Juneathon Day 10. Four and a half hours of Abs

Today I spent four and a half hours working on my abs. Shall we leave it at that???

Curses. You want proof. Okay, here it is:-
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This is me and my very lovely lovely friend who emigrated to Canada 6 years ago. She is briefly back in the UK and we managed to meet up today for many cups of tea, some lunch, and basically four and a half hours of laughing.

If that doesn’t count as abs exercises for Juneathon then I’m giving up now.

Juneathon day 9. An Ode to my Legs

An Ode to My Legs the day after a 42 mile bike ride.

My legs were refusing to run
We did more than enough on the bike“.
I’ve told them it IS Juneathon
And we don’t have to go on a hike.

They said “Okay,
Have it your way,
We’ll just do a short plod today”.
So before they could bay
Or even say “nay!”
We snuck out for 3 muddy miles and I had a lovely time.

Juneathon Day 8. The ‘Wrong Way Round and Round’

In the village next to us there is a milestone that shows ‘Hyde Park Corner 97 miles’. For several years keen cyclists of the village have organised a ride going the ‘wrong way’ from Hyde Park back to the village.

To try and tempt more people, and especially families, to join in this year they organised a 19 mile loop starting and finishing at the village pub. The idea being to ride 5 loops (and a bit) for the full distance, or any number of loops for your own personal challenge.

Whilst my husband is a very keen cyclist, who no longer finds 100 mile rides a challenge, it’s a different story for myself and our son.

Son and me. Serious Cyclists.
Son and me. Serious Cyclists.

Our longest ride to date has been 25 miles which included a fantastic lunch stop. Son was happy he could manage one lap, and I was hoping if we had a good lunch he could be tempted out for a second.

Bike all labelled up. Spot the iconic Milestone
Bike all labelled up. Spot the iconic Milestone

Our first lap was mostly uneventful. Son managed to ride into the edge of a high verge, legs flailing as he trimmed the long grass and filled his bike with it. Miraculously he stayed upright. A little further down the road I wasn’t so lucky, managing a huge wobble as I tried to tuck in when another cyclist overtook us. Fortunately it was a grassy verge I fell onto, so it was mainly just my pride that was hurt.

As we reached the end of the loop our thoughts were turning to chips and coke, and the pub did not disappoint. We even found a friend of son’s who was happy to ride another loop with us and his Dad.This second loop was slower, but without any cyclist-verge incidents. However it seemed to pass quicker, I guess because we knew the route by now. As we arrived back at the pub, we were announced by one of the organisers and received a round of applause.

Beer has rarely tasted so good
Beer has rarely tasted so good

A swift half, and then we pedalled the final 2 and a bit miles home. In total the boy and I had cycled 42 miles on a beautifully warm and sunny Sunday. My legs didn’t feel too bad, but my neck and shoulders (and just to lower the tone, my backside) might not be speaking to me later on.

Still – forty two miles!

Juneathon Day 7. The pathetic one

The first week of Juneathon has been great. Lots of energy, lots of exercise, lots of smugness. Weekends are always my downfall. My first lie-in for weeks with no cats or kids crashing in meant that park run was a no-no.

We had to go to a local pub to help a friend celebrate his birthday, and what with one thing and another I didn’t have time to walk down. Well, not the whole way. On the drive down I got my husband to drop me off and I gently jogged the last 5 minutes. Yes it was only 5 minutes, yes it was downhill, and yes it was in jeans with my handbag tucked under my arm. However it was something I wouldn’t have bothered doing if it wasn’t Juneathon so I’ll take that for today.

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It was getting dark on the lane so extra hardcore points

Juneathon Day 6. Builders.

Warning – this post contains builders. If you’ve never had any experience of dealing with builders then please feel free to skip to the middle of this post, the “I went for a run” part.  If you’ve ever had any building work done on your house, or if you’ve watched Grand Designs and are currently contemplating it, then read on. Friday has always been my long run day. However I knew it wouldn’t happen today because the builders were coming. We are just about to start our loft conversion and needed the Building Inspector to come and look into a hole dug outside our kitchen, and at two holes above windows.

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Black cat re-enacting classic ‘Titantic’ pose on temporarily displaced decking

The builders arrived just before 9 o’clock to wait for the inspector (apparently we were first on his list) and we took the time to discuss various complicated details of steel beams and purlins. We drank tea. We ended up deep in village gossip and still the inspector hadn’t arrived. After an hour and a half they went off to do other things. Inspector finally arrived around twelve. I rang the builders who came back and the inspector duly* gazed into holes, passed judgement, and left. Builders filled in the hole, chatted some more and went at about 1pm, promising to return around three when the Roofer was coming to discuss scaffolding.

I looked in the fridge to see if there was anything inspiring for lunch, found there wasn’t, and decided to pop out for a short run instead whilst the coast was clear. I got into my running gear, strapped on my Garmin and had just shoved my hair off my face with a hairband when the doorbell went. Guess who? It was the builders of course. They were off to price some steel up and could I just photocopy the specs… They left, again, AND I WENT FOR A RUN! It was just three miles, it was slow, but it was a chance to stretch out my stiff hamstrings and enjoy the sunshine. It was wonderful.

It is now three o’clock. I’ve run, showered, my running kit is in the washing machine and I’ve had my lunch. Guess what I’m doing now – I’m waiting for the builders to come back.

* my predictive text auto corrected this to ‘dully gazed into holes’ which is much funnier

Juneathon Day 4. Duathalon Day

This morning it was drizzling, yet I cycled up to the allotment, worked for 2 hours in the steadily increasing rain, and cycled home again.

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Well weeded

Was that myJuneathon activity for today? It has been in previous years (and may be later this month) but not today. Oh no, today I have something much more exciting* planned. I’m doing a duathalon. I know I’ve been enjoying cycling on my new bike but the plan is that I just do the running and my husband will do the cycling. It was sounding like such a great plan, and a way for us to enter something together. Then we saw the weather forecast for today. And then he foolishly Googled the results of the last duathalon event. It’s a 2 mile run, followed by a 10 mile cycle, finished off with another 2 miles of running. It’s at Castle Combe circuit again, so it’s flat and traffic free. It’s also fast, and looking at the times for the runs I’ll be last by a few minutes. Sigh.

Anyway. I must get ready now, so I’ll let you know how it goes … tomorrow. Wish me luck.

* i.e. terrifying

Juneathon Day 3. Track Tuesday.

Despite this bring a blog about running, it’s not an athletics track I’m talking about. We live very close to Castle Combe Motor Racing circuit and every Tuesday Chippenham Wheelers (the local cycling club that we’re family members of) organise a cycling night. The chance to cycle on smooth traffic free tarmac, with coaching available, isn’t one to be passed up.

Mr B&T took the opportunity to ride in a fast group,  whilst me and my boy rode together at our own pace. In total we managed 10 laps, 18.8 miles, in 1 hour 23 minutes. We’re in training for a big ride on Sunday – but more about that later.

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One of the speedy groups
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Quick water stop
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My Trusty Trek
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Who knew Castle Combe had such stunning architecture

Juneathon Day 2. Running with my Ears

A lovely 5 mile run this morning. I kept the pace up in case the builders were planning on arriving, but not so fast that I’d be a sweaty mess if they were waiting on the drive for me when I got back. As it turns out they’re not coming until next Monday – so expect a very similar run /post in a week’s time.

As I stood on the drive waiting for my Garmin to find some satellites I became aware of the hedge next to me. It was buzzing -swarming with bees. I tried to film them but the microphone isn’t great on my phone.

After this I was alert to all the sounds around me. I was listening to the birds as I ran through the village, and could notice when the noise from the bypass on the very edge of town began to impose on my consciousness. The bridge over the bypass has a Strava segment running over it which is a tempting reason to run that way.
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The view from the top showed the tractor I’d heard cutting the grass, leaving stripes even my Dad would be proud of.
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There is another buzzing you can hear here, but sadly is not more bees, just the powerlines on the nearby pylon.
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The run back home was uneventful, but I felt pretty good, fit and positive. You can tell it’s only day 2 of Juneathon!

Juneathon Day 1, A Good Start

June dawned, bright and sunny. As I seem to have done more cycling than running recently I decided I’d better start Juneathon off with a run. Just a short run, only 5K, but along a route I haven’t been down for a few months. It’s an out and back route, with a short but steep dip in the middle. A few years ago I decided I wanted to break 30 minutes for 5K, so I ran along this lane regularly until I finally managed it.

Today I ran it in 29 minutes 40, so not a world record but at least it was still under 30 minutes. I was wondering how low I could get this time, when I realised that should be my aim for Juneathon – to see how much time I can take off this route. Roll on the rest of the month!

June is Approaching

It’s nearly the end of May, which can only mean:-

a) June is nearly here;
b) the weather should start getting better;
c) It’s nearly the start of Juneathon;
d) All of the above except for b.

Yes, Juneathon. A month of exercise, blogging and excuses – no slacking allowed! However what is allowed is dressing gown dashes, planking in PJs, pub bar push-ups, and anything else Cathy (the organiser) deems as exercise. I just about survived the last Juneathon and it’s colder sibling Janathon. Let’s see how long before my day’s exercise is a plank this time!

For more information, and to sign up, have a look at the Juneathon website. See you there!