Tuesday 29 April 2008

Fund it Frog

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For a while now I have been trying to work out exactly how to make my fortune from Facebook. I have not succeeded.
I've just come across something very cool though. Fund it Frog is an application whereby every time you do your shopping, at hundreds of ordinary online stores (Tescos, John Lewis, B&Q etc) it generates funds for the charity of your choice. Cool! Click here.

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Monday 28 April 2008

Solidifying ideas

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Useful meeting today with a great guy who knows his stuff and is eager to share his expertise. As always I was happy for any excuse to pore over a map and find it all dizzyingly exciting. Our expert friend shows us where
is where we will first touch down in Antarctica. We are all quite ignorant - I thought he may have to point out to us where the South Pole is!.
 
We had a lot of talk about what is the earliest we can get in, and the latest we can get out. We are pushing the very limits of the expedition season.
Earliest entry: beginning of Nov. Last exit Jan 27. Under 90 days. Ben's plan suggests we need 104 days... hmmm...
Another worry is that most planes are already full (and the cost of them was just funny). We need to get moving!

We also discussed sledge options. Ben has always been keen to backpack out, feeling it would be faster, if harder. Andy opposes this, having spent 5 months beneath one on his trek to Asia. I am just playing the 2-year old, asking "Why?" to every accepted piece of wisdom. I want Ben to break down his knowledge and to build it up from scratch with fresh eyes. There are always new and better and different ways to do things and I don't want us to do anything just because "we always do it that way".

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Sunday 27 April 2008

Perspectives

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Ben loves SOUTH because it is the longest expedition of his life. I love this expedition because it is so short and sweet.
(You can quote me on that when I am whinging furiously after a couple of weeks on the ice!)

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Friday 25 April 2008

Ultramarathon Man

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Tent 91 at the
became huge fans of
. "Run if you can," he wrote in his book about his ludicrous long-distance running achievements, "walk if you have to, crawl if you must. But never, ever stop."
This advice served us well (though did little to help my metatarsal!). So I wrote him an email when I got home to say thanks for the inspiration. Well today I got a reply! How cool! If you enjoy running, or are thinking of signing up for a fun run then have a look at his book
. And a great article
. He also carried the Olympic torch in San Francisco recently and wrote
about the experience.

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Fundraising nomination

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I have got through to the final stage on Everyclick's Nominate a Fundraiser competition. The winner gets £20,000 for the charity of their choice, so fingers crossed!

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Wednesday 23 April 2008

Wise Words from the London Underground

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This is a piece of artwork currently displayed on the London Underground. Simple, true, and so relevant to so many who follow the herd through the stations each day.

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Monday 21 April 2008

Riding to Write. Or Writing to Ride?

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Immediately after graduating from university I climbed on my bike to try to cycle round the world. Four years later I arrived back home and sat down to write a book about my experiences. I soon discovered that the riding was the easy part and that the writing was, in fact, the true arduous endurance challenge!

I climbed off my bike, sharpened my pencil, and began writing. I felt that I had prepared well for my new beginning as a writer for on the road I had read books for a couple of hours every single evening in my tent. I thought I knew what was good writing and what was not. I was ready to begin.

Words came fairly easily and, after a couple of months, my book began taking shape. Excited, I sent my synopsis and sample chapters off to agent after agent and sat back to wait for the royalties to roll in.

Reality hit hard. I did not receive rejections. Worse, I was met with a wall of indifference. Few agencies even replied. Those that did tended to use a generic rejection letter with little hint that anyone, not even the work experience tea boy, had considered my manuscript. Others replied only to say that they were not even considering new authors. The travel writing market seemed saturated. Cash cows and celebrity tales dominate. I am not whinging: it’s a competitive world!

But for a young, not famous, beginning writer the outlook was bleak. I did not give in as I believed that I had an interesting tale to tell and that I could become a good writer as well. However, after nine demoralising months I had to face reality. My book was not going to get published.

Perhaps it was stupidity to ignore the massed expertise of the entire publishing industry, perhaps it is important to be determined and to back yourself. But, whatever the reasons or the motive I decided to self publish a book about my experiences cycling the length of Africa. I knew of the stigma of self publishing, vanity publishing, of thousands of unsold, poorly produced books piled in the corner of your living room for year after year. But I also learned about the modern technology of Print on Demand where stylish looking books are instantly available on Amazon with very little financial output required. So I decided to trust myself, and to go for it.

Self publishing would give me the freedom to succeed or fail on the merits of my own writing and the opinions of those reading the book rather than on the whims of over-subscribed agents with no time to do anything but glance at a page or two. Self publishing promised to give me a new challenge. I had cycled round the world, I had written a book, now I just had to publish it, distribute it, market it and sell it as well. And, by no means least, if those who read my book actually enjoyed reading my book I felt it would be a welcome ‘up yours’ to a publishing industry where everything seemed set up to make life difficult for young people striving to become writers.

A year later I had sold over 4000 books. JK Rowling and Steven King may not be looking anxiously over their shoulder at me, but given that most bookshops are reluctant to even stock self published books I was pleased with this figure.

Even more pleasing is that, following on from my first book, my second book has been taken on by a traditional publisher, Eye Books. They are also re-releasing my first book which now gives it a chance to be sold in shops and to potentially reach a wider audience than when it was simply self-published.

With a new, bold, expedition in the pipeline for the end of 2008 and a book to follow that the future is slowly beginning to resemble one in which I may have a chance to make my living from expeditions and from books. The pleasing thing about expeditions is that your success or failure rests mainly in your own hands. Writing is not like that. But perhaps that just adds to the satisfaction of the challenge. I am just enormously relieved that I did not give up on my book when nobody in the publishing world wanted it. Self publishing my first book was extremely rewarding and a good way for would-be authors to determine whether or not their book is actually any good.

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Determination, Motivation, a refusal to yield to odds


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So you think you are having a bad day?

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The Wind of God's spirit

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I received this very interesting (and kind) response to my first book.

Hi Alastair
Just finished reading 'Moods of Future Joys' today and thoroughly enjoyed it and in some ways was challenged myself.
As a cycling expeditioner myself at one time (though on a much smaller scale), I always like to read other's stories of travel in this mode. I especially find them stimulating when the author speaks of how the journeys have changed or challenged them personally in some way and your experiences were fascinating reading. Your writing comes from the heart and is that much richer because of this.
I've always been inspired by T.E Lawrence's quotation about how those who dream by day are dangerous for they may make their dreams a reality (I'm sure you're familiar with this as it is found in the initial chapter of 'Seven Pillars of Wisdom'). I am impressed by how you have 'dreamed by day' - in my own Christian scriptures, the Bible speaks of the 'wind of God's spirit' blowing where it pleases. Most of us hide from that wind and never allow it to carry us to a place where we can discover all that we have been created to be, leading lives which are diminished because we do not let ourselves engage with the adventure that is life, and the strong sense to live it in all its fullness. You have responded admirably to the challenge to your spirit that I would dare to venture in saying, could well have a divine origin. Having completed your journey around the world, I am sure that in future you will be less shackled by the anxieties and fears that often cripple our lust for life. May your journey around the world so strengthen and inspire you, that your future journey through life is enlivened by it.
Reverend ....

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Quote of the Day

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I've never seen a monument erected to a pessimist.
Paul Harvey

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Sunday 20 April 2008

Maps, tea, laughter

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Round at Ben's with Ben and Andy. Maps out for the first time: always a highlight of any adventure!
First real chat and planning. Great to slowly begin to feel a little involved. Could we use giant Zorb balls to travel , to avoid crevasses?! Edible pants, edible sledge..! Good laughs.

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Thursday 17 April 2008

Sharing the dream

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I have begun voraciously reading Antarctic literature (I'll put together a list of the good ones eventually). I do this to learn, to pick up advice. I feel that the more I know of the history of expeditions there, of other men's struggles and victories and tragedies, the better equipped I shall be and the more right I will feel to step foot on that land. In the same way that you would only feel a thrill to walk out onto the turf at Elland Road if you knew the history and the significance and if you had ever dared to hope about it.

Saturday 12 April 2008

Marathon des Sables 2008

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"What counts in battle is what you do when the pain sets in" - John Short

"It's not that we have a short time to live but that we waste a lot of it" - Seneca

"Run if you can, walk if you have to, crawl if you must, but never stop" -
(this became our tent motto)

My shoulder hurts from the
. I have also forgotten to buy peanuts.
I'm queuing to check in my luggage at Gatwick airport and everyone around me looks fit, keen and organised. It's easy to tell who's off to run the MdS: most of us have the
. Many walks of life, as many different motives to be here, all united by one small red bag that will carry everything we need for the next
. I wish I was as fit, keen and organised as all those around me.

God it feels good to be back in Africa again. Good, really good. Probe a little deeper in the bland, empty, newly-built town of
and you find hanging haunches of red-white meat, motionless men sitting at tables of steaming mint tea glasses, cages of chickens waiting suspicious-eyed for their turn on the weighing scales and the chop. Piles of Brazil flip-flops ("hello my friend! What is your best price?") and fake Barcelona shirts. Curly-toed slippers and sacks of spices, mounds of dried dates and cheap plastic combs. It's good to be back.

There are no clouds in the sky to liven up the golden sunset behind the date palms so I head back to the hotel to do some real damage to the all-you-can-eat-because-you're-jolly-well-going-to-need-it buffet.

No nerves about the race, I'm just so happy to be out here. Today we drive out to the emptiness of the desert so I am conscious of the need to savour all this now. The cool blue swimming pool. Enjoy this now. The scent of honeysuckle, running water and a comfy bed. Enjoy this now. My feet are fine, my belly is full. Enjoy it all now...

The drive out to the desert took hours. For the first time since I returned home from my bike trip I really felt a yearning for the road, for the freedom, for the silence, the nights beneath the stars, the interactions at tiny wadi villages, for well water, Coca Cola signs and for all the strangers you meet and smile at as they sit on their haunches watching, watching, waiting, waiting for something to happen in their lives.
We left the villages behind, left the fluttering, scurrying plague of plastic bags, left the road and arrived at our camp on a grey gravel plain looking towards the
that awaited us on Day 1.

(The dunes of Day 1 seen on Google Earth)
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A slung canopy of coarse black sacking and a couple of rugs -Tent 91- becomes home from home for 8 of us for the next week. We pack our bags, and re-pack and then then do it all again for we have over a day of admin to kill and a new manic obsession with trimming weight and maximising calories. We tell my brother that his pack is ridiculously heavy and then eat most of his Jelly Babies to "help him out." He even throws away his Golf World magazine to save some weight - this must be getting serious!

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Every day we are woken at dawn so killing time becomes as integral to the week as sweating, eating and popping blisters. It is a relief to actually begin racing. Each morning the organisers ensured that we did not begin running until the sun was sufficiently high and fierce. They combined Gallic inefficiency, a penchant for long speeches, several multilingual renditions of 'Happy Birzday', and an announcement that one racer had just become a Dad with a daily blast of 80's Rock Music heralding the start of the 23rd MdS [
]. Helicopters swooped low, we jumped and danced and cheered and all 800 of us set off towards the sand dunes, relieved that all the waiting and dreaming, all the training and dreading and wondering was finally over.

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The whole event was far more exciting, fun,
and moving than I had anticipated. The dunes were huge and beautiful and hot and hard -everything that I had hoped for- and so by Checkpoint 1 I was hopping about with enjoyment. This was the only Checkpoint I ever sat down at. I sorted out my fresh water bottles, taped some hotspots on my feet, ate a bit, then kept moving.
All of us in Tent 91 had agreed that it was wise to begin the race slowly, and all of us initially wanted to achieve no more than to just finish the race. Across a broad gravel plain, up and down some more dunes, past a few vomiters, share my water with a dehydrated Aussie who had run out and then there in front of me lay the end of Day 1. It had been so much fun and I grabbed my night's water supplies and headed eagerly to Tent 91 to share experiences with the rest of the guys.

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On Day 2 the heat rose, above 40C, and I got my first blister. Water was becoming more precious. I peed only once all day, knocked back loads of salt tablets and gritted my teeth across a never-ending shimmering gravel plain that pulsed heat all the way to the end of the day. Whilst huffing and labouring, slathered in
, yearning for my next issue of mineral water, I shuffled past a lady herding her goats. She was barefoot, relaxed and entirely comfortable with her environment. I realised then how unsuitable pasty Brits were for this race. She was tough and her life was tough. She is poor, I am rich. She was working, I was on holiday. She was smiling, I was not.

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By Day 3 I began to get competitive. I was beginning to move up the field and decided to push harder: I knew that I was easily capable of finishing the event so I might as well try to do as well as I could. The day was more like running on the beach, with stretches of flat, soft sand that wore me down as dehydration pounded at my head and I felt the consequences of running much more than on other days. 'Running' is putting it a bit strong: all of us developed our own pace of 'Sahara Shuffle' and your position on any day was determined by whether you were able to keep shuffling when all about you had been reduced by the heat or sand to a mere walk or march. The best way to imagine the speed of the 'Sahara Shuffle' is to think of the pace that footballers trot up and down the sideline of the pitch before they come on as substitutes. It is the slowest possible jog that you can do once you break out of a walk. It is very, very slow. It is all that you can achieve in the Sahara desert.

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The MdS is entirely about body management. The key is a total awareness of your mind and body and the discipline to take control of any situations that arise.
If your feet hurt: stop and tape them up. If you do not you will regret it later.
If you are tired, think 'why'. Deal with it. Drink more. Eat salt. Eat
. Deal with the situation. If you do not you will slow down and lose places.
If your mind is weak and tired, deal with it. Get a grip of yourself. Remember your motivations. Eat painkillers. Stick on the heels of somebody who overtakes you and do not let them escape until you are strong again. Listen to music and escape it all. Quit whingeing and run faster - it's the best way to get the day over and done with!

Music helped me that 3rd day as the thermometer nudged the high 40's,
reminding me of the majesty of the surroundings I was fortunate enough to be be shuffling through, the
blasting me back up the field, and the
making me laugh at the unsuitability of the lyrics ("...the misery dictionary, page after page after page..."). Music, Nurofen, stubbornness, the end. Tent 91, banter,
and the amazing amounts of pus squirting from poor George's blisters all helped to cheer me up in preparation for the big day: 75km awaited us in the morning.

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I felt nervous in the morning. An
had told me that the race really began with this stage. I worried that my lack of fitness would be shown up today. 75km through the Sahara desert. But I also believed that this was the sort of stage where I could do well. It was time to find out.
I ran, faster than I would have liked, to the foot of the large
jebel
(mountain). My strategy was to push hard until it was too hot, march fast but steady through the heat of the day, then leg it until sunset and just grit out the darkness until I finished. I had no watch or GPS, I never looked at my map, and I just tried to think only of the 12 or 14km until the next checkpoint. Never think about the end. Just keep going. Checkpoint after checkpoint after checkpoint and eventually the miles will lie behind you and in your memory rather than ahead of you and in your fears. "All the life you have or ever will have is" this checkpoint, the next checkpoint, this checkpoint, "over and over again (I hope) and so you had better be very thankful for it."

Up and over the
jebel
. Through the sand dunes. Across a gravel plain. Keep up with the blokes ahead, but don't get caught up in a race too early. Across a salt plain. Up another
jebel
. Pace yourself, take it steady. And all the time I managed to keep on shuffling. I barely walked at all and just kept singing to myself "
keep on running, keep on running
" which must have been irritating for those I passed and a good incentive for those who passed me to crack on out of earshot. I began pushing myself harder and harder, developing a dogmatic mantra of "don't stop, don't stop". I paused at checkpoints for no more than a minute. I ate on the move. I was too hot to need to pee. I ate salt. I kept drinking. I turned the music up to full volume, I ate painkillers, and I drove myself on across a shimmering plain towards Checkpoint 4 with the mantra of "
don't ******* stop, don't *******stop
" running through my head. Music and painkillers: a powerful cocktail. Head down. Think of nothing. Just keep moving.
Swing your arms, stretch your stride to steal every extra inch, save seconds and hoard them into minutes, keep moving, keep competing. I once read an Army book about a long course the author was trying to pass. The advice from that was "Don't stop, for if you stop once you'll stop twice". So it became a point of pride for me to try to barely stop moving, to never sit down and, above all to never, never, ever ******* stop!

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Sunset and I was racing well. I was running now, faster than I had done all race, faster than I had done for months. I still felt great. I even thought that perhaps I could finish before night fell and that really was an incentive to get moving. With 5 miles to go a fellow Brit caught me up. We did not speak (for I had my headphones on full volume). We did not need to speak and I just tucked in on his footsteps and tried to keep up with the brutal pace he was setting. Settling into a rhythm we began to push each other harder and harder. The sun was gone, the glowsticks bounced on our packs, our weak head torches picked a vague route through the gravel and soft sand. And we ran. We were racing for the finish and bed. I felt absolutely glorious. Because of my injury I had not run this fast for 9 weeks. We were hurtling along far faster than 3-hour marathon pace. It was so absurd and so magnificent and I will never forget the adrenalin and the gratitude I felt to be able to push hard like that. It was slightly too good to be true and, about half a kilometre from the finish I began retching violently and had to let my fellow Brit push on alone to the finish. A couple of minutes later I crossed the line, shook hands with my lunatic pacemaker (thanks, Henry!) and felt enormously relieved that the brutal day was over. I ate but could not sleep because of nausea and because the painkillers were wearing off. My knees and hips throbbed. But I enjoyed welcoming in all of our tent members and hearing their tales. We were all so chuffed to have got the big stage out of the way.

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Because we had done well we had the whole of the next day off as the long stage had a 34-hour time limit (I took 10h20). We ate and slept and traded Peperamis for Haribo and dehydrated porridge for dehydrated chilli con carne. We popped our blisters and filled them with iodine. Tom gave himself a huge red iodine moustache and we slobbed and laughed and began to dare to think about the end. Many poor, brave souls were still plodding on, with the last people not arriving until sunset on the NEXT afternoon! The entire camp turned out to applaud the last ones home, because to finish so late meant they had suffered and endured much longer than all the speedier runners*.

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The next day we only had to run a marathon. That I say '
only
' is a great indication of how the MdS allows people to expand their parameters and their perception of their own boundaries. I found it to be the hardest stage of all. I pushed hard and made it round in about 4.5 hours, but on the last leg I was absolutely haemmorrhaging time on the scoresheet. I could not run, I wanted only to lie down in the sand and pour water all over me. I shouted at myself, I made pacts with the devil, and I tried to just keep forcing my legs onwards. I marched as fast as I could for I could not make my legs run anymore. Seeing the camp, the end of the day, salvation from the pain and from my slowness was a gigantic boost and I managed to run fast to the end,
thumping in my ears as I crossed the line. The biggest problem of the day was that my old foot injury came back, pain shooting up my shin as I ran. Still, nothing that painkillers could not overcome for just one day more!

That evening was my favourite of the whole event. I had loved the desert, thrilled over the thickness of the stars, and relaxed at not hearing a telephone ring once. So for an 18 piece orchestra to appear, (looking clean and female and lovely and distracting us from their music) and to lie back in the desert and stare up to the stars as they played was absolutely incredible, if a bit surreal. The first piece of music they played was simply gorgeous. Unfortunately I cannot remember what it was! The nearest approximation I have found is
.

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The camp rang with end-of-term-itis. People recklessly threw away every possession they could spare. We ate all our remaining food, squeezed trainers on to long-suffering feet and lifted our packs for the last time. Just 17km remained. Nothing could stop anybody anymore. I ate far too many painkillers, a few Haribo, and limped on to the end. My legs were empty of gas, my foot hurt and I was happy to see the final finishing line. Everyone in Tent 91 had pushed so hard to get where they had and it was a proud feeling to share a team photo at the end, as well as a photo with my bro, a couple of charity snaps, and a picture for
whose brilliant shoes had ensured that all of us got through with minimal blister issues. Now, back to that all-you-can-eat buffet. It was going to take a beating from us all!

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I was chuffed to finish the race. I hope that it can generate some support for
(donations welcome
). I did well in the end (just missed 100th spot but got into the Top 10 Brits) but I have a couple of regrets. I wish I had been able to train for the event. Being injured meant that I missed out on 2 months' training. It is the sort of event you want to be able to give your all to. I wish also that I had gone far harder on Day 1 and Day 2. I over-estimated the difficulty of the race and wish I had legged it from the start. But overall I was very happy with my performance.

Home again it is fun to reminisce, especially as my foot turned out to be broken and so now I am in a plaster and therefore
forced
to sit still and reminisce. The MdS made me realise how much I had enjoyed my 4 years on the road, and made me dream of more. But I also realised that the massive appeal of the MdS is how accessible it is. Yes, it is expensive (I recommend you try and sign up through a different agency than the pricey UK one). Yes, it is tough. But it is not
that
hard. It is a race accessible to all. People in their 60's walked it, finished it knackered and were rightly proud and fulfilled. Racing snakes pushed hard, tested themselves, and were proud of that. Even those who did not finish (perhaps that should be '
especially
those who did not finish') learned so much about endurance and determination. People certainly expanded their parameters. But the greatest attraction I can see of the MdS is that it squeezes a lifetime of adventure into just one week. For those too busy at work, too tied by their families, too scared, too lazy or too busy to take years away from the conveyor belt I would highly recommend the MdS to you. It compresses so much into a short space of time. There is the dreaming, the planning and preparing, there is a taste of new cultures and foreign landscapes, there is hardship and doubt and difficulty. There is triumph and relief and camaraderie. There is the sweet feeling of coming home more grateful and appreciative than the person who left for the race ten days ago.
The toughest race on Earth? It is always possible to run to blind, collapsing exhaustion, even during a 3km fun run. So there is perfect scope for pushing yourself hard in the MdS. But it really is not that hard to finish (unless you are injured). If you are fit and healthy, if you could run an ordinary marathon (at any speed), if you've got some determination, then YOU can do this event. Go for it! It was lots of fun.

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I ran this race to support
. I was due to run the London marathon too, but now my foot is in a cast I have had to postpone that until 2009.






See my photos from the race
...
There are also some really great pictures from the 2008 race
.

* whilst I feel that, in some ways, the slower you finish the MdS the greater the praise you deserve, I also feel that allowing generous cut-off times that mean you can walk the whole event greatly undermines their claim for it to be the "toughest race on Earth". I believe that the cut-off times should be such that everyone has to finish the 75km stage in under 24 hours. The marathon stage should then begin at 9am. To give people a full day off is, frankly, soft. I still enjoyed it though, especially when we received a can of Pepsi as an incentive for us to hand in our old, crumpled race numbers and collect fresh ones!

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