Monthly Archives: May 2018

Somerset (and surrounds) races in July 2018

by Lolly

Races and other running events in Somerset and surrounding area in July 2018.

This is a reference list of events we are aware of, not a list of recommendations. We have no affiliation with any event listed.

Races in Somerset and surrounds
  • 1st July – Quantock Beast
    Quantock Harriers’ 5.7 mile multi terrain race around Fyne Court, Broomfield
    Website
  • 1st July – Bristol Race for Life 5k & 10k
    Cancer Research UK’s 5k and 10k multi-terrain charity runs in The Downs, Bristol
    Website (5k), Website (10k)
  • 3rd July – Summer sunset 5 mile
    Aspire Running Events’ 5 mile multi-terrain race in Corston, Bath (event 2)
    Website
  • 3rd July – Run Exe Summer 5k
    City Runs’ 5k road race in Exwick, Exeter
    Part of the Run Exe Summer Series
    Website
  • 6th July – GWR Towpath Series Race 3
    Great Western Runners’ 10k towpath race from Ashton Gate, Bristol
    Website
  • 7th July – Ham & Lyme 100k/50k
    Albion Running’s 100k and 50k multi-terrain races between Ham Hill Country Park, Somerset and Lyme Regis, Dorset
    Website
  • 7th July – Cider Frolic
    White Star Running’s solo or team marathon (6km segments) in Blandford Forum, Dorset
    Website
  • 8th July – Two Tunnels 5k, 10k & half
    Relish Running Races’s tarmac 5k, 10k and half marathon races in Bath
    Website
  • 8th July – Bath Race for Life 5k & 10k
    Cancer Research UK’s 5k and 10k multi-terrain charity runs in Bath
    Website (5k), Website (10k)
  • 11th July – Yeovilton Summer 5k Series
    Yeovil Town RRC’s road 5k in Yeovilton
    Website
  • 15th July – Frome Half Marathon (& 5k & 10k)
    Half marathon, 5k and 10k road races in Frome
    Website
  • 15th July – Taunton Race for Life 5k
    Cancer Research UK’s 5k multi-terrain charity run in Taunton
    Website
  • 21st July – Bath Running Festival Omnium
    Relish Running Races’ combined sprint, obstacle, middle distance and endurance challenge in Bath
    Website
  • 21st July – Exeter Pretty Muddy 5k
    Cancer Research UK’s 5k obstacle run in Exeter
    Website
  • 22nd July – Brean Down Challenge 5k/10k
    Aspire Running Events’ 5k and 10k multi-terrain races up Brean Down
    Website
  • 22nd July – Bath Running Festival trail races
    Relish Running Races’ 5k, 10k, half marathon and marathon multi-terrain races
    Website
  • 22nd July – Dalwood 10kish
    Roughly 10k multi-terrain run around Dalwood, Axminster, Devon
    Website
  • 22nd July – Exeter Race for Life 5k & 10k
    Cancer Research UK’s 5k and 10k multi-terrain charity runs in Exeter
    Website (5k), Website (10k)
  • 27th July – Kennet & Avon Canal 145 mile race
    Non-stop tow path race from Bristol to London
    Website
  • 28th July – Dorset Invader marathon
    White Star running’s multi-terrain marathon race in Blandford Forum, Dorset
    Website
  • 29th July – Seaview 17
    Minehead Running Club’s coast path run to Minehead
    Website
  • 29th July – Dorset Invader half marathon
    White Star running’s multi-terrain half marathon race in Blandford Forum, Dorset
    Website
South West parkrun anniversaries

Because parkrun birthdays mean celebration and cake

  • 28th July
    Blandford, 4th birthday (Website)
    Stonehouse, 2nd birthday (Website)

 

Know an event that we’ve missed? Comment below, or Tweet us!

parkrun tourism: Lanhydrock parkrun

by Ben

When someone asks ‘Which parkrun is the prettiest / most scenic?’, Lanhydrock parkrun is invariably listed among the responses. It’s also a common reply to ‘Which parkrun is the toughest?’ Both of these seemed like good recommendations to me. In fact, Lanhydrock is probably the parkrun we’ve wanted to visit the most for almost as long as we’ve been touring.

I honestly have no idea if we could see this from the route…

We certainly had the weather for it – a gloriously sunny early May bank holiday weekend. We travelled down on Friday evening to stay in a holiday cottage on Bodmin Moor – a convenient 20 minute drive from Lanhydrock. Being National Trust members, we didn’t have to pay for parking, but I don’t think it’s too silly at £1 for an hour or £3 all day.

After the usual toilet stops on arrival, we made our way into the House grounds to find the start. It’s a bit of a walk from the car park to the start, so it’s certainly not a run I’d want to be running late for! As it was, even bimbling along we were there at about 8:45 – plenty of time. A brief course description in the new runners briefing was following by the standard briefing at the start line, and then we were off!

Gathering at the start.

And boy, were we off! A road downhill start meant that when I glanced at my watch about a quarter of a mile in, I was averaging about a 5:20/mile pace. Not sustainable! Despite the promise that the 1.5 miles were downhill (and the next 1.5 miles uphill), we hit a short incline after that first quarter of a mile, and things got a bit more sensible. For a little bit anyway. Well, until we hit the next downhill…

The course is well advertised as being ‘downhill for the first half, then uphill for the second half’. I was happy with this – I could take it easy early on, and then half plenty left in the tank for the climbing later. Unfortunately, an off-road descent is far too tempting for me to ‘take it easy’. My pace eased up: 7:00/mile, 6:10/mile, 5:03/mile, 4:31/mile(!). I was flying past people – and was also pretty certain that I was going to be pretty embarrassed later when they all came back past me again. Allegedly, this downhill was in a gorgeous wood with bluebells, but I’ll be completely honest and say that I was only watching my feet and the runners around me!

The course kicks back gently uphill for a short while before the end of the first mile, and then is mostly flat, with a slight drop for the next three-quarters of a mile, as it loops along the River Fowey. And then the climbing starts. We’d dropped about 300 ft from the start line to the river, and most of that needed to be made back up again. (Lanhydrock is actually a net downhill course, as the start line is uphill from the finish line. It doesn’t feel it.)

The uphills definitely lived up to their billing. A gentle initial climb gets harder when the course turns up along ‘The Avenue’, one of the driveways up to the house. Some respite (though it isn’t flat) is provided as you cut diagonally across a field, but the subsequent scramble up through the woods more than makes up for it. I dropped down to a walk for a while, and was far from the only one to do so – in fact I was still making up ground on those around me while doing so. The course returns to the garden drives with a short bit of climbing to do, before the final push downhill to finish.

Done.

I measured the course slightly short (4.88 km), but the twisting and turning through the woods was probably not tracked properly by GPS. It would be an odd course to be short, given they have the flexibility to move both the start and the finish.

It was refreshing to run a one-lap course; the last parkrun I ran that was a single lap was Moors Valley back in July. Of course, for my parents and the children spectating, it was less ideal! The route was nice and varied, and allegedly very scenic, though as I mentioned earlier, I don’t appear to have noticed. (Lolly took a bit longer than me, and reassures me that it was, in fact, very pretty.)

After the run, it was off to the Stables Cafe for breakfast, our daughter’s favourite part of parkrun tourism!