Archive for the ‘Ultrawalking’ Category

25
Feb

Jim Gleeson – Centurion Walker

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Thanks to Tim Erickson for this excellant article.

I love the mention of the Races in Darwin.  It must have been torture!

03 jim gleeson

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23
Feb

Nobby Young – fundraising leaflet

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His site is http://walksa.blogspot.com/

Herald newspaper audio interview http://www.theherald.co.za/article.aspx?id=522189

Cheers D

Walkabout South Africa

Friday, January 22, 2010

Port Elizabeth


Yesterday I had my twenty-third birthday in Port Elizabeth and, in true Raubenheimer fashion, I even had a vegan chocolate cake with icing and candles! Darrell and Evie are the parents of my good friend Andrew, someone who I’ve always been able to count on in Johannesburg. Now, spending some time with his parents, it’s obvious to see that generosity and hospitality are a hereditary asset in the Raubenheimer family! One needs only to mention their name to a runner who has taken part in the Rhodes Trail Run, or the Baviaanskloof Trail Run (which they organise) to hear countless tales of their passion and compassion for people.


So, well fed and rested, I find myself in the last few weeks of my trip. I’m looking forward to finishing, but I’m not sure what it will be like going back to a “normal” life. That being said, I think my trip has been quite pedestrian (tom-tom-snare) compared to many journeys that one reads about. But for me the real life changing part of the trip has been the people that I’ve met and the thought processes that this trip, particularly the oscillations between comfort and varying hardships, has allowed me. Someone recently pointed out to me, that the qualities that we admire in people are seldom possessed by the people that we aspire to be. This eloquent summary had been on my mind for some time but it’s articulation seemed to bring the issue to the fore. Suffice to say I’ve had a radical change in values.

Well, I’ve a touch of writer’s block (I remember some funny quote about using writer’s block as an excuse that made everyone who said they had writer’s block look like an idiot… but I can’t remember it so now it seems a valid excuse), but I’m around this computer after walking again tomorrow, so I’m making a written statement that I’m going to completely update the blog tomorrow!

If I haven’t, please harass me.

Posted by Kyle Meenehan at 8:13 PM 1 comments

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26
Nov

Caboolture Multi day event – 1993

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1
Aug

Edward Weston struck down by car

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Article from Google Newspaper Database

This is from The Evening Independant on 22 March, 1927.  Weston was aged 88 and struck down by an Automobile in a New York hospital. Read the full article for complete details

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Double click on the images to read the full details

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The How and Why of the Oldtime

Six Day Races

ANDY MILROY


THE only ultra records to survive from the last century are those set in Six

Day races and many-modern ultra runners, aiming to tackle the new

versions of’ this event, have expressed considerable interest in how the oldtime

processional runners achieved such distances. I have attempted to examine

all aspects of such races and the preparation of the ” peds ” to discover their

recipe for success.

Reliability

Is there any point in considering such performances in the first place’.’

Were the totals inflated by-inadequate lap recording or undersize tracks? In

many of’ the major American matches the task of keeping score and timekeeping

was entrusted to officials selected from the local athletics clubs who should

have been independent of the management and competitors. The tracks were

measured one foot from the inner edge, or sometimes eighteen inches. They

were usually measured with surveyors’ instruments both before and after the

event, and cases of final distances being reduced or increased following

discovery that the track was undersize or oversize are recorded. However, some

people at the time expressed reservations about Littlewood’s 623 ¾ miles. Sir

John Astley wrote – I have never felt quite satisfied as to the correctness of

the scoring, though I know he was a very smart young chap, and perhaps the

prettiest runner of the set”. Sir John’s ideas as to the limits attainable in a

Six Day were perhaps conditioned by the races at the Agricultural Hall.

Islington, the foremost British venue. One Englishman who had lived in the

United States stated-Madison Square Gardens (where Littlewood set his

record) bears the same relation to it (Agricultural Hall) as a lady’s boudoir

in Fifth Avenue does to a log hut in the Western wilds.” I hope by the end

of this article to have produced enough evidence for readers to make up their

own minds.

How the runners gained experience

In these modern days where professional athletics is a fringe activity

occupying principally the Scots and the Australians it is hard to visualise the

state of affairs that existed in the 1870’s and ’80’s. At that time ” amateur “

athletics was the preserve of the upper classes. Any working class lad showing

athletic prowess very swiftly turned professional. George Littlewood for

instance was competing from at least the age of nine.

For athletes wishing to try their endurance in the popular Six Day contests

there was a chance to learn the “game”-almost a nursery for ” peds “. Out

numbering the “real” out-and-out 6 Day races were 6 x 12 hours and 6 x 14

hours events which cut out the unprofitable periods when the public were

scarce, were easier to supervise, and were ideal preparation for an all out

event. The race programme of an ordinary “ped”- Sam Day, with no

pretensions to greatness, gives an idea of how a young runner might swiftly gather

experience. March 1879 6 x 14 hrs. Lambeth Baths, June 1879 6 x 14 hrs.

Agricultural Hall, August 1879 6 x 14 hrs. Dundee, October 1879 6 x 14 hrs.

Birmingham, November 1879 6 x 12 hrs. Wolverhampton, November 1879 14 hrs.

Lambeth, January 1880 66 miles in 10 hrs.

The Quality of the Pedestrians

The men who tackled the Six Days successfully were no heavy footed

Plodders, for the unmatched prizes of the event attracted any athlete with

ability as a runner or walker. Had Salazar or De Castella been alive then

they too would have tried multiday racing. Pat Fitzgerald held the United

States Hour record with 11 m 60y. George Hazael the 20 miles world best.

Rowell has still to be equalled as a performer over two and three days. George

Mason and James Bailey who set ultra bests up to 40 miles also had a go.

Mason, in fact, was probably the best “marathon” runner of the day with an

estimated 2.45 en route to a 30 miles best (John Hayes-2.55 to win the 1908

Olympics). The best walkers tried the event too. Tincler, the world one mile

champion, Harry Vaughan, the 24 Hour record holder, and Littlewood attempted

6 Days; Littlewood with conspicuous success. With so many good quality

athletes involved it’s not surprising that the standards were so high.

Training

We are fortunate that in 1908 Len Hurst, perhaps the foremost long distance

runner of the day gave details of his training in a book written by Alf Downer.

Hurst competed successfully in a number of multiday races and was involved

in virtually the last flourish of Six Day racing-the 2 man 6 Day relay of 1904.

From his training, devised for events from 15 to 50 miles, we can get an idea

of that undertaken by Rowell, Littlewood, and other 6 Day pedestrians. He

first advised anyone planning to take up long distance running to take any

amount of walking exercise. He suggested a daily programme as follows:

Rise at six followed by a steady walk till 8.30. Breakfast. Rest till 9.45 then

walk till 11 a.m. followed by a three mile run. Dinner at 12.45 followed by a

rest on a bed until 3 o’clock. An hour’s walk followed by a three mile run.

Tea at 5.30 followed by a walk from 6.30 to 8.30. Finally relaxation until bed

at ten o’clock. This remember, is the training schedule for a top marathon

runner of the day. To modern eyes its emphasis on walking seems more

applicable to the Six Day, and it is likely that Rowell undertook a more

intensive version of the above. Before his major races he is reported to have

covered 40 to 50 miles a day in training, walking and running (Hurst probably

about 26 to 30 miles). He was also known to throw in the occasional long run,

and thought nothing of running up to London from his home at Chesterton,

near Cambridge (some sixty miles in under eight hours. and back again the

next day!

Rowell is also said to have experimented to find the most economical style

for the event. In the early 1880’s Walter George and he tried out running with

little or no bend of the knee, allowing the rear leg to swing naturally through

as the fore foot landed on the heel, thus practically running on the heels, with

hands and arms in front of the sides of the body most of the time. The back

leg would swing naturally forward from toe to heel without any exertion or

knee lift. This, George and Rowell practised in Richmond Park for two or

three weeks almost daily.

I have concentrated on Rowell’s training because he was the most successful

runner at the peak of 6 Day racing, and moreover, unlike most other peds,

does not seem to have used stimulants.

Rest / Sleep

Having locked at a number of 6 Day races involving most of the top men

there seems to have been a consensus that one could get by on about three

hours sleep a night. In a fiercely competitive situation this might drop to

to 2 to 2 ½, hours, but with a good lead, four hours might be taken. I only have

mile splits for a lengthy period of a race for Rowell and Littlewood, but

examination shows clear but differing strategies. In his great 1882 run when

he set out to run his opponents off their feet Rowell took half an hour rest

every six hours up to 22-28 when he took three hours sleep. He took further

half hour breaks at 32 ½, and 38 ½ hours before another long break from 41-03

to 42-20. Six hours later still sticking to schedule he had his sleep break from

48-20 to 50-35-2 h 15. The strain was now beginning to tell or else he planned

more frequent breaks, because an hour later he took 15 minutes rest, three

hours later a further 20 minutes, and on reaching 300 miles in 58 hours, another

half hour break. He then pushed on for six hours, took 40 minutes rest before

stopping for the night from 68-3, to 71-23 hours after reaching 350 miles. He

had taken 13 hours 22 minutes rest in 72 hours. He was inadvertently

“poisoned” with vinegar at this point, but it is likely that he had over

stretched himself with his fearsome opening day (150 miles). A schedule of

6 hours running ½ hour rest was also followed by Robert Vint and James

Albert for at least part of their record runs.

Littlewood’s 623 ¾ miles was achieved when 6 Day races were on the wane.

and his performance was not well reported in the States or in Britain. I do

have mile splits for most of his earlier walking record of 531 miles. His great

strength seems to have been the ability to bang out 4 ½, to 5 miles an hour pace

as a walker almost indefinitely. He rested only briefly for about five minutes

at a time and slept probably 3 h 45 the first night, 3 h 46 the second, 3 h 40 the

third, and 3 h 45 the fourth before a further 2 ½ hours from 107 ½ , to 110 hours, 3 hours

the fifth night and finally 1 h 50 from 130 to 132 h 20 m. A probable total of

18 ¾ hours sleep in 6 days. It is likely that his 623 ¾ miles effort was based on a

similar schedule. However, his rest total was only 16 h 26 in total so he probably

took close to three hours a night.

Pace/Walking-Running Ratios

The pace the peds aimed for seems to have been a top speed of 6 m.p.h.,

often around 5 ½, with occasional lapses to 4 m.p.h. Rowell seems to have

scored with his ability to reel off 10 minute miles for hours on end. His 1882

run, of course, violated this norm: 7 m.p.h. the first day, and by the end of

Day 3 he suffered for it. It is hard to distinguish on a sheet of mile times

between a fast walk of 5 m.p.h. and a slow jog of 5 m.p.h, but I have not been

able to spot any systematic pattern of slower miles and faster which perhaps

means the peds ran as they felt, walking when tired or stiff. When James

Albert Cathcart ran his 621 miles he apparently ran as far as he could for as

long as he could each day then walked. Ed Dodd and Tom Osler record Merritt

running three laps and walking one and Weston running two miles without

a walking break but apart from that I’ve not seen much evidence for drawn

out walk/run schedules.

Food: Drink Stimulants

In training and during the race diet was regarded as very important. Roast

beef, roast and boiled mutton or chicken, with limited vegetables and stale and

crusty bread was regarded as suitable to be washed down with bitter ale. The

meat, often in the form of chops, was usually taken before the longest rest

period. Meat protein was also eaten whilst on the move in semi-liquid form

such as mutton stew, calf foot jelly or eel broth using an invalid feeding cup

like a small gravy boat with a long thin spout. The favourite liquid intake

was an extension of this-beef tea or beef essence. Other fluids taken were

tea, coffee, ginger ale and milk, as well as more potent beverages. In an

attempt to revive the flagging pedestrian alcoholic drinks like champagne and

brandy was used successfully. Often more drastic measures were needed.

Minute doses of poisons like strychnine and belladonna were used, morphine

in hot drops and even electric shocks. Other means included mechanical

instruments like the scarificator used on Fitzgerald which jabbed sixteen sharp

blades one eighth of an inch into inflamed and swollen tissue. The pain from

swollen and strained legs was such that staggering pedestrians would hold

sponges soaked in ammonia to their noses to stop themselves from fainting.

Another favourite, legitimate restorative was the very hot bath which when

used on a tiring ped would “liven him up considerably, fairly making him

out”.

The greatest stimulant of all which made the suffering runners willing to

undergo such tortures and risks was the money. Rowell, at the height of the

6 Day mania won $ 20,398 in his first Ashley Belt race, and $19.500 prize money

plus $ 6,500 entrance money in the next race. Almost a hundred times the

annual average wages of the day! Even taking the financial rewards into

account the incredible determination and stoicism of an athlete like

Littlewood is amazing. The first time he passed 600 miles in May 1888 he had huge

blisters on the sole of each foot which by the last two days had burst and

were raw. His little toes had swollen and burst open so the bones were visible

and the flesh hung in flaps. On the third day his hip had been

swollen and inflamed with rheumatism. The second time he achieved 600 miles (623 ¾)

in the course of the race the spirit bath he was bathing his feet in

caught fire and caused a severe blister on his loot.

Clothing and Shoes

The costumes worn by the pedestrians were fairly standard, only Westonia

went in for elaborate clothes. They consisted of shirt and tights, with trunks

worn over the tights. On their feet were lightweight boots or shoes-special

running shoes had been used by professional runners for at least fifty years.

Howell wore lightweight running shoes specially made for him by his father

who was a cobbler.

The Age of the Peds

.

Apart from Frank Hart who was probably about 24 when he set his best

565 miles, virtually all the other top pedestrians achieved their peak

performances when they were over thirty. Littlewood was 30 in 1888. Albert 33

and Herty probably 29. Fitzgerald was 38 in 1884 and Rowell 31. Hazael was

37 in 1882. Of the earlier “record holders” O’Leary was 34, Weston was 40,

Gentleman was 39 and Brown was 36 when setting their best performances.

To anyone familiar with the ages of present day top 24 Hour runners this

would not be surprising. With the exception of Dave Dowdle, Mark Pickard

and Wally Hayward they fall into the same age group.

Venues

The two great venues were the Agricultural Hall, Islington, London, and the Madison Square Gardens, New York. The track in London was made of loam and fine gravel which was then rolled. The normal floor was probably dirt. The earth floor of the Madison Square Garden was specially prepared before the track was laid. First the ground was dug to a depth of twelve inches then broken up into a fine filth and all pebbles removed with rakes. On top of this a layer of tan bark and clay or loam was laid. (Tanbark was

either the bark of the tanbark oak which was used in tanneries and thus freely

available in New York, or else the pulverised wood of the tree). Thus the

three inch top layer was a mixture of plant fibre and earth, and provided a

spongy surface to run and walk on. Perhaps the nearest track conditions to

the old days is the track at Haverford College fieldhouse, Pennsylvania, which

was used in January this year 1983, for a major 48 Hour race. The track is

dirt on dirt foundations. Many of the runners reported rapid leg recovery

from the race. This is perhaps how the old time peds managed to cope with

several races one after another. Although running, indoors meant that the

weather was not a consideration there were other handicaps, such as tobacco

smoke, fog and dust which could make the atmosphere inside the hall very

unpleasant and even make the competitors sick.

To summarise: The old time ‘peds’ success was probably due to their

willingness to cut their sleep to three hours or less a night, to running to a pre

planned schedule of rests at least at the start, and to their capabilities as

walkers to push along at 4 m.p.h. plus. Perhaps the most important factors

were the chance of overnight wealth to poor men, who, to achieve such success,

were willing to put their fate in the hands of ruthless handlers who, of course.

were in on a cut of the prospective prize money.

One final point. Was the 623 ¾ miles the greatest distance the peds could have achieved? The answer is probably not. Littlewood, and probably others.

were content to break the record by a small amount, to leave it within reach

on another occasion so that another bonus for breaking the “record” could

he earned. Mike Newton’s and Tom O’Reilly’s extravagance in breaking the

modern day record by over seventy miles would have been regarded as most

unbusinesslike!

Daily Splits for 600 mile performances

Haezel 135 m 242 m 342 3/8 m 433 5/8 m 540 m 600 1/8 (107) (100 3/8 ) (91 ¼ ) (106 3/8 ) (60 1/8 )

Fitzgerald 126 m 226 m 336 m 447 5/8 m 536 1/2 m 610 m

(100) (106) (111 ¾ ) (88 ¾ ) (73 ½ )

Rowell 135m 240 m 346 m 440 m 525 m 602 m

(105) (106) (94) (85) (77)

Albert 130 1/8 m 238 m 348 m 450 m 545 m 621 5/8m

(107 7/8 ) (110) (102) (95) (76 ¾)

Littlewood 122 ¼ m 217 7/8 m 320 ¾ m 431 m 538 ½ m 623 ¾ m

(95m 1100y) (102m 1540y) (110 ¼ m) (107 ½ m) (85 ¼ m)

Note – I don’t have the daily splits for Daniel Herty who ran 605 miles behind

Littlewood. Littlewood also ran 611 ¾ miles in May 1888 and is the only

pedestrian to go over 600 miles twice.

Sources

Running Recollections and how to train-Alfred Downer l908.

Sporting & Athletic Records-H-Morgan Browne 1897. English, American & Australian Sporting Calendar-Jas Toulon 1884

Pedestrian Record-Lupton 1890. The Great American Sports Book-Gipe 1978.

Ultramarathoning-Tom Osler and Ed Dodd 1979.

Fifty Years of My Life-Sir John Astley 1894.

Bell’s Life.

I’d also like to thank Peter Lovesey for reading, the draft of this article

and his help and comments.

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11
Jul

Ultramarathon history in America

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The articles in here are only touching the surface and this will grow immensely in the next few years

Long Distance Running in Mexico

Native American Indians Running

Newspaper Boy walking around the World – 1914

The Great American Footrace

Tarahumara Indians

Trans Continental Runs

Kouros runs 635 miles in New York – 1984

Cassidy runs Angeles Crest – 1993

1993 Badwater Results

1993 Trans am results

Barkly Marathon – 1990

Gibsons Ranch Multi day – 1990

Graduating to Multi day runs – 1991

Leadville Trail Report in 1989

Western States 100 – 1990

Western States Trail Run – 1992 or 1993

Angeles Crest 100 mile trail run – 1993

Leadville 100 -1988

1989 Sri Chinmoy Ultra Trio

Death Valley -1988

New York 100km – 1993


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