Originally the plan was a trip to the outskirts of London,
drive down after work, fulfill a family commitment, drive to Skegness arriving
about 3 am, sleep in the car, visit some friends and drive home. However a short
visit with friends feels almost ignorant, they are good friends and well worth
spending the time for a real visit, so I changed the plan.
The new plan was a drive from home to London, then drive to
Edale in the English Peak district, grab a couple of hours sleep in the car and
have an early start on the Kinder Killer. The kinder killer is a loop of
approx. 33 miles with 9,000 foot of ascent, a comprehensive run following the
most attractive routes up, down and around Kinder's complex system of
convoluted ridges and valleys, including some interesting but very easy rock
scrambles.
After much messing about with traffic diversions I finally
landed in Edale at 4.30 am, I parked in the darkest corner of the village hall
car park and climbed into my sleeping bag in the back of the car, completely
exhaust and ready for some sleep. Unfortunately I didn’t notice the railway
tracks only 20 feet away and was woken every hour by passing trains.
When my alarm sounded at 7.20 I awoke feeling surprisingly
fresh and was heading up through Edale by 8am. There were no cafes open for an
early morning coffee or shops to find food so I got on with the first ascent up
Grindsbrook Clough. Obviously I had a GPS route on my phone as I am totally
useless at navigation and with 79% battery I was pretty confident there was
enough charge to last the whole day. I got View Ranger running and off I went.
Kinder’s valleys are a real treat, in September they are
becoming over grown with bracken and thistles and all sort of under growth.
Almost always the path becomes over grown part way up and you find yourself
walking in the stream as this provides the easiest passage.
As expected the scramble at the top was wet rock but easy
none the less and the view from the top was spectacular. One down and feeling
good.
The next few hours were about rocky technical descents and
lovely flowing tracks running across the edge of Kinder, the kind of running I
enjoy and I was making the most of it, running all the gentle ascents and
pushing a little on the descents. About 1pm I stopped for some food and ate about half of
the carton of custard I had packed. I had very little food and a couple of
litres of drink but was happy I had enough for the day. I guessed that I was about half way through the run and
although I was beginning to feel tired I also felt pretty good and pressed on
to the next descent, a long and gentle run down towards the Snake pass road.
The next ascent was tough and I was getting low on drink so
refilled a couple of bottles with water from a stream near the top of the
ascent to Blackden Moor, taking the opportunity to stick my head under a small
waterfall and cool off a little. The sun was high and the sky cloud free so I
was over heating a little, luckily there a numerous streams on the ascents as
they are mostly up valleys, hence I took every opportunity I could to poor water
over my head and cool down.
Following Blackden Moor around the hill side I strayed from
the path and found myself battling through head high bracken, the Hoka Stinson
ADR trail shoes I use are great but a little unstable when traversing hill
sides and I found myself tripping and falling like a drunk person.
Having managed the struggle through the bracken forest I
checked my phone’s GPS and was still right on the track, unfortunately the
charge was down to 17%. I pushed on across "The Edge" heading towards Mill Hill,
finishing off my custard as I jogged and enjoyed the feeling that I could run
for ever. Mill Hill was busy, there was a lot of walkers about, i took a rest
and consulted the GPS again. Only 3 ascents left but my phone was beeping to
tell me the battery was low. Only 13% charge.
I spent the next 3 hours worried that my phone would fail as
the display got dimmer, the battery charge was expiring fast, the ascents were
killing me and I felt like quitting, I took a couple of energy gels I had left
and pushed on. My navigation is very poor but I got the map out and plotted the
route in case the phone died, which on the final ascent it did. However I had
almost completed the route with only the final ascent to go.
By 5.40 pm I was back in the car park exhausted by very
happy, at my current level of fitness i found the Kinder Killer very tough, however it is a great route and I would recommend it to anyone.