Saturday, 30 March 2013
Couldn't fail
You know the day on a point to point race where there is a following wind (and the course in more downhill than uphill) and everyone sets a personal best time.
It was the equivalent to that for photography today. You had to be out of form if you couldn't get a few PBs to today.
I still love using one of my early digital cameras, an HP945 which I bought in 2004. The only problem is that it takes so long to process each photo. I took a few shots of some of the slower shots on it and then this one looking south. I've zoomed in a long way but I can't quite work out the locations.
I'm signing off from this location a lot earlier than yesterday (and we've managed to a trip to the airport to meet a friend as well). Mind you I need the time with loosing an hour overnight. I'm going around another scenic route on foot first thing tomorrow before taking photos of the final Easter Festival event on the promenade.
I'm leaving the videos behind tomorrow but my cameras will still be getting worked hard as we are off to a family lunch straight after the runs.
20 years at this game
We took a booking for our holiday apartment for July last night. I understand that some self catering providers are blaming the new booking system for a lack of bookings this summer. Our booking was from a lady who was so disappointed that she couldn't get in with us so she has booked for July 2014.
Its almost 20 years since we bought our house and the apartment that adjoins. After we bought our second holiday property in 1999 I am not often available for cleaning the apartment, perhaps 5 or 6 times a year, but that is what I have been doing this morning. The photos demonstrate job done (although I didn't have to wash the linen).
We've got the first of two family friends visiting us shortly either side of my trip to Peel for the Easter Festival and some of the website coverage.
Running next year
I'm finally signing off after spending the whole evening on the website and video editing. I think it is definitely easier to run!
At least I had reasonably sheltered spots from which to do my photography tonight. Some of the marshals and helpers were frozen.
I had the usual problem with light tonight - as the evening went on the photos became more blurred. I put quite a bit of thought into where I was going to go tonight with my five cameras (I had three video points x 2) with "so-so" results.
My favourite bit of filming today arose only because my knee was sore and Marie was feeling a bit car sick in the back. So after taking her mum through Laxey to Ramsey we swapped positions and I sat in the back to go back through Kirk Michael. It wasn't long before the pocket camera was switched to video mode.
At least I had reasonably sheltered spots from which to do my photography tonight. Some of the marshals and helpers were frozen.
I had the usual problem with light tonight - as the evening went on the photos became more blurred. I put quite a bit of thought into where I was going to go tonight with my five cameras (I had three video points x 2) with "so-so" results.
My favourite bit of filming today arose only because my knee was sore and Marie was feeling a bit car sick in the back. So after taking her mum through Laxey to Ramsey we swapped positions and I sat in the back to go back through Kirk Michael. It wasn't long before the pocket camera was switched to video mode.
Friday, 29 March 2013
Beat that
It never ceases to amaze me in not much more than 10 minutes we can we walking virtually on our own in such beauty in the Isle of Man. Just back from one of my (many) favourite walks with Marie - Port Grenaugh and Arragon.
In doesn't auger too well for my photographs tonight though - my fingers were not such healthy colour as as scenery.
Some fond memories
I published the photo above in a couple of places this week and I'm sorry that I still don't know who deserves the credit for taking it (it came to me third hand).
I've just been re-reading the stories in the Manx Independent about the loss of animal life in the Isle of Man during the snow and quite a lot of it happened in this part of the Island. I've added the details for the Isle of Man Agricultural Benevolent Trust to the front page.
But just down the road from where this photo was taken I have happy memories of a man who celebrates his 90th bitrhday today.
Geoff Duke was world motor cycle champion for three years between 1951 and 1953 but 20 years later he established a garage business in Douglas near to Pulrose Bridge. The three parts, a petrol forecourt, a showroom and workshop are all separate now but he also used to run a wholesale parts business from the premises.
I used to the spend the hours of midday to 6 pm on a Saturday serving customers at Michael Motors (it was my second job of the day as I used to assist with Crowe Brothers milk round at Bishopscourt between 5.45 and about 11 (with a cycle home for some hot soup in between - funny how its only the winters I remember!).
At about 12.30 on the Saturday a Volkswagen van would pull up on the other side of the road to see if the garage had any requirements for spares. The driver always had a warm and friendly greeting even though there was rarely any business for him.
Often I would see the van driver in Douglas after school. He would ride around on a little 50cc Honda and gave the teenage lad with the afro hair he recognised from Kirk Michael a big wave. "That's Geoff Duke" I would proudly tell my friends.
The term down to earth could have been invented for Geoff Duke.
Thursday, 28 March 2013
A week early
When I came home this evening I was struggling to find the motivation to go and take photos at the Manx 10km Walking Championships.
I found the motivation but I didn't find the event - I was a week early!
I found the motivation but I didn't find the event - I was a week early!
Wednesday, 27 March 2013
Perfect continuity
The collection of Race Walking Records that I had built up over 37 years found a new home yesterday when Steve Taylor came to collect them from my house.
A few hours later I received the first edition of a new electronic version of the magazine. Its now free and I have shared a copy here: http://www.manxathletics.com/2013/RWR1303.pdf
And the source? Steve Taylor.
My eating is going to be almost as continuous today as I am out at lunchtime and for an early evening meal tonight.
A few hours later I received the first edition of a new electronic version of the magazine. Its now free and I have shared a copy here: http://www.manxathletics.com/2013/RWR1303.pdf
And the source? Steve Taylor.
My eating is going to be almost as continuous today as I am out at lunchtime and for an early evening meal tonight.
Tuesday, 26 March 2013
Under the sun and the snow
The email and the phone would not stop last night. If anything was going to happen in family life, at work, in our holiday business or in athletics last night seemed to be the time. Everything under the sun.
Not that there has been much sun lately. My issues melt quickly unlike the snow that so many people in the Island have been under.
At the best of times, city folk would struggle to understand what it is like to be without electricity and food supplies in dreadfully cold conditions. But even as someone who spent much of their childhood beneath the mountains at Kirk Michael from which the south east winds would blow the snow, I'm struggling to comprehend just how bad it is for the people in the country right now.
When you read of farmers loosing hundreds of sheep you wonder how any business person, for that it what farmers are, can manage to loose such a big percentage of their assets. And its shocking to think of the sheep perishing in that way.
I recall what it was like on the road between Bishopscourt and Kirk Michael when on a bad day you could barely ride a bike downhill into the wind. In my adult life, whenever someone has said there has been a lot of snow I have produced the old photos and told the stories of how much worse it was in the old days so its a shock to say I can't remember it is as bad as it is now in Cronk-y-Voddy and Baldwin etc.
How many people can imagine being five days without electricity? My mother-in-law was brought up on Lambfell at Cronk-y-Voddy and she still gets the "skeet" from up that way. She told us about the concerns for the lady who needed 24 hours a day care who couldn't get help.
The lady was rescued by helicopter yesterday. Imagine the surprise to find the pilot is Prince William, It really was a day for everything under the sun. And for escaping from under the snow.
Lets hope that more people have their lives back to normal today.
Not that there has been much sun lately. My issues melt quickly unlike the snow that so many people in the Island have been under.
At the best of times, city folk would struggle to understand what it is like to be without electricity and food supplies in dreadfully cold conditions. But even as someone who spent much of their childhood beneath the mountains at Kirk Michael from which the south east winds would blow the snow, I'm struggling to comprehend just how bad it is for the people in the country right now.
When you read of farmers loosing hundreds of sheep you wonder how any business person, for that it what farmers are, can manage to loose such a big percentage of their assets. And its shocking to think of the sheep perishing in that way.
I recall what it was like on the road between Bishopscourt and Kirk Michael when on a bad day you could barely ride a bike downhill into the wind. In my adult life, whenever someone has said there has been a lot of snow I have produced the old photos and told the stories of how much worse it was in the old days so its a shock to say I can't remember it is as bad as it is now in Cronk-y-Voddy and Baldwin etc.
How many people can imagine being five days without electricity? My mother-in-law was brought up on Lambfell at Cronk-y-Voddy and she still gets the "skeet" from up that way. She told us about the concerns for the lady who needed 24 hours a day care who couldn't get help.
The lady was rescued by helicopter yesterday. Imagine the surprise to find the pilot is Prince William, It really was a day for everything under the sun. And for escaping from under the snow.
Lets hope that more people have their lives back to normal today.
Sunday, 24 March 2013
Old men stories
My thoughts were on Tim Hutchings this morning whilst I was struggled to run in the biting, cold wind - and the need to set Sky+ to record the World Cross Country Championships as we were going to our friends' house for lunch.
Now Tim knows a thing or two about World Cross Country Championships having twice finished in the silver medal position in 1984 and 1989. And he wrote a hard hitting article published in the most recent edition of Athletics Weekly in which he slated the current British cross country runners for not racing each other on home soil, or should that be home ice and mud?
I have no idea how hard it is to be an international cross country but at least I could still relate to someone two years younger than me lecturing on the need to continue training when the weather is less than favourable.
One thing I managed to do this weekend, partly because the freezing weather kept me inside most of the time, was to catch up on reading Athletics Weekly. There was an interesting article a few weeks ago about Jim Alder who won the 1966 Commonwealth Games Marathon and finished second in the 1969 European Marathon. If ever there was a man who suffered set backs in his life it was him. His father was killed on the last day of the war and his mother died of TB two years later. Fifty years on and his retail sports business went under and the guarantees he had given to the business cost him his own house. He went back to his trade, bricklaying, and is still running every day aged 72, albeit he admits its more of a jog.
I can relate to the slow down that all athletes suffer sooner or later. Sometimes it seems that all too many "fit athletes" die prematurely. Only tonight I read about former Olympic 200 metres champion Pietro Mennea who died this week aged 60. So it was almost pleasing to read one of the obituaries in Athletics Weekly from a few weeks ago.
75 years ago the International Cross Country Championships (as it was known before it became the World Championships) was won by Jack Emery. According to Athletics Weekly he went to school in Newcastle-under-Lyme, a place where I lived for two years. I was inferior in every way for whilst I was completing my education at North Staffs Polytechnic he completed his at Oxford or Cambrdge; my running in the Potteries took me to places like Silverdale and Keele, his running took him to an international title.
The reason I am less sad about this obituary was that despite pushing his body hard he lived to be 99 - and he enjoyed a drink and a cigar in his 90s!
I often say that we retain many of the same strengths and weaknesses throughout our lives. Despite so many years suffering from poor circulation, chilblanes and more recently low levels (on one occasion medium levels) of frost bite I did it again yesterday. One of my toes is an bad state today, after five years of running in the mornings in shorts, I actually covered my arms and legs this morning. But I still forgot to set Sky+.
Now Tim knows a thing or two about World Cross Country Championships having twice finished in the silver medal position in 1984 and 1989. And he wrote a hard hitting article published in the most recent edition of Athletics Weekly in which he slated the current British cross country runners for not racing each other on home soil, or should that be home ice and mud?
I have no idea how hard it is to be an international cross country but at least I could still relate to someone two years younger than me lecturing on the need to continue training when the weather is less than favourable.
One thing I managed to do this weekend, partly because the freezing weather kept me inside most of the time, was to catch up on reading Athletics Weekly. There was an interesting article a few weeks ago about Jim Alder who won the 1966 Commonwealth Games Marathon and finished second in the 1969 European Marathon. If ever there was a man who suffered set backs in his life it was him. His father was killed on the last day of the war and his mother died of TB two years later. Fifty years on and his retail sports business went under and the guarantees he had given to the business cost him his own house. He went back to his trade, bricklaying, and is still running every day aged 72, albeit he admits its more of a jog.
I can relate to the slow down that all athletes suffer sooner or later. Sometimes it seems that all too many "fit athletes" die prematurely. Only tonight I read about former Olympic 200 metres champion Pietro Mennea who died this week aged 60. So it was almost pleasing to read one of the obituaries in Athletics Weekly from a few weeks ago.
75 years ago the International Cross Country Championships (as it was known before it became the World Championships) was won by Jack Emery. According to Athletics Weekly he went to school in Newcastle-under-Lyme, a place where I lived for two years. I was inferior in every way for whilst I was completing my education at North Staffs Polytechnic he completed his at Oxford or Cambrdge; my running in the Potteries took me to places like Silverdale and Keele, his running took him to an international title.
The reason I am less sad about this obituary was that despite pushing his body hard he lived to be 99 - and he enjoyed a drink and a cigar in his 90s!
I often say that we retain many of the same strengths and weaknesses throughout our lives. Despite so many years suffering from poor circulation, chilblanes and more recently low levels (on one occasion medium levels) of frost bite I did it again yesterday. One of my toes is an bad state today, after five years of running in the mornings in shorts, I actually covered my arms and legs this morning. But I still forgot to set Sky+.
Saturday, 23 March 2013
All at sea
I've just been outside for 37 minutes. I could hardly call it running as it was so difficult to move in the wind, slush and waves across the promenade. There were people at the Sea Terminal who looked as if they had been there all nights.
My thoughts are with anyone who goes on sea today. My remaining thoughts are on trying to warm my hands. I can barely type.
My thoughts are with anyone who goes on sea today. My remaining thoughts are on trying to warm my hands. I can barely type.
Friday, 22 March 2013
Manx communication problem
I thought I was being responsible today. With bad weather forecast for the day I would leave the car at home and take the bus to work. There was always the option of getting the train home.
Then the buses were suspended. I was persuaded to go home but rather than wait for the announcement at 15:00 about the buses, I would get the train. There was nothing on the public transport website to say that they had been suspended. But I was de-railed by the lack of action at the railway station.
At 15.30 the website, which offered the chance to "follow us on Twitter" (and read the tweet from 1 March) also also said that the latest news concerned Pulrose Bridge being closed, still had a scrolling banner as follows:
Thanks to Eammon for driving me home - we met two buses on the road, But even now, the website has the system message.
Heritage transport; heritage communication.
Front page news
In more than 40 years as an athlete, I don't recall ever making it to the front page of a newspaper. Yet I managed to do it this week with my photo of Simon Skillicorn in the Creg-ny-Baa fell race.
http://www.iomtoday.co.im/news/isle-of-man-news/more-snow-on-hills-tomorrow-1-5519037
I think I shall stick to photography for the Easter Festival.
http://www.iomtoday.co.im/news/isle-of-man-news/more-snow-on-hills-tomorrow-1-5519037
I think I shall stick to photography for the Easter Festival.
Tuesday, 19 March 2013
Radio Times or what?
I've finally had an evening at home but as I walked through the door I remembered that Marie was out at a dinner tonight.
So I decided to tackle a few emails. I couldn't work out why my brother, Mike, had been sending me so many emails with references to RT on YouTube in recent weeks. They were actually not about the Radio Times but concerned Fairport Convention original guitarist Richard Thompson who has recently released a new album called Electric and has been appearing on all sorts of TV shows in the UK and the USA.
I stayed on YouTube a bit longer to re-watch my own video of the Creg-ny_Baa Fell Race - wasn't Lloyd Taggart electric in that?
I've also supplied a few photos of the fell race to John Watterson for the Manx Independent and just put another on the front page.
So I decided to tackle a few emails. I couldn't work out why my brother, Mike, had been sending me so many emails with references to RT on YouTube in recent weeks. They were actually not about the Radio Times but concerned Fairport Convention original guitarist Richard Thompson who has recently released a new album called Electric and has been appearing on all sorts of TV shows in the UK and the USA.
I stayed on YouTube a bit longer to re-watch my own video of the Creg-ny_Baa Fell Race - wasn't Lloyd Taggart electric in that?
I got a wet backside on Saturday lying on my back to capture Lloyd with the Baldwin Valley in the background
I've also supplied a few photos of the fell race to John Watterson for the Manx Independent and just put another on the front page.
Monday, 18 March 2013
Half a job
I said in the middle of last week that it would be Sunday before I had an evening at home but I ended up spending Sunday in a place that I had been at on a Sunday for five and half years.
When I got home I did a fair bit of tinkering on the website but forgot to check out the Liverpool Half Marathon. It was just before I left for work this morning that I looked up the results by club and posted the list of Northern and Western AC athletes, although I mis-sorted some of the columns.
I received quite a few emails with additional names and corrections so I finished the job off at lunchtime and added the pics of three of the star performers.
If you know of anyone else who ran the Liverpool Half Marathon do let me know.
Sunday, 17 March 2013
Payback time
When the alarm went off yesterday morning I tried to remember the reasons why I could remember I had no time to spare!
The reasons came back into my head quickly. We were going out to the Young Farmers Concert at the Gaiety Theatre in the evening and we had friends round for a meal beforehand at 5 pm. With the Creg-ny-Baa fell race starting at 1.30 I would have little time to upload photos, update the website and edit video before they arrived. And if I was to make it to the start of the fell race I would have to get the holiday cottage cleaned very quickly. And if I was going to start that task on time I couldn't afford to delay commencement of my 10 mile run.
Thankfully, I got some payback on my previous investment in some of these functions. I am fit enough to routinely run 10 miles; the holiday cottage benefited from my spring cleaning and only having two people for four nights (and as we didn't have anyone moving in immediately I could leave some of the washing in the tumble dryer and call back today); I'm getting heavier handed with the video editing (I don't lose sleep if I don't get every person into the cut of every single race any more); and if our guests wanted to watch the rugby (they wished they hadn't), I could sneak away to finish uploading the video).
But the final payback was a cost not a benefit. Long before the end of each 35 minute slot by the local young farmers clubs I was desperate to stand to relieve the pain from my knee caused by so many years of pounding the roads. The evening was as good as ever but if you saw someone at the back going over the top with standing ovations you may have seen me.
The reasons came back into my head quickly. We were going out to the Young Farmers Concert at the Gaiety Theatre in the evening and we had friends round for a meal beforehand at 5 pm. With the Creg-ny-Baa fell race starting at 1.30 I would have little time to upload photos, update the website and edit video before they arrived. And if I was to make it to the start of the fell race I would have to get the holiday cottage cleaned very quickly. And if I was going to start that task on time I couldn't afford to delay commencement of my 10 mile run.
Thankfully, I got some payback on my previous investment in some of these functions. I am fit enough to routinely run 10 miles; the holiday cottage benefited from my spring cleaning and only having two people for four nights (and as we didn't have anyone moving in immediately I could leave some of the washing in the tumble dryer and call back today); I'm getting heavier handed with the video editing (I don't lose sleep if I don't get every person into the cut of every single race any more); and if our guests wanted to watch the rugby (they wished they hadn't), I could sneak away to finish uploading the video).
But the final payback was a cost not a benefit. Long before the end of each 35 minute slot by the local young farmers clubs I was desperate to stand to relieve the pain from my knee caused by so many years of pounding the roads. The evening was as good as ever but if you saw someone at the back going over the top with standing ovations you may have seen me.
View towards Snaefell yesterday.
Saturday, 16 March 2013
One of those proud of the Isle of Man days
Where else but the Isle of Man could you arrange for meetings with the head of the government, parliament and the judiciary for your shareholders? That was our agenda yesterday and very welcoming they are were too.
I then went to the prize presentation for the Microgaming Isle of Man Cross Country Championships and, when I arrived, there was a massive crowd of youngsters and parents present with a slightly smaller number for the senior awards that followed. In addition to the sponsor, the awards were presented by our double National Cross Country Champion Keith Gerrard.
Well done to everyone who organised and whose achievements were recognised at the events I attended yesterday. I was proud.
I then went to the prize presentation for the Microgaming Isle of Man Cross Country Championships and, when I arrived, there was a massive crowd of youngsters and parents present with a slightly smaller number for the senior awards that followed. In addition to the sponsor, the awards were presented by our double National Cross Country Champion Keith Gerrard.
Well done to everyone who organised and whose achievements were recognised at the events I attended yesterday. I was proud.
Wednesday, 13 March 2013
The Paypal election
I thought I was seeing things tonight when I saw that the BBC News Channel was reporting the Paypal election as breaking news.
As it is my last evening at home until Sunday, I thought it was time to indulge in some news gathering from my collection of papers and other media.
I'm going to have extended work commitments for the next 48 hours, then on Friday evening I hope to make it to the cross country presentation and we're attending a local "cultural" event on Saturday.
After more cleaning on Saturday morning I'm heading for the hills with my cameras in the afternoon.
I hope that the mist will be clear this time and that I can see things clearly. Once I had caught up with world events tonight I saw clearly that it was the Papal election that was causing the smoke.
As it is my last evening at home until Sunday, I thought it was time to indulge in some news gathering from my collection of papers and other media.
I'm going to have extended work commitments for the next 48 hours, then on Friday evening I hope to make it to the cross country presentation and we're attending a local "cultural" event on Saturday.
After more cleaning on Saturday morning I'm heading for the hills with my cameras in the afternoon.
I hope that the mist will be clear this time and that I can see things clearly. Once I had caught up with world events tonight I saw clearly that it was the Papal election that was causing the smoke.
Monday, 11 March 2013
10 Years After
I've just been flicking through my usual pile of half read newspapers over a few cups of tea and noticed an obituary for yet another 70s rock musician. There seems to be one nearly every week and sometimes their passing encourages me to use one of their tracks as a soundtrack for one of my films.
This time it was the other way around. On 2 March I used Alvin's Lee's composition "Gonna Run" and four days later he died. He was the lead guitarist in one of the Isle of Wight festival successes named Ten Years After.
As a tribute, here is the result of the 20 Mile Race...Ten Years After.
This time it was the other way around. On 2 March I used Alvin's Lee's composition "Gonna Run" and four days later he died. He was the lead guitarist in one of the Isle of Wight festival successes named Ten Years After.
As a tribute, here is the result of the 20 Mile Race...Ten Years After.
1 | Peter | Hughes | 2:05:19 |
2 | Paul | Curphey | 2:06:11 |
3 | Paul | Dickinson | 2:16:03 |
4 | Richard | Radcliffe | 2:19:38 |
5 | David | Young | 2:19:49 |
6 | Paul | Trees | 2:23:14 |
7 | Robert | Webb | 2:26:03 |
8 | Peter | Cooper | 2:26:09 |
9 | Alan | Bagley | 2:26:38 |
10 | Dave | Corrin | 2:27:18 |
11 | John | Grady | 2:28:58 |
12 | Martin | Bell | 2:35:34 |
13 | Jason | Cochrane | 2:49:19 |
14 | Michael | Crook | 2:49:21 |
15 | Michelle | Kewley | 2:54:27 |
16 | Dave | Nixon | 2:58:06 |
17 | Sue | Furner | 2:59:45 |
18 | Alan | Pilling | 3:02:23 |
19 | Richard | McAleer | 3:25:28 |
20 | Ruth | Eastham | 3:34:36 |
21 | Catriona | Farrant | 3:36:51 |
Saturday, 9 March 2013
Erratic speed
I've just done a speedtest on my internet connection and it is back to 0.50 Mbps - that is little more than 1 of the advertised "up to 40 Mbps" advertised.
It was the same on Thursday evening when everything seemed to be slow. My own speed was so slow I thought I was going to pass out with tiredness and I had to abandon the work I had planned at the cottage. My football team looked as if they were only playing to 1% of their capacity and then, when I tried to relax, the internet connection made watching the iPlayer impossible.
This morning, at 6.30, the internet connection was 50 times faster. My training pace too was just about acceptable although well inside the "up to" speed that I used to perform to. And then I took Robbie to the Mooragh Park in Ramsey.
He has planning his own comeback then on 12 April after a break of 20 months but I couldn't see how he could run almost 4 miles when he had not run more than a mile at the NSC in recent times. In 2011 his speed was incredibly erratic taking between 26 minutes and 55 minutes. To run 33 minutes straight off today was probably less erratic than any of the other measures I have been testing.
Wednesday, 6 March 2013
There's the rub
I've been rubbing and scrubbing on night three of my spring clean and maintenance at the cottage with the consequence that, combined with running in the morning and my ordinary working day, I'm beginning to struggle.
Website just ticking over tonight as the clock does too. I won't be in Ramsey tomorrow night. Night four beckons.
Website just ticking over tonight as the clock does too. I won't be in Ramsey tomorrow night. Night four beckons.
Tuesday, 5 March 2013
Spring in the air
There was certainly no spring in me when Mike Garrett asked me if I was going to do a warm down after the 10km race on Saturday. I could barely move as I complained: "You've had five more minutes to recover than me" such was the difference in our performances.
But its been great during the past couple of weeks for people like me who run in the mornings to enjoy the light and dry conditions. There were still some patches of ice around this morning though.
The spring is not the best of times for me with one of my commitments though. I spent Sunday afternoon Spring cleaning our holiday apartment and last night I started the same exercise at the cottage. Its the time of the year when everything comes out of the cupboards and gets reorganised and the imaginary marks I have been giving myself throughout the previous year get docked when I find something that should have been done long ago.
Maybe we are different to some, because we don't rely totally on the government website bringing business to us, but our bookings for the summer are good. There has been an outcry about the latest online booking system and, although it could be better and is to geared towards the hotel sector, it is a step in the right direction.
I'll be stepping up and down the stairs again tonight as I progress my work at the cottage. I guess I'll get around to cleaning the living room at about 7.45 to take in the football as I did last night when I did the ironing from there.
All being well, I'll publish some stats on the Leinster Management 20 Miles (which is to be held this Sunday) at the end of this long spring day and I also plan to have one to two words about the aforementioned Mr Garrett.
But its been great during the past couple of weeks for people like me who run in the mornings to enjoy the light and dry conditions. There were still some patches of ice around this morning though.
The spring is not the best of times for me with one of my commitments though. I spent Sunday afternoon Spring cleaning our holiday apartment and last night I started the same exercise at the cottage. Its the time of the year when everything comes out of the cupboards and gets reorganised and the imaginary marks I have been giving myself throughout the previous year get docked when I find something that should have been done long ago.
Maybe we are different to some, because we don't rely totally on the government website bringing business to us, but our bookings for the summer are good. There has been an outcry about the latest online booking system and, although it could be better and is to geared towards the hotel sector, it is a step in the right direction.
I'll be stepping up and down the stairs again tonight as I progress my work at the cottage. I guess I'll get around to cleaning the living room at about 7.45 to take in the football as I did last night when I did the ironing from there.
All being well, I'll publish some stats on the Leinster Management 20 Miles (which is to be held this Sunday) at the end of this long spring day and I also plan to have one to two words about the aforementioned Mr Garrett.
Sunday, 3 March 2013
Usual database issues
My lists of finishers in the Manx Harriers open were some of the first I produced as they formed one of the early features on the Manxathletics.com site.
I've not done much work on them for a while but tonight I have added the 2012 and 2013 results and also tried to standardise some of the names. For example, if you entered as Andrew one year and Andy another I have selected one or other. If you prefer your listing to be with a different version of your name then let me know,
I've already spotted one of my errors with an extra "r" in Richard Gerrard's name. I'll do another version tomorrow night (late).
I've not done much work on them for a while but tonight I have added the 2012 and 2013 results and also tried to standardise some of the names. For example, if you entered as Andrew one year and Andy another I have selected one or other. If you prefer your listing to be with a different version of your name then let me know,
I've already spotted one of my errors with an extra "r" in Richard Gerrard's name. I'll do another version tomorrow night (late).
Pos | Forename | Surname | Club / Country | Time | Year | Distance |
5 | Richard | Gerrrard | Unattached | 1:54:29 | 2010 | 20km |
7 | Richard | Gerrard | Unattached | 1:51:59 | 2011 | 20km |
3 | Richard | Gerrard | IOM Veteran Athletics Club | 1:49:52 | 2012 | 20km |
4 | Richard | Gerrard | IOM Veteran Athletics Club | 1:45:23 | 2013 | 20km |
Cover photo?
Dermot O'Toole, in the foreground of the photo taken at the Ascot Hotel sponsored Manx Harriers Open Meeting yesterday, has asked me several times on my thoughts of photos for the cover of his soon to be published second edition of his book tracing the history of the Manx Telecom Parish Walk.
But maybe Robbie Lambie, in the background (blue jumper) alongside Ron Ronan thought that he was going to be on it as, when I said I was going to take photos with them in the background, he immediately started combing his hair!
Such is the status of twice national cross country champion Keith Gerrard, even Robbie would admit that his days as a famous athlete in Peel are past!
After running in the afternoon and editing video straight afterwards I struggled to get to Peel on time for a concert last night. I've been chasing my tail ever since. So many things to do that emails have been "rested".
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