Running
Running
Friday, May 3, 2024
Running in installments during the April International Marathon
Friday, December 22, 2023
December international that was mean!
December international that was mean!
While the November international marathon went largely without a hitch, the December one was different. It was done on the same route, but it got to me bad! Blame it on the new route that came into the works during the October international marathon. This new route takes you from Uthiru towards Ndumboini, and then down Kapenguria road, past Wangari Maathai institute all the way to Lower Kabete road.
The usual runs, before October, would then direct me to the left to head towards Mary Leakey school to eventually join Kanyariri road, to then run along that tarmac to some turning point on the Northern bypass for a U-turn back to Ndumboini and eventually back to the starting line. This December run, for the third time in as many months, would instead require a right turn as you join Lower Kabete road. Then the run goes along Lower Kabete road all the way just past Zen gardens, then a U-turn back to the starting line.
This new route may sound simple, but it is not. It has turned out to be one of the meanest routes that I have ever ran on. I was initiated in October, did a second run in November, and hoped to nail it in December, but it was not to be. The October debut was a struggle, as I got to learn the route. The November run was more of a confirmation that this run could be modelled into the ‘new normal’. December was to confirm that this route could be conquered and officially unveiled to the rest of the runners as the new route.
The November run, held on the twenty-fourth, was more of a memorial, and I would like to forget it in a hurry. I even did not blog about it! I left for that run on that Friday at lunch hour, instead of the usual evening run time. It had been raining like crazy in that month, as blamed on the El Nino weather phenomenon (for those who do not know better), but the real culprit was climate change (who those who know better).
In that month of November, it was raining daily, every time, every hour. We occasionally had a few hours of no rains, and it is during such hours that we had to squeeze in the runs. Friday lunch time was one such time slots. The weather was good, and I just left and went for the run, not thinking much about it. I went through the motions and finished the run at about 2.45pm after 2:16:02 on the road on that 25.25km distance. My average of 5:23min per km was good enough.
I had largely switched off during that run. I was still in deep thought over the events that had taken place that Friday. Just a few hours ago, we had all assembled at the main hall. The mood was somber, if anything, tearful. I have never been in such a quiet meeting. You could hear a pin drop. There was no cheering, no clapping, no applause, no whispering, in fact, you even felt out of place to just think of clearing your throat. The memorial service had started at ten. The departed colleague had succumbed to breast cancer. She was just a mother of one young child. The service ended at 12.30pm. I was downcast. I could not have gone for the scheduled run that evening, I was feeling drained. I decided to just go for the run after that service. I was mostly robotic in my motions that day. I was in Karatina one week later for Evalyne’s sendoff.
It is therefore the December marathon that was the run to confirm that the new route was a candidate for the new marathon route. The MOE*, cognizant that December was a short month, had scheduled the Dec run on the second Friday of December, instead of the usual last Friday of the month. Bad coincidentally, this last Friday would see me attending the last day of a three-day first aid training course. This Friday was the last day that had the practical and theory exams that determined those who finally got through to be certified as first aiders for the next one year. I could not make it for the run that should have started at four, when the exams were ending at four-thirty.
*MOE – marathoners of expert, the committee that organizes our runs
The December international marathon would finally come knocking on my door on Monday, December 11, 2023. I did not feel ready. I just did the run because it was a run day, and was also probably my last work day in the year. I was scheduled to leave the city on or after the holiday of the next day. In fact, this initial plan of starting the holiday the next day was put to the test just a week prior, when it became clear that I would have to miss the staff party on that Friday if I was to leave early. I therefore had to extend my workdays by another three days after the run due to this last minute change. Nonetheless, this was not going to change the date of the run. The run was on.
December had also started with those daily rains, day and night, anytime, every time. They kept being unpredictable. Running continued to be timed whenever the weather permitted, instead of by schedule. Finally, it was run day. The sun was bright on that Monday at noon. I was not taking any chances. I found myself in the changing room and was out for the run at 12.35pm. I had been on this route two previous times. I should have been a walk in the park, but this was no walk. It was a real run. A real international marathon, where athletes are made… and crashed! A run that you fail to take seriously at your own peril. A run can dent your records… forever. It is a run not to take lightly.
It was a good run, all the way to the U-turn on Lower Kabete road just past Zen gardens. I even extended my run slightly to the Red Hill road underpass, where I did the new U-turn. I was momentarily back to Lower Kabete road to run its length past Kenya School of Government, and the UON Lower Kabete campus. And it is that section on Lower Kabete road that did the most damage to my run on that day. The section was just hilly without a break. It went on and on and on, every leg step being more tired than the previous. It was a stretch of road section to forget. I laboured on and managed to finally get to Kapenguria road.
However, the turning left from Lower Kabete road into Kapenguria road only offered a short seven minutes relief, as I went slightly downhill. It was soon time to face the infamous 2km Kapenguria road hill. The usual marathon routes have been crafted to avoid this particular encounter. The new route unleashes this selfsame uphill in an equal measure, just when you are already tired after the long hilly section of the Lower Kabete road.
I was already deep in the run, with 19km already conquered, in just under 100 minutes. Whatever was remaining had to be done. What else was I to do? Give up on the run? Drop out! Cry out loud! That last one I actually did do.
“For crying out loud,” I cried out loud, when I reached Wangari Maathai institute where the next hill towards Ndumboini looks at you with a dare.
With no choice, other than that crying out loud, I ran on and kept going. I ignored the road repair crew who had reduced the road to a single lane for all traffic, and just kept pushing the legs uphill.
It was a relief getting to Ndumboini. From there I knew that nothing, repeat, nothing, was standing on my way to the finish line. And twenty minutes later, I finished my run at 2.50pm, after 2hr 22min and 54sec on the road. My average speed had gone down to 5:27min per km. I was happy that I was still standing after this run – another monthly run in the bag, oh, the last monthly run of 2023. Lessons learnt from these twelve monthly marathons in 2023 – running is not easily, find a recurrent run event that keeps you on the road to force you into a routine, and finally, celebrate your run achievement every time, whatever it is. You are doing better than you imagine. Merry Christmas!
WWB, the coach, Eldoret, Kenya, Dec. 22, 2023
Friday, September 8, 2023
The run that I did not finish… almost
Sunday, February 26, 2023
Valenthon that was tougher than Kili
Sunday, December 25, 2022
25 on 25
Sunday, November 27, 2022
November International boycott… when action is louder
Monday, October 24, 2022
When ‘return’ does not mean ‘return’
Monday, August 1, 2022
Sprinters delight lives up to expectations… but wait!
Monday, June 6, 2022
It rains when we run – the second international says so
It rains when we run – the second international says so
The second international marathon held on Friday, May 27 was not so much different from the previous one ran on April 28, albeit the first one being held on a Thursday and the fact that I was suffering a cold that had put me down for three days so far as I prepared for this May run. The second run still started at the Generator at a few minutes past 1615hrs, despite the run being a strictly 1600hrs run. Edu was there for this second one once more. He told us to wait for a new comer whom I had not met before. He introduced him before he joined us, as ‘he has ties to the team, real ties’. I let that puzzle slip as I saw someone approach the generator. He said a familiar ‘Hi’ to Edu, and a casual salutation in my direction. We took the start-or-run picture and we were soon off for the immediate uphill that comes just 200metres from the starting point.
It was still hot with the evening sun hardly at the horizon. We left and kept going at a relatively slow pace. I led the pack as we headed to Waiyaki way past Kabete Polytechnic, and crossed the road at the Uthiru flyover to head towards Ndumboini. We then went downhill past Wangari Maathai Institute to the river, and then faced the second uphill as we headed towards Lower Kabete road junction.
We just ran and ran in a relaxed pace. We ran some one kilometre on Lower Kabete road, diverted to the left towards Mary Leakey school and finally got to the University farm at some point in the run. We finally got to ‘the tank’, the point at which the usually muddy Uni road gets to the Kanyariri tarmac. We had just done 10km and were almost half way through the run.
Going towards Kanyariri ACK and finally the right turn towards Kanyariri Centre on the Gitaru-Wangige road was our next course in the run. It is just under the overhead busy road that we did the U-turn and were now headed back on same route to ‘the tank’, then straight on from the tank to Ndumbo. All was well until the tank, when it started to drizzle. We faced the Ndumboini hill when it was virtually raining. However, it was short lived despite it having soaked our clothes and running shoes.
We finished the run in less than twenty-minutes after passing by Ndumboini on our way back. I stopped my timer after a time duration of 2:24:43 for 22.33km in case, having starting before the starting point and finishing after the finish point.
It had hardly rained since the April run, when it had rained for the full day on that run day. We only got a reprieve in the evening to have the April marathon, which was otherwise heading for a cancellation. And keeping to the same tradition, it started raining just around eight on this Friday of the second international. It was not past eight and we had now gathered for the ‘Lakeside evening’, where revelers get to partake of delicacies from the lake region. That is the day I heard of vocs such as aliya, athola, obambla, cham, buss, osuga, akeyo, mtoo, apoth, ngege, omena and aluru (which was advertised but was not there). It was still raining heavily at ten when I got a lift home after this May run and the subsequent party.
It has hardly rained since that May run, and I can for sure say that the next rainy day shall be June 24, when we shall be having our third international marathon codename ‘Divas International’. But do not take my word for it. Just experience it in the next three weeks.
WWB, the coach, Nairobi, Kenya, June 6, 2022