Coastal Trail Series – Portland

This is a much larger post for a change. Steve had some annual leave up his sleeve so we took off Friday in order to get some traveling in before the run on Saturday.
As this run was down in Dorset territory it was a great opportunity to visit a place that is the iconic home to one of my favourite, inspiring shows – River Cottage. Although Hugh was no where to be seen we did arrive early enough to have breakfast. To be honest, the breakfast was nice but the selection available was far from what I imagined there should be. Steve had a bacon roll and I had salmon with fresh baked bread. Both very delicious but only 2 of the 5 or 6 choices and of which there we no eggs at all to be found on the menu. Not sure what that was about? The coffee however was also great.
After lunch we slowly headed out of Devon and into Dorset stopping along the way at Charmouth to do a bit of fossil hunting. We found a few small ones but nothing like the intact dinosaur that is on display nearby. I think you have to really be visiting on a daily basis with hammer and chisel to be finding all the good stuff. Me, I’m just content to have a wander and see what I find.
We stopped for fish and chips in West Bay which is a nice little seaside town, however it is very much a retirement destination but still has quite a strong fishing business by the looks.

We next moved on to Chesil Beach which is basically a huge spit running parallel to the mainland for miles. It is entirely made up of the most amazing coloured pebbles. I have never seen anything like it before. They make the most amazing noise underfoot and although tiring to walk on I found them far better than having annoying, grinding sand in your shoes.

Finally we headed into Weymouth which was far larger than I expected it to be. Again, due to the proximity of the sea, fishing and cargo are the main stayers here. It seems to be a town that has everything going for it plus access to stunning waterways. From Weymouth you can catch the numerous ships leaving for France etc. I believe imports and exports go through this town port as well.
We decided not to stay the night in town and headed out to The Lugger Inn located in Chickerell.
Saturday morning we got a sleep in for a change as we normally get up really early and arrive in time for the race briefings etc. This time it was a leisurely breakfast and a short drive to race base at the Portland and Weymouth Sailing Academy. Talk about a great set up they have here and tons of kids learning to sail. I could see myself living quite contentedly for a while in Portland. I suppose it helps when the weather is glorious so the sea, sky and rock look spectacular.

So far, of all the runs, this was by far the most spectator accessible where I was able to arrive at certain points along the way to provide some encouragement to Steve as he ran and try to snap a few pictures. I was very fortunate to catch up with him as he was going far quicker than I had catered for. The hardest part was the long stretch down Chesil Beach – pebbles all the way. Gotta hurt!

Anyway, here are some pictures from this fabulous weekend.

Finally here at the River Cottage store
Finally here at the River Cottage store

And their off...
And their off...

Up the hill on the right, round the island and along the spit
Up the hill on the right, round the island and along the spit

Portland Bill - as the lighthouse is called
Portland Bill - as the lighthouse is called

Great sea views
Great sea views

Hard, cold slog
Hard, cold slog

On the home stretch
On the home stretch

Picking up his meal ticket and medal
Picking up his meal ticket and medal

Relaxing after a hard slog
Relaxing after a hard slog

He still has energy??
He still has energy??

Coastal Trail Series – Gower

Yesterday was the second of seven half marathons that Steve is attempting to do. This time it was held in Gower, Wales. The race base was out of the small Welsh village of Llangennith.

It was only 2 hours away so we left at 6.30am, picked up a friend on the way and got there in plenty of time for a coffee and general browse before the race started.

The weather was magic, blue skies from here to forever. Not quite the Sydney blue that we know and miss but blue enough for us. Wales is a magic country and in particular down on the coast the scenery is stunning.

Steve has been sick (first time in ages) and hadn’t managed to get any training in since the last run. Even given this I don’t think he did that badly. Mind you I’m impressed that these people get through it without keeling over. This time it was not only hills but beach running as well.

While he was off running, I went for a walk to the beach with my mate where we set up the burner for a nice hot cuppa, rugged up in all our winter woolies watching the surfers in their thick neoprene suits. Nut cases!






Coastal Trail Series – Dorset half marathon

Steve has been doing a fair bit of running lately. Not just your average tarmac running but some serious trail running. They are maniacs over here for this stuff. Especially fell running (up, down, around, over through fells).  Anyway for starters he completed the Dorset half marathon trail race this weekend and in my opinion did pretty darn well for his first ever one.

Set in spectacular locations on the coasts of UK you can complete either a 10km, half marathon or full marathon run through mud, sand, paddocks, streams etc. Not only does it punish your body but the mental agility is paramount. Unlike tread mill or tarmac running you can tune out as you plod the miles. If you tune out here you could well end up falling off a cliff, turning an ankle or landing smack in the mud or worse, cow pooh! The idea of doing this type of running is rather exciting but to be honest, I’m too lazy! I’ll stick to swimming.

This months run was based out of the Square and Compass pub in Worth Matravers. Stunning location, fab local pub complete with South West ciders and warming fire place. I have discovered I need to take a navigation course as I thought I would walk to a spectator point to watch for Steve on the run. After about 1.5 hours of walking and no luck, I returned to the pub to find the runners coming back in. I had gone miles out the wrong way, not even heading towards the coast where they were running. How embarrassing. I did however get one cracking great walk in! Oops.

Anyway, by the time the runners got back they were covered in mud but incredibly still functioning like normal human beings (if you consider putting your body through this as normal to begin with). I must admit a few of the runners looked a rather nasty pasty grey colour which was a bit worrying but the ambulance didn’t seem to get any action so that was good.

Steve was stoked and did very well and is keen to do another. There are 7 races in this coastal series. One every month up to May 2009. If anything it is a great opportunity to see some incredible countryside locations in the UK. Watch this space for more in future I suppose.

Number 280
Number 280
And they are off...
And they are off...
Dorset coastline - Worth Matravers
Dorset coastline - Worth Matravers
Can you spot the runners at the very bottom!
Can you spot the runners at the very bottom!