Crowds flocked to the small town of Keswick in northern England Sunday, July 8, to watch Kilian Jornet break the most famous and arguably the toughest record in British fell (mountain) running. The Catalonian long-distance Skyrunning champion posted 12 hours 52 minutes for the 64-mile route with 26,630 feet of ascent, knocking a massive 1 hour 1 minute off the record.
Up on a Pedestal
The Bob Graham Round record has remained untouchable since 1982 when local lad Billy Bland from Borrow dale stormed this circuit of 42 summits in northwest England’s mountainous Lake District in 13 hours 53 minutes, annihilating the previous record of 17 hours 45 minutes by Mike Nicholson five years prior. This historic route starts and finishes at the Moot Hall in Keswick, climbing the Lake District’s highest mountains including Skiddaw, Helvellyn, the Langdale Pikes, Scafell Pike (England’s highest), Pillar, Great Gable and Robinson.
In the 1980s the builder and stonewall er Bland was running phenomenally, winning the British Fell Championships in 1980 and dominating classic long distance fell races like the Wasdale and Borrow dale. As Bland ran the Bob Graham Round, paced by fell-running legends like Joss Naylor and Kenny Stuart, he and his crew soon realized he might break 14 hours. But none of them expected the record to stand for so long.
“I wasn’t the best that was about,” says Bland. “I was fairly good but there were about 20 lads about that time that could run fast fell races. I think they put us on a pedestal they shouldn’t have, so none of the better runners really tackled it.”
The Competition Ramps Up
Bland is right. Until recently the UK’s Mark Hartell was the closest challenger (in 1999) to Bland’s record but was still over an hour away with a time of 14 hours 54 minutes. Then suddenly in April 2016, Brit Jasmin Paris broke the ladies record, flying around in 15 hours 24 minutes, only 91 minutes off Bland’s incredible time, and prompting some of the guys to give the Bob Graham another go.
This story is from the September/October 2018 edition of Trail Runner.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the September/October 2018 edition of Trail Runner.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
You Cannot Erase us
Over the years and through thousands of miles of running, I have thought about the words that marked the beginning of colonialism on the land and the end of Indigenous sovereignty.
Inside The Adaptable Mind
How Courtney Dauwalter uses adaptability to stay cool, calm and collected when the going gets tough.
Take it Easy
How to stay at aerobic pace when you live in the hills
Here Comes the Sun
Where pessimism meets its match
Connecting the Dots
How Laura Cortez uses her passion for trails to build community.
Carbohydrate Confusion
When it comes to food and nutrition, we tend to overcomplicate things. Eat this, not that. Run fasted, restrict sugar. Unfortunately, much of the controversy stems from observations and sensationalized media headlines vs. actual data, leaving the consumer more confused from their Google search than they were before.
This Wild Life
ONE MAN’S 92-MILE RUN OF GRIEF AND SELF-DISCOVERY.
Our Town
Trail running is all about the community it fosters and the beauty and diversity within the community. Here’s a look at seven places, and the faces that call them home.
Fueling for Females
Here’s how female runners can use recent research findings for performance breakthroughs
Lose Weight with a Shake
Being a health and nutrition correspondent means that companies frequently send me their products, and ask for my stamp of approval.