know how my April will go.
The good news is that the other aches and pains/injuries I was carrying earlier this year are now gone. Neither the right hamstring nor the discomfort/tightness in the arches of my feet have bothered me during March. So perhaps this demonstrates that it is possible to train through minor injuries and they will eventually disappear. Let’s hope so.
Longest walk: 120 miles (194km) – being the first 34 ½ hours of the M25 circumnavigation.
Races:
None. My first race of 2016 is the Dutch Centurions race (24 hours) in mid May and I will follow that up with the 145 mile Grand Union Canal Race at the end of May.
Plans for April:
This is very much dependent on my knee and hip, but I would like to build up to finish the month with either one or two 100 mile weeks and then I will have two easy weeks before the Centurions race in mid May.
And why am I writing all this?
I have huge plans for 2016. Everything is focused around the 6 jours de france (Privas 6 day race) in October, and I am breaking my preparation down in to individual months – March was month three and was all about doing a big ‘non-stop’ walk around the M25.
I have plans for each individual month (April was supposed to be a high mileage training month, and will still hopefully be a quality training month) as I build up towards the race, and at the end of each month I intend to write a review and set my goals/plans for the next month.
Writing this blog post helps me to focus on what I need to do.
On the weekend of 11th to 13th March I attempted to become the first person to circumnavigate the M25 on foot non-stop. With the help of a few friends who acted as my support crew my plan was to start the 165 mile trek beside the QE2 bridge in Dartford, on the western side of the Thames, and walk clockwise around the M25 following the A and B roads until I arrived back at the QE2 bridge on the eastern side of the Thames (there is no pedestrian access to the bridge itself) some 40 to 48 hours later. Or at least that was the plan.
Fundraising:
I also wanted to use the walk to raise money for Sport Relief, one of the biggest annual charity fundraising events in the UK in which celebrities raise millions of pounds by challenging themselves to massive sporting challenges (see Eddie Izzard’s 27 marathon challenge, Jo Brand’s 150 mile ‘Hell of a Walk’ and Greg Jame’s 5 back to back half ironmans) and thousands of people like you and I contribute our little bit by raising thousands of smaller amounts through our own sporting challenges.
I contacted Fitbit to help me with my fundraising by sponsoring a prize to the person who had the closest guess as to the number of steps my walk took – providing that they also made a donation. And to that extent the walk was a success. I raised £1,500 for Sport Relief and hopefully also spread the word about this great little device called ‘Fitbit’.
Fitbit also kindly gave me a Fitbit Surge which was a nice upgrade on the Fitbit Charge that I previously used.
Preparation:
Unlike an organised event/race in which I only need to turn up to and walk, there was plenty that needed to be done before I even laced up my shoes.
Firstly, I had to plan the route. All I knew was that it would make sense to start and finish at the Dartford Crossing, although at the time I didn’t realise that pedestrians couldn’t walk across the bridge. The M25 motorway circles London but because it is a motorway, you can’t actually walk on the M25 itself. I have used MapMyRun previously to plan walking routes, including the ‘Richard Walks London’ route that I did in central London last year, so decided to use it to map my M25 route which would follow the A and B roads around the M25, staying as close to the motorway as possible throughout the journey. MapMyRun is an easy tool to use and it also integrates with Google Maps, and Google street view to enable the user to see what the roads along the route actually look like, and the route I mapped out looked OK to me.
There was a good mixture of narrow country lanes, suburban streets, and busier high traffic roads. Plenty of variety. The only problem, as I was to find out, was that in a number of places the roads that MapMyRun planned were not ‘roads’ as such, but were dirt or grass trails – they all had names including one grass trail called ‘New Road’. Fortunately the weather was kind to us as many of the trails would have been impossible to walk if it had rained throughout the week beforehand.
One of the many country lanes
A Duel Carriageway without a footpath!
One of many ‘roads’
Crossing over the M40
Once I had planned the route I created and printed detailed maps that spread the full 165 mile route across 55 A4 printed pages which had every kilometre marked and the names of all the streets that we would be following. I printed three copies of the maps – one for me and two for my support crew. I also laminated one of the copies in case it rained.
I also employed the services of OpenTracking.co.uk who uploaded the map to their website and gave me a GPS tracking unit to carry so that anyone who was interested, my support crew, and I could see where I was on the map at any time. This proved to be very helpful on a number of occasions when I got lost, although unfortunately the tracker stopped transmitting after about 30 hours.
And on a regular basis in the lead-up to the walk I posted on facebook and twitter to try and encourage donations to Sport Relief as well as entries in to the competition to win a Fitbit Surge.
The Start:
After all the planning, the morning of Friday 11th March finally arrived and I left home mid-morning to travel via train to the start where I met one of my support crew, Sarah Lightman, who was giving up her weekend (along with Jim Hanson and Suzanne Beardsmore who would join us on Saturday afternoon) to help me achieve my goal. Walking long distances isn’t easy. When you get tired you can’t think clearly, and when you can’t think clearly you forget to eat regularly, and you make other mistakes that you wouldn’t normally make. But a good support crew makes all the difference, and I had the best. Both Sarah and Suzanne are experienced long distance race-walkers and Jim has supported us all during many races in recent years. I know that I wouldn’t have completed this walk without the support that these three gave me during the weekend. It definitely wasn’t something that I could have done solo.
Friday gave us a beautiful spring afternoon, and for the first time this year it was warm enough to wear a T shirt outside. We knew that the temperature would plummet overnight though and I had plenty of warm clothing plus other stuff I might need during the weekend which we put in to the back of Sarah’s car as I made final preparations for the walk.
And then at 2:30 in the afternoon I was off. The start of my next adventure.
The start, with the QE2 Bridge in the background
I had daylight for the first 3 ½ hours and for most of this time it was reasonably warm. It was enjoyable walking along roads that I hadn’t walked before. Sarah was leapfrogging ahead and feeding me every 30 minutes and everything was well with the world.
But as it started getting colder my pace started to slow although I still felt good and was enjoying myself. Around about 7:30pm it was time for Sarah to leave me for the evening. We had decided that it was more important to have all three of my support crew with me on the Saturday night, and that as I would be relatively fresh and on roads that I had either walked or cycled before during the Friday night section, I would be OK walking alone. So I put all of my warm clothes on as well as my camelback which was filled with food and drink, and collected the maps that I would need to get me around the lower portion of the M25 overnight, and said goodnight to Sarah.
Friday Night:
Early on Friday night
It got cold very rapidly and my pace dropped quickly. This wasn’t a race though so I wasn’t too concerned about my pace. Whilst I had a plan in mind that would see me walking the first 80 miles in 18 ½ hours to get through to Black Park in Windsor in time to walk parkrun at 9am on Saturday, I wasn’t going to lose any sleep if I didn’t make it. Actually I was going to lose a lot of sleep!
It was during the night that I realised why all of the long distance races I have done to date (8 races of 100 miles or further) have been in the summer – because the nights are so much warmer. The freezing cold weather was sapping my energy. At one stage my hands were shaking so much from the cold then when I tried to have a drink I ended up pouring it down my front. I was also having trouble reading my map when my hands were shaking, and got lost a few times by making silly mistakes.
But despite the cold I was still enjoying the adventure, and was evening enjoying having to find my way back on track after getting lost. The GPS live tracking was proving really useful.
At around 3am on Saturday morning I arrived at the A3 motorway. My map showed that I was to cross the motorway via a footbridge but I had somehow managed to arrive at the motorway about 50 meters down the road from the footbridge and in the dark I couldn’t work out how to get on to the walkway. So instead, given that there wasn’t any traffic, I climbed the barriers and the median strip and clambered across the road. Having crossed the motorway I needed to walk through the forest on the other side for about 200 meters to get to the road that I was supposed to follow, but somehow I managed to go the wrong way and it took me almost 30 minutes to find my way back out of the forest. The forest isn’t actually that big either!
A few hours later I got lost again when I found myself in the grounds of a hospital. My map showed that I should take the 2nd exit at a roundabout but the map didn’t include the hospital which was actually the 2nd exit. My wife happened to ring me while I was walking through the hospital grounds and asked how I was going. I replied that I am “in a hospital” and then quickly explained that I wasn’t actually “in hospital” but just lost within the hospital grounds.
And on another occasion I thought I was a few miles ahead of where I actually was, and was therefore reading the wrong page of my map. I tried to walk through a gate and down a private road but was stopped by security guards. I returned the way I had come and took another side street which wasn’t on my map (because I was reading the wrong page of the map) only to get completely lost. It wasn’t until about an hour later that I worked out that I was actually trying to read the wrong page of the map – and that was only because somehow I had managed to catch myself up and get back on to the correct page. All a part of the adventure.
Saturday:
Sarah called me at around 7am and we agreed to meet at Egham at around 8:30am. If I was to get to Black Park by 9am I had to be in Egham (65 miles into my trek) by 7am and that wasn’t happening, so I sent a txt to the Black Park parkrun event director to explain that I wouldn’t be there, and continued my slow’ish walk. The fact that I wouldn’t be doing parkrun would also help me catch up on some of the excess mileage I had done getting lost – as I wouldn’t need to do the extra 5km I had planned on walking within Black Park.
I passed the 100km mark in 14 hours 38 minutes and found Sarah soon afterwards with a hot Pot Noodles which was just what I needed to try and warm up. The weather was still cold so I kept my overnight warm clothing on and continued walking. I still wasn’t really tired. Just slow.
Crossing the Thames at Egham
Sarah continued from where she left off the previous day, leapfrogging past me and feeding me every 30 minutes. At around 11am my parkrun and ultra-running friend, Louise Ayling, surprised me by joining me for an hour or more. It was good to talk to someone for more than just a few moments at a time although I don’t remember what Louise and I talked about. The conversation helped take my mind off the job at hand and made the next few miles go by that much faster (both in my mind and physically).
Louise walked with me until Suzanne and Jim joined us in the early afternoon and from there on I had a constant walking companion with either Suzanne or Sarah walking beside me to keep me company and take my mind off things.
Saturday afternoon with Suzanne and Sarah
For most of the afternoon I made steady progress through hilly countryside around the north western side of the M25. We walked past many beautiful and expensive properties and lots of small country pubs as we went from one village to the next. I was slow but was making steady progress walking at a pace of around 3 ½ to 4 miles an hour.
When we passed the 100 mile mark just before 5pm (26 hours and 19 minutes after starting) I posted on facebook that we would be finished within another 21 hours! And that was when it hit me – 21 more hours on my feet!
When doing an ultra-distance event, or any event for that matter, it is best not to focus on how far you have to go – at least not until you are almost finished. Up until then I had simply been focussing on one step after another. Every kilometre my watch would vibrate and I would check my pace. And then keep walking. I don’t think I gave any thought to how far I had to go until I got to 100 miles.
In need of a rest:
I kept going and continued to maintain a reasonable pace but as it got dark I started to tire. Jim and Sarah/Suzanne (whoever wasn’t walking with me) continued to leapfrog me but it seemed to take longer and longer to catch up to where they were waiting each time. Occasionally we would catch up with them before expected. This would happen when the ‘road’ we were walking down became a dirt trail that cars couldn’t travel along and they would have to double-back and find another route while we continued to follow the map.
There was one particular street, Tom’s Lane in Kings Langley, which I would have sworn was at least 3 to 4 miles long although Google maps tells me that it is only 1 ½ miles in length. It was a steady uphill slog from start to finish. I was walking with Suzanne at the time and Jim and Sarah came past us in the car, stopped a few meters ahead and jumped out of the car with packets of hot chips from the local fish and chip shop. This was just what I needed. I had basically been snacking for the previous 30 or so hours and it was really nice to eat something substantial.
Unfortunately it wasn’t enough though, and just as we approached 32 hours I decided that my idea of walking non-stop wasn’t going to work. At least not this time. We caught up with the car and I climbed in to the back and slept for 15 minutes – lying across the back seat with my legs hanging out of the door and my feet resting on a fold-up chair that Jim arranged as a foot rest. It wasn’t a deep sleep as I could hear voices but it was enough of a sleep for me to feel a little rested when I was woken up by my cold support crew who had been standing beside the car trying to keep warm.
I wasn’t ready to give up yet, but I was exhausted and needed a rest. I don’t know whether this was the start of the end, or whether the rest prolonged the inevitable, but 2 ½ hours later I again found myself sitting in the car, and this time we made the decision that at the pace I was walking (about 2 ½ miles an hour) there was little chance, if any, that I would make it to the finish within the next 18 to 20 hours and that the best thing for me was to get some proper sleep.
Unfinished Business
It was 1am on Sunday morning and I couldn’t face the idea of spending any more time on my feet, so I also made the decision that I wouldn’t attempt to continue after a sleep either. That was it. I had attempted to walk around the M25 and had failed. It was a challenge that had beaten me. Mount Everest wasn’t climbed by the first person who attempted it, and the M25 would not be walked non-stop by the first person who attempted that either.
It turned out that we were only a mile or so from the nearest hotel so we checked in to the Days Inn in South Mimms and I was asleep within minutes – after posting and tweeting a quick message to those people following my progress to advise that I had stopped.
A quick recovery:
Ruth collected me the following morning and Jim and Suzanne took Sarah back to find her car and they all headed back to their respective homes to recover from their ordeal – supporting is just as hard, if not harder, than actually doing the event and I am grateful for the work that they all put in over the weekend.
When I got home I slept on the couch for a few hours before going to bed for a few hours, having tea, and going to bed again. A great way to spend a Sunday, but not what I had planned.
Incredibly, the following morning I woke up feeling refreshed. And while eating breakfast I got this dumb idea about going back to South Mimms and continuing my walk. I had booked the Monday off work in order to recover, and I felt recovered. So why not go and complete what I had started.
I expected (and maybe hoped) that Ruth would try and talk me out of it, but she supported the idea so after breakfast I packed what I needed for an un-supported 45 mile walk, drove the car to the railway station nearest to where I would finish, and caught the train back to South Mimms. From there I walked the 2 miles back to where we had stopped in the early hours of Sunday morning and rang Suzanne to confirm that I was in the right place – there was a hand carwash on one side of the road and a pub on the other, and I couldn’t remember either of them. I thought we had stopped in the middle of a country lane but Suzanne confirmed that I was in the right place.
The re-start. Not exactly the quite country lane where I thought we had stopped.
The last quarter:
My original map indicated that the whole route would be about 165 miles and we had completed 120 so in theory I had just 45 miles to go. It was 3pm on Monday afternoon so it was reasonable to expect that I could finish by about 2am given that I felt recovered, and even if I was a little slow, I should be finished by 4am. I didn’t need to be at work until 9:30am so I would have time to drive home, get a small amount of sleep, and then get over to north London where I was scheduled to be working for the week.
So I set off towards the finish and almost immediately got lost! Not a good sign. The plan had always been to follow the ‘A’ and ‘B’ roads on the outside of the M25, staying as close to the M25 as possible. And as we had discovered over the weekend, many of the ‘B’ roads were actually just dirt trails. This added to the interest though and meant that the walk was anything but boring. It also made getting lost very easy and my map reading isn’t great at the best of times. One of the other benefits of having Sarah and Suzanne walking with me on Saturday was that it was their job to navigate. But I was on my own now.
The first few hours of the walk were reasonably uneventful. I wasn’t walking fast but I was walking at a reasonable pace and was happy with progress. Until, that is, I came across a street sign that I recognised from earlier. It was about 9pm and I was in the same place I had been two whole hours earlier! I couldn’t believe it. I studied the map and worked out where I had gone wrong, and then followed the correct route. But two hours was going to cause me some problems with getting home and then to work in the morning. For the next few hours I kept convincing myself that I could finish by 4/4:30am but I knew in my heart that that was unlikely, and once I accepted reality I then spent a few hours thinking about what excuse I could give my client for letting them down – maybe I could tell them that I was sick (maybe I was), or maybe tell them that Zac was sick. But I then thought that potentially they may have heard about my walk, and it would be unprofessional if I made an excuse that wasn’t true. So I decided that I would call them and explain the situation when I got to the finish. If I had thought things through in advance I could have put my work clothes, laptop, etc, in the car and gone straight from the finish to the client’s office via a local swimming pool (for a shower) but this wasn’t an option. I would have to finish the walk, go home, have a shower, and then go to the client’s office.
I was enjoying the walk but wasn’t walking much faster than 3 to 3 ½ miles an hour, and having got lost for two hours it was likely to be after 6am by the time I finished. The good thing about that, though, was that it would be daylight when I finished meaning that I could take a ‘finish line’ selfie.
So I walked through the night, enjoying most of it other than the extreme cold. I had my neck and face covered during the night and it was so cold that I didn’t eat much – as eating meant I needed to bare my skin to the cold air. I wasn’t hungry though. With my new healthy eating diet I have found that I can walk for hours without eating. I did eat every couple hours, but not every 30 minutes as planned.
Eventually it became daylight and I still had a few miles to go. Cars and trucks started rushing past me as people headed off to work – and I kept walking. I got lost one last time, with just a few miles to go, when my map told me to go down a pedestrian path which had a locked gate at the end. I had to double-back and find another route through to the finish which was through the industrial area called ‘Greys’ on the eastern side of the Thames.
And finally, just before 7am, I arrived at the end of the road beside the QE2 bridge, and the entrance to a truck depot.
Finished! With the QE2 Bridge behind me.
The journey had taken me 86 ½ hours from when I had started at 2:30 on Friday afternoon just a few hundred meters away on the other side of the river through to 7am on Tuesday morning. Of that, I had walked for 49 hours and 56 minutes not counting the additional 2 miles from South Mimms railway station to where I resumed the walk on Monday afternoon.
I had walked 177 miles (285km) and taken 342,313 steps. Add to that the 2 miles I walked from the South Mimms railway station and the 2 ½ miles I still had to walk back to the car, and it would be fair to say that this was my longest ever walk – beating the 176 miles I walked at the Privas 3 day race last year.
I had also raised almost £1,500 for Sport Relief!
After walking back to the car I rang the client I was due to see and explained that I would be late. Fortunately he was 100% understanding. I then drove home for lunch and a shower before heading off to work. No time for any sleep. Ironically, having just walked a lap of the M25, my Sat Nav told me that the M25 was too congested to drive home via that route and took me home via the A13 in to central London.
177 miles around the M25To put it in to perspective – a walk around a small part of the UK
The after-effects:
Walking distances of 100 miles or more tends to do a few strange things to my body.
Firstly, after every event I have done of 100 miles or further I have had night sweats for at least one, and often a few nights. It is as if I have an illness and my body is trying to sweat the illness out of me.
Secondly, my mouth and tongue tend to swell up a little and I lose all sense of taste. This time around the roof of my mouth also felt raw and it was painful to eat anything for a whole week. It is still not 100% recovered as I write this.
And lastly, the obvious one is that even with the best precautions, you tend to get blisters on your feet. For this event I used Injinji toe socks together with 2Toms Blister Shield and I only had two small blisters – one on the inside of each heel. Those blisters came through during the Saturday and I popped and drained them on the Monday before starting the final quarter of the journey. They came back again during that stage, but overall I am pretty happy to report that I walked 177 miles and only got two small blisters.
Kinesiology Tape on my right knee
The other issue I had going in to the event was my right knee which had been causing me pain/discomfort and had limited my training during the 3 weeks leading up to the walk. The good news is that the knee didn’t hurt at all until I had my first sleep at 32 hours, and after that it was only occasionally uncomfortable. It is sore now, and I won’t resume training for another week or so to let it recover more, but it held up for the duration of the walk. During the walk I had the knee taped using Kinesiology Tape that I purchased on Amazon. My physio had recommended it and pointed me at this YouTube video which I followed to apply the tape.
And one other side affect that I have suffered from since my first Roubaix 28 hour race is that I appear to have killed a nerve or nerves in the front of my left foot, and don’t have much feeling in that foot. It almost always feels like I have ‘pins and needles’ but I have had the foot checked by doctors and there doesn’t appear to be anything wrong that they are worried about. It is just one of the side-effects of being a long-distance race-walker.
The good news, though, is that my legs recovered quickly. They were a little sore on the Monday but if it wasn’t for the blistered feet, I would have been walking normally by the Tuesday.
The plan now is to take another week off, 2 ½ weeks in total, before I resume training in preparation for my next two races – the Continental Centurions 24 hour race in Holland in mid May, and the Grand Union Canal Race (145 miles) at the end of May.
Surrey Comet Article:
This article was published in the Surrey Comet after I completed my walk:
And in August 2016 I appeared in my first ever podcast interview when Chris Desmond from the Uncomfortable Is OK Podcast interviewed me about the M25 Circumnavigation and my upcoming 6 day race.
I did it!
In 2017 I had another attempt at a non-stop M25 circumnavigation. Read about it here.