Jump to content

Methven Hornet

Coach
  • Posts

    2,268
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Methven Hornet

  1. 19 hours ago, henage said:

    Dogs been doing 1 lap for the last 5-6 weeks . Today it made a successful break for freedom at the start . Took a big early lead , realised it didn't have its bar code sat down near the kids play park and waited for the wife . Did 2 laps as well 

    Dogs seem to enjoy it so much. As usual, the run director's instructions were all but drowned out by the excited barking at the start.

    • Like 1
  2. 23 hours ago, gingerjon said:

    I had it wrong anyway, the headwind was for the first 2.5k and then behind you (ish) on the return. Not just southerners feeling the cold and I noted that a regular in a Leeds United shirt seemed to have other plans. 47th out of 191 which I will more than take.

    I achieved my highest ever finish in a Parkrun: 21st (out of 31 ?). At one point it looked as there were going to be more volunteers than runners.

  3. 5 hours ago, shaun mc said:

    Anyone done the UKs greatest ascent Park Run - Whinlatter? You finish 300 feet higher than the start, and there's nearly a km of downhill at the start, so basically the rest is uphill on forest tracks. Not looked at recent timings but very good runners (eg English Fell Racing champion) took nearly 4 minutes longer than a flat Park Run

    I shall have to try that one (next spring/summer ?)

  4. 5 hours ago, gingerjon said:

    You soft Jock.

    Just off to a seafront E=>W course so the return half will be run straight into a coastal headwind of 34mph. The feels like is set to be -3. At one point there's a ramp as well so don't talk to me about gradients.

     

    Hey! I'm only half soft Jock, I'm part soft Nigel as well. ?

    And, yes, ramps can be cruel. Perth is as flat as a pancake but it has two ramps up to the flood defences at crucial points of the course, near the start and finish.

    I've been out for three weeks with quite a prolonged bout of manflu and I've only been running since Monday. At that point I was struggling to run 5K, with a pair of lungs that felt a couple of sizes too small, but things got easier as the week went on.

    Loch Leven was just as I expected: cold with a biting wind. And quite a climb that they made you do three times. I just placed myself to ensure I got round but ended up with my highest ever finishing position, coming 21st! (the field was only 31 strong + dog). A slow time but enjoyable.

    And I beat the two runners who had worked so hard to catch and pass me. It never ceases to amaze me how people put so much effort in just to stop on the last climb. Forget being out of breath, you can breathe when you've finished!

    • Like 2
  5. Choices of a Parkrun Tourist

    The athletics club I'm a member of - Perth Road Runners - have organised a low-key (but very serious) winter competition based upon nearby Parkruns. To qualify for the final table you have to complete five nearby Parkruns during the period beginning of November to end of February. Your average time is then calculated and presented as a percentage of your best time from the Perth Parkrun (flat and fast course). It's called How Low Can You Go (which judging from last week's Christmas social is pretty low - gutter low in some cases, almost River Tay in others), and the lower your percentage, the higher up the table you finish.

    Now, as my running in 2018 has been shockingly bad, and my base time is poor, with a bit of effort I could do quite well in this. The problem is that I've only done the one run - Lochore Meadows in the old Fife coalfields - and I'm running out of opportunities to complete the challenge. With holidays, a wedding and my cross-country commitments, I have just 5 Saturdays to complete 4 runs. So, I've got to run tomorrow regardless of the promised wintery weather.

    My dilemma: Which parkrun do I choose?

    Camperdown (Dundee) 
    2°C (feels like -4°), no snow, 22mph wind (NE), elevation grading 4/5 (Perth is 1/5)

    Loch Leven (Kinross)
    0°C (feels like -5°), snow (1 flake on BBC Weather), 12mph wind (NE but very exposed), elevation grading 3.5/5,

    Kirkcaldy
    2°C (feels like -3°), no snow, 18mph wind (NE), elevation grading 3.5/5, travelling time double that of the above two.

    Dunfermline
    1°C (feels like -5°), snow (1 flake), 16mph wind (NE), elevation grading 4/5, travelling similar to Kirkcaldy

    Mm, choices, choices. I think I'm going to go for the quality of the post-race cakes and coffee, which will be Loch Leven. Quicker to get to as well.

    But it's going to be so cold.
     

  6. 43 minutes ago, 17 stone giant said:

    The best-laid plans of mice and men often go awry.

    I thought it would be fun to pick a very old thread to read.

    Good to see that people have been playing RL Administrator since at least 2010, and probably a good few years before that too. Lol

    What did happen to that "most obvious" of Ashes series? I must have missed it.

    Four nations in the UK this year, though. Woohoo!

    Thay an' a' gang aft agley.

  7. On 17/04/2018 at 8:12 AM, Hopping Mad said:

    Didn't Whitehaven have a plain chocolate away shirt in the early Eighties?

    The club's traditional all white with one chocolate, blue and gold chest/arm band is perfect for a summer sport but I had a soft spot for Haven's late Eighties home shirt design: blue with broad chocolate bands edged in gold. Somebody once told me the late Eppie Gibson came up with the idea. Is that true?

    It's on here, together with a couple of other classic Haven shirts:

    http://trustinhaven.com/merchandise-for-all/

    Other winners for me are Dewsbury's red, amber & black hoops, York's amber & black hoops and Workington's white with a broad blue chest/arm band.

    I'm not sure but I just got the impression from seeing many kits over the years that they emphasize the blue and gold more. Could be wrong.

  8. Lets hear it for Alex Neil

    Got promotion for Hamilton Academical to the scottish premier league.Now he does it again with Norwich to the English premier league.Could Manchester United come calling?

    He certainly seems to have something. What he did with Hamilton was extraordinary, and although Norwich are a much better club it is no small achievement to get them pack in the top flight.

  9. We've drawn Derry City in the Europa League qualifying.

    That should be a cracking tie; is it winnable do you think? If so, will they be at home in the next round on 17th July? I ask because I'm in mid-Wales that week (daughter's graduation) and I wouldn't mind popping along.

    St Johnstone have drawn FC Luzern from Switzerland, which is certainly more welcome than last year's tie with FC Minsk. The authorities don't seem to understand the needs of travelling football fans regarding visas.

  10. The title is always a joke but I've always enjoyed going to Scottish football far more than I ever enjoyed the equivalent over the border.  Sadly, even Queen of the South is a smidge too far for me now.

     

    There's always Gretna (2008) in the Lowland League.

  11. Proxima, by Stephen Baxter.

    Mr Baxter like to blow things up - in Moonseed he blew up Venus in the first few pages, eventually followed by Arthur's Seat, Edinburgh, Scotland, Greate Britain, and then pretty much planet Earth - and in Proxima his destructive instincts haven't deserted him. Before that, though, there is our migration to the stars to describe...

  12. Just starting Arthur C.Clarke's Rendezvous with Rama, bought on Kindle as part of the Rama omnibus.

     

    I read the first book many many years ago and loved its though-provoking nature. I read the first sequel and didn't like it quite as much, so let's see if the other two volumes are any good at all.

    Rendezvous with Rama is the first book in the series, surely? I've read it a few weeks ago after I spotted it in a charity shop - it is good and I'm looking forward to the others.

    Series:-

    Rendezvous with Rama (1972) ISBN 978-0-553-28789-9

    Rama II (1989) ISBN 978-0-553-28658-8

    The Garden of Rama (1991) ISBN 978-0-553-29817-8

    Rama Revealed (1993) ISBN 978-0-553-56947-6

     

  13. I know we're going round in circles for the umpteenth time but this is key for me.  The RFL have put forward a system that puts all the focus on mediocrity - indeed it practically celebrates it.

     

    And in doing so they have hammered the final nail in the Challenge Cup, taken away the lower tiers' only chances of genuine silverware, given up the community game and waved a white flag at international development.

     

    But, y'know, jeopardy.

     

    Sums the whole thing up.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.