Battersea parkrun (not parkrace)

Just a note to say that a runner collapsed at this event, but the Battersea parkrun team posted on their facebook page later in the day to say that they were recovering in hospital, as well as huge thanks to the 4 doctors who stopped and helped them.

Another weekend and another visit to a London parkrun with Branka and Holly! This had been in the diary for a while as Holly wanted event number 16. It was half term and we had tickets for an exhibition on Saturday afternoon, so Andy booked us a hotel and I went into London straight from work on Friday evening.

The hotel was fairly close to Embankment tube station (on the Northern line- the line needed for Battersea) so it was a nice warm up on Saturday morning. The train didn’t take long, and I arrived on the tube ahead of Branka and Holly (who travelled in that morning) so I waited for them at the station. The walk to the start (1.3 miles on Strava) so we were glad of arriving with plenty of time.

Tube station/ finish cones out/ huge tarpaulin of trust and the view of the old power station from the tube station

The start and finish are in different places, with everyone leaving their bags on the biggest tarpaulin of trust that I’d ever seen! It was super busy with tourists taking photos- I even saw parkrun Karen (from Insta) again- we were waiting around to see where the first timers welcome would be, and I noticed people heading away from the finish area. We decided to follow them- lucky that we did as it turned out everyone was walking to the start. They walk you around in a loop, so that the first people to begin walking end up first on the start line. It definitely had the feel of a race rather than a parkrun, with huge groups of people warming up, loads of runners in club vests and loads of secondary school age kids looking like serious runners. I felt very nervous, as if I was about to do a race, whereas I don’t usually feel this way at a parkrun.

We couldn’t even hear the main briefing as we were so far back, but luckily Branka had checked the course page and reminded us that it was two laps! People started moving so the parkrun had begun!

I tried hard to run fast but didn’t look at my watch at all, just wanting to run on feel- I am really impressed with those splits as it was a perfect royal flush negative split.

The course is basically two anti-clockwise laps of the park, it’s flat and fairly wide (it’s a road, like Finsbury Park), although we had to keep left as there were plenty of runners out in the park heading in the opposite direction. It took a while to find my speed, and I kept having to overtake runners and then settle into a pace once there was space. I still felt very nervous and it wasn’t until the second lap that I felt more relaxed and as if I was at a parkrun. I saw the first finisher head into the funnel as I began my second lap- he was way ahead of the next few runners- very impressive. It does seem to attract the faster runners- there were nearly 200 who ran under 20 minutes (out of 1159 in total)!

The avenues of trees in the park/ the tourist board/ the front of the start line with loads of club runners/ pots set out for the tokens

I knew they had a multiple funnel system, and as I headed into the finish on my second lap I could see two funnels being closed off, and they were sending us over to the left of the funnels. Everyone bunched up and they asked us to try and keep in order after we had all spread out. I chatted to a guy who had finished just ahead of me- my watch had said 27:55 so I was really pleased to have managed such a fast time, and didn’t mind waiting in the funnel for a bit. I think after around 10 minutes they moved us up a bit, and we realised that in the funnel on our right, a runner had collapsed and was receiving medical treatment from a paramedic, with an ambulance coming too. I was trying not to look- mainly because if it was me I would not want people staring at me, but also if I do look I know it would upset me, but the guy I was chatting to was giving me a bit of a running commentary on how the collapsed guy was doing. I was very relieved when our row was finally moved on and I could meet up with Holly and Branka. Holly had finished a bit behind me but her funnel had been cleared ahead of me, so we knew our times would be messed up a bit of course. The team had posted that results would be delayed (understandably) and that they might not be correct, and I was expecting a 59:59 for everyone. I had token 711 and my watch had said 27:55, but when the results came through my token was 801 and my time was 28:49 (with Holly being ahead of me in the results on 775) but the team had warned us and I was just happy to get any time. It’s now set as my course pb so I shall just have to go back.

Token and purple pop up pics

After we finished, we took a few photos by the pop up and then headed out of the park and over to the converted power station building- it’s now a huge shopping centre with restaurants, cafes, a cinema, bowling alley and all sorts of other things. Holly had seen a picture of the pancakes at Where the Pancakes Are and they cater for all sorts of dietary requirements, so we headed there for breakfast.

Pop up selfie and pineapple pancakes

I had pineapple and coconut pancakes with lime syrup- good to have something more unusual rather than the standard berries and syrup combo. Then it was time to head back to the train and continue our weekend in London (F1 exhibition, and then later on we went back to Battersea as they had a light instillation- see below for a few pics)

So, Battersea parkrun- definitely one to visit as it has very different vibes to smaller parkruns, and as it’s so flat it is a great one for trying to blast out a fast time (even with the congestion at the start).

Before and after for the 5k app map– another nice big gap filled in

That was my 391st parkrun and my 125th parkrun venue, and my 28th London parkrun.

A few photos of the light sculptures

Thames Path, Woolwich parkrun

Originally Dad and I had planned this towards the end of last year, but a storm meant it was cancelled so we stayed closer to home. This time around the weather looked good (well, no storms) and so we were a go!

I picked up Dad and drove to St Albans station- there we got a fast train to Farringdon and changed to the Elizabeth Line, getting off at Woolwich. The connection at Farringdon was great, and so after getting the 7:13 train, we arrived in Woolwich at 8am. This turned out to be lucky as I went totally the wrong way out of the station, so we had nearly a mile warm up walking through Woolwich (which is very interesting) and along the Thames before finding the start area.

Can you spot me in the top left photo? Purple pop up and the finish line with the statues in the background.

Having seen loads of photos of the statues online, it was great to see them in person, although there was no sign (that I could find) telling me about the artist or the artwork.

The toilets were open at 8:30 (when we arrived at the finish area)- they were inside the large cafe and there were plenty of them. It didn’t seem a hugely busy parkrun (not compared to Tooting from the week before)- there were 224 participants that morning. We spent some time taking photos with the statues and sheltering from the wind, before the first timers welcome was at 8:45. We were then all walked to the start, which is maybe a 5 minute walk from the finish area, along the edge of the river. The parkrunners headed down the steps, whereas the RD and time keepers stood on a platform above, and this made for a great run briefing as the RD didn’t need to shout, and everyone could see and hear him.

This parkrun is famous for the spiral- a mount you run up in a spiral and then back down- it makes an excellent Strava map! It felt pretty flat apart from the spiral, and there were a few puddles to dodge along the first part, but nothing swampy (again, nothing like the huge puddle from Tooting last week!). It felt like we had hardly gone any distance when we approached the park with the spiral in it, and I happened to glance at my watch and see we had already gone over a mile. The course really seemed to fly by!

The start with the elevated bit for the RD, and then views of the spiral on the mound

It was such fun heading up the spiral and seeing runners above, either heading up, or seeing the faster runners fly back down towards us. I am sure on a clear day the views would have been spectacular, but on this grey day we couldn’t even see the tops of the tallest buildings. No matter, we loved it.

Check out the splits too- perfect royal flush negative splits right there!

Dad and me heading into the finish, pop up sign at the end, token and the view (and cool sign) from the spiral

I finished in exactly 29 minutes, my fastest time of the year so far, and also means I get a shout out on the vegan runners facebook post as they have all sorts of challenges and this is the “noughty step” (times ending in :00).

Avocado toast, views walking back to the station and the view inside the cafe

As soon as we finished we headed inside the cafe to warm up and dry off. I was super impressed with the prices- my avocado toast was £6 which is a bargain. Dad went for the plant based sausage sandwich, and when he ordered it they asked if he wanted plant based meat or mushroom- they recommended mushroom- we were both expecting a patty made with mushrooms, but instead his roll was filled with sliced sautéed mushrooms. He enjoyed it anyway, despite it not being what was expected. The cafe was cosy and had plenty of space for the parkrunners and others.

We walked the direct way back to the station (literally a few hundred metres) and again our trains on the way back lined up perfectly- as we were going down the stairs at Farringdon a train was pulling in, and it was a fast one to St Albans- couldn’t have planned it better!

We have already made plans to go back in the summer, and hopefully bring Mum along, as she would enjoy watching and chatting while we ran, and then we could have a walk around the Woolwich area after breakfast as there seems to be so much history and interesting buildings there. Such a good parkrun morning!

Before and after map- a nice big segment filled in there!

Stats: 390th parkrun

124th venue

And now I’m making a start on Lon-done, that was my 27th London venue (out of 65 currently but of course that’s going to keep going up)

My slightly zoomed out map showing more of the sections that need colouring in!

Do you have parkruns you’d love to revisit? This one was fab and as the journey was so good it’s definitely on the list to go back to.

Tooting Common parkrun

After realising how (relatively) simple it was to get to various London parkruns by train, and deciding to work on Lon-done, Tooting Common was on my radar. I’d previously been to Clapham Common whilst in London, and Tooting was the next stop down, so I had thought it might be left for when I was in London. However, Branka noticed that she had completed her 221st parkrun last weekend, and thought that doing her 222nd at Tooting would be a great idea. Holly and I were free for touring, so off we went!

It happened to be their 9th birthday too, so extra celebrations. I’d seen them post a photo of a huge puddle, so decided to pack spare shoes and socks for the journey home. I don’t mind getting wet feet while I run, but the thought of cold wet feet for the journey home was not appealing at all.

Engineering works meant that the Hatfield line was out of action, although it meant a slightly easier train journey with only one change rather than two, so I drove to St Albans and met Branka and Holly on the train (they got on the same train at Luton)- we were glad that we had factored in extra time, as they managed to miss their train due to the platform being changed at the last minute- this has happened to me before at St Albans so I could very much sympathise.

Anyway, the journey to Streatham all went to plan- we had to change at Blackfriars (could also change at Farringdon)- this was the same platform and the train was a few minutes later- and then travel around 5 stops to Streatham. It was then about a mile walk to the start. The park is close to the train station but the parkrun starts at the opposite end of the park. As we walked through the park we took a little detour as the maps tried to guide us through a huge puddle. We didn’t think this could be part of the course as it seemed so narrow, and Tooting gets several hundred runners, but we were wrong!

We got there just as the first timers welcome was happening, so it was perfect! Branka had time to put on her tutu (of course she wore a tutu for her 222 run) and we left our bags on the tarpaulin of trust. We got a few photos by the purple pop up but it was busy and the main briefing was about to start so thought we’d do some more at the end.

The course starts close to the cafe- you immediately head out to the perimeter of the park, do 3 laps and then return to the start/finish area. On Strava it’s a very pleasing triangle shape:

(Also check out our splits- a fab royal flush negative split)

Train ticket/ pop up/ birthday hats, pre-parkrun pop up pic

I ran with Holly and we had a lovely chat on the way around. I can’t think of that many three lap courses, but I knew we’d be overtaken in our second lap by the front runners (by the way, the first finisher was female- girl power!) as if it’s a two lap course I’m doing well if I’m not lapped. As the laps were so short, we soon reached the huge puddle. It was deep and very long, then just as you thought it was over and you were out, more puddles would appear. I tried at first to keep my feet dry but it just wasn’t happening, so just had to tell myself that like a wet suit, my body would warm the wet water in my socks and I would be OK. Of course, by the time we reached the puddle in the second lap my feet just just warmed up, only for them to be plunged into cold water again. That lap had the added “fun” of being splashed by the faster runners as they ploughed through the puddles.

A few pics of parts of the puddle, finish line zig zag and post parkrun pop up

The course is flat and there were loads of cheery marshals en route- lots of had on party hats and one was celebrating her birthday too, although when we shouted “happy birthday” to her she said “you too”- probably thinking that we were celebrating Tooting parkrun’s birthday and not hers.

I had to stop and retie my shoelace at one point (even the double knot had worked it’s way undone), but other than that we kept running and it didn’t feel like long before we were heading into the finish funnel. They had a long zig zag on the grass, but despite us coming in during a bit of a rush, it kept moving and there wasn’t a traffic jam in there. A few minutes after we had finished when the rush had died down, they began taking down the zig zag to make the funnel shorter.

The parkrun cafe painting and the cafe, finish token and the three of us with the pop up (check out the pink tutu!)

After finishing, we took more photos and I changed my shoes and socks (not that easy to do while avoiding the muddy grass) and then we headed back to the train station (after initially going the wrong way out of the park as we got distracted while chatting…). We passed the cafe, which was a really pretty black and white building, and decided to get a hot drink to take with us. Inside the cafe was a lovely painting of the cafe- it was such a classic old style park cafe and was tiny compared to the number of runners (548 participants on that day). I’d packed a croissant in my bag to have on the way home so our parkfaff could happen on the train.

The ‘after’ and ‘before’ map (can’t switch them somehow)- a nice square filled in close to Richmond Park

The return journey was super easy- around a ten minute wait at Streatham for the train to Blackfriars, and then a 4 minute wait for the fast train back to St Albans. Of course we had a chat about our next touring plans, and checked out the 5k app as we were on the train- Brockwell was close to the train line that we were on so that’s on the list now (and it’s tarmac apparently so no wet feet either…).

So that was parkrun number 389, 123rd venue, and if I use the 5K app to track Lon-done it’s the 26th one (out of 65 on there but of course that number is going to keep on going up). Fingers crossed that the next few weeks are free from storms or engineering works so I can visit a few more new events.

2024 parkrun summary

First up, a big shout out to the 5K parkrunner app, and the google Chrome running challenges extension, as I love both of these for keeping track of challenges but also just total number of parkruns completed. I could spend ages looking at the map.

Of course I had plenty of revisits too including one of my fave events of Hove Prom in Brighton.

So, a belated 2024 recap. I completed 16 new parkrun events in 2024, which is in line with previous high years- those early years of touring were easier as I was visiting events in Herts, whereas now it is more reliant on a weekend somewhere else or travelling a bit further .

(For interest the numbers are 14 in 2023, 14 in 2022, 5 in 2021, 3 in 2020, 16 in 2019, 17 in 2018, 22 in 2017, 10 in 2016, 2 in 2015, 1 in 2014 and 1 in 2013- my first event)

I did 46 parkruns in the year which equals my highest years of 2019 and 2022. I don’t think I will ever get the 50 as we’re always going to have a weekend in a non-parkrun country at some point each year. I volunteered 21 times- mostly at junior parkrun but with a few 5k events thrown in there too.

Notable achievements- Stay in Beds challenge completed (all the parkruns in Bedfordshire)- achieved at Great Denham last April

350th parkrun- celebrated at Lee on the Solent in March

German flag claimed- at Dietenbach in May:

(This had been a long time coming because we went to Berlin in 2018, and were meant to be flying out there on the Friday night, but our flight was cancelled and we travelled on the Sunday instead, so of course I couldn’t parkrun then. This trip was combined with a trip to the Europa-Park theme park so we were close by)

Japan flag claimed- at Futakotamagawa in August:

(We had three Saturdays in Japan but due to travelling and logistics I managed one while I was out there, but it was perfect and I am very proud of myself for navigating the trains on my way there by myself as I am not the best at navigating and get very anxious- not helped by an earthquake warning on our phones the night before…)

Single-ton (100 run/walks at the same location) achieved at Panshanger on their 10th birthday:

Deciding to make a dent in Lon-done after having visited lots of London events – in 2024 I went to Hampstead Heath, Pymmes, Gladstone, Harrow, Southall, Wormwood Scrubs, Osterley and Morden which (I think?) all count towards Lon-done. Getting into more tourism with Branka and Holly has been great fun too, as well as tourism with my dad.

National Trust parkruns are excellent for post-parkrun parkfaffing too- a scone and a pot of tea? Perfect.

I’ve also had a lovely time volunteering at Birchwood Juniors since they launched. I feel like it is my volunteering home now as I know more of the team.

Basic total stats at the end of 2024 – 386 parkruns completed, 96 volunteer occasions, 121 different events overall

So what next for 2025? More tourism of course! V100 is on the cards soon, and later on I’ll be celebrating my (arbitrary) 400th parkrun! Oaklands College launched in January so I’m looking forward to revisiting that event (I think I could run there from my parents too so that will be something good to explore as I like a parkrun sandwich). I am also hoping for a new flag, or at least a new event outside of the UK, but we shall see how plans go for that as nothing has been properly arranged yet.

What are you looking forward to in 2025?

Morden parkrun- not MOR

(With Me Now had a Blur theme for their published post which led me to think of a comment filled with Blur songs- MOR by Blur just fitted perfectly but Morden was certainly not middle of the road)

A trip to Morden had been arranged with Branka and Holly for a while, with Holly aiming for an event number for her Wilson Index (I think), and although I knew it would be a bit of a journey, I had not really properly looked into travel times, putting it off because I knew it would be an early start. I knew I would be meeting the two of them at some point in London as we come in on different train lines, and Branka looked up options for me as well (very kindly). I’d need to get a train at 6:25 to Kings Cross, walk over to St Pancras and then the two of them would get on the train I was on at Blackfriars. Simple, only on Friday night Andy noticed that the train companies had posted of likely disruption due to staff illness and absence. Hooray. We at least knew we would have options and so if times were getting tight we could get off early and divert to a nearer parkrun. After one of those sleepless nights that you always have before an early alarm (I mean, 5:15 feels too early for a Saturday!) thankfully the trains we all needed were showing as on, and on time, so we were a go.

Very empty London station and the water refill machine

So I drove to Hatfield (easier than running to WGC and I really didn’t fancy leaving enough time to run there), sorted the parking, got my ticket and then stood on the platform in the dark, questioning my life choices. But of course once the journey got underway my enthusiasm appeared.

I had a gap of 20 minutes to change from Kings Cross to St Pancras, and if you’ve been there you will know they are across a road from each other, so I had plenty of time- I visited the (award winning) toilets, saw a water refill machine and mooched around a bit before going to the platform- the next train came and after a few stops, Holly and Branka got on and found me.

We got off at Morden South, which is on the overground train, and this was a very easy walk around to the start of the parkrun. We walked to the leisure centre first and used the toilets (open to parkrunnners) and noted the cafe as we said we’d pop there after. The walk to the parkrun was through the car park and then into the open parkland.

Volunteers by the building, pop up sign with the touring crew, the start line and the finish funnel

The parkland reminded me a lot of Wormwood Scrubs- not manicured city centre parkland but much more wild, with huge oak trees and plenty of wide open space.

The volunteer team were all gathered around an old building (which reminded me of Canons Park), and they had a whistle which they blew for the volunteer photo, first timers welcome and the main briefing. I really liked this and it added to the cross country feel of the place. There was a tarpaulin of trust by the building, so we left our bags there and took the photos with the sign before it got too busy. I realised that I recognised one of the volunteers as I follow them on Insta (the parkrun couple)-of course I was too awkward to say hello in person but I did comment on their post after as it was a great event.

The welcome was great, although I had thought it was two laps so was a bit surprised to hear them say it was three laps. Then as soon as that finished, we moved over to the start area (which was on the other side of the hedge to where we were) and without too much waiting the whistle was blown and we were off.

Lone purple pop up photo and some photos taken mid run I loved how you could see parkrunners stretched out into the distance

Branka was running intervals, and I ran with Holly, having a good chat on the way around. The course really surprised me in a good way- three laps can sound not the most exciting on paper, but each lap was shaped like a figure of eight (or a butterfly), zig zagging around the parkland, and it meant that you could always see lots of other runners ahead and behind.

The course map- also how impressive is our pacing? Getting a little quicker for each mile! You did the lower section first in a backwards w shape if that makes sense.

They had warned us we would be lapped in our second lap, but the course was wide enough for this to be fine and not an issue. At the centre of the figure of eight were two marshals, standing back to back at times so they could cheer on the sets of runners on either section of the course. It was undulating with one uphill part, but nothing too steep or long, and although it was grassy and my trainers picked up a fair bit of mud, it wasn’t slippery or boggy (although I imagine it would be much tougher after a spell of wet weather). The volunteers were wonderful- each one giving praise as we ran past (even on our third time) and the people in the finish funnel did not stop heaping praise on the participants as they finished. After scanning, Holly and I stood by the finish funnel cheering in other people and the enthusiasm of the volunteers in the finish funnel did not wane at all. They were fantastic.

A few more mid run photos and more pop up signs including my selfie (still working on them but so much better at getting the sign in the background now)

Branka had looked up trains for the journey home (very thorough) so we didn’t hang around too long- we walked back to the leisure centre to get hot drinks to take to the station, and then had our drinks and cereal bars on the platform and train.

Shoes before and after- I did have some big twigs attached as well!

Mid run photos, the finish funnel in action, token photo

On the way back we had fun looking at the 5K app and spotting other parkruns close by. Tooting Common was closer to Streatham station so we have put that as a potential trip for next year. After Branka and Holly got off the train for their connection, I stayed on to go back to St Pancras, and as I had just missed a connecting train (I had not looked up return journeys as those trains are every 30 minutes) and Branka had reminded me of our trip to British Patagonia, I decided that rather than wait in the station for the next train, I would walk up to Upper Street and get some pastries and a tea from Bird and Blend. This detour added on a fair bit of time so I got home around 1:20, but I feel I made the most of my trip into London.

Peanut chocolate pastry enjoyed at home in the warm (from British Patagonia), the leisure centre building by Morden, take away tea for the train and my new 5K app buff, and a matcha latte from Bird and Blend

Realising how relatively easy the journey was (I am aware that train travel is not always this easy) has meant that some of the further away London parkruns are a bit more within reach now, so I think they are going to be my main touring from home, as in other directions there are long drives involved to reach a new one. Branka pointed out to be that as a patreon of the 5K app, I could import challenges from other people rather than manually add them, so I have now added the Lon-done challenge to my app. Currently I have been to 25 of 64, so about 1/3 of the way there. Something to work on over the next few years.

After and before- not sure why it’s that way around! You can see the after screenshot was taken on the train as the blue dot shows the location!

So, that was my 381st parkrun and location 121, and a great one at that.

Are you a fan of train travel? I get a bit stressed getting to stations, but once I am on the train I much prefer it as you can just relax and look out the window or listen to a podcast.