Runner's World

(Jacob Rumans) #1
JUNE 2018 RUNNERSWORLD.CO.UK 033

trainers and try to trace their watery
courses as faithfully as the city will
allow. One of my favourite running
adventures was following one of
London’s subterranean rivers the
Fleet from the trickle of water at its
source on Hampstead Heath down to
the mighty Thames.
Thinking bigger there are your
five-to-nine possibilities. Adventurer
and author Alastair Humphreys is
a proponent of using this 16-hour
window to do a micro-adventure. You
could even fit in an ultramarathon
between leaving work on Tuesday
night and the ‘cut-off’ of being back
at your desk on Wednesday morning.
You will probably be in need of a lot
more coffee than usual.
There are a huge number of
possibilities on our urban doorsteps –
you can vertically challenge yourself
by running up skyscrapers; run
underground routes overground; race
boats trains and buses; or throw dice
to determine your running challenge.
The only limit is your imagination.

time-pressed running adventure is
adapting it to your surroundings.
With almost 90 per cent of the UK’s
population living in urban areas
it’s easy to think we urbanites are
hamstrung in our ability to create
adventures. On the contrary towns
and cities are a veritable playground
for running mischief.
If you live in an urban sprawl you
may assume that adding ascent to
your runs is asking a lot. But running
the New York City Marathon gave me
a new appreciation for bridges. The
blighters had me huffing and puffing
and the different perspectives they
gave on the city were wonderful too.
If there’s a river in your hometown
try running a stretch crossing each
bridge as you go. This can be a lot of
fun and surprisingly tough.
Talking of rivers in some cities
they are hidden beneath our feet.
London has dozens invisibly
meandering deep below the
metropolitan maze. With a little
research you can lace up your


Collect as many blue plaques (or
similar) as you can in 60 minutes.

GPS-enabled smartphone with
camera running shoes.

Time limited to 60 minutes.
Penalties given for going over
time – deduction of points
buying a round of drinks etc.
Proof of plaque recorded with
selfie photo. All plaques get
one point with bonus points
awarded as follows:
Playwright – 2 points
Knight of the Realm – 2 points
Statesmen – 3 points
Prime Minister – 4 points
Field Marshal – 4 points
Houses with two plaques –
5 points (there are 18 houses
with two blue plaques)
London Underground plaques


  • 6 points (there are only four
    with the ‘Johnston’ typeface)


London’s blue plaques have been
commemorating notable men
and women for over 150 years.
This is your chance to pay
homage. Do it alone or better
yet grab a few friends and
make it sociable. Set the
countdown timer on your phone
to 60 minutes and start running
aiming to find as many of the
900-plus plaques adorning
London’s buildings as you can.
To make it more challenging
give bonus points as outlined
above or you could set a
boundary such as a postcode
or borough to limit your search.
The City of London has around
160 commemorative blue
plaques within its borders. If you
are doing it with friends finish in
a pub with points deducted for
every minute over the 60. Loser
buys the round. Obviously.

Download the English Heritage
blue plaques app to assist you
in your search.

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Even time-constrained
runners can add a little
adventure to a run.
And some culture too

DIY EVENTS

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