July 16, 2007

100km Twitter

I twittered while I walked. This is how it happened:

Sat 14th July 08:06 - And so it begins. 100km to go!
Sat 14th July 12:47 - Chicken wraps for lunch at checkpoint 2. Lovely.
Sat 14th July 20:33 - Half way. Welcome supper of bean casserole. 50km to go
Sun 15th July 00:27 - Just left checkpoint 6 heading to devil’s dyke.
Sun 15th July 04:22 - Dawn. Finally!
Sun 15th July 08:58 - A little over 10km to go
Sun 15th July 10:11 - Bacon butties for breakfast. Yum! Last leg started
Sun 15th July 11:55 - Last hill before the finish. My legs hurt.
Sun 15th July 12:34 - 99km down, one to go!

28 hours and 55 minutes

That’s how long it took my team to walk the 100km of the Oxfam Trailwalker this weekend.

We set out from Queen Elizabeth Country Park near Petersfield in Hampshire at 8am on Saturday night and walked along the South Downs Way for a day and a night and arrived at Brighton race course just before 1pm on Sunday.

A big thank you to both of the those (cheers Lyle!) people who sponsored me - one of the things that kept me going in the lull before dawn was not wanting to have to explain to you why I couldn’t finish. If you want the gory (but remarkably blister free) details, I’m sure I’ll feel like writing them up when the memories start to blur at the edges.

If I never see a pot of Vaseline again, it will be too soon!

July 9, 2007

Trailwalker 2007 Countdown

On saturday, I will be endeavouring to walk 100km (about 62 miles) in under 30 hours.

After my training walk last week, 30 miles (near as damn it) in the rain, the dark and the cold, I realised how hard it’s likely to be next weekend. To be honest, I’m not 100% certain I’m going to finish it although if I quit, it will be because I absolutely cannot go on. Fortunately, I have the money I’ve raised from sponsorship to give me added incentive to finish because now I have people I can’t let down. If I don’t finish, I don’t get the money - it’s that simple.

All the donations will primarily will go to the Ghurka Welfare Trust. The event itself was started in pre-handover Hong Kong by the Ghurka regiment stationed there and was such a success that rather than stop running it, they got together with Oxfam and started holding it across the world. They’re both good causes. You can read more about them and the event here.

If you’d like to sponsor me to walk the equivalent of nearly two and a half marathons along the South Downs way (and give me that huge incentive to walk, crawl and drag myself over the finish line) then you can do so online via my bMyCharity page.

What follows now is some musings on why I don’t expect to get a lot of sponsorship.

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July 3, 2007

A Walk on the Wild Side

So, anyway.

On saturday I went for a walk. It’s only two weeks until I take part in the Oxfam Trailwalker (the event that one kind person here has sponsored me for so far) and I figured it was high time I did a decent training walk in preparation. “It’s going to be wet though” said some random bloke down the pub (who may or may not be a good friend - I wasn’t paying attention at the time). “Yes, ” I replied, “but last time I checked, I was still waterproof.” Actually, I didn’t say that. That would have been a quick witted and off the cuff and I don’t do that.

A week earlier, another acquaintance of mine who’s a personal trainer by profession and confession said that she’d like to come along with me for the walk. I pointed out on more than one occasion that I was going to be doing 30 miles and that it was likely to be very late and dark before I got back. It didn’t deter her. I’m glad because it was nice to have the company.

30 miles, as it turns out, is a fuck of a long way. At least, when you’re walking it is. The route was a little muddy which is unsurprising considering the recent precipitous weather we’ve been enduring. When I say “a little” I mean extremely. On the drive down to our dropoff point we passed through a tremendous downpour and I prayed to a god I don’t believe in that it was only passing. It was. We got dropped off. We began walking.

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June 13, 2007

Oxfam Trailwalker 2007 - Making a difference

Anyone who’s been reading this over the last 3 or 4 years (don’t let the limited archives fool you!) will know that my recent Highland exploits are not the first time I’ve ventured out on a weekend, determined to work up a sweat and get muddy and knackered by taking part in an event with a very dubious sounding name. There’s been multiple Tough Guys, a couple of Hellrunners, a Grim challenge, a Mountain Marathon that went well and one that went not so well and various other little races. People like Lyle and Pix have occasionally had recourse to call me a nutter or a loon for doing these things and I admit freely that it’s a character flaw of mine: a selfish desire to prove myself both physically and mentally by pushing myself to do these events.

In four weeks time, I’m going to be doing something else but this time the reasons for doing it are not so selfish. I’m taking part in Trailwalker 2007, an event organised with the goal of raising money for the Ghurka Welfare Trust and Oxfam, who help organise and co-ordinate it.

Ghurka Welfare Trust
The Ghurka Welfare Trust was set up in 1969 in order to provide financial, medical and community aid to alleviate hardship and distress among Gurkha ex-servcemen of the British Crown and their dependants after they have returned to their homeland of Nepal. Some of you may well have read about the recent case of Tul Bahadur Pun, a Ghurka soldier and recipient of the Victoria Cross. I know Razorhead blogged about it. Well it’s people like him and other former Ghurka’s who this charity helps.

Oxfam
Oxfam is a charity that most people are aware of. You may not be aware of everything they do and think they just send food to famine victims in Africa. They do a lot more than that though - they set up HIV and Aids awareness and diagnosis programmes in countries like Thailand, help tackle urban poverty in Russa and setup schools and community housing for the poor and outcast indigenous communities in Bolivia amongst other things.

So what’s Trailwalker then?

Well, as the name suggests, it’s a walk. As part of a team of four (made up of myself, my mother, my brother and a family friend), we’re going to be doing a sponsored walk. Now before you tut and sigh and say “But Dragon, you’ve just spent a weekend running up and down mountains in the Scottish highlands - a walk isn’t going to be much of challenge!” I should remind you that this is me. This isn’t some 5km or 10km walk I’m going to be doing. For that matter it’s not even 25km.

In a little over 4 weeks, on Saturday July 14th, we will be walking 100km along the South Downs way, from Petersfield in Hampshire to Brighton in East Sussex. And we have 30 hours to do it.

By taking part in Trailwalker I’m hoping to raise money for both these charities and I’m asking you, yes you, to help by sponsoring me to do it. Maybe you can only afford to sponsor me a pound, maybe you’ll put 10 pounds in. That’s only the price of a couple of bottles of wine or four pints of beer and hell, it means you’re sponsoring for a mere 10p a kilometre. But every penny and every pound that I raise will be helping someone who desperately needs it. And if you’re feeling extra generous, perhaps you could mention this on your blogs and ask some of your readers to contribute too.

You can sponsor me online on my BMyCharity page which is here. However, if you’d prefer to use PayPal or even another method instead, let me know and I’ll set something up.

Please dig deep and together we can make a difference.