ASKruns v UltraBoyRuns: The Garden Lapper #review #racing

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I’ve been locked down for a few days now – unable to leave the house, never mind go running. I mean I could have visited the treadmill but I don’t have a good relationship with the treadmill – we treat each other with disdain.

I’ve also been having a huge amount of fun eating toblerone and eating toblerone requires concentration and so you can’t run. When I haven’t been working, I’ve been eating and vice versa. Life is a super exciting rollercoaster at the moment.

Yesterday though I said to ASK would you like to go running in the garden?

She replied, ‘yes please, can we have a race’ and I told her that if she ran 100 laps of the garden I’d give her the virtual medal she hadn’t quite earned from her March running, and that yes we could race it. 100 laps of the garden would be enough to cover the last couple of miles she needed and she seemed happy to try it. I told her that I’d carry on and do maybe 200 laps and she seemed pretty happy about the arrangement.

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The trouble is that the layout of our garden is not very conducive to running for a number of reasons;

  1. It’s on multiple levels
  2. It’s multi-surfaced
  3. The runnable bit isn’t very big

Regardless I managed to devise a route that would take in the bulk of the paths of the garden, a rock jump and some steps – all this in under 50 metres. Had I been smarter I could have used the front garden too and the two side passages wither side of the house which would have made it more like a 200 metre loop but I figured the pain of torment of such a small loop would at the very least test our mental strength.

I told ASK that we must move at slow and steady pace and that the garden was full of opportunities to injure ourselves and so we must be careful. Anyway ASK was off like a rocket  and calling out to me to hurry up – I was choosing to run just behind her incase any of the garden obstacle proved the undoing of my rather slight five year old. 

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I had instructed both of us to put a layer on and also a buff to help keep us warm but as the laps started falling we found that both of us were wildly overdressed and quickly disposed of our layers. ASK was quick round the course, racing up the steps and then bounding down the narrow path down and making jolly good fun of the rock leap at the bottom of the narrow path.

She refused to let me pass and lead the way – even when we had water stops she would say, ‘dad are you ready?’ and then immediately step out infant of me to get a bit of a head start. As we hit 50 laps she started to slow a little bit – not on the downhill but on the steps and the climb back up to the top of the garden. I offered words of encouragement and gave her regular updates as to how many laps we had completed and more importantly, how many were left to go. 

Thankfully her mid-run lull lasted about 10 laps and then she had some fire in her belly as I said there were barely 30 laps left. With all the energy she could muster I could see the pumping of her arms driving her ever forward. 10 laps to go and I called out to her that there were about 20 laps still left, because clearly she wasn’t keeping count, and as the entered the last 3 laps I finally revealed we were nearly there. She shot off but I called out to her that there were still 3 laps left – and thankfully she slowed a little bit, allowing me to catch her up.

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As she passed the ‘checkpoint’ for the final time I called out to her that this was the last lap and that I was going to win. With gusto I started tailgating her around the lap, making her call out to, ‘stop it dad!’ to which I replied, ‘well go faster!’

She did.

The last 20 metres were quick as lightning and she crossed the line with a little jump in the air and a big slurp of water in the late afternoon sunshine. A very happy young lady was soon awarded the virtual medal she had now finally earned – that makes it about medal number 26 that she’s achieved and this one was in very special circumstances.

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6 comments
  1. Marc said:

    Keep up the journal, it’s always interesting!

    I met you at the Marlborough Downs Challenge 2017 or possibly 2018 and have been following your posts since then.

    • ultraboycreates said:

      Weirdly the only thing I remember about that race was how much my hips hurt and how beautiful it was.

      Did I chat to you in the car park beforehand? I met a lovely chap there – he was rather quicker than me though. I also met a few back of the pack runners too towards my own finish who really inspired me to keep going.

      It’s really nice to know that there’s people out there I’ve met that are willing to read my terrible writings years after I met them.

      I hope you’re well and not too caught up in isolation.

      • Marc said:

        Lol. It’s always interesting. I chatted to you in the carpark before we set off. I remember you were in a bit of pain just after we left the canal and headed up back onto the downs.

        Gutted it’s cancelled this year, hopefully the lockdown will be finished and I can go and most of it one weekend.

        Cheers

        Marc

      • ultraboycreates said:

        I knew I remembered you. Well I hope you enjoy the opportunity to run it post lockdown – if it’s any consolation they’ll be back and you can get another lovely mug! I had 12 ultras booked in this year – managed to run 2 so far but most have been cancelled – hoping that the last five stay open but there’s bigger issues than ultra marathon cancellations sadly ☹️

  2. Luke Gow said:

    Hey, don’t know if you remember me from the Foxlake Nocturnal 2018 (you were walking faster than I could run) but I’m a follower and miss you on Strava! I’ve just entered this (again, it was postponed earlier this year) and thought you might be up for it… http://www.ultranorth.co.uk/

    • ultraboycreates said:

      I do remember you indeed – my calendar for this year is now pretty empty currently, other than the Cheviot Goat in December… I could be tempted. May see you there. Thanks for the heads up. Apologies for the no Strava, I’m just not enough of an athlete for all that fitness!

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