Tag: londonmarathon

  • The Big 3-0. My Longest Ever Run!

    The Big 3-0. My Longest Ever Run!

    Sunday 9 February 2025

    Week 5, Day 7: 30km Long Run

    My longest ever run and the first time I’ve ever run into the thirties! Crazy!

    Today’s word-of-the-day was ‘easy‘. Given my right knee has been giving me some grief, and we had XC yesterday, Jo was very strict. “Keep it easy, Very easy.”

    This one scared me a bit. 30km. That’s like, 2 ½ hours of running. I’ve never ran that far or for that long. And I would be on my own with no one to chat to and only Steve Magness and Rich Roll to keep me company.

    I headed out.

    Almost immediately I stopped.

    Brainwave! I’ve never used the alerting system on my watch, but I quickly programmed in a ‘too fast’ alert so my watch would beep if I went faster than 4:50/km pace. I also added a ‘too slow’ alert for paces slower than 5:00/km. I quickly turned this one off to stop the almost continuous beeping. This proved to be a pretty successful strategy actually. It meant I didn’t need to endlessly fixate on my watch to check I wasn’t accidentally speeding up, which is what often tends to happen, but was getting a constant reminder if I did speed up. And the beeping noticeably stopped. At first it was really annoying, beeping every 100m or so, but after I settled into it, my watch beeped far less often.

    The route I’d planned pretty much went to pot in the first 10 minutes, when I decided I fancied running down Badgeworth Lane. One of the nice things about running so far is that you can make it up on the fly, and know you’ve got 20km to play with to get back home. Nearer the end you need to be a little more on it, of course. I didn’t think Rob would come and pick me up from Bishop’s Cleeve if I got my distances wrong. But it’s really quite freeing just having nowhere particular to go for the next 2 ½ hours. Except for running back past your house of course – I try to avoid that.

    30km Long Run

    The run went pretty well overall.

    Pacing, good.

    Route, good.

    Fuelling, good.

    Knee? Not so good. It started hurting a little from about 8km, but didn’t really get any worse until just towards the end. I’m trying to remain calm and not worry, but my worry level has probably increased from about 2 to 4. Tomorrow is a rest day so I will rest hard, perhaps even forgoing our morning walk. I stretched, rolled and massage-gunned my ass off when I got in and will try to do some more later. I’ve also booked in for a sports massage at Pentons tomorrow, to loosen anything up which might be causing a bit of tension or stress. Let’s wait and see.

    So all in all, knee excluded, another good run. I’m really chuffed with how ‘easy’ I found 30km. Yes it was long. But it was doable and I got it done.

    Fuelling Notes

    Pre Run

    As it’s important to practise practise practise, I’ve decided I should be having my pre-race breakfast before my long runs. I know my stomach behaves differently on race day when I get nervous, but the more I can create patterns to simply repeat on race day, the better. I had a bagel topped with peanut butter and banana about 75-90 minutes before I started running.

    During Run

    Gels gels gels. Today I had three:

    I should have had something more at 2h 20m, and I was carrying some Veloforte Lemon & Mint chews, but I just didn’t really want to open them. And as the pace was easy, I decided it was probably ok for the last 10 minutes.

    Interestingly, I was ‘hungry’ on the run. The gels were fuelling me but my stomach felt empty and like it needed some real food. I’d woken up hungry but didn’t want to overeat and feel sick on my run, so I probably needed a little more food yesterday post race / pre long run. A good learning for next time.

    Post Run

    When I got in, Rob had finished off the milk! So I headed to the co-op for more and made myself milky coffee. Jo’s advice of ‘cows, chickens and carbs’ was ringing in my head but what I really wanted was cheesy beans on toast. I don’t think this is a bad re-fuelling decision, given half a can of baked beans has 10g of protein vs. 2-eggs’ 12-15g, so went with what I fancied and really, really enjoyed it.

    For that little bit more protein, and given the beans over eggs previous decision, I finished with some yoghurt with stewed apple, raspberries and pecan nuts, another recent favourite.

    Despite a good re-fuel, I know I’ll feel like a bottomless pit the rest of the afternoon. I always do after a long run! We are going out for a Harriers’ ladies meal to celebrate the end of the Midlands XC league tonight, so I hope we have some crumpets in for a tasty mid-afternoon snack.

  • Go Slower, Keep It Easy

    Wednesday 5 January

    Week 5, Day 3: 60′ Easy

    Keep it easy.

    Slow it down.

    Even more.

    Seriously Nicole, stop running so fast!

    Easy runs are really important to let your body clock up the miles and build aerobic capacity and volume, whilst avoiding training overload by always running too hard to too fast.

    One of the biggest ‘challenges’ of marathon training so far, has been keeping my easy runs ‘easy enough’. Last Wednesday my legs felt pretty good after Tuesday’s session, and I averaged ~ 4:40/km for my ‘easy’ run. Too fast!

    The theme of last week’s feedback on Training Peaks was ‘slow it down’ and today, I really tried.

    Luckily, my legs were spent. I decided to get up and run first thing, therefore not having much rest, in real terms, between finishing the session and starting my run. This helped me to keep it easy.

    I think I almost passed, though Jo probably would have liked it to be slower still. Unfortunately, my decision to run first thing, and Jo’s WhatsApp messages to make sure I kept it ‘REALLY REALLY EASY’ (which was in capitals) crossed paths and so I didn’t pick her messaged up until I got back home. Luckily I was too busy keeping it easy* to see them.

    *Keeping it easy and finishing my bi-annual re-listen of Stephen Fry reading Harry Potter. Oh how a good audio book can keep you going for miles upon miles upon miles. Until next time!

  • Bondarenko, Bondarenka

    Bondarenko, Bondarenka

    Tuesday 4 February

    Week 5, Day 2: 3 / 2 / 1 Bondarenkos

    Let’s get the most important things out of the way first.

    Every time you read the word ‘Bondarenko’, please sing it to the tune of the chorus ‘Bamboléo’. It will cheer you right up.

    This is a hard session. It’s definitely a session where you really feel like it’s doing you good and ‘adding to the bank of mental toughness’, which can be withdrawn during future difficult sessions, long runs or most importantly, on race day.

    What is a Bondarenko?

    The basic set goes like this:

    400m @ 5k pace
    400m @ 5k pace + 20-25s / lap

    300m @ 5k pace
    300m @ 5k pace + 20-25s / lap

    200m @ 5k pace
    200m @ 5k pace + 20-25s / lap

    100m @ 5k pace
    100m @ 5k pace + 20-25s / lap

    So, for example, if you run an 80 second lap, your times would looks something like this:

    400m in 1m 20s
    400m in 1m 40-45s

    300m in 60s
    300m in 75s

    200m in 40s
    200m in 50s

    100m in 20s
    100m in 25s

    Then you repeat the whole thing 3 times, 2 times, 1 time with [3-4 minutes] rest between sets.

    In ‘real money’, it means you run continuously for long periods of time with no real break between them. The rests are ‘floats’, so they are slower but are not a recovery jog.

    The objective of a Bondarenko session is to break you practise changes of pace, develop your lactate shuttle and build speed endurance. The theory goes that by running just above and below your lactate threshold, you become more efficient at processing the lactate and maintaining steady state.

    A secondary benefit of the Bondarenko is mental toughness. Going from the 100m fast, straight into 100m float then back up to a 400m effort is really hard. It’s a tough session and is not for the feint hearted*.

    *If you want to make the session easier, as no one should start with the full set, other shorter options of 2/2/1, 3/2 or 2/1 sets are available.

    Track Tuesdays

    But what a great session!

    The last time Bondarenkos were on the menu, I named my Strava, and I quote, “Bondarenkos aka hardest session I think I’ve ever done”.

    Well today, they were not the hardest session I’ve ever done. The 3 x (3 x1 km) session a couple of weeks ago takes top spot.

    Don’t get me wrong, it was not easy. I was very grateful to be running with Stew, Rob and especially Gio who helped with the changes of pace. But the paces were strong, the floats were strong – possibly a fraction quick – and we finished the final set not much slower than we started.

    Another great session – in the bank.

    Fuelling Tips

    Pre Training

    This is a big session. Up to 12 km of hard running. Add in a warm up and cool down and I clocked nearly 18 km.

    Eat a carb-heavy breakfast, lunch and mid afternoon snack.

    Breakfast: I am obsessed with chia and flaxseed porridge at the moment, topped with partly-defrosted frozen raspberries or blackberries and peanut butter. It is insane.

    Lunch: Cheesy beans on toast – also a recent obsession.

    Mid Afternoon Snack (about 2 hours before training): I made a batch of these oaty-banana bars which I keep in the freezer. Defrost in the microwave, drizzle with peanut butter and you are good to go.

    Post Training

    It was late when I got back, but re-fuelling is critical.

    Dinner: Quorn spaghetti bolognaise and a chocolate protein hot chocolate with oat milk.

  • London’s Calling

    London’s Calling

    So I did it.

    I finally entered The London Marathon.

    Gulp.


    I’ve run for about eight years now. I took up running when I moved to Southampton for work after university, to meet people and make friends in a new city.

    Since then, I’ve moved to Cheltenham, where I now live and work from home. I rowed at school and university – but looking back now, I was never that good at it.

    I was too short.

    Too weak.

    Too inflexible.

    Pretty rubbish, in hindsight. But I worked hard and did as well as I could. I’m a much better runner, it turns out.

    Running follows cycles. Cross country, relays, track and repeat.

    Every year, April comes around and my Strava and Instagram feeds are full of marathon training. And every year I get, what I call, ‘the Marathon itch’. And every year, someone – a friend, a coach, a more experienced runner – says,

    “Don’t enter a marathon until your older. It ruins your life and kills your speed.

    But it is the best thing you’ll ever do!”

    So this is what I expected when I sat down with my coach, Jo, probably in Woodkraft, one of our favourite post-parkrun-breakfast cafes, and told her about the 2024 marathon ‘itch’ I wanted to scratch in 2025. Except, this time, she didn’t say ‘no’. She said, I’m paraphrasing of course… but she said something along the lines of, ‘Well yes, I was wondering about that too. We’ve gradually increased your long runs and mileage so you’re in good place. For the marathon, you’d need to up it a little more again, but we’ve got a good base…’

    Well, that was unexpected and not the ‘talk down’ I’d expected.


    So here I am, just starting my First. Ever. Marathon. Block.

    It’s not special, I know. Thousands, probably millions of people have trained and run a marathon. But I haven’t. So this is totally new for me. So I thought, why not create a bit of a diary to capture my experience, learnings and if you want, you can follow along with me. If not, well, that’s fine too.