50 miles in Bushy Park

To date I have done three 100 mile or longer walks and every time I have struggled through the night and especially in the early hours of the morning.  This has been partially due to physical tiredness but also partly due to the fact that my body expects to go to bed at the end of the day rather than walking through the night.  At the Roubaix 28 hour race last September I had to sleep for about an hour 25 hours into the race, but in the other two races I had managed to keep going but had struggled with severe tiredness during the last 4 or 5 hours.

So as a part of my preparation for the Bourges 24 hour race at the end of February the plan for this weekend was to have a normal Saturday (parkrun in the morning and a normal day of activities) and then to start walking at 7pm and cover 50 miles through the night.  Bushy Park is closed to traffic from 7pm during the winter and with a one mile flat stretch of road between the Teddington Gate and the Hampton Court Road Gate it makes a perfect place to do a walk of this type.

So just before 7pm I met fellow Centurion, Suzanne Beardsmore (C1094) at Teddington Gate and after hiding our food and clothing near the start area we headed off on the first of 25 out and back laps down Chestnut Avenue, around the Diane Fountain to the Hampton Road Gate and back.

25 out and back laps of Bushy Park

Suzanne and I walked together for the first six miles, covering the two mile laps in approximately 24 ½ minutes, before parting company as Suzanne wanted to maintain a slightly slower pace than myself.

Another Centurion, Sue Clements (C950), joined us at about 9pm and walked with me for the next ten miles – she did 20 miles in total – helping me to maintain my 12:15 to 12:30 mile pace, but when she stopped for a break I began a five mile bad patch which saw me lose a few minutes, passing half way (25 miles) in 5:11:45.  My target time for the night was between 10:15 and 10:30 so I was still on pace but not feeling great.

During long distance events you will have highs and lows and shortly after I went past half way I started to feel good again and picked up the pace and for the next 80 to 90 minutes, walking some of my fastest laps of the night.

It was an interesting night.  At 7pm the temperature was still reasonable at about 4 degrees but by the time we finished at 5:30am the temperature had dropped to zero and the grass on both sides of the road and slowly gone from green to white.  Fortunately the roads and remained ice free though.

My nutrition strategy for the night was to drink a sachet of Generation UCan at the start and then every two hours throughout the night, with fruit (raisins, mandarins and bananas) every hour in between.  In total I consumed five sachets of UCan, two (frozen) bananas, two mandarins and three small packets of raisins.  Not much at all, and significantly less than I used to consume before discovering Generation UCan.

But the problem with it getting so cold is that I was effectively eating partly frozen bananas and the water was freezing in my water bottle!   Not a problem I have experienced previously.

The other problem I had was with my new head torch which I had only recently purchased and was using for just the second time.  Whilst it is a hundred times brighter than my old head torch, it turns out that the battery doesn’t last very long and after two hours the brightness started to diminish rapidly and by four hours the light wasn’t much use at all.

I don’t need the head torch for my coming 24 hour races but will need a powerful light for the Thames Tow Path and Grand Union Canal races in May, which both go through the night on terrain that will require good lighting to ensure no accidents.

This was another reason for the overnight walk – to test equipment.

Having passed the half way point in 5:11:45, I managed to walk the second half in 5:13:25 for an overall time of 10 hours 25 minutes and 10 seconds.  A good time in the dark, but my goal for the first 100 miles in Borges is sub 21 hours (NZ record is 21:04) so I still have a lot of work to do over the next five weeks.

When 4 hours becomes 6

I had promised my wife that I would be home by 3:30pm today so you can imagine my surprise when at 3 ½ hours in to my walk, and with what I thought was about 60 minutes to go (plus a 75 minute drive back home), I checked Google Maps on my cell phone to find that I was about 2 ½ hours away from Shorne Woods in Kent, where I had started at 10am, and where I had left the car.

It was Saturday again today – parkrunday.  And I decided to head over to Kent to do the Shorne Woods parkrun that I hadn’t done previously – it was my 74th different parkrun but was almost cancelled due to dangerously icy conditions.  Fortunately the run director was able to move the start and alter the course slightly to enable us to run, and I ended up with my fastest time since November (22:27).

My intention was to then do a four hour walk alongside the Lower Thames up to the Dartford Bridge then across to Dartford to link today’s walk to last Saturday’s on my ever growing map, before heading back to Shorne Woods by road – which I thought would take me about an hour.

Last Saturday's walk and today's walk
Last Saturday’s walk and today’s walk

The walk up the river had taken a bit longer than planned, but as with last week I got to see some sights that many Londoners will never see and below are a few photos I took along the way.

IMGN0403_thm

The Dartford Bridge
The Dartford Bridge – known as the ‘Dartford Crossing’
The Church of McDonalds
The Church of McDonalds


As a result of my mis-calculation I ended up walking 50km (31 miles) to give me my third 30+ mile walk in eight days and one of the highlights of today’s walk was that I was able to comfortably walk the 50km on very little nutrition – having only taken two packets of raisins and a mandarin with me for what was supposed to be a four hour walk.  I also had one sachet of Generation UCan before I started walking.  This is a product that I am really starting to like.

Once again, due to work commitments I am unlikely to do much walking this week. Last week I got out for two shortish nighttime walks in Richmond Park.  I don’t know what this coming week holds, but am looking forward to our second Bushy Park overnight 50 miler starting at 7pm next Saturday.

January Back to Back Day 2 – Surrey walkabout

Today’s walk was all about holding a decent training pace for 50km on the back of yesterday’s 48km (30 mile) walk and I am please to say “mission accomplished”.

Public Footpath signI headed out early (6:30am) and took about 20 to 30 minutes to get going properly, but I often find that I start slowly when it is dark.  I didn’t really have any plan as to where I was going to go but stuck to the roads until after sunrise and then simply aimed to complete a big loop around Surrey.

 

Shortly after daylight I turned into a sports field near Motspur Park that I recognised from a month or so ago.  Last time I had gone through the park it was dark and I had been unable to find the exit (which was in to a cemetery!) that I was supposed to take in order to head the in the direction that I wanted to go, and I ended up completely lost.  This time I had the benefit of daylight and discovered that the reason I hadn’t found the exit I wanted last time was that it didn’t exist. There was a 3 meter high fence where I thought the exit was.  Today it didn’t matter though and I exited on the other side of the park and headed towards North Cheam.

After a while I arrived at Nonsuch Park, the home of Nonsuch parkrun, and Nonsuch Palace which was built in the era of King Henry VIII.

Nonsuch Palace
Nonsuch Palace

Nonsuch Palace
Nonsuch Palace

Leaving Nonsuch park I then followed various “Green Trails” and parts of the London Loop for the next couple hours ending up in Chessington where I found myself in the grounds of an NHS facility and accompanying housing estate which I walked around for maybe 20 minutes before I could find my way out.

Back in Kingston about 5 miles before I wanted to be I headed over the river and back through Bushy Park and then home via Teddington Lock.

Deer in Bushy Park
Deer in Bushy Park

 

Teddington Lock Weir
Teddington Lock Weir

Lockmasters building
Lockmasters building

Teddington Lock
Teddington Lock

Teddington Lock Bridge
Teddington Lock Bridge

All up I completed 50km (31 miles) in 6:24.  Only a couple seconds a mile slower than yesterday’s pace.

Todays map

My nutrition today was exactly the same as yesterday with the exception of the banana at the start as I had only just eaten breakfast.

I now have two rest days due to work commitments and will then take it easy through to my next longish walk which will probably be four hours on Saturday or Sunday.