Adharanand Finn's Blog, page 11

January 21, 2011

Moving to the Guardian for a while

Writing two blogs - this one and one for the Guardian - as well as a book, and several articles, all on the same thing, is getting a bit too confusing for my poor head. So I'm going to focus my blogging on the Guardian site for the next few months. Every Tuesday a new blog will appear here, so please bookmark the page if you want to keep up with my progress.

Bye for now. I will be back.
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Published on January 21, 2011 00:40

January 10, 2011

Iten: land of a thousand runners

I've started writing a blog on my trip to Kenya for the Guardian. The first piece, written before I left, was put up on the website last week: guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/jan/04 and the second piece went up today: guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/2011/jan/10

Things have been pretty tough over the last few days. We made it to Iten, but finding a house to rent has not been easy. The houses that are available are very basic, but still not cheap when it's a mizungo [white person] wanting to rent them. We think we've agreed to rent a half-built bungalow from a politician. It has all been negotiated through two other people, so it's hard to know exactly what is going on. But one thing is for sure, the politician is not interested in negotiating. He has my main contact running scared at the moment because we dared to say we only wanted the house for two months, instead of the four months we initially mooted.
All the uncertainty has been tough on the children, on top of the constant attention they get and the fairly basic campsite we've been staying in. They keep telling me that they like England better. To give ourselves a little break, until our house is ready - on Friday, we think - we've moved to a more expensive "resort" for a few nights. It has a swimming pool with a waterfall. The loo has a seat. And the beds have lovely, soft, fluffy pillows. It's complete luxury.
As for the running, I've been out for three runs since I left Lewa, two with Kenyans. The pace has been very slow each time, which is allowing me to get used to the altitude, and to test out my sore calf - which feels better. The "barefoot" running style now feels completely natural to me, though I have to admit I've seen plenty of Kenyans running heel first in big Nike running shoes.
The key question, though, before I bin my theory of barefoot running being part of the Kenyan secret, is how do the best Kenyan runners run? There was an incredible cross-country race in Iten at the weekend and I was watching the feet closely. It was only a district race, but the standard of competition was probably higher than the world cross-country championships - there were world championship medalists finishing way down the field. Interestingly, though, nearly all of the top 50 or so athletes in each race were definitely running "barefoot style", or, to put it another way, were not landing heel first when they ran.
I briefly contemplated entering the race, but felt it was too soon. In hindsight, I would have definitely come last, probably by quite a long way. There was one English guy in the race, and I've just discovered he's also writing a blog about training in Kenya. He didn't come last, but he was a long, long way from the front.
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Published on January 10, 2011 11:26

January 2, 2011

Roaring lions and other creatures

Running through the bush in Lewa, without a lion in sight. Photograph: Marietta d'ErlangerLast night we heard lions roaring as we were walking around outside, flashlights darting across the darkness. We ran to our tents, dived in, zipped up and then lay there listening to the terrifying but incredible sound as they continued to prowl and roar just yards away for the next hour or so.

All the wild animals are making it hard to run right now. We're staying with my sister-in-law, Jophie, and her husband, Alastair, a slow talking bushman who once stopped a charging elephant in its tracks just by roaring at it and waving his arms like a wildman. They live in tents in the bush. It's fairly rustic, but also quite luxurious. They have three staff working for them who keep the place ship-shape and cook lots of lovely food, and the girls get hot water bottles placed in their beds each night.

Just outside their camp is a short 200-metre loop on a dirt track, which Alastair says is relatively safe for running. Because it's open, and near the camp, it's less likely to be the resting place of a rhino, buffalo or lion, he says. Less likely. Not impossible.

Needing to get some running in to test my sore leg, I have been out around the track a couple of times - although after hearing the lions last night I'm not sure I'm brave enough to risk a third run.

The good news is that my calf seems to be better. Although it is still sore to touch, it doesn't complain when I run on it. Jophie organised a masseur from the nearby luxury safari camp to come and give me a massage and I think that helped. Or maybe it was just the altitude that was causing the problem. Either way, I'm now acclimatised and ready to roll. Marietta even shaved my head this morning, ready for battle. All I've got to do now is find me some runners.
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Published on January 02, 2011 04:58

December 28, 2010

Starting and stopping: my first run in Kenya

In my imagination, my first run in Kenya was going to be across wide, open plains, the gazelle and wildebeest absently chewing on the tough, dry grass as I loped by. In the event, it was on a treadmill overlooking a poolside cocktail bar full of lounging diplomats.

After our epic journey out here, we were happy to be booked in as guests at the luxurious Muthaiga Country Club. The famous Nairobi members club, replete with manicured lawns, neatly pressed shirts and colonial swagger, was where Karen Blixen stayed when she first arrived in Nairobi in 1914.
I did attempt to locate some other runners in Nairobi, but there were none to be found. I was told some people ran somewhere on the other side of the city. It would take three hours to get there because of the Nairobi’s chaotic traffic. But there was a gym at the club, with running machines. At least I could start getting used to the altitude.
I put on my running shoes, set the treadmill at a nice slow pace (8-minute miles) and started to jog. As it turned out, it was lucky that I hadn’t journeyed across the city to run with a team of crack Kenyans, as I lasted barely a mile. I was just increasing the pace slightly, beeping the machine up to 7.6-minute miles, when I felt a sharp tightening in my calf. I stopped straight away. After a bit of stretching, I tried jogging again at a slower pace, but it was too sore. I causally backtracked out of the gym, smiling pathetically at the resident fitness instructor. It wasn’t a very impressive start.
Later that evening, someone told me it was probably the altitude. I hoped that was all it was. I really couldn’t afford to be injured already.
A few days later, out in the bush, on a ranch owned by some of my sister-in-law’s relatives, I set off on my second run. This was more like it, I thought, as the plains stretched out before me, a few isolated mountains dotted on the distant horizon.
I followed a dirt road for about a half a mile until I came to some sort of guardhouse at the gate to the ranch. Two men in uniform came out to watch me run by, calling to me in Swahili. I had no idea what they were saying, so I just called back: “Jambo.”
Then my calf went again. I stopped at the side of the road, feeling suddenly vulnerable. Up ahead a man with a cow was stopped, staring at me. Behind, the two guards were still standing there watching. I had no option but to start walking back.
Was it the barefoot running technique that was causing the problems? I really hope not. Yesterday I saw a Samburu tribesman running past – as you do – in full traditional costume. He wore sandals and was clearly landing forefoot first. He was the first Kenyan runner I’ve seen. If they do it, surely I can too?
Next week I’ll be in Iten, the epicentre of Kenyan running. Hopefully they’ll be a few decent physios around.
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Published on December 28, 2010 00:01

December 22, 2010

Waltzing through Heathrow


Whatever the Lewa marathon throws at me at the end of my six months in Kenya, it is hard to imagine it being more challenging than the journey to get out here.
On the Saturday before we left, a tonne of snow fell across England bringing the country to a standstill. We thanked our lucky stars we weren’t flying until Monday.
Come Sunday night, however, all flights from Heathrow were still being cancelled. I went to bed hopeful after hearing that no further snow was forecast and that Heathrow was expecting to be fully operational the next day.
At about 4 o’clock in the morning, my youngest daughter, Uma, came in to my bedroom wanting to do a wee. I stumbled sleepily out of bed, picked up her and then stopped. Outside the window it was snowing a blizzard. The cars, our carriages to the airport, had disappeared under two silent mounds of white. I went back to bed but couldn’t sleep.
At 8am it was still coming down. The road was buried under two feet of fresh snow. We weren’t going anywhere. We wouldn’t even get the cars out of the drive. I tried ringing the airline but the number was constantly engaged. Sitting in the kitchen, endlessly hitting redial, as my children talked excitedly about being on the aeroplane, after all we had done to get to this point, was heartbreaking.
“Let’s just go,” said Marietta. It meant dragging my parents and Marietta’s mum, Betty, who were all giving us lifts, as well as the three children, on a perilous, if not impossible, journey up to Heathrow airport, to sit with 500,000 other demented people wondering how to go about rebooking a flight when the airlines wouldn’t even answer the phone.
There were stories in the press of late-night drunken fights as families tried to sleep on the terminal floor. On Radio 4, Simon Calder said: “It’s grim. But it will only get grimmer.”
It felt as though the whole project was unravelling. All those plans, all that excitement, being slowly buried by the gentle, beautiful snow that just wouldn’t stop.
But my Dad, game for the challenge, was out clearing the drive. Marietta was packing up the last bits and pieces. We had to go. We had a flight to Kenya booked that night. It had cost me £4,000. We couldn’t afford not to try.
The drive to Heathrow was intense. Abandoned lorries littered the carriageways like dead cows in an icy drought; the endless, ominous whiteness lay over everything, contemptuous of our efforts. The radio talked of Heathrow being so full of flightless passengers that police were stopping people entering the terminal buildings. Would they even let us in?
The children were coping amazingly well with all the glum faces and the talk of impending catastrophe, eating Marmite sandwiches and describing to me in intricate detail the way cars fit on a car transporter. I nodded blankly. “Amazing,” I said.
Eventually, despite the slippery roads, we made it to Heathrow. We walked in past long cues of tired people leaning on overloaded trolleys. Marietta went up to the first desk she could find and asked the man if he knew where we could check in. “I’ll check you in now,” he said. Just like that. Ten minutes later we were waving goodbye and waltzing through an almost empty security check into the departure lounge.
It was still not certain whether the flight was going to leave, but it was not listed as cancelled on the board, unlike many others. So we found an empty row of seats by a big window and hunkered down to wait. The hours went by and the flight kept being delayed, but still not cancelled. The uncertainty was sending an aching craziness though my veins. I paced back and forth, occasionally kicking a chair, or gently knocking my knuckles together. To add to our problems, Uma came down with a fever and fell asleep. Lila, the eldest, after some reading and running around, settled down to watch Peppa Pig on the internet.
Little Ossian, meanwhile, was having the time of his life. He drove his toy cars along the endless rows of empty seats. Then he climbed on the seats. He looked out of the window at all the trucks whizzing by with their flashing orange lights. He ran up and down the moving floor. He was in heaven.
Eventually his fun was ended when they finally called our flight. I could feel the tension easing from my limbs as the plane finally, after endless taxiing, lifted off into the sky. Marietta looked at me. We had done it. Somehow, we had actually done it.
That, of course, was just the beginning of our adventure.
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Published on December 22, 2010 13:06

December 8, 2010

'That's a lovely forefoot style you've got there'

It's now three weeks since I started "barefoot running" - which is running "barefoot style" in "barefoot shoes". Yes, I know, it doesn't make much sense, but if you read my earlier post, hopefully you'll know what I'm talking about.

So, with less than two weeks to go until I touch down in Kenya, how is it going? Today I managed to run two miles and my legs are only mildly aching afterwards. That might not sound great, but it was what I was told to expect. I'm using different muscles and so my legs need time to readjust. Meanwhile, my waist is expanding and I'm obviously losing fitness.

But it's not all bad. A few months ago, before I started with all this barefoot (in shoes) malarky, I went into a running shop to buy some new trainers. I was with a friend who runs, by all accounts, considerably slower than me. The shop assistant got both of us to run on the treadmill and filmed us on his souped-up computer-aided gait analysis machine. He told me that I needed extra support, cushioning and stability because my knees were collapsing in on each stride (pronation, they call it). It was a fairly damning analysis.

My friend got on and jogged for a few seconds before the shop assistant told him he had a perfect running style. Ouch.

Yesterday, I went to a different running shop to buy some racing flats - it's what the Kenyans run in, I'm told. I was nervous about the shop assistants getting me on their treadmill and then telling me I couldn't buy racing flats as I needed more support padding etc etc blardy blah.

I picked out the pair I wanted - the flattest shoes with the least support - and asked if they had them in my size. "Do you pronate?" the man asked me. "Er ... I don't know," I said, wary of lying outright in case he could tell just by the way I walked or something that I did. But it was the wrong answer.

"Hop up on the treadmill and we'll take a look," he said. I considered bolting for the door, but decided against it. Instead I obediently put on my trainers and clambered aboard the treadmill. I wasn't sure if my "barefoot style" was up to a public examination by a gait expert. Would I look completely mad if I tried it? If I didn't, though, he'd tell me I couldn't buy the trainers. I had to give it a go.

The machine whirred slowly into action. Lead with your chest, I told myself. Legs like a unicycle. It started to get faster. Pad, pad, pad. He was crouching down trying to look under my feet. I tried to look casual, like this was my natural running style, not something I was working hard to maintain. He was checking me out from the side now. After about 30 seconds, I hit the stop button and the machine came to a halt.

"You're lucky," he said. "You have a lovely forefoot style. It's the most efficient way to run."

I stepped off the machine and tried to look surprised by the good news. Of course, it had nothing to do with luck. In only three weeks I had gone from having a calamitous style to having a "lovely style". True, I could only maintain it for two miles, but progress was definitely being made.

The experiment continues ...
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Published on December 08, 2010 16:10

November 23, 2010

Struggling around the Drogo 10

Struggling up the last few steps. Photograph: Jiva FinnAbout half a mile from the end of the Drogo 10 on Sunday I saw my brother and my daughter standing among the trees cheering me on - my brother grinning and taking a picture of me with his camera. I'd just climbed up one side of the beautiful Teign Valley, a half-mile accent so steep I had to walk most of it. I was running along a rare stretch of flat, looking out across Dartmoor, when the race stewards directed me right and up another short, sharp incline. My legs turned to sand. I could hardly move them, even to walk. My daughter, who is four, looked very concerned.

This was not my kind of race. Too many steep hills. Up one of them, a man in his mid-60s - I'd guess - edged passed me wearing a pair of Nike Free - Nike's barefoot-style trainers. I suddenly felt like I was wearing bricks, especially as my trail running shoes are too big for me and were caked in mud.

I ended up trundling across the finish line in 65th position. In a local race in Devon. What hope does that give me when, in just a few weeks, I turn up at the fastest village on earth?
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Published on November 23, 2010 02:40

November 18, 2010

Bare necessities: how I was introduced to the dark arts of barefoot running

Tonight I ran like a Kenyan. Barefoot. On a treadmill in a boxing gym in West Hampstead.

I was given a lesson in the art of barefoot running by one of its leading proponents, biomechanic expert Lee Saxby. First off he filmed me running normally on a treadmill in my trainers. Then he told me to take off my trainers and he filmed me again. I instantly and automatically, without thinking, started to run with a forefoot strike - meaning that rather than landing on my heel first, as I did in trainers, I started landing on my forefoot first.

This is the fundamental difference between the two styles of running. By landing on your heel, the full impact of your body weight is concentrated on one spot, which, Lee says, not only causes injuries, but slows you down. In effect you're braking with every step.

But it's not only about the forefoot strike. Lee told me to keep my head up, lead with my chest, and pull my legs through, as though I was on a unicycle. If that wasn't enough to think about, he started a metronome going at a rapid-fire tack tack tack. I had to match it stride for tack. Then he played the film back to me.

It was quite shocking to watch. With my trainers on I looked like an overweight office worker out for a slow jog. (Admittedly, that's perhaps what I was, but it wasn't how I envisaged I looked when I was running.) With the shoes off it looked a bit better, but after Lee's lesson I looked like a proper runner. "You look like a Kenyan running," he says, though that may have been pushing it.

The thing is, though, this is how Kenyans (and Ethiopians) run. It's because they all grow up running barefoot. Running shoes encourage you, with all their padding, to land heel first, so we in the west get into bad habits right from the start. Running barefoot, however, forces you to run in a different way.

I know, from already mentioning it to a few people, that the most common reaction to talk of barefoot running is "what about glass/dirty streets/stones etc?" But running barefoot is more about a running style than not actually wearing any shoes. The top Kenyans all wear trainers to compete. Lee says this is because they don't want to be worrying about treading on stones and hurting their feet if they're trying to win races. But they don't wear heavily padded, stability trainers like we do. They wear racing flats. Racing shoes are super lightweight and have minimal padding, pretty much like specialised barefoot running shoes.

This was all very exciting. Had I stumbled on the Kenyan secret, here in this small boxing gym, as the trains rattled in and out of London outside the windows. Lee definitely seemed to think it was at least a factor in why they were so good at running. He had the air of a man confident in his theory, willing to answer any question you cared to throw at him. He was even confident enough to occasionally say he didn't know.

Unfortunately, though, it takes time and concentrated effort to learn the barefoot style well enough that it begins to feel natural. I had hoped I could combine barefoot running with my usual style, to hedge my bets and to not lose any fitness. "It's all or nothing," says Lee. "Your mind will slip into the style it's most used to. If you're running heel first most of the time, your body will do that automatically." I'm going to be in Kenya in a month. Is that enough time to learn? "Yeah, that should be fine," he says.

So what do I do?

Firstly he advises I only run a mile at a time - either barefoot or in special barefoot trainers. Once I can do that without having sore legs the next day, I can start upping the distance by 10% each run. He says the most important thing to focus on is the quick tempo leg movement and he recommends I get some sort of clip-on metronome to help me.

It's radical, but I decide to try it. If the Kenyans run like this, then I have to really. It's exciting, though. It did feel great running like that, my legs zipping through under me, my body straight, head up, the aspect, at least, of a real runner. The only thing is having to concentrate on style so much. That feels odd. But hopefully it will soon feel natural. We'll see.
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Published on November 18, 2010 14:32

October 28, 2010

Liftoff - then back to earth

That's it, I've booked our flights to Kenya. Liftoff is December 20. We'll be spending Christmas in tents in the Lewa nature reserve.

I thought booking the tickets was going to be an exciting moment, but instead it was pretty stressful. It was a few nights ago. Marietta wasn't feeling well and had gone to bed early, so I was sitting alone in the dark in the kitchen, my face peering into the computer screen as numbers added together like some frenzied multiplying machine until they were up to £4,000. The digits were losing all meaning. Was that a lot? Then I had to fill out hundreds of details for five people. Long passport numbers that seemed too small to see. Then the site crashed. Back to the beginning, start again. And once I finally clicked BUY, it wasn't clear if I'd actually bought them. I got a "transaction successful" message, but also an error message telling me to call the airline. It was after midnight. I went to bed grumpy.

Nonetheless, flights booked - I checked the next day, it was all fine - it was back to running. Except I've got a little tweak behind my knee. Hopefully nothing serious. I've been reading Christopher McDougall's bestselling book Born To Run. He claims most injuries are actually caused by running shoes. He makes a pretty good case for it too, in his gung-ho American way. Those damn shoes make you land like some goddam clown on those ol' heels, when you were always supposed to land on your soles, like god intended. McDougall is revered by the barefoot running movement, which is getting stronger by the day. Most of them don't actually run barefoot, but in shoes that offer some minimal cushioning and support. Even Nike do a pair now, which shows how big the movement has become.

I tried it out, running sans shoes, this afternoon. I ran to Regent's Park in my lunchbreak, took my shoes off and then ran around some football pitches. It was too short a test to be conclusive, but I found my running style instantly changed to a shorter, faster stride pattern. This is supposed to be good, according to the barefoot runners. I felt like a runner from the 1960s - when of course shoes had less support. Did people get injured less then? I don't know.

It was quite nice, however, putting my trainers back on afterwards. They felt warm and soft like pillows. Heavy pillows.
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Published on October 28, 2010 15:29

October 18, 2010

Over the hill and far away

Last week I was pondering whether, after running four consecutive half marathons in 1 hr 30 mins, I had reached my running peak. I was now 36, struggling around training runs, and just didn't feel like I was getting anywhere. How did I honestly expect to train in Kenya with the greatest runners in the world? Who was I kidding? With all this in mind, yesterday morning I lined up in the Autumn sunshine at the start of the Dartmoor Vale half marathon.

Worried about my fitness, and mindful that I had set off too fast in all those four previous half marathons, I held back at the beginning, sitting behind two men going at what seemed like a nice pace. They kept chatting to each other and both seemed a lot more comfortable than I felt, but once we hit the first big hill, at about 3 miles, I went passed them.

Normally I hate hills. My legs start aching and a steady stream of people begin overtaking me. Old men with bandy legs, short, hardy women with hunched shoulders, even dog walkers who happen to be traversing the same stretch of road. But yesterday, for some reason, I felt fine. Nobody passed me. I didn't even feel the urge to look back and see where they were. The hill went on and on for miles, but I just kept plugging away.

At the top there was a drinks station. I grabbed a cup of water but nearly choked trying to drink it. It was a stupid place to be handing out water, I decided, chucking my cup towards one of the bins. It went straight in.

From that point on the course seemed to be a gradual downhill back to where we started. I used the slope to pick up the pace and was soon overtaking struggling runners. Even when we got back to sea level, I still felt strong. The mile markers, which usually seem to take forever to appear, especially at the end of a half marathon, where popping up quicker than I expected each time.

I sprinted across the line in 11th place and 1 hr 26 mins and 54 secs. A big PB. I wasn't quite past it yet, after all.

While I was out racing around the lanes of south Devon, Jophie, my sister-in-law, and her husband Alistair, were in Iten in Kenya, looking for a house for us. Although they didn't find one, they said the area was one of the most beautiful places they had ever been. I spoke to Jophie on the phone after my race:

"I've picked up the number of someone called brother Colm," she said. "I think he's a priest, but I'm told he might be able to find you somewhere to stay."

"Brother Colm? Oh my god."

"You know him?"

Brother Colm is a living legend, one of the men most responsible for Kenya's running success, as far as I can tell, and currently the coach of David Rudisha, the 800m world record holder and, after Usain Bolt, probably the biggest thing in athletics right now.

She offered to sell me his phone number for £20.

"Done," I said.
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Published on October 18, 2010 05:07

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