The final reckoning

So as I draw runglassonrun to a close, I am delighted that over the course of the last 5 months the total raised for Macmillan Cancer Support in memory of my mum is over UKP16,000, with a few quid still to come in. When Gift Aid is added on, it comes to over UKP19,000. That is way ahead of my original target, and I’m truly grateful for the real generosity of so many people. I’ll be emailing everyone individually to say thank you – but you know who you are. It was a great relief to get over the finish line – I always knew that all things being equal my pig-headedness would get me through the events, but was always worried that an injury might knock me off my stride. Thankfully I stayed fit throughout, and can now concentrate on abusing my body in the run up to Christmas. There’s no doubt too, though, that I’ll miss the whole experience, which has been enjoyable, painful, exhilarating, draining, relentless and inspiring in equal measure. I thoroughly recommend every single one of the events. But if you don’t fancy any of these, then why not join me in the next big challenge. The Great British Bike Relay in May 2010. Tempted? Go to www.greatbritishbikerelay.com and sign up. See you in Glasgow!!

Back to the home page

Category Uncategorized | Tags:

You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.

Comments




XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

By submitting a comment here you grant Run Glasson Run a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution. Inappropriate comments will be removed at admin's discretion.


Why am I doing this

Last year my mother died of cancer. Our whole family was shocked and devastated by the suddenness and unexpectedness of her death. Everyone who knew her remembers a funny, generous, loving person in perfect health and the fitness that came from a life spent with dogs and horses. Sadly she died too quickly to benefit from the support of a Macmillan nurse – but as mum had been a nurse for her whole working life, raising money for this great cause seemed to be a very appropriate way to remember her.



Countdown: -273 days

Race list

  1. L’Etape du Tour

    20th July 2009

  2. The Vitruvian Half IronMan

    5th September 2009

  3. New York City Marathon

    1st November 2009

  4. Hellrunner

    15th November 2009

  5. Helly Hansen Adventure Race

    6th Dec 2009


Training blog

Post a comment

Previous Next
Latest on Wed, 06:30 pm

Scott Emond: All the best Richard. May the wind be at your back and your mom guiding you from above.

Jon Kent: Good luck Rich - just keep pedalling - you'll be fine

Amy (Niece): Wish you luck for all the racing.

Alex C: Rather you than me!

Matt Bee: I'll still beat you at Vitruvian, I hope!!

Sasha Glasson: i wouldn't do 'hellrunner'

Lineda Sahi: Wish you all the best especially for the 'Le Mont Ventoux', the toughest I think. And as the French saying goes : "N’est pas fou [...]

Richard's Big Sister: I always said I was the sensible one.

» Leave a comment





Share this web site.
Please wait... loading.
Please wait... loading.

Helly Hansen Adventure Race

And to round things off, there's an off road adventure race, which includes cross-country running, kayaking, mountain biking, assault courses and any other abuse the organisers choose to throw at us over the course of three or four hours. It's a team event and to compound the misery I'll be bullied round the course by an ex Royal Marine. I'm not expecting a relaxing day.

http://www.trailplus.com/helly_hansen.cfm

Close

L’Etape du Tour

This is the daddy of them all. Racing a stage of the Tour de France is always a challenge, but this year it’s on Mont Ventoux, ‘the Giant of Provence’. This is the hardest stage there is, bar none. It’s legendary among cyclists for being the climb where British rider Tom Simpson died of exhaustion in 1967. The entire stage is 172km, with 3000 vertical metres gained over the course of four category 1 climbs, and the 22kms ‘hors categorie’ finish up Mont Ventoux. In the words of Lance Armstrong: “It’s a tough mountain, a really stiff challenge, probably the most difficult climb in France.”

http://www.letapedutour.com

Close

The Vitruvian

A half Ironman triathlon comprises a 1.9km swim, a 90km bike ride and a half marathon to finish. The Vitruvian is one of the most challenging courses on the circuit. The bike route has 1000 metres of climbing in the hills of Rutland, including two ascents of the notorious ‘Rutland Ripple’. Perhaps the best description of this race comes from the organisers: “This is a full on tough quad crunching, lung buster of a race that will push even the toughest of the longer distance triathletes to the limit.”

http://www.pacesetterevents.com/vitruvian-triathlon.php

Close

The NYC Marathon

26.2 miles of running on an undulating route through the city’s 5 boroughs, ending in Central Park. Perhaps the world’s most famous and best supported road race, it should be a great experience. It will be my 3rd marathon – but for each of the others I had 6 months of running training, for this one, I will have 6 weeks. That is a massive challenge.

http://www.nycmarathon.org/

Close

Hellrunner

My penultimate event, and one which defies description. To really make it a mental challenge, you never know how long the race is going to be, even when you’re standing on the start line. All you know is that you are going to be up to your waist in mud and water, freezing cold and utterly exhausted for as many hours as it takes. Words of encouragement come on the event’s website from a previous competitor: “It was incredibly hard, and just when you think you've got to the end the crowd-lined 'bog of doom' is there to totally destroy your morale. By that point though you're so tired, upset and distressed you really don’t care.” Anyone want to join me?

http://www.hellrunner.co.uk/index.htm

Close