I write this on the four hour drive back to the mystical land
of Wales from attending the British Athletics Mountain Running Training Camp up in
Georgia Malir’s neck of the woods, Leeds. (I should probably be doing Welsh revision for my speaking exam on Thursday but this is obviously
way more important!)
Upon arriving at the very posh Weetwood Hotel I found I was
roomy with Rebecca Hilland who actually lives in Norway! I hadn't met her
before but as is normal for most mountain runners she was lovely and we
were soon chatting away. I knew pretty much everyone else on the camp
and it was nice to see everyone again and catch up.
Sarah Rowell started the training camp with a look back at
the GB team’s success in 2015 and the highlight of this was definitely a first time viewing of a short video of the British team at the home World Mountain Running Championships last year. Those championships will
always hold a special place in my heart being my first home World Champs and my first team medal at a major champs. Everyone loved
the clip and it definitely brought goosebumps to look back, reflect and
remember such massive British success on that very special day! When I look back and
think about it; that day when I got to wear my GB vest competing against
the best in the world on home soil seems kind of surreal. If I could go
back and relive that weekend I most definitely would. Nevertheless we
must all look forward to future.
So, Sarah then described in detail the major champs this
year in Arco and Bulgaria. I've been very lucky to have actually already
raced on the course in Arco, Italy near Lake Garda for the World Youth
Cup two years ago. It is such a beautiful part of the world and all the
lovely pictures Sarah showed us are going to be a definite motivation
for all of us towards making the team and being able to race there at
the European Championships this year.
Next up was food and I think it's fair to say that we all
felt a bit under-dressed in the hotel surrounded by people who were all
neatly dressed for weddings and what not. We mountain runners didn't
mind though and the food was delicious.
The look on the waiter's face when Katie Walshaw asked for
custard “and possibly a banana please?” was priceless. He had probably
never heard of such a combination asked for in the posh hotel, but he
did oblige.
I never knew that arranging a training session could be so
confusing as we all planned to go to the local hill called The Chevin to
do a hill session on the Saturday. Of course; us girls easily decided what we wanted to
do without much debate, but the men were not so quick to decide… “Oh,
let's just run around the hill and the paths when we get there and
decide what we want to do then”
So after a nights sleep and breakfast we made our way to
the famous Chevin, where sometimes Johnny and Ali Brownlee train. After a
gentle jog (it wasn't that gentle really as us girls tried and failed
to keep with the men) the boys finally decided they would do long hill
reps from the bottom to the very top, with us girls doing shorter faster
ones half way up.
I felt really good during the session and was
pleasantly surprised as this was my first big hill session of the year.
It was great to turn around after each rep and fly back down to the
start. And, I DIDN'T FALL OVER!!! Can we just take a moment to
appreciate this achievement as I'm forever renowned for falling over
running fast downhill. May I even dare to believe that this is a thing
of the past? We'll just have to wait and see!
The Chevin was a lovely setting for a hill session and I
can see why GB team mate and friend, Georgia Malir uses it a lot for
training!
The men seemed to be running well up and down the hill too, so a good training session for all.
After some much needed lunch, it was time to get our brains
in gear with a talk from Jamie Pringle all about preparation for
altitude. This was particularly useful as he talked a lot about how
altitude effects the body physically and how it is best to prepare for
this. The World Mountain Running Championships this year are at altitude
in Bulgaria so this was highly relevant.
A quick trip down to Leeds Uni followed, for a drills
session with Alison Rose. This was useful as it helped everyone to
identify their weaknesses and how we could address them in order to
improve.
A talk about training for mountain medals revealed that
Andrew Douglas likes his magic 8 hours sleep, Rebecca Robinson has such a
crazy lifestyle balancing running with being a doctor (I thought
training around exams was bad enough!) and also Chris Smith’s ability to
overcome challenges as he lives in London with hardly any hills but has
learned to make use of the environment around him.
An extremely yummy vegetable lasagna for tea followed. (Don't worry though Mum; yours is still the best!) The meal presented a slightly less amused waiter when Katie
changed her mind on food once again, but to be fair to him he did once
again oblige.
Georgia and I had fun talking Strava, blogging, so called gimp
masks, altitude training etc with the fell running legend: Ben Mounsey after the
meal. I'm not sure Ben and I successfully persuaded Georgia to start writing a
blog though. You can check out Ben’s epic blog here.
I think its safe to say that we all probably ate more jelly
beans between us than the number of miles we ran cumulatively. A never
ending bowl always seemed to be there tempting us to eat just one more.
As Sarah said, Gary must have been “buzzing around on the ceiling” with
the amount he seemed to eat.
The arrival of Sunday brought the Sunday long run, full of
sunshine and shared miles. Georgia was a very good guide showing us get
local routes.
Finally to end we had a session led by Liz Birchall on ‘How
to market yourself on social media’. This was interesting and provided
an insight into how British Athletics use social media to promote the
sport. Everyone probably felt that Ben could have lead this session as
he's obviously the social media king!
So as we've just crossed the border back into Wales, it’s
safe to say that I'm suitably excited to see just what the friendly GB
mountain running team can produce this year. Time to put the hard
work in...
but for the moment, back to reality and to revise for that Welsh exam.
PS: A big thank you to all the British Athletics coaches
and managers involved with organising and creating such an inspiring
weekend.
PPS: Also thanks to Georgia for showing us around her local routes. Next time we will have to make it to the cafe for pancakes.