Endure24 seemed to provide the answer. Running as many 5 mile loops as possible in 24 hours, with a option to bail at any point - seemed ideal.
I arrived early Saturday to set up tent, thinking I'll be early and therefore there would be loads of space - wrong, seemed to bag the last small patch of ground in the Solo runners area. The whole place resembled Glastonbury with out the music or the mud. With about an hour to go, the music had already started, and then came the thunder and lightning and bucketfuls of rain. So we had music and mud - perhaps it was going to be Glastonbury after all.
As well as solo entries the race is also run with team relays (of various sizes and sexes). At the start the speedy teams went to the front, the solos at the back. 12:00 arrived and off everyone went. The first lap was muddy, from then on it got worse. By the end of the 4th lap, rather like the Inuit who have lots of names for snow, I had made up several mud related names:
Mudousse- for the chocolate mousse mud that was available after the check point
piddle-Mud - the light coloured puddles that were full of mud
forest-gateaux-ud - entering the newly cut path to the peats stinky mud
Breakneck mud - the special mud on the down slopes the just manages to remove any grip at all from a runner who thinks they need to run down hill.
you get the picture - it was muddy.
After for laps of this though (and feeling very fresh in the legs) I could feel the feet starting to complain. The route undulates constantly and I think that and the mud had started to aggravate the tendons. I was running very steady 50 minute loops - and was very pleased with the effort so far. I took a walking break for most of the next lap, then went to the tent for a change of kit, to see if the pain would start to ease off.
The next lap didn't get much better, I had a longer break and then resumed. Then an every longer break and walked most of the next one. Even walking in the mud was entertaining - trying to keep out of the way of the fast runners coming through and remaining upright.
It was starting to get dark, so I though I'd do at least one lap in the dark and then call it a night. Which I did. I stopped, went to get some food at the catering tent, before spending an age trying to get clean before clambering into my sleeping bag for a few hours sleep - which was really easy. #
The sun was up early - and so was I. I did a few slow laps - hit 55 miles and called it a day.
I was disappointed with the mileage total, I was hoping to get as close to 100 as possible, but it wasn't to be. It doesn't count as a DNF but it was really.
The event is a very social one - lots of local runs make up teams and keep going through the night - maybe if I do this one again - I should do this as part of a team - just need to rope in a few bods!
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