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Sunday, 28 September 2025

Club Training Monday 29th September - Brancumhall

Monday's session is at Brancumhall. As usual, bring your road shoes to run to Brancumhall and your choice of off road shoes (which someone will take from the club to Brancumhall in their car) for the cross-country session. Each full lap of Brancumhall is approximately 800m. The session is 5 x 1 lap at 4k/5k effort (don't think in terms of pace for cross-country reps as the underfoot conditions dictate the pace). Stand/jog on the spot for 1 minute to recover between reps. For those doing the GSR next weekend, this will be the last hard session. Thursday's run will be a pre-race run with strides.

Alan

Thursday, 25 September 2025

Club Training Thursday 25th September

Thursday's session is a threshold session on the Sainsburys circuit. The session is 6 x 6 minutes at threshold with a 2 minute jog recovery. It's a long session but a short warm-up, taking the direct route to Sainsburys main gate, on the far side of which the session starts. Do the reps in a clockwise direction. As per usual, be very conscious of the level of effort which defines "threshold" i.e. the effort at which you could speak a couple of words only, the point at which breathing noticeably increases, the effort you could sustain for about an hour if you were in a race situation.

Alan

Sunday, 21 September 2025

NATIONAL XC RELAYS

This years National XC Relays are again in Cumbernauld on Sat 25th Oct.

Young females @ noon, Young males @ 12.40, Ladies @ 13.20 and Men @ 1445

Cost is £6.50 for young athletes, Senior races £7.50

Make sure your SA membership is up to date.

I need names by Tuesday 7th Oct as this is pre-entry

If you wish entered please leave your name HERE. Those already registered are listed HERE.

Club Training Monday 22nd September

For Monday, we return to the most local of hills at Avondale. Take the usual warm-up via Churchill Avenue and Lidl, starting the reps on the wide section of pavement after the side road junction. This week we are increasing the number of reps to 12 x 45 secs at 5k pace with a jog down recovery. As usual for this session, it should be possible for everyone to start each rep together. Think about a strong, powerful stride with only a slight forward lean. This is running-specific strength training rather than trying to run up the hill as efficiently as possible.

Thursday will be a threshold session.

Alan

Saturday, 20 September 2025

WEST DISTRICT XC RELAYS

The West District XC relays will take place on Saturday 11th Oct

Venue is Ayrshire Athletics Arena, Kilmarnock

Young females 11.00am    Young males    11.45am

Junior, senior & master Ladies  1.00pm  Junior, senior & master men   2.15pm

Young athletes are 3 per team @ £16.50 per team

Ladies 3 per team at £7 per head, Men 4 per team at £7 per head

Make sure your Scottish Athletics number is up to date

I need names by Tuesday 23rd Sept as this is a pre entry event

If you wish entered please leave your name HERE. Those already registered are listed HERE

Wednesday, 17 September 2025

Club Training Thursday 18th September

Continuing with a mix of threshold and VO2max sessions in this few months heading into the Winter racing season, Thursday's session is back at Langlands Place. The session is 5 x 800m at 4k/5k pace with a 90 second stand/jog around recovery. Being an out and back session, do be careful making the U-turn at the end of Langlands Place. As each rep is identically out and back, it is particularly important that you try to run every rep in the same time within about 1 second i.e. consistency is key!

Warm up via Strathaven Rd and Sainsburys. Cool down using Greenhills Rd and Strathaven Rd.

Alan

Sunday, 14 September 2025

Not the TTC 2025

Today, 19 Harriers traveled to Loch Ard, just outside Aberfoyle in the Trossachs for the "Not the TTC" Sunday run. The idea was to keep the spirit of the Trossachs Training Camp going with a long easy run in beautiful surroundings.  Two routes were planned, an 11.8km loop and a 21.8km loop. The purpose of a long run is to carry out one and a half to two and half hours of easy, aerobic running. The distance does not matter, it is time running at an easy effort that makes the difference. Therefore, those running at a slower pace on the shorter loop got just as much training benefit as those running at a slightly faster (but still easy) pace on the longer loop. Russell and Frances led two packs on the shorter route, whilst Eddie and I led two packs on the longer route. As the pack leaders had carried out a recce last Sunday, there were no navigational mishaps this year!

Both routes were extremely undulating and scenic but with excellent, firm forest roads underfoot. The weather was the most settled of the weekend with overcast skies and no wind. Those of us on the longer loop got a little bit damp at the highest part of the course as we were at the same level as the clouds briefly.

About two and a half hours after starting, all the packs had arrived back at the forest car park where we had started and everyone seemed to have enjoyed the run (even those who had been coaxed into the longer route pack). We all headed a mile or two along the road to Aberfoyle where we descended on the cafe in the main car park, taking the cafe owners somewhat by surprise, for soup, burgers and coffees before hitting the road home.

All in all, this was an enjoyable outing for the Harriers and is something that we can perhaps repeat every few months through the winter to provide a change from the streets of EK and to keep the motivation for the vital long-runs going.

More photos from Frances in this album.
Alan


Club Training Monday 15th September - Brancumhall

Monday is the first Brancumhall cross-country session of this season (these sessions are every second Monday from now until the National Cross-Country in late February). Refer to this post from last week for an explanation of why these cross-country sessions (and races) are an important part of our winter training. 

As this may well be the first time in off-road shoes or spikes for a while, the session may seem like a slight step backwards from the most recent threshold session we did on the road a few weeks ago. However, this is to allow the muscles and tendons to adjust to running on soft ground in different shoes and not to introduce any injuries by introducing too big a change too soon.

The session is 4 x 6 minutes at threshold with a 2 minute jog recovery (a few weeks ago we did a 6 x 6 minutes threshold on the road). Use the usual lap on the outside perimeter of the football pitches in an anti-clockwise direction. As always, remember that threshold is a level of effort; not a specific pace. On soft ground, your threshold effort will be at a slower pace than on a flat road.

For those new to Brancumhall, the session is around the outside perimeter of Brancumhall football pitches on the grass. The way the weather has been this past few days, the conditions will be soft to very soft underfoot. A trail shoe, spikes or a fell shoe with rubber studs would be best in those conditions. If you are wearing spikes or fell shoes for the session, then bring your usual road shoes too such that you can run to/from Brancumhall. Usually, some kind person will take their car from the club to Brancumhall and transport your off-road shoes for you.

Alan

Wednesday, 10 September 2025

Club Training Thursday 11th September

The time has come. Thursday's session is at the Harriers "track" at Langlands Place. We are building towards a winter racing season that starts with fast, short XC relays and peaks with the Brampton 10-miler. Now we are re-introducing the speed sessions that will awaken the speed that makes the slower pace of longer races more comfortable. The session is 10 x 400m at 4k/5k pace with a 1-minute stand/jog around recovery. Warm-up and cool down to/from Langlands Place as per usual, along the Strathaven Rd, around by Sainsburys and up the hill to Langlands Place.

Remember that Monday is our first Brancumhall XC session of this year, so get your off road shoes brushed off ready for use.

Alan 

Sunday, 7 September 2025

Club Training Monday 8th September

Monday's session is a continuation of the hill rep session. I think that it is too dark to do this session at Langlands. Therefore we will do the session at Avondale; not such a steep hill but good enough and close to the club. The session is 10 x 45 seconds fast (5k pace) with a jog down recovery. This session builds strength and develops running efficiency. The warm-up is relatively short and is down Churchill Avenue from the NEL roundabout, around Lidl and up onto Avondale. The reps start on the wide pavement on the far side of the first junction off on Avondale.

The Winter is all about building endurance and strength. Our cross-country races play a big part in that, supplemented with off-road sessions. To that end, our Brancumhall cross-country sessions begin on Monday 15th September and continue at fortnightly intervals to the week before the National Cross Country. How do these sessions build strength? Because, unless the ground is very dry and hard, running on soft ground requires most of the forward propulsion to come from muscle strength with very little coming from muscle (and shoe) elasticity as it does when running on a hard surface. The soft ground absorbs the load that would usually stretch the muscles and tendons elastically and reduces the spring that comes from those stretched fibres. However, when moving back into the road racing (or track or trail) season, the strength built over the winter in this way supplements the elastic propulsion, making us faster, more efficient and also stronger to handle hilly courses. So cross-country is an important part of our training.

Alan

Not the TTC Sunday Run - Further Details

Today, the pack leaders completed their reconnaissance of the two loops we will use for next Sunday's Not the TTC Sunday run. There will be an approximately 11km loop and 21km loop. The faster packs will do the 21km loop. The names we have so far are listed here. It is not too late to sign-up, in fact we can take names right up to the night before so that I have enough time to work out the packs. Use this form to sign up.

We will be having a light lunch at one of the local cafes or pubs in Aberfoyle. We will just play that by ear on the day depending on the final numbers and weather.

The plan is to meet at the Loch Ard Forest car park in Milton at 10:30 next Sunday14th September. The car park is a mile or two through Aberfoyle on the Kinlochard road (B829). After a mile or two, the road forks to the left, signposted with a brown tourist sign "Loch Ard Forests". Take this left fork and follow this narrow, single track access road round to the right, following the Loch Ard Forest signs at the junction, and keep bearing right past some cottages and houses on your right. At the last of the white cottages on your right, the road forks straight and right. Go straight onto the forest road which drops down a slope past some parking spaces on your left (drive past those). Keep going for another few hundred metres to the main car park which will be up on your left. This is where the runs start. The precise parking/starting point is shown in this Google Map. Easiest option is to follow the route to this point on Google Maps.

All the routes are suitable for road shoes and are good forest roads. Dress for the weather. Any questions, let me know. Your pack leaders (Russell, Frances and Eddie) can also help you, having been on the recce today.

Alan

Saturday, 6 September 2025

The 2025 to 2026 Cross Country Season

We now have details of the dates (and some of the venues) of all of the championship and West League Cross-Country races for this year. Those events with GP in brackets are part of our club Grand Prix. A ll of the venues are reasonably local. Cross-country races are the reason for the existence of "Harriers" clubs and are generally events you can only do through being a member of a Scottish Athletics affiliated club such as ours. They are also the basic method of winter strength and endurance training used by all endurance runners through the years, whether racing on the track or roads over the Spring to Autumn. So lets have a great representation from Calderglen Harriers in this coming season.

Alan

11th October - West District XC Relays - Kilmarnock (GP) See separate blog post for entries.

25th October - National XC Relays - Cumbernauld (GP)

1st November - West XC League Race 1 (venue tbc maybe 1/3 will be GP)

8th November - National Short Course XC - Lanark (GP)

22nd November - West XC League Race 2 (venue tbc maybe 1/3 will be GP)

6th December - West District XC Championship - Erskine (GP)

10th January - Inter District XC - Alexandra Park, Glasgow

17th January - West XC League Race 3 (venue tbc maybe 1/3 will be GP)

31st January - National Masters XC - Tollcross Park

21st February - National XC Championship - Calendar Park, Falkirk (GP)

Wednesday, 3 September 2025

Club Training Thursday 4th September - Auldhouse 5k - the dark one

Thursday is the final Auldhouse 5k of the year. This one starts and finishes under the bright lights of Auldhouse meaning we have a slightly longer warm-up and cool down. Depending on the weather, this can be quite a fast one as there is no need to be cautious running up the steep hill into Auldhouse Cross as the finish is 100 or so metres around the corner in Auldhouse.

As usual, register for training as normal as this registration list forms the start list in the timing app. Do wear bright, reflective clothing and do bring a head torch if you want.

Alan

Tuesday, 2 September 2025

World Masters Mountain Running Championships - Meduno, Italy

Emerging into the sun at the summit of the climb

I'd procrastinated about entering this due to my propensity for illness and injury, usually triggered by me committing to a major event or indeed any overseas event. I had entered a few years ago when it was in Ireland but personal circumstances meant I could not go. However, 3 or 4 months ago, figuring that although I could be fitter next year, I will also be another year older and inherently slower, I made up my mind that it had to be done. As this was my first year in the new 5 year age group (M60), it was likely to be my best chance of being a counter in the GB M60 team (3 to count). So I got an entry for the event, accredited by British Masters Athletics, and a month or so ago, I organised the flights to Venice and booked accommodation (which immediately resulted in my first cold for months the next day!).

San Daniele del Friuli old town

This year's event was in Meduno in the province of Udine in the foothills of the Alps quite close to the Austrian border. Meduno is a small village and could not hope to accommodate the influx of runners from around the world. Therefore, participants were spread far and wide throughout the province. I had found a hotel in the medieval hilltop town of San Daniele del Friuli about 25km from Meduno. I arrived there on the Wednesday with my race (the classic 14km up/down) being on the Sunday. Nowadays there are three races in the championship; an uphill race (5km, 800m ascent), the long distance race (34km, up/down 1850m) and the classic up/down race (14km but last minute changed to 15km, up/down 740m). Originally the event alternated between an uphill championship race only for one year and the classic up/down race the next year, each event being hosted by a different country each year. But now the popularity of this type of running and the fact that more runners are entering from the oldest age groups means they have both events plus the long-distance event every year.

I had originally toyed with the idea of doing the uphill race only as I am mince at running downhill fast on technical terrain. However, I am glad I didn't as much of the descent in the up/down race was very runnable (for me) and, on speaking to another member of the GB team who did the uphill race, it was absolute carnage due to the extremely muddy conditions in torrential rain and the fact that the organisers allowed poles to be used in this race, which is fine if you know how to use poles but chaos if you don't, which was apparently the case, with people slipping down the hill and landing on top of each other and getting poked and hit by wildly flailing poles.

I decided to do a full course recce on the Thursday, walking the uphills to save energy and jogging the flat and downhill bits. The purpose was mainly to decide which shoes to wear for the race but also to get an idea how to pace it. The Thursday was torrential rain and thunderstorms; not the best conditions to be going up a mountain but needs must.

Typical ascent path

The recce was a great decision as I was able to see that the first 3.5km of the ascent was mainly a single track (i.e. one person wide) slippy, muddy, rocky, tree rooty nightmare. For those who know the WHW, think of the worst parts of the loch-side but tilted up onto a slope of 20 to 30%! Talking of which, about half way up the ascent, passing through a mountain hamlet, I met one of the organisers who was marking out the course and spoke to him for a few minutes. Turns out he did the WHW race in 2017 as a qualifier for the Western States 100 miler in California that year. A seriously fast guy but very definitely at the younger end of the masters spectrum (M35 in this case). The ascent topped out at about the 5km to 6km mark (i.e. 740m of climbing over about 5km as the first 500m of the race was on the mainly downhill main street of the village). The entire ascent was in dense forest and reached an altitude of about 1000m above sea level. The forest at least gave some protection from the wind, rain and thunder. A water station was positioned in a summer pasture farmstead at the summit which, unfortunately, the course dropped down into and then climbed back out of up a steep grassy bank. Just when you thought you were finished with climbing for a while!

The climb out from the summit water station

Thereafter it was 7km of gravel and rock farm track steeply downwards with a few short level bits and a further 1km ascent near the bottom just to turn the screw. Then the second part of the nightmare began. The course veered off the farm track onto another single file single track signposted "Dangerous Descent!!!". And indeed it was. Steep, mud on rock, single track, twisting and turning, jumps off rocks and a few random rock steps thrown in for the final 3k. I would just have to take my time on this bit, knowing that I would be losing places left right and centre in the race. Finishing without breaking an ankle was now my objective. I now knew that I would be wearing the Inov8 Mudtalon trail shoes in the race that I had worn for the recce. They wouldn't be great on the gravel and rock farm track but would hopefully keep me on my feet in the mud (they didn't).



The Classic 14km race day (Sunday) was the finest weather of the week with not a cloud in the sky and temperatures rising to 26C. However, this would make no difference to the underfoot conditions as it had rained to a greater or lesser extent every day since I arrived and the course was deep in the forest, shaded from the sun. Add to that, the multiple races that had run over parts of the course on Friday and Saturday, it was guaranteed to be even muddier than on the recce. Before leaving the hotel to drive to the course, I did a final check of the event web site for the briefing notes to see where I had to be and when. The headline presented to me was good news and bad news. The good news, there had been so much carnage in the final descent of the long-distance race on the Saturday that the organisers had decided to by-pass the final 2km of the treacherous descent on today's Classic race. The bad news, this added another km onto the course so it was now a 15km race. The start had also been pushed back a further half hour, I guess to allow the course markers to be moved and marshals briefed. I uploaded the new gpx route onto my Garmin and tried to work out what the changes involved. It seemed that we were now descending for 2 or 3km on a tarmac mountain road with multiple hairpin bends (it turned out we were only on this road for the final 1.5 to 2km and were mainly in a field and forest to the side of the road) and approaching the finish from the opposite direction to that originally intended on the main street.

Race day - the Classic ascends the mountain in the middle of the picture

Needless to say, I was feeling rotten on the Sunday morning for some reason (I can tell you now that as I am writing this, I am loaded with the cold, coughing and snottering, so that was what was developing on the Sunday; my health jinx continues) and struggled to muster a warm-up. The classic race was split into 3 waves setting off at half hour intervals. First off at 9am were M35 to M50, followed by the F35 to F75 at 0930 and finally the M55 to M75 wave at 10am. We all had to sign in to the call area and have our kit checked a half hour before each race (e.g. all gels had to have your race number written on them so that any litter found on the course could be attributed to a specific runner and that runner disqualified, checking compliance of national vest/t-shirts, front and rear numbers/age categories displayed properly, etc. this is the real deal as far as championships are concerned with medalist and random doping control at the end). We were held there until 15 minutes before the start and then led down to the start pen where there was enough space to jog about and do some strides and drills. The announcer provided us with some more welcome gems about the course change whilst we waited i.e. exactly 500m before the finish line, there was a flight of 42 steps to run down and to be very careful! In my warm-up I had only recced, the last 250m of the revised finish unfortunately so did not see those steps.

A few minutes before the start, the field of 207 M55 to M75+ runners advanced to the line and a few seconds before 1000, the starter set us off (if he had waited any longer, he would not have been heard for the church bells that rang on the hour!). As expected, it was a cavalry charge for the first 550m along the main street, being pushed, clipped and concentrating like crazy not to be tripped. Then we veered off the main street to the right onto the steep trail, initially two abreast and after a further 50m or so it funneled down to single file. And that was the race decided as it was more or less impossible to pass for the next 5km, not that I was feeling up to passing anyone. It was a constant slog up. On the steeper bits, the person in front of my little pack would walk and we would all walk. When he started running again, we all started running again. Meanwhile packs in front were doing the same but presumably at a faster pace as they had disappeared. I was light headed and dizzy and kept stumbling and cursing myself and couldn't understand it.

Climbing the steps through the mountain hamlet

After we passed through the mountain hamlet, running up a set of stone stairs between buildings to join the dirt trail again, it got even steeper. I became acutely aware of what was a several thousand foot drop off to the left of the single file trail, albeit covered in dense vegetation which would stop anyone falling far, as I was about to prove. I continued to stagger and slip on the muddy path and then all of a sudden, my left foot slipped off the edge and I followed it. Over I went, tangled up in the undergrowth. An Italian or French runner (blue vest, wasn't sure which) grabbed me and pulled me back up onto the path and I carried on only one place further down in my little pack but with a few scrapes and cuts. Par for the course. Somewhere around 4.5k, the single track path joined a farm track and continued to climb through a series of hairpin bends. At this point, I started moving through the pack and cleared them all but apart from the odd straggler, there was nobody else in sight. At the summit, we emerged from the forest to be faced with an official photographer and the drinks station in the farmstead. I caught one more Italian runner at the drinks station and then passed him a few hundred metres into the descent where I was initially moving quite well at sub 3:50/km (not that I was looking at my watch during the race). The descent was relentless and I had a few near ankle twisters on rolling rocks obscured by the dappled sunlight through the trees. Occasionally I thought I was catching someone only to find it was a back marker in the ladies' race which had started a half hour earlier. Then it was that 1km climb I mentioned previously and my quads had had enough. I lost a lot of speed here. When we started descending again, I was much slower and was caught by a couple, including another GB runner who moved me down from 4th GB to 5th GB. Then about 4km from the finish, we veered off onto the "Dangerous Descent" path. I was running quite fast for me on this sort of steep, treacherous, muddy, rocky single track terrain but an Italian and then Spanish runner came flying passed and disappeared. After 1km of this we crossed a tarmac mountain road into a field and followed a narrow footpath down through the field and then another wooded area before eventually emerging onto the road again. At this point we were descending on the tarmac road for about 1.5 to 2km. For those familiar with the Bracklinn Falls road in Callander, it was like that but with 180 degree hairpin bends every so often. Punishing on the feet in trail shoes. I wasn't being caught or overtaken on this bit at least. Then, with 500m to go as promised by the announcer, we turned sharp left through a hole in the wall onto a flight of irregular steps that zig zagged down through the village. More caution and caught and passed by at least one; I can't remember now, my eyes were too focused on where my feet were going. We emerged onto the mountain road again with 250m to go, still descending for about 50m, left turn onto the main street for about 150m and then left turn up the school steps and the finishing straight. At least I didn't have to get involved in a sprint finish with anyone!

Finished!

I finished in 1:28:08, 23rd M60 and 5th GB, so not a team counter. This was 12 minutes behind the winning M60 from Italy. A small amount of that difference would be due to me being stuck in the traffic jam on the climb and not firing on all cylinders; the majority of the difference due to them being exceptional athletes! The Italians occupied 5 of the top 6 M60 places and swept up the team prize (3 to count). GB were second team with 2nd, 8th and 18th positions in the M60 category and Spain 3rd with 7th, 12th and 19th positions.

A free pasta party was underway in the finish area and a DJ was really going for it with some classics mixed with typical Europop. The biggest party animals were the Argentinian and Uruguayan women's teams who seemed to still be in competition with each other on the dance floor!

Across all age groups and genders, there were 605 starters in the Classic race which included participants from 27 countries. As expected the Alpine nations were well represented (Italy, Austria, Germany, France and Switzerland). However, there was a strong Latin American representation with a big team from Mexico and teams from Argentina, Uruguay, Peru and Columbia. The GB team was quite big (18 participants) but surprisingly there were 66 Irish runners competing and winning medals in many of the age category team competitions. Central Europe was strongly represented by Czech Republic (who will host next years championship), Bulgaria, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia and one athlete (in the Classic at least) from Ukraine. There were also small contingents from USA, Australia and South Africa. The oldest runner was Elizabeth Springer (which means runner in some of the Germanic languages!) who is 81 years old and finished in 2:45, 3rd place in the F75 category!!!! There were 15 over 75's in the classic race. The first M75, aged 77, finished only three and a half minutes behind me, an Italian by the name of Pierino Barbonetti!! Billy Buchanan, you are but a boy, there is time for you yet!

I would say that this year's courses were definitely mountain races rather than trail races, satisfying the official requirements of a mountain race championship for significant elevation gain over a short distance but were not great racing courses due to the ascents being too narrow to pass. Fine for those with a fast 400m time to get to the front at the start but not great for the rest of us. However, all in all, I needed a holiday and a quiet week wandering around an Italian mountain village eating pasta, ham and ice cream has probably done me good (apart from picking up a cold!). Once more details of the courses are published, I might consider next year's event in the Czech Republic. It is in June. 

Just one (more) cornetto

Alan