Thursday 27 August 2015

Trailtrekker 2015 - Llamas Not Included: Part 2

As an avid reader of Run Sancho Run you'll know that a standard review is for a 10k race.  There is the occasional half marathon thrown in for good measure and I'm training for my first full marathon in October.  These distances being the norm I'm usually relieved when I get half way and find myself on the way to the end, every step bringing me closer and closer to the finish line.  This weekend however, halfway felt much more like "I have to do all of that again?!"

On Saturday morning at 7am, team Llamas Not Included set off from Skipton to complete the Oxfam Trailtrekker (you can see how we got on on Saturday here) and by 1:18am on Sunday morning we made it to the water Stop at Deepdale, 58km under our feet and three hours later than planned.  We were safe and dry, apart from our feet which had been soaked, wading through the flash floods on Cam Pasture following a two hour electrical storm.

We were the lucky ones.  We had been held up at Cam Farm in the relative warmth and safety of the watertight barn.  My thoughts turned to those who had been stuck here at this small checkpoint during the lock-down.  The only shelter was a couple of marquees and the facilities were limited.  We only stopped long enough to thank the volunteers before pushing on through the night towards Mike and Lyndon (our support crew) who we hoped were waiting for us at Buckden.  We should have been there with them at around midnight so we could only hope that news of our hold up had reached them.

Debs took point as we rejoined the Dales Way footpath.  We had been fortunate that the organisers had closed the section of path between Beckermonds and Deepdale and diverted us onto the road.  I can't imagine the state of the path following the deluge that had come before us!  My feet, on the other hand had not enjoyed the extra tarmac section.  I had chosen, against all advice, to wear trail shoes rather than walking boots in a trade off between weight, traction, comfort and the likelihood of wet feet, and the one thing trail shoes don't like is tarmac.  Each step of the detour had felt like a hammer blow up my legs but at least we were back on grass.

Debs kept a good pace but having been ill in the week before the event she was starting to flag.  To be fair, I hadn't been sure if she was going to make the start line on Saturday.  The Bronze stop at Horton would have been a poor consolation prize for her after all of the training that we'd done, but the Trailtrekker is about more than stamina.  Mental strength, as much as physical ability, is required to make the 100km Gold finish line in Skipton.

We soon came to Hubberholm (a hamlet that I really want to visit in my own time as the pub looks really inviting) and silently passed on through on the final approach to Buckden an the Silver Challenge finish point.  In the distance, behind us, we could just make out the lights of the trekkers following in our footsteps.  We hit Buckden like a wrecking ball, cheers and rounds of applause coming from the support crews and volunteers who were lining the street to the check point.  We totally forgot the "Please be silent when passing through the village" edict laid down by Oxfam, but then they started it.

We hit the Checkpoint at 2:56 on Sunday morning and cheers rang out as Llamas Not Included were announced to the tent of waiting support crews.  Lyndon and Mike were there waiting for us and had been for the previous six hours.  The event lock-down had hit every checkpoint but at Buckden "entertainment" had been laid on.  Our poor crew had to sit not only through a storm but also through a zumba-thon.  The powers that be decided that crew had to remain in the flammable tent rather than sitting out the storm in their personal faraday cages, or cars as you or I might know them.  Raising morale is all very well and good, but hammering it out of people out of misguided knowledge is cruel.

We ate creamy pasta and crisp sweat potato chips, Lyndon made us some fresh coffee and we contemplated what we had gone through.  We still had 35k to go to Skipton, our pace was well within the 30 hour cut off, but the previous week's tonsillitis finally claimed Debs.  She retired, claimed her well deserved Silver medal and smiled the smile of somebody who knew they would be asleep soon, comfortable, warm, and dry.  In a change to tradition I decided not to change my socks, saving my final pair for the last check point at Conistone, we filled our water bottles and walked off into the night. 

Buckden to Kettlewell was the only section of the route that we hadn't previously walked so we were flying by the seat of our pants, but we had figured that it wouldn't be too difficult to follow the path along the side of the river.  We were right, the path was easy to follow but the rain had turned a lot of it into ponds.  My wet socks remained wet and I felt 100% justified in retaining a pair of socks for the final walk to Skipton.

Half way to Kettlewell we were diverted along a path to Starbottom as the riverside path had flooded.  This meant more tarmac, but the sun was coming up and the negative thoughts of night were lifting.  We stopped for warm fruit punch in Kettlewell where the gent looking after the urn told us that he had never known so few teams to make it through the village by dawn.  Suddenly we felt elated.  It wasn't a race and even if it was we were far from winning, but we had got this far and we were damned if we were going to be stopped.

3 Llamas in the early morning sun just outside Conistone
Only we weren't all going to make it.  Dalia had done brilliantly since having her feet patched up in Horton but the miles finally took hold and forced her to retire at Conistone.  We had endured an additional detour between Kettlewell and Conistone which saved us miles but kept my trail shoes on solid ground.  My feet were sore and I didn't want to take my shoes off but on investigation I only had one small blister and some swelling due to damp.  I re-taped, chose to keep the faith with the trail shoes that had got me this far rather than changing for my back-up trainers and got ready to push on.  Only this time we needed to find another team to buddy up with.

Health and Safety dictates that you need 3 people in a group just in case somebody need to go to find help.  The sun was up, the wind had dropped, we knew the route, all Jon and I needed was a team to join and we would be on our way home.  I'll be honest, I can't remember the names of the walkers we buddied up with (sorry), their team name and number is lost to me too, but they let us leave Conistone within the letter of the rules.  The rules were out of the window however by the time we cleared Cool Scar.

We maintained line of sight to our adoptive team but decided that we'd rather keep our own council and conversation.  In the distance on Malham Moor we could see the next team.  A quick Health and Safety Risk Assessment told us that if anything happened to either of us we would be joined in a matter of minutes by another team so we didn't really need to hang around.  We passed on to Boss Moor, passing another team struggling with injury but determined to finish, and then in the distance a mirage.  No, not a mirage a real ice cream van.

Just when things were getting bad, bleak, lonely, or sore, the event crew from Wild Fox managed to turn up and raise morale.  They had been giving out cheese and biscuits at the foot of Fountains Fell, they managed the soup and chilli at Cam Farm, and here they were again, at 7am on Sunday morning, 24 hours after we had left Skipton, dishing out 99s to anybody who wanted one!

By the time we had reached the final Water-stop in Hetton we had joined up with another team, but as a super team, made up of waifs and strays of around 5 other teams was about to set off, we jumped ship again and hit out for Skipton.  We didn't stay with our new family for long, making our excuses and walking off at our new found pace before we had hit the first field.

We had asked Mike to contact our families when he got back Skipton, to tell them that we would be finishing around 1pm (three and a half hours later than expected) but we now knew that midday was likely.  A phone signal for the first time in 26 hours was ours and we made like E.T.  Our ETA confirmed we walked on through Flashby and took on our final climb up High Wood and Crag Wood.  Below us we could see the Leeds Liverpool canal, joining Skipton and Gargrave.  The same stretch that we had walked on Saturday morning.  How that had been part of the same experience was beyond us.  We kept passing teams, the topic of conversation was always where they had been during the stop, but a sudden realisation dawned on us.

Jon and I had managed, somehow, after 28 hours, to have got ourselves in the position that we could still finish on Sunday morning.  The psychological impact of this was immense.  In the back of my mind I had thought that 24 hours would be a good time.  Our "plan" was actually to hit 26.5 hours.  Nobody planned for injury or the event being halted for two hours, so to finish in the morning rather than the afternoon suddenly meant everything to us.

We were sure that the last team that we'd passed was trying to catch us (they weren't) and decided to run if they got too close.  We were delirious with fatigue but determined.  All that was left was the drop into Skipton and the least well signposted section of the route.  I'm sure that following the path through the park next to Skipton Academy makes the 100km a nice round number but I'd rather cut the corner.  We were close to doing just that when we saw a glow stick dangling from the bough of a tree.  We kept to the path like good boys and turned towards the Academy and the finish line.

Other than the balls of my feet I was feeling fine, but then Jon happened to mention that he was feeling quite emotional.  We turned the corner of the tennis courts that we had passed at 7am the previous day and, to rapturous applause, we crossed the finish line with Mike, Dalia, and Debs there to meet us.

The end.
100km 28:47, 6 friends for life, 1 blister.  I collapsed and swore that I would never ask the members of Llamas Not Included ever to do anything like that again.

Llamas reunited.
We gathered our thoughts and broke camp leaving one of the tents to Oxfam to sell on or use themselves.  On our way off the site I saw a number of other teams cross the finish line and roundly applauded them.  I needed food though, so I went for a bacon buttie in the hall where we had had the safety briefing two nights previously.  There I found some of the team from Wild Fox who had been in charge at Cam Farm.  I took the opportunity to thank them for looking after the 300 trekkers who were stopped in the barn, for their professionalism, and for generally being on the route when we needed them.

Bacon buttie in hand, I wandered off to load my car, and there, directing vehicles and radioing in the teams before they crossed the line, was Terry, the volunteer coordinator who I had hugged at Cam Farm 15 hours earlier.  I learned then just how bad the situation had been.  With only one very steep road in and no passable path out, the event crew had come very close to cancelling the event and evacuating everybody from Cam Farm.  The steep drive to the farm was too much for coaches and the closest place to get people too was Hawes.  It was only the break in the weather and the chance to get everybody to Deepdale where we could be rescued from if the storm came back that kept everything moving and allowed us to finish the trekk.

I have never taken on anything as tough as the trailtrekk, but it is there to be done.  The challenge is as much mental as physical and it's for a very good cause.  The money that team Llamas Not Included has raised is going to help people around the world and that thought is helping my aching limbs.  Standing with Jonathan, Dalia, and Deborah at the finish is quite possibly the proudest moment of my life so far.  I know we were lucky with the weather and it could have been much, much worse, but if you are after a challenge, if you want to help those who need it, Trailtrekker knocks a corporate obstacle course into a cocked hat.

Thank you to all of the Oxfam staff and Volunteers for a wonderful walk in the country.

1 comment:

  1. Good memories! I was in the team of waifs and strays who adopted you at Hetton only to bid you farewell once we were on the road. We knew you both just wanted to get on with the walk and were more than happy to let you 'escape;.

    We were slightly ahead of you at Cam Farm and left before the lockdown. We crossed the bog in torrential rain with bolts of lightning on all sides and even made it some way along the riverside path towards Deepdale before rising waters blocked our way and we had to re-trace our route back up to the road.

    By Hetton our two teams had become a determined, hurting band of five. We couldn't match your pace after that and dragged ourselves over the finish line at 12:40pm in an elapsed time of 30:31. Slower than we'd hoped but in the small, wet hours of the morning even finishing seemed beyond reach.

    Well done to the both of you for getting there.

    Laurence Timms (Grumbler's Stumbers/Stumbler's Grumblers)

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