Wednesday, 27 June 2012

Terry the Mountain Goat, Part Three - Scafell Pike



It had been a cold and short sleep on the floor of a moving train. We’d left Bangor station at around 4.30am but it had taken a long time to find a comfortable spot. By the time I’d just got comfortable, around 6.30am, the lights came on and an announcement of breakfast stirred us into life and back into our seats.

The weather outside had not improved. We stopped off at Carlisle whilst they changed engines on the train, much to the excitement of any on-board trainspotters, and we were served with a good old-fashioned fry-up to get us energised for the next leg.

Arriving at Ravenglass station in the Lake District, we quickly disembarked and were herded on to another train. I’d heard we were being transported via a steam railway but I’d imagined something a little more substantial than what we were presented with. This was one of those little locomotives that would normally chug around a Safari Park rather than a proper full-size train.

As I’d walked from our train to this one I realised the groin strain I picked up from the night before was more painful than I’d remembered, even when I was walking across a flat, tarmacked car park. I thought to myself that I just needed to warm up and then it would be fine.

I sat opposite Adam on the little open sided carriage, wedged in with a couple from another team. We were both cold and wet and barely spoke, other than to note the expression of the sheep in the fields as we slowly chugged past them. They seemed to be observing this gaggle of humans with some sort of curious amusement. It was if they were wondering what the hell we were doing. I’ve never felt as if I’ve been judged by an animal before, let alone a sheep, but if there are sheep words for ‘look at those bloody idiots’ then that was what they were bleeting to each other across the fields.

Eventually, after what seemed an eternity, but was probably about half an hour, we arrived at Brackenclose where we were to walk for two hours across hill and dale to the bottom of Scafell Pike. We set off via some roads and all was well. The rain was continuing to pound down on us but we were in reasonable spirits.

However we soon went off road and up a steep track. It was here that the pain at the top of my leg (I hesitate to keep using the word groin, it seems quite unsavoury) became more prominent. We clambered over a raging stream and then across an undulating and boggy expanse of land.

By this time I was suffering badly. I was becoming slower and slower in movement as each step became increasingly painful. Other teams would pass me and my own team frequently had to stop and wait for me to catch up. I told them what my problem was and Neil looked concerned.

“You can’t really walk off a groin strain” he observed as I gulped down some Ibuprofen.

I, however, felt that was an unnecessarily pessimistic point of view and was determined to soldier on.

As I dragged myself over the uneven hills I thought several times about the mountain ahead. I knew it was going to be hard, I knew I was in pain, but the worse thing as far as I was concerned was to give up.

I thought of all the people who had sponsored me. I thought of friends and family and having to go home and tell them that I’d failed. In the end I came to the conclusion that I hadn’t dragged myself through these conditions in this much pain to just go and look at Scafell Pike. I was going up it come hell or high water, the latter of which was looking more and more likely as the rain fell out of the sky like the last days before the Great Flood.

I have to pause a moment to say how beautiful the Lake District is. Unlike the night before we could see the terrain around us and as we came over the ridge of a hill the land fell away to a valley with a large lake. It was a magical sight compared to the miserable greyness above and was one of the few things so far that day that put a real smile on my face.

We arrived at the base of Scafell Pike and stopped to eat. As we did so the rain, which was already heavy, got even heavier, as if someone had flicked a switch to a ‘monsoon’ setting. I tried to eat my sandwich quickly before it became too soggy and Alan held his vertically in a bid to keep it dry for as long as possible.

I announced to the team I was coming up with them despite the pain I was in and I then avoided their gaze as they looked at me with worry in their eyes. We set off and from the outset I was slow and lagging well behind. The terrain was hard from the start and we were soon on similar rock steps as we had been the night before. This time I could see where I was going but it wasn’t making it any easier. Every step was so painful that I cursed under my breath so many times that I’d have filled up a ‘swear jar’ and now be entirely bankrupt.

After about half an hour I caught up with the rest of the team who, unusually, had all stopped to wait for me.

“How are you doing?” they asked. I considered my answer but decided I had to go for honesty.

“Not well” I replied.

They looked concerned and Neil quietly said, “The terrain’s like this all the way up, I’m worried you’re going to hurt yourself”.

I knew what he was saying and I knew he was right. With the heaviest of hearts I knew I had to stop.

“Go and rest”, said Alan, “then you’ll be able to have a go at Ben Nevis tomorrow”. I didn’t want to hear this and I quickly agreed and turned back down the mountain.

As I slowly and painfully headed my way back down to the check in point I was grateful for the driving rain as it was hiding the tears of frustration that by this time were rolling down my face as I passed other teams battling the elements as they made their way up. I was desperately upset and disappointed in myself and felt like a massive failure. Yet I knew it was right, there was no way I was going to get to the top given the timescale and I didn’t want to get us all stranded up there.

I made my way back down and through the medical tent, and was pointed towards a pub some 15 minutes walk away. There I was reassured to meet up with a whole load of teams, some who’d decided the conditions were far too treacherous to even attempt the mountain. I chatted to two women, one was limping after a trip and the other had nasty cuts and bruises on her face where she’d fell the night before. We bonded with tales of our various injuries and sat there with our clothes dripping whilst waiting for a coach to take us away.

As it turned out the rain then went from ‘monsoon’ to ‘armageddon’ and shortly after I had left Scafell Pike the decision was made to turn all the teams around as the weather was making the mountain deadly, with huge raging streams of water pouring off it.

We all ended up in ‘The Ratty Arms’ a nice little pub by Ravenglass station. As I arrived it resembled a refugee camp, full of soaking wet people huddled around a pile of rucksacks in the door. Some people were cloaked in those foil blankets to keep themselves warm. I went inside, found a seat, got myself a pint, sat down, and was shivering once again.

The train was delayed to pick us up so we had longer to enjoy there. I was joined by a large team from Derby and we sat and talked and laughed and drank whisky to warm ourselves up. Eventually Neil, Adam and Alan arrived, cold and wet but safe.

When we eventually got back on the train it was quite convivial, perhaps helped by the input of some alcohol. We all had tales to tell, and every single one of us had gained a new and deserving respect for the elements.

As we tried to sleep that night the train headed slowly north to our final mountain. Ben Nevis.


TOMORROW: BY THE FAIR BONNY BANKS OF, WELL, ER, LOCH LINNHE ACTUALLY.

Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Terry the Mountain Goat, Part Two - Mount Snowdon


The initial trek up Snowdon was via a reasonable path and I felt quite pleased with myself that this, as I had imagined, was just going to be a bit of a stroll. Twenty minutes later however, after encountering the first in a series of rocks and stones that acted as a semi-natural set of steps, I was panting like a Bullmastiff.

I knew that there were these type of steps but I had imagined a more uniform pattern, one in front of the other at roughly the same height. They weren’t. With each step you had to look and decide whether you wanted the steep one on the right or the slippery one on the left, like some extreme uphill version of Hopscotch. I made my decisions by watching whoever was in front of me, but it was hard going and I realised for the first time that this was not going to be quite as easy as I’d thought.

As well as this little problem I was also having a couple of other issues. The rain was blurring the view through my glasses and, with all the hot breath emanating from my open mouth, they were steaming up. This I solved simply by removing them and putting them in my rucksack. My vision without my glasses isn’t the best but enough, I thought, to get me by.

Issue number two was that I realised as the remainder of the light faded that I needed to rely on my borrowed head torch to shine the way forward. Unfortunately it wasn’t up to the job and only semi-illuminated the ground in front of me. These two things combined so that when I looked at the ground it was often hard to get any sense of how even or uneven the path was in front of me. I was relying on the lights of my team mates and watching where they trod.

We made our way up, crossing streams and encountering steeper and steeper sets of rocks to clamber up. To our left there was an ever growing void of blackness, but even with poor visibility we knew that was the valley below. One slip could lead us tumbling towards a substantial and life threatening drop. This was fine when the path was wide, but more and more we encountered parts of the route that involved clambering around a damp and slippery rock face, trying to find whatever footing was available.

It was long and arduous but it wasn’t too cold. The rain was keeping us nicely cool as we journeyed ever upwards. When we stopped for a breath we looked up and could see the long trail of little white lights of the teams ahead of us, and looking back, there was a longer snake of lights behind us. We were like a procession of Glow Worms heading up the mountain and it was a strange and eerie sight to behold in the middle of nowhere.

As we got higher the little radio we’d been given crackled into life every now and then with team after team reporting that they’d got to a checkpoint, or in some cases, to the summit itself.

Eventually, a very steep set of rocks turned us around to a new side of the mountain we’d not been on before and a viciously cold wind whipped around us. However, we knew we were near the top as we encountered more and more teams on their descent, so we didn’t want to stop to add more clothes.

Up and up the path went until finally we seemed to stop by a flat-topped stone plinth. I clung onto it in the freezing wind and increasing rain and watched as Neil brought out the radio to announce we’d got to the summit. I hadn’t realised.

I didn’t feel elated, I just felt cold and tired. We were there for just a few moments before descending.

If you’d asked me before I set off, I would have said that the trip down was going to be easy. Sadly I realised on the way up that it wasn’t going to be. For the most part you are heading down but the same problems around finding the right footing and scaling around rock faces were still ahead. If you built up speed and fell in the wrong place, you’d probably fall forwards and increase your chances of tumbling off the mountain.

As it was I slipped a few times as I gingerly made my way down. Every time I landed hard on my backside and fortunately each time on a flat, if wet, piece of rock.

Before long we were in a long line of other teams all heading the same way and we began to slow up, just as the rain began to pelt down harder and noisier than ever.

My light was as bad as ever and as the fatigue kicked in it was becoming harder to find the right footing with each step. I continued to fall on my arse a few times and I occasionally mis-judged the ground and stepped just that little bit further than I was expecting. On one of these occasions I felt a sharp and unexpected pain in my groin at the top of my right leg but the cold and the rain and the thought of being in the dry and the warm kept me going.

Eventually we saw the lights of the car park twinkling some distance below, but the agonisingly slow descent seemed to make our destination come no nearer, like we were trying to reach the mythical pot of gold at the end of the rainbow.

We got there eventually but it hadn’t been quick or easy. We were guided towards a packed cafĂ© where other drenched individuals were huddling around in shock. It was 3am and all we wanted was to get somewhere warm and dry and sit down.

We found our way on to one of the coaches and sat in the dark, shivering. We listened to the rain beating heavily on the roof and knew that, in just a few hours, there was another mountain waiting for us.

Perhaps, we thought aloud, the rain won’t be as bad as this at Scafell Pike.


TOMORROW: RAIN, RAIN, AND MORE RAIN.

Monday, 25 June 2012

Terry the Mountain Goat, Part One - Run to the Hills



As I sat on a tightly packed coach, with my rucksack sat on my lap and gripping on to my borrowed walking poles, I looked out of the window at the rolling Welsh countryside and wondered how I’d got involved in all this in the first place.

It was, as I recalled, a simple exchange with a work colleague who, knowing I’d just completed a fun run, suggested I might like another challenge. How about climbing the Three Peaks of Snowdon, Scafell Pike, and Ben Nevis, over the course of a couple of days? The sensible part of my brain was shouted down by the more reckless part who was bellowing “How hard can it be?” in my ears.

As the coach weaved its way past little stone houses I looked on in envy at those occupants who hadn’t closed their curtains, who were bringing their evening to a close and were, most likely, looking forward to their bed. I, on the other hand, was about to climb my first mountain, in the dark.

Only six hours before I’d been standing on Platform 16 of Euston station, along with around 43 other teams all spending the next few hours living on a specially chartered train, watching the Rock Choir sing us off, much to the bemusement of the normal commuters arriving from Manchester and Milton Keynes.

I’d met my team, some of whom for the first time. Neil I knew from work, but Adam and Alan were unknown quantities.

Neil is a sensible type of guy and he was plainly going to be the Akela of the group. He had all the kit and could map read. He gave us a map-reading lesson on the journey up but I could tell that it wasn’t sinking in with any of us.

Adam looked the part with his bushy beard and Bear Grylls kit but in reality was a laid back guy with a very dry sense of humour. Alan on the other hand was louder and more brash, the kind of guy you don’t miss when you’re down the pub. A proper Marmite kind of guy, you either get him or you don’t and he wouldn’t give a damn either way. 

Fortunately we all clicked fairly quickly, probably because we knew that we were all going through this ordeal together. We shared a similar sense of humour and this was the thing that was going to get us through the next two days.

So as we arrived at the Pen Y Pas car park at the base of Snowdon there was a palpable sense of anticipation in the air. There was also quite a lot of rain sharing that space and so, with hoods and hats on, we left the coach, attached our head torches and, and made our way past the check point to the winding path up the mountain, hoping that we’d be back soon.


TOMORROW: MOUNT SNOWDON BY NIGHT


Wednesday, 20 June 2012

24 Hours from Snowdon


So, both my rucksacks (one for the mountain, one for all the rest of my kit) are packed and waiting for me. There's no going back now, the mountains await. In just 24 hours time I'll be stepping off the train in Bangor and, along with the rest of the team, be taken to the foot of Snowdon and sent forth to the peak under the cover of darkness.


Well I say darkness, we have head torches to light our way. I like the head torch, it makes me feel like I'm a robot.

Once Snowdon is accomplished we are taken to within a two hour trek of Scafell Pike the next morning, and then Ben Nevis in the wee small hours of Saturday morning, and be expected to conquer these as well. It's relentless.

I've probably overpacked whilst at the same time forgotten something vital. I do have wet weather gear and, given the forecast, I'm going to need it. We're expecting rain, and lots of it. Oh, and high winds, there's going to be a fair bit of that. Oh, and thunderstorms. 

So if I don't get hypothermia or pneumonia, or be blown off the mountain by a hurricane, I'll probably be struck by lightning whilst drinking from the metal water bottle the present Mrs Hayward bought me for Christmas. Maybe this is why she was so keen on me taking out some insurance for this event.

Weirdly though I'm kind of looking forward to it. I'm going to get soaked, my feet will ache and by Saturday I'll probably smell a bit musty and my hair will be stuck to my head but at least I can look forward to returning to my own comfortable, warm bed in the early hours of Sunday morning.

As you may know I'm putting myself through this to support The Railway Children, and they in turn support homeless children who won't be going home to a warm bed tonight or any other night. 

I know there's always someone waving the tin around for a few quid but I think this is a very worthy charity. Just think back to your own childhood, or think of your own kids, or kids you know, and think about what it would have been like for you or for them to be living on the streets. 

Think about the fact that there are kids, perhaps the same age, sleeping rough somewhere tonight. Then think about my aching, bleeding, blister-ridden feet come Saturday and click on the link below, or drop me a text or an email, and donate some money to a worthy cause.

The Railway Children will be grateful for whatever you can spare, and so will I.

Thank you :-)


Please visit our fundraising site here: http://uk.virginmoneygiving.com/team/noblewarriors 



Thursday, 14 June 2012

Friday I'm In Love


Ever since I left school I was certain of one thing; I would never go back for any kind of school reunion. It wasn’t that I had any particular problem with the place or any of my fellow pupils or teachers; I just didn’t see the point in it.

This self-induced attitude had therefore made me suspicious of reunions of any sort. So when, on Facebook, a group started up, loosely based upon a nightclub in Southampton I used to go to around 1993-1994, the first nightclub I regularly went to in fact, I initially viewed it as a mild curiosity. I could glance through my phone to see that there were photos and posts from people whose names and faces were flickering around in the deeper recesses of my memory and I smiled to myself as I remembered these images from another age.

So I remained a casual and fairly impassive observer of these posts for a while, and wasn’t at all tempted when I saw a reunion was being planned. I figured that it was all such a long time ago and besides, no-one will remember me so it’d all be terribly embarrassing.

However what I did have were some photos of my own to contribute. So I spent an afternoon going through boxes and unearthing the flattering and not-so-flattering faded images of friends of yore, and friends of now from back then when they had more hair and less girth (I include myself in that description).

The nightclub I speak of wasn’t actually a nightclub at all. It was just a night in a room above a pub on a Friday called The Attic but it was, to all intents and purposes for us, our very own goth club. The pub below was a gay bar, which was almost a perfect venue as neither party were bothered by the other and it was always pretty clear which part of the establishment you were from when you went to the toilet.

To those who have not dabbled in goth, of which there are many I’m sure, I have to stress that goths are no more scary or weird a group of people than any other. No-one is drinking blood, nobody has the power to turn into a bat and no-one is sacrificing virgins on a stone plinth. Well, not every night.

I agree that the black hair and pale faces have a slightly creepy edge and not one I went for myself, mostly because black hair didn’t suit my ruddy complexion. I experimented one afternoon and it just looked so appalling that I resorted to red and other colours that have now left me with a somewhat auburn hue. Also, applying make-up wasn’t my strong area so I didn’t do it but I’ll tell you something, any man that paints his face in ghostly white make-up, dons a frock coat, a cape and winkle pickers and walks through a city centre on a Friday night has, in my view, absolute balls of steel and I take my hat off to you, past and present.

Goths are just joined together by their common interests in the music and the literature and the…..ahhh, who am I kidding? Yes, maybe that’s the genesis of it and I haven’t done any research on it but, on the whole, there was just something about the boys and girls and men and women who were goths, or who, like me, flirted around the scene, that I quite liked.

It was a small but busy club and after a while you realised you probably knew everyone in the room, and that was a comfortable feeling. When you went to a pub in town you would often witness a fight, but at The Attic on a Friday night there was no such risk. Yes, I wasn’t alone in getting a bit giddy on snakebite and black and accidentally falling down the stairs, or bumping into the DJ area (which was in effect a table suspended down from the ceiling by chains) but no harm was done.

The Attic unwillingly closed its doors at the end of 1994 so we all dispersed elsewhere, but the vibe of the place has clearly stuck with a number of people for many years, myself included, and I suspect we’ve never found anywhere else quite like it.

So time has gone on and more and more people have joined the group on Facebook, added photos and videos (some of which I was in, much to my surprise – I don’t remember anyone having a camera!!), and joined in the many conversations. People who, whilst I hadn’t totally forgotten them, I’d certainly not thought about for a long time. It’s a weird thing but slowly the memories have manifested into the carefree feeling of the time, the camaraderie, the anticipation of a Friday night. Bear in mind, I was young and going out in Southampton still felt relatively new to me back then.

Everyone has their own place they remain fond of but for me The Attic was the first place I danced, drank, laughed, loved and occasionally fell over (damn the heels on those pointy boots I bought in Salisbury). I remember the many nights when we all crowded on the postage stamp sized dance floor and wheeled around backwards to The Sisters of Mercy or Siouxsie and the Banshees. I remember the way we used to change the words to the songs so that the opening of The Marionettes’ song ‘Like Christabel’ was changed from “She keeps her thoughts in a forest dark” to “She keeps her tits in a thermos flask”. Oh how we laughed.

I remember the night the fire brigade turned up because a nearby resident had not been aware of the injudicious use of the smoke machine and believed that the great clouds of smoke billowing out of the upper windows on a warm summer evening to be a full blown inferno. The burly men with the hose were not impressed.

I remember being sat mournfully outside one evening after being dumped by a girl I’d only known for a few weeks when I was approached by a goth called Robbie who imparted me with some sage advice, “It’s probably her time of the month, mate. Get it sorted!”. Even at the tender age of 19 I knew that these were wise words even if I didn’t, on this occasion, get it sorted. It did, however, cheer me up no end.

And of course I will always remember the night that Ned was upended into a large metal wheelie bin and bundled through the door to the backyard of the pub, only to discover there was a drop of several feet on the other side. Oh well, he lived to tell the tale.

So now I find myself in a strange place because all these memories have come racing back to me like an explosion of sight (mostly black), sounds (mostly ‘She Sells Sanctuary’ by The Cult) and smells (mostly patchouli oil and K Cider).

Each day more and more names and faces from my past are going to the reunion and, actually, I would really like to join them. Yes, it’s not the early 1990s anymore, but these people were friends. We’ve all changed of course, all older, some with kids, some in different parts of the country, but all with a shared memory of a little nightclub down Northam Road.

The sad thing is I’m going to miss out on this night of memories. Not for a bad reason of course, I’ve got a date with three mountains, all for a good cause, but when I’m heading from Scafell Pike to Ben Nevis next Friday night, tending to the inevitable blisters from my walking boots, I’ll be remembering when the blisters came from, yes, those damned pointy boots again.

So, if you’re at the King Alfred pub in Southampton that night, spare a thought for me and my aching feet, but above all have a fantastic night and party like it’s, well, 1994 I suppose.


Monday, 11 June 2012

Every Breath You Take


You know, it all started as a bit of banter and now I think it’s got a little bit out of hand. I shall explain.

There are these guys down my local gym. They’re two of the individuals I referred to in my previous post. They seem to live in the weights area as I rarely see them anywhere else, and their hard work shows. Their upper body muscles are impressive. They obviously put in a lot of work and are now very good at, well, lifting things.

Their overall physique is, however, questionable as both are a little portly around the midriff. Not that I can really cast any stones in that area. I sympathise wholeheartedly with this curse of the middle aged man.

They also boast a large and colourful collection of ink on their body but one, let’s call him Jeff (I don’t know his real name, I hope for the sake of anonymity he’s not called Jeff), also sports an interesting haircut.

I liken it to a toilet brush as it kind of sits on the top of his head and sticks up. It’s like he went to the barbers, asked for a very close crop all over, not even a grade one, perhaps a grade quarter if there is such a thing, but it went wrong when the clippers broke before the barber could get to the top of his head so Jeff just left the tufts of hair on top, so that it now resembles an amusing looking hat.

Fair play to Jeff, it’s a bold haircut but it doesn’t suit him, or anyone for that matter. What this distinctive barnet has done though is make him recognisable.

So when I mentioned to friends about Jeff and his mate (let’s call him Arthur) one of them realised she had seen him when she was on the school run. She noted how she had been drawn towards his unusual look and had made some bad eye contact. Jeff however didn’t seem to mind at being stared at, and I pointed out that he probably just thought she was admiring his mighty biceps.

Jeff and Arthur are the ones who make the most noise when exercising as they lift almighty weights that they can barely manage. When they are in the building everyone knows about it. So, just for a wheeze, I decided to record Jeff & Arthur’s cacophonous grunting on my phone, just to illustrate my point to friends when they came up in conversation in the future.

I’d really like to share it with you but it would probably be highly illegal to do so. Just ask me and I’ll play it to you some time.

So, that was that, until yesterday, when my friend sent me an email. She and her husband had come to an astonishing discovery – Jeff was one of their neighbours. So as to prove it they had taken a covert photo of him from an upstairs window.

Again, it would probably be highly illegal to post that photo here so I’ve recreated it for you…….

I realised at this point that, to my horror, I think we are now both officially stalking Jeff. Hopefully he is blissfully unaware of this as, should he find out, he could probably rearrange my face into a more unconventional pattern. Mind you I think I have a good chance of out-running him, unless he’s actually The Terminator.

So, in the style of Simon Mayo’s Confessions, I apologise to Jeff & Arthur, but more so to Jeff.

Due to my idle chit chat he now has a growing legion of stalkers. He’s being stared at by mums taking their kids to school, he can’t have a session at the gym without some freak hovering nearby with a microphone, and now he can’t even have a relaxing sit down in his own garden without seeing, out of the corner of his eye, the glint of a paparazzi’s camera lens from behind a hedge.

I hope he can forgive me but above all I hope he doesn’t, by some weird quirk of fate, stumble upon this blog as the consequences may well be a little painful.

Sorry Jeff.


Wednesday, 6 June 2012

Weighty Matters


Has it really been so long? Well, yes it has. I needed to take a break, collect my thoughts, and re-group. Not so much writer’s block as I’ve continued to write about all sorts of things, but most have been just too crazy or too personal to blog about.

My recent musings have been more of a cathartic thing for me which one day I’ll re-visit and transform into a seminal piece of literature about the complexities of the human condition. Or, more likely, after I’ve expelled my final breath, someone will find my journal of weirdness, sift through it, tut loudly at the mixed metaphors and unnecessary exposition, and chuck it into the recycling where it will be transformed into rough toilet paper for use by inmates of Her Majesty’s prisons.

Back in the real world I have just a couple of short weeks until I found myself facing three immensely large mountains in the space of a day and a bit. This would be OK in itself if it wasn’t for the fact that I have to wend my way to the top of them and, presumably, back down again.

I’m not built for hills. I lived on a hill when I spent a year in Sheffield and it wasn’t very long before I got fed up with dragging my carcass up it every day, especially when there was a handy bus service to my door. Mind you, the bus used to struggle as well. It was a very steep hill.

I have, in all fairness, been in training. No, I haven’t actually climbed a mountain to practice as my view on this is that it won’t make the challenge any easier. I’m just happy to climb the three mountains and then never do anything quite so daft ever again. Well, unless I get the taste for the mountain life. Perhaps I’ll build a wooden hut and become a goat herder, who knows?

So, in an attempt to ensure I don’t end up on the side of Snowdon, five minutes into the ascent, screaming “No, leave me, I don’t want to hold you back, let me die here, tell Emma I love her, etc…” I have become a regular at my local gym where a sturdy looking chap called Ed put together a training regime designed to ensure I am fit enough for the task in hand, or that I’ll injure myself so badly that I’ll never walk again, it’s pretty rigorous.  

I even have to spend time in the weights area with the top heavy looking chaps who grunt a lot. Some even shout words of encouragement at each other such as “Do you wanna get fit??”, and I even saw two young fellows high five each other, without any hint of irony, after they’d tackled a particularly challenging weight. I promise you I’m not making any of this up.

Personally, I tend to keep myself to myself and I don’t follow the required etiquette as I usually scoot around the weights area and get on with various exercises with no pause to admire myself or anybody else in the big mirror. Therefore I can be done and dusted on the more modest weights while the regular muscle heads try to noisily lift a humungous weight just the once.

So I think it’s done some good and I’m now in a better place to attempt these mountains than I was a few months ago but the prospect is still causing me some concern, mostly the lack of sleep I will experience and, well, the whole ‘uphill’ bit.

Some would say I went into this without thinking about it but not me, oh no.

Yes, I know I’m rattling the tin again but if you’d like to sponsor me then please do so here. The money goes to a good cause as you’ll see when you click on the link. It doesn’t go to me so I can invest in blister plasters and Deep Heat, I promise.