From 169436102c944e6e44100f0c47f62a60034cf893 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alex Coleman Date: Sun, 24 Nov 2024 20:57:41 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Add 18-24th Nov run notes --- content/blog/2024-11-24-runnotes.md | 46 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 46 insertions(+) create mode 100644 content/blog/2024-11-24-runnotes.md diff --git a/content/blog/2024-11-24-runnotes.md b/content/blog/2024-11-24-runnotes.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3c521de --- /dev/null +++ b/content/blog/2024-11-24-runnotes.md @@ -0,0 +1,46 @@ +Title: 18th-24th November Run notes + +## Monday + +Cold. It's frosty but the pavements are passable. It's bright and the sky is clear blue criss-crossed with vapour trails. +The roads feel busier than usual and I nip along a quiet greenway, has the cold put everyone off? Suddenly, like vapour trails +I cross paths with a runner here, a runner there, the cold isn't putting everyone off I guess. Back up the hill to Middleton +and through the streets is the smell of idling engines as people warm their cars, the air peppered with the yaps of dogs and +cries of protesting children who don't want to be dragged into the cold. + +## Wednesday + +The train is late and it's cold. I start off in town bobbing and weaving through commuters and school kids. I reach +Knavesmire and sunglasses save me from a bright winter sun coming over the fields and racecourse. The grass softly crunches as +I patter back onto the riverside path and the ding of a bell tells me I'm slowing down a cyclist. I make my way back to the +centre and a pair of cargo bikes go by, kids chatting in the front and mums from the saddle. Good active travel vibes to +start the day. + +## Thursday + +A morning for a wintry walk in the wood. What’s left of the snow is now twice frozen and less like snow more like meringue. I reach +the start of the wood but cut down and into the field fancying my chances of reaching the Dunningley viaduct. I spend a +couple of minutes scrambling along the raised side of the old railway line but once again come to a dead end. I work my +way back and wander along the field looking over to Morley, trains going past occasionally. I come back through the wood +and theres a perfect stillness to it all. The sun starts to welcome in the morning and golden beams flicker through the trees. + +## Friday + +Frost on frost this morning so I'm all wrapped up, gloves on and off I go. There's minimal grit on the pavements so I spend +a lot of time dancing between the road and the pavements. Oh to be but a car. I head out +towards Tingley for my longer route and put my sunglasses on to keep the wind chill out of my eyes. The sun has barely +risen but the clouds are racing away to reveal the blue sky. I track down my first hill into Ardsley and crunch my way +over thrice-frosted grass and leaves to avoid the path. Eventually I'm at Thorpe-on-the-hill and pass two schoolboys sliding +on the frosty pavement in their black school shoes. The sun is finally up and starting to make a different on the footpath but by +now I'm almost round and back. I slip through to a track away from the road and bring myself back to the warmth. + +## Sunday + +The mild, wet bleh has returned. Under grey clouds and rain I set off for a loop via Oulton. It's wet and there are large puddles +along the road which I dance around, drivers do a decent job of not splashing me. +I spend a climb up past a big warehouse trying to remember its name. It's something Tolkienesque, and eventually it reveals +itself as Iron Mountain, just down from the Royds Cat Hotel, the crossover no-one expected. I get onto Wakefield road +and I'm advised to approach a large JCB cutting back the hedge with caution. I avoid any serious injury and continue up +past Oulton Academy meeting two runners as I go. I come round into Rothwell proper along Marsh street where it's all very +quiet. Coming up through Robin Hood the rain seems to start to ease but it really has been a filthy one. My once white +shoes say it all.