Sunday 17 July 2011

the big day ...


After months of training (well, for some of us...), the big day arrived on Saturday 16th July. Thankfully it wasn't scorching hot - that would have been a nightmare.

Instead it rained constantly all through the Friday night while we camped at Queen Elizabeth Country Park. We joined hundreds of other walkers at the 8.30am start line, to be told by the announcer that the rain would continue until early evening, and then start again about 4am - to which the whole crowd cheered! 'Bring it on!' we laughed.

Little did we realise how tiring it would be getting thoroughly soaked for hours and walking in waterlogged shoes. We waded (or tumbled) through mud. Flat stretches which should have been easy now required short shuffling steps to avoid falling - not very kind on the leg muscles. We started taking much longer than planned at Checkpoints - lots of changing of clothes being needed. And we got a call after Checkpoint 2 to say the TrekAmerica van got stuck in the mud, and 8 strangers had to help push it out! Thank goodness those Trailwalkers are a friendly bunch!

There was a great atmosphere with lots of encouragement from wonderful Gurkhas and Oxfam volunteers at the checkpoints (so nice being high-5'd as we went into one checkpoint!). It was great to talk to lots of other Trailwalkers we met along the route too (at least in the daylight stages, before we hit energy conservation mode).

We didn't see many non-Trailwalkers on the route (why go out in that weather if you didn't have to!) and thankfully not too many bikes - although I did get knocked in the chest by a cyclist in Stage 1 (no he didn't fall off his bike or even slow down to apologise!).

We were very lucky as the rain stopped in the early afternoon, and we began to enjoy the walking. It was all going swimmingly (no pun intended). We had walked the first 6 stages ahead of or on schedule for a 24hr finish, although maybe 25hrs as we were taking much longer breaks than planned. And who can blame us, because it was lovely to reach the Checkpoints and see our Support Crew of Andy & Keith and enjoy a bit of banter (in the early stages) and/or have them run around attending to our every need while we collapsed into camping chairs and tried to find the energy to stand again (in the later stages).


Then we left Checkpoint 6 (just over 60km), around 11pm on Saturday night with our head torches aglow. The steep hill early in Stage 7 practically finished me off and with increasing pain in my left knee (downhill) and right thigh (uphill), I walked a long lonely stage in the dark with a half-broken phone, fearing I was 40 minutes behind the rest of the team in reaching the checkpoint. I had made up my mind I would have to drop out when I reached CP7 at Devils Dyke around 1.45am, sure that the boys would already be rested and ready to start walking the next stage. Thankfully they were not too far ahead and all needed more rest after a difficult stage for all of us. Keith wrapped a duvet around me and told me to sit down while I thought about it. I shed a few tears as I realised I had to go on!

We all knew beforehand that 70km was the crunch point, and once we passed that, there was no going back. There was no question now that we would all battle on to the finish, despite our growing catalogue of aches, pains and blisters! Who knows our combined usage of Ibuprofen pills and gels (not to mention knee support and walking poles for some). We stuck together more in Stage 8, another slower stage, but dawn was breaking as we reached the twin windmills of Jack and Jill at Checkpoint 8 which gave us all a real boost.

Somehow we walked the interminably long Stage 9 on schedule, despite very muddy conditions and the overwhelming desire to take the weight off our feet. We then said our farewells to our Support Crew at Checkpoint 9 knowing the next time we saw them would be the Finish line at Brighton Racecourse. We thought we might be spurred on to a quick time for the final short stages 10 & 11, but by now it was becoming a struggle! Jon's hip was agony. Matt thought he might have a stress fracture in his foot. Even Rich was admitting to some aches and pains at this point! At the mini Checkpoint 10 most people barely stop - we slumped on the grass for about 15 minutes, apparently 'soaking up the atmosphere'.




 





With 3km to go a Gurkha told us it was only '25 minutes slow walking' to the Finish (it took us another hour).  But we finally approached the Finish line, completing 100km in 27h 27m, relieved and so happy at what we had achieved.





Since the event we discovered that only 52% of teams completed as a full team of 4 within the 30 hour time-limit, and we're so proud that we were one of them. We all agreed it was the hardest thing we have ever done. I don't think any of us could have done it alone, but with the 6 of us working together we battled through our tiredness and injuries with sheer determination and lots of teamwork. It was lovely to hear from our friends & family during the route, and even have Matt's parents walk with us at one stage!

It was hard going at times but we also shared a lot of comedy moments together, and is something we will never forget. In the process we raised nearly £3k for Oxfam & the Gurkha Welfare Trust, thanks to the wonderful support we had from family, friends and colleagues. Thank you!!!

Trailwalker was such a well organised event and an amazing experience that we would recommend to anyone. So would we ever enter Trailwalker again? "Never again!" we agreed, lying on the grass after the finish. But then talk turned to considering what the next big challenge could be..........???


We did it! Team TrekAmerica stay awake a little longer in order to celebrate 
(Keith, Rich, Jennifer, Matt, Andy & Jon)

Thursday 7 July 2011

Phenomenal fundraising!

It's been a week of full-on fundraising activity, which kicked off with our second cake sale on Monday. The team (plus supporters Aneesa & Jo) churned out amazing quantities of sweet and savoury homebaked treats and once again our TrekAmerica & Exodus colleagues turned out to eat for a good cause. We raised just over £100, with the proceeds split between Team TrekAmerica & one of our colleagues in Exodus who's in the Joint Pains trailwalker team. ...Thanks everyone!

It tasted as good as it looked!

Having begged our local Sainsbury's to let us shake an Oxfam bucket outside the store, unfortunately they allocated us a weekday, which also happened to be a day of *pouring* rain. However we raised almost £25 over Thursday lunchtime which adds another chunk to our fundraising total (and at the same time had the pleasure of knowing there are kind souls out there on the streets of Balham).

However our biggest success came from simply emailing our friends, colleagues and business contacts and telling them what a difference their donations can make (and how hard the challenge is). They generously showed their support for the cause by donating a whopping £800 in just over a week. To top it all off, our parent company TUI Travel PLC also pledged a cheque for £500. What a great bunch of people we're lucky enough to know!

Monday 27 June 2011

40 is the new 30!

Team Trek upped our game with a 40km team walk on Saturday (Trailwalker stages 2 + 3 + 4 +5!)

We travelled by bus, tram, train & taxi and made it to our start point at Harting Down (Checkpoint 1) before 9am. Despite drizzle and thick fog at the start, this was our first team walk not to feature rainjackets and ponchos, and by early afternoon we were enjoying sunshine. After 6 hrs, we diverted to a nearby pub next to Amberley station, where the boys ambitiously gulped down 2 pints and we aired our feet while we changed our socks (much to the delight of other pub-goers I'm sure). We finally arrived at Checkpoint 5 and marched along the dual carriageway to the nearby bus-stop with about 1 minute to spare before the last bus of the day at 6.30pm - perfect timing as always!

2 of the team have now walked the entire Trailwalker course at least once, plus 1 of us has walked everything except Stage 1! We're hoping this gives us a real psychological benefit, so that even when we're flagging we know what lies ahead and that we can cope with it...

* Stage 2: 10.4 km ... 2h15m (+10 mins at checkpoint)
* Stage 3: 8.3 km ... 1h45m (+10 mins at checkpoint)
* Stage 4:  9.3 km ... 1h50m (+50 mins diversion to walk to the pub!)
* Stage 5:  12.5 km ... 2h30m
* Total 40.5 km ... 8h20m walking + 1h10m of breaks

.....And then Rich did yet another 40 on Sunday!

While a couple of us did short walks around the London parks on Sunday, Rich proved his mettle by joining another Trailwalker team on their 40km training walk from Southease to Eastbourne (including a diversion to another lovely pub of course). This was despite the heatwave, and the strain on the legs from completing our longest ever day walk on Saturday. So in a 33-hour period, Rich got 80km of walking under his belt (plus lots of train travel and a little bit of sleep). That's dedication to the cause!

Walking 40km in a day is now passé, so the only thing for us to do is to step it up again on our next team walk... but our training is now tapering off so the next team walk will be the big one... 









Our chief navigator
 






Matt tends to his feet, to the delight of the people at the next table


Pint number 2











At the end of a long day!


Monday 20 June 2011

30km team walk - Pubs and Ponchos

Team Trek hit the South Downs again on Saturday, and covered 30km from Washington to Ditchling Beacon (stages 6 + 7 + 8 + first quarter of 9) in 7 hours.

However that included what turned into a 25-minute pit stop at the Devils Dyke pub when we reached Checkpoint 7... The boys were surprised at how good it felt having a pint en route!

It was a mixed day of sunshine and heavy showers, and we seemed to spend a lot of time repeatedly taking out our rainjackets to put them on, then putting them away again, then taking them out again. In the early stages there was an hour of constant rain which was hard going and even a brief hail storm. As we passed Chanctonbury Ring a fierce wind seemed to want to push us off the ridge - there was a strong chance that Rich would become airborne in his poncho (see picture below).

But we battled on and we all felt in pretty good shape when we hit 30km. Only 4 weeks left until the big event, but as our training ramps up we're gaining confidence that we can achieve this. Next Saturday we will tackle 40km covering stages 2, 3, 4 & 5 ......

* Stage 6: 10 km ... 2h25m (+10 mins at checkpoint)
* Stage 7: 9.4 km ... 1h50m (spurred on by the pub up ahead?... +25 mins at checkpoint)
* Stage 8:  6.9 km ... 1h25m (+5 mins at checkpoint)
* Stage 9 (first 1/4):  approx 3.5 km ... 40m
* Total 29.8 km ... 6h20m walking + 40 mins of breaks






Sunday 12 June 2011

Sunshine & Gurkhas speeding past

Feeling very positive after walking 30km from Hilltop Farm to Washington yesterday (stages 3, 4 & 5).  I've now experienced every stretch of the route except Stage 2 and am familiar with every checkpoint, which somehow makes the task ahead seem less daunting!

Last week's training walk was hard work in the rain and at one point I couldn't walk downhill without my knee yelling at me not to do it. This time I accidentally left the house at 6am instead of 7am and despite more than 3 hours of trains and buses, got a nice early start on the trail. There was so much sunshine in the first few hours that despite lots of shady woodland early on, I even got a bit sunburnt. And fortunately only a little bit of grumbling from my knee, on the last downhill stretch 5 minutes from the end.

During Stage 3, I passed every runner in the South Downs marathon (going in the opposite direction). I like to say hello to everyone I meet on the trail, so there were a lot of 'hello's, 'good morning's and 'well done everybody!'s going on!

During Stage 4, I also saw two teams of Gurkhas training for Trailwalker. They slowed down enough for me to tell them I was training for the same event, pausing only to say "see you in July" before running off into the distance!

* Stage 3: 8.3km ... 1h45m
* Stage 4: 9.3km ... 1h55m
* Stage 5:  12.5km ... 2h30m
* Total 30.5km ... 6h10m

Jennifer x





Looking back towards the start of the route




through National Trust Slindon Estate

At Bignor Hill


The Gurkha teams run off into the distance!