Peatpixie versus the OMM
Blog break
Where have I
been? Why haven’t I blogged? The answer is simple – life got in the way.
Minipixie is loads of fun to hang out with, even with chickenpox. Spare time
taken up with visiting family and friends, making the most of the last summer
before we are sucked into the school term shackles, work being hard, and with
trips away to reduce my time even further. Oh and running, and racing,
gradually being pushed up the priorities. I toughed out a brutal Trigger and
made myself a promise to get to the Lakes, to train there and race there, as
often as I could, which in reality I guessed would be once every couple of
months. By May I had made good on my word and had been up to Langdale on a
blustery damp weekend and slogged through an Old County Tops recce with some
ace mates, returning damp and jubilant that my legs , trained on nothing but
peak district weekend days, and the odd lunchtime hill dash, still had
something of my old form in them. Jubilation was squashed when I returned a few
weeks later to do Fairfield Horseshoe, and sprained my ankle a few metres away
from the summit. Summer was cancelled.
I don’t panic
about injury time-outs any more, I am too old and grizzled. So I re-set my
goals and looked to Autumn to be my time for racing in fun places. Raced a
little over summer, the short and not too gnarly variety, quietly notching up
points in Glossopdale’s fell championships. Then opportunity knocked when new
mum Alice proposed an OMM team.
Yes, a thousand times yes! Who better to do this event with than another
running mum needing to keep true to fellrunning alongside the circus of
parenting. What better time to peak than late October, after the FRA relays
which spurred me to train to be fit, fast and navigationally competent,
Everything fell into place and then fell apart when poor Al got a beastly chest
infection the week before the FRAs, meaning both our outings at the relays and
the OMM were not possible. Alice’s husband , Tim, promised to go easy on me as
her replacement and then 2 days before the OMM, called me to say it just wasn’t
possible for them both to travel. I was gutted for them both. Then suddenly
realised I could try to find a partner. Social media connections in fellrunning
run deep and I messaged Josie G, last seen at a race in the Lakes before I even
knew what “parenting” meant. Thankfully she is both an avid mountain marathoner
and on half term break, and accepted my offer. Back on…but with an added dose
of being responsible for the driving, and
making sure I gathered enough kit together. Tim and Alice magnanimously lent us
their tent (Josies awaiting repair) and some other kit and bits and off we set
for Largs, Ayrshire on a drenched Friday afternoon. Last minute but very
enthusiastic
OMM arrival
The OMM is the
more commercial of mountain marathons so it didn’t surprise me , on arrival,
that the shop was the first thing I saw after registering in the big marquee. I
did buy some ¾ leggings tho cos they were cheep! Josie had the sudden
realisation that she’d packed shorts, and would likely be needing more leg
cover due to the expected vast swathes of heathery moor to cross. She also
purchased some ¾ length leggings. We then spent lots more time than planned
chattering and socialising, Josie knowing a LOT of people and me playing “can I
spot anyone I actually know” – Sarah and Robin from Glossop arrived but Immy
had been and gone. We repaired to the Premier Inn about 30 mins drive away.
smile, for you know not what lies before you |
OMM Day 1
In no time at
all we were back in the parking field in the dark, hurriedly checking all kit,
food etc were in order and packs were not too lumpy. I was wearing the dibber
(little device to poke into a hole to log your presence, for those who don’t
know) on my wrist, so without further ado we headed off at a not-too-fast march
to the start, which was billed as “1.8 mile uphill from the marquee”. I have to
say I was more nervous about getting to the start, than the event itself. So
off we went.
I fell
instantly into the trap of trying to figure out which other teams were in
direct competition with us, which is more than worthless in a MM because there
are 5 different races, routes all varying, although some control points are
shared. We did get the distinct impression that there were a fair few
fresh-faced teams in our category. After a short time of getting used to the
map scale, terrain etc we felt comfortable, though the heather was beginning to
scrape Josie’s ankles and she’d even snagged her new kecks on a fence. We ran
alongside a team of two young ladies who were both wearing proper short shorts
earning them our nickname of “brave-shorts”
- I hope they didn’t suffer too badly! The big bonus was that visibility
was amazing, so some controls were just a game of spot the crowd, and we swore
blind we showed Jim Mann and Nic B a good line off along a ridge.
Photo R&R images |
Soon the
heather became a bit ridiculous and though we did a really efficient job of the
section of the course where you have to pick your own route, there was a long
pull through unforgiving heather and the pain became rather awful for Josie.
She put on waterproof pants which helped, but progress was still a trudge and
with regular tumbles for both of us into what would become the most shouted
word of the weekend “DITCH” (or just “BITCH!!”)
We made it into
the camp in around 7 hours which I think , given the terrain, was pretty
respectable. Good fortune had us camped next door to 2 mates of Josie’s and
both Glossop pairs close by too. We started to compare notes and then rain
began, so a mass dive into tents was required. My feet were dull blocks of ice,
the toenails looking a bit battered. I had my two dehydrated meals (boy am I
glad I packed 2) and went off to sleep. My feet sprang into painful life at
around 0100 and the throbbing and aching was so violent, I thought that was my
chances of rest gone. Taking off my socks seemed to do the trick.
OMM Day 2
Rain and strong wind awoke me at around 0500 (0600 on the watch, daylight saving starts) and gradually the sound of vehicles at the camp marshal point and people around us stirring, made it necessary to wake up and face the (wet) music. A hardy bagpiper was also making the rounds of the camp, along with an overly cheery man with a megaphone.
I was in a blind panic because I couldn’t find my waterproof trousers. I realised they had likely dropped out of the pack whilst I was fishing for some gloves or a snack earlier the previous day ,and sunk unnoticed into the heather. If I tried to run more than a few hours without them in the rain, hypothermia would become a real risk. I made a plan to use my survival bag as a plastic “skirt” but couldn’t shake off the worry, never mind the worry that we may be randomly kit checked and disqualified for not having the required items.
We started at a wooden bridge, and I know we both were dreading any more heathery hellholes.
Thankfully most of the ground was boggy grass which was a veritable treat
compared to ankle-clinging ditch dodging.
photo R&R Images |
We did make our one big error
which was to misjudge our pacing and ran past our first control. Josie really
impressed me with her quick planning to regain the situation but we knew that
we’d become distanced from other competitors in our category. It did have the
benefit of there being a number of trodden paths leading to various places we
needed to visit, so running rather than marching was much easier than on day 1.
We caught a number of other teams, after doing a really decent job of the
choice section of the route even if I do say so myself, and were rewarded with
a grassy (if tussocky) descent down to a road checkpoint where all the day’s
routes were converging on the final hill , beyond which the finish, a brew, and
food, lay. The final track down through
forests in the estate were well-worn by studs of faster teams, parts of which
resembled a steep bank in an XC race, and down, down we dashed, with weighty packs
helping/hindering our hurtle. We did both remain mainly upright, then joyously
ran to the finish.
Map brain
Both days, as
time progressed, the land “came into focus” on the map- that is the best way I can describe the
feeling of finally being able to look up, and look down to the map, and see the
connections without having to stand and scratch my head. The buff-coloured
wiggles became more meaningful and I started to be able to say things like
“there will be a little lump here and then it’s about 300 metres further”. I
can honestly say that the amount of information on maps is pretty terrifying to
me, a lot to try and process all at once. In the past, I’ve felt pressure to
just move fast, and tried either make things fit, or look for something
blindingly obvious like a summit or a fence to aim for, and wasted loads of
time going uphill or over rough land. This time I was able to think it out more
clearly, and overlay all the hard lessons of the last few years onto my
decision making, Josie is clearly very good at all this and was very patient
and polite, when I made a couple of silly suggestions. One thing we both found
hard was the colouring on the race map. Pale grey gridlines made taking
bearings harder.
Bring on the
one-day mini mountain marathons and Praise Be for Josie Greenhalgh!
As a wise man once said "avoid races with bagpipes, they're all shit"