September 2024

Fun Run, not sure about that ?

Bibra Lake 12k fun run. Confident at the start.

This weekend I raced the Bibra Lake 12km fun run, my first event under  a half marathon since November 2019. This event is free and put on by the City of Cockburn, an hour drive south of Perth. What is unique about this event is there is prize money for the winners (not unique) but also the age group winners and my good friend  Mike Kowal has been cleaning up the last few years in the over 55 category.  Mike must have podiumed the last four or five years and in that time Jeff and Bartsy have also made the ‘dash for cash‘ in the 55+ category and come away with winnings.  It has become a rights of passage for us Yelo runners so it was time I made my bid for glory and cash. Although I had this penciled in for some time it  came very close to the Bibra Lake marathon and Birdy’s backyard Ultra and I really wasn’t anywhere near fit enough to race it.  I was 50/50 to actually start as I knew I had no right rocking up and trying to gram a poduim. The day before I ran 5km and felt absolutely crap, albeit I have found this to be the case on many occasions when you have a big event the next day. I’m never sure if it’s the body Central Governor trying it’s best to protect you by persuading you to not even rock up to the start ! I have attached an article on the Central Governor below FYI ( https://runnersconnect.net/central-governor-theory/ )

Mind over Matter? The Central Governor Theory Explained

As runners, we spend countless hours focused on the physiological aspects of training – VO2max, threshold, aerobic development, etc.  And for good reason. There is no doubt that improving these biological systems will help you run faster.

However, when it comes to racing, are physiological limitations all that matter or is there a mental component involved as well? What role does the brain play in our attempt to race as fast as possible?

According to exercise scientist Dr. Tim Noakes and a growing number of colleagues, the brain may play a more important role in race potential than runners have typically considered. Noakes’s hypothesis suggests that the brain acts as a central governor when racing, limiting our ability to push beyond perceived fatigue to ensure self-preservation.

In this article, we’ll look at the central governor theory in more depth, explore why it matters to those racing for personal bests, and outline some specific strategies you can use to overcome your own central governor.

What is the central governor theory?

In short, the central governor theory is based around the premise that the brain will override your physical ability to run and “shut the body down” before you’re able to do serious or permanent damage to yourself.

Noakes believes that the point in the race when you think you’ve given everything you’ve got is actually a signal or response from the brain to slow down to preserve health, rather than a physiological reality. In actuality, Noakes believes you have more to give physically when this happens.

Runners experience this during almost every race they run. At mile 8 of a half marathon, goal race pace is extremely difficult and the thought of running faster, even for just a minute, seems impossible. Yet, when you get within 400 meters of the finish, you’re somehow able to summon a kick that finds you running minutes per mile faster than goal pace.

Once your brain realizes it won’t die if you pick up the pace (because the finish line is close) it opens the biological pathways to run faster.

That’s not to say that the physiological demands of a race aren’t real. Rather, the central governor theory posits that racing is a balance between: (1) physical preparation and biological systems; (2) emotional components, such as motivation and pain tolerance; (3) and self-preservation. The exact combination of these factors is what leads to how hard you’re able to push during a race.

Why does it matter? Does this mean you don’t have to train?

Perhaps the biggest misconception of the central governor theory is that if we could just teach ourselves to push harder or somehow turn off this central governor of the brain, that we could run faster. However, as mentioned above, racing is a combination of three important components: physical, emotional, and mental.

As an example, if you asked an Olympic-caliber runner to run a 7-minute mile, they would do so easily and be able to carry that pace on for 26 miles or more with little effort. Ask a four-hour marathoner to run a 7 minute mile and it will be an all-out effort they can only maintain for a mile. The physiological differences between these two runners means that even if the central governor was turned off, the four-hour marathoner couldn’t run with the Olympic-caliber runner. That’s pretty obvious.

However, if that same four-hour marathoner can learn to push the boundaries of their central governor, perhaps by adding motivation, like a Boston qualifier, or improving their mental fortitude, then they can tap into this extra performance reserve.

How to overcome the central governor

So how do you do that? How do you push the boundaries of your central governor? While you can’t completely overcome the central governor, you can improve your ability to tolerate physical discomfort and prepare your mind for the physical demands you plan to place in it.

Workouts

The problem many runners face is that the experience of trying to push themselves beyond their comfort zone when their mind is telling them it can’t go faster only occurs on race day.

Typical interval workouts and tempo runs are performed at a consistent pace and the recovery between repeats allows you to recover to a state that is very unlike the corresponding point in a race. During workouts, you simply get to a certain fatigue level and then stop pushing.

This is great for building your physiological systems, but does nothing to teach you how to push the central governor and prove to your brain that you can in fact run faster, despite how bad you might feel.

One workout that trains this specific aspect of racing is called a hammer interval session. Succinctly, a hammer interval moneyslots session is traditional interval workout except that on the third or second to last interval, you break from your goal pace and simply focus on running that specific repeat as fast as you can – hammering it.  An example hammer workout for a 5k runner might look like: 8 x 800 meters at 3k to 5K race pace w/2mins rest, hammer (run as fast as you can) interval numbers 4 and number 7. Maintain the 2-minute rest after each hammer and do your best to get back onto 5k pace after each hammer.

The specific pace of the hammer repeat isn’t the important part of this workout. Rather, it’s the ability to chip away at the mental constraints late in a workout or race that tell you that you can’t go any faster.

Mental training and visualization

Running a PR is tough! No matter how well rested or prepared the body is, racing hurts. If you toe the starting line thinking that somehow you’re going to feel good or that pushing during the last miles is going to be easy, then you’ve already set yourself up to let the brain override your physical abilities.

Prepare yourself mentally. Don’t head into a race telling yourself that somehow this race is going to be different. Be prepared for it to hurt, but remember that you’ve trained yourself to push through this exact situation. Visualize the race during your training runs or while meditating and picture yourself hitting that point in the race when your body starts to hurt. Recall those feelings from your last race or hard workout and then visualize yourself pushing through that moment. By preparing yourself mentally, you’ll be ready to face the realities of the race.

Pacing

Finally, work to improve your sense of pace. Pacing is one of the ways the brain self-regulates the central governor. The brain “anticipates” all the known variables of a race – distance, topography, temperature, etc. – and then calculates an optimal pace that will get you to the finish without dying.

When you deviate significantly from your optimal physiological pace, the brain reacts by reducing the level of muscle activation in order to force you to slow down. By going out too fast during a race, you kick in the central governor early and even elicit physiological changes by the brain designed to slow you down.

Armed with this new understanding of the central governor theory and how the brain impacts your ability to race, implement these three simply strategies into your training plan and start to push yourself harder than you think you can.

Right, back to the matter at hand, me not making an arse of myself running two laps of Bibra Lake.  The plan before the event was for me to run with Mark , Mike, Graeme and Jules who were all well into their respective marathon training blocks and would use this event as a medium tempo / marathon pace run, aiming to average around the four minute and ten seconds pace.  I was hoping to hang on and then pip Mike to the finish to take an age category podium place.  Of course as soon as the event started this plan went out the window as I was feeling remarkably good so decided to go with the front runners and wait for the guys to catch me up. Because the event starts on a closed road you could spread out and get swept up with the first kilometre pace that is always quicker than any pre-race racing pace plan.  To add fuel to the fire there’s a slight downhill towards the end of the first kiloemtre which does nothing to slow you down to a more reasonable pace.  In my defence I did manage to beat all the runners in the image below bar the runner in the orange vest who pipped me with a few kilometres to go, he was ninth to my tenth overall.  He was the only runner that went past me although my mate Graeme was just a few seconds behind me at the finish line.

The first kilometre felt good, funnily enough. Running far too quick for my training..

Mark and Jules did what they said they would and finished a few minutes behind me acing their pacing strategy and picking up the win for Jules.  Mark has the Sydney Marathon next weekend and Jules is running with me at Perth in four weeks.  I will be very happy if I can finish with Jules at Perth as she will go sub three hours and that is my goal also, albeit I feel Jules has more chance of success than me . Both these guys are incredibly methodical when it comes to training and I expect them to reach their goals due to this attitude, remember consistency is the key marathon success.  Lately I have been anything but consistent but this race has given me belief I have a sniff at Perth for sub three hour marathon number 33.

The Bibra pacing bus I should have been on.

So you left me running too fast at around the one kilometre mark. It actually felt easier than I thought it would after the disastrous five kilometre warm up the previous day.  I had my Saucony Endorphin Elites on and these are just incredible, if you are serious about road running treat yourself.  I was sitting around 15th after the first few kilometres and pacing just under four minutes a kilometre. Quicker than I planned but decided to run on feel and see how long I could hold of the Bibra bus behind me ,containing all my Yelo running mates.  I had a few runners on my tail and I could see four runners up ahead. Just before the halfway mark I caught the pack ahead of me and moved into the top ten, at this point unbeknown to me.  It was starting to hurt mainly due to a complete lack of any pace work for a few months. On the bright side I was still maintaining my sub four minute  kilometre pace so was on for the age group win.

I made a mental decision to try and hold the pace for the last lap but not kick-on (not that I could?) , I reckoned I was far enough ahead of Mark and his bus that I could drop the pace by five to ten seconds and still finish ahead of them. Position wise I wasn’t bothered where I finished , just wanted a place on the podium and the hard cash that comes with it. Of course the last few kilometres hurt as they always do, it doesn’t matter if you are well trained or under trained , you’ll always hurt at the end because that’s the point isn’t it, why else put a bib on your chest?

I finished 10th overall from a field of over 250 runners and clocked a time of 46:51 which I was absolutely over the moon with.  I had no right running so quick and although I spent some serious time in the pain box it was nothing worse than normal, which was an added bonus. My splits were race perfect but more importantly I started to believe I have a chance at Perth in four weeks, this was the best outcome of the day.

Not so much smiling at the end, just relief it was all over. (Thanks for the photo Jax.)

These events are good for so many reasons but the main one is just hanging out with like minded people, doing what we love.  Nothing beats that feeling after nailing a race and it’s always been my main reason why I do what I do. If I didn’t race I’m not sure I would run, it’s the time with a bib on my chest that makes the ‘slog‘ of training worth it. ( Please note training isn’t always a ‘slog’ as such but as you age it certainly becomes more challenging.  I suppose that’s why so many runners disappear, it just gets too hard ? )

Graeme, Mark, Rob, myself, Jules and Mike. All smiles at the finish.

So to the reason behind this little adventure, to get on the podium and join the Yelo runners before me who have made it there previously, namely Mike, Jeffrey and , surprisingly , Bartsy.  Although the finishing time is miles off my glory days off a decade or so ago it put a massive smile on my face and spring in my step. Days afterwards I’m still buzzing from the event and the $80 prizemoney will pay for a few coffee’s at Yelo this Thursday as is tradition, actually I brought Rob breakfast so after coffee’s on Thursday I’ll be down financially.  The picture of my podium is one of my all time favorite running images because of what it portrays, a runner who at 57 is still as stoked about running as over twenty years ago when he first started his journey, as I have always said the best runner in the world is the one having the most fun, on Sunday  on that podium, it was me.

First podium for a few years and actually first time on a podium . Image Dennis Tan.

The last image is Michael and I showing off our medals, so good to get a one , two on the podium together and another story to add the many we have shared over the years and to many more to come. I’m sure we’ll be back at this event next year as we both try again to get that ‘last podium‘…..

First and second really old runners… the last time or the first of many more ?

Final recap on the event is I did a lot better than I thought I would and although it hurt I felt it was a comfortable pain, if that’s a thing. Maybe after over twenty years of racing I’ve finally managed to persuade my Central Governor to give me a break and release some of the 60% of available  mental toughness we all have but very few can access.  https://www.bing.com/videos/riverview/relatedvideo?q=goggings+60%25+rule&mid=3E8020E11BBFC78438703E8020E11BBFC7843870&FORM=VIRE

Big shout out to fisiocrem , this product is just incredible for tired and aching legs. I use it daily and have noticed a vast improvement in recovery.

Bix hydration is just ace, a product brought to life by Vlad Ixel a professional ultra runner who knows a thing or two about hydration. ( https://www.bixvitamins.com/ )  The best thing about Bix is it tastes good with many different flavours and you never get sick of drinking it, this is a big plus as Maurten and Tailwind (both great products)  can be difficult to digest later in the event.  From the website :-

As an Australian elite multiple trail running champion, with wins in over 40 ultra-marathon races across Asia, recovery from training and races has always been my top priority. 

In searching for a solid recovery and hydration supplement, I recognized that critical vitamins and minerals – both in diversity and quantity – were missing from almost all supplements on the market. I had the feeling that in an effort to maximize their bottom-lines, companies in the hydration space, failed to deliver a product that could meaningfully assist athlete performance. 

In order to address this, I began the development of a hydration product. After two and a half years of development alongside a leading German sports scientist, BIX Recovery, an advanced, high-quality recovery drink was born. 

BIX boosts 12 active ingredients scientifically balanced to replace lost electrolytes and assist in immune function. It’s designed with quality vitamins and minerals, in quantities that work! 

BIX is a recovery solution for everyone, that will get you to the top of your game!

Great hydration.

What can I say about HumanTecar,  ( https://athleticus.com.au/ ) it looks great, smells great and is awesome for recovery or even pre-run/workout. Read about the science behind it first and then try the products. The compression bandages are just magical after a long event. Put these on and the next day you are recovered, I have used them on a number of occasions and they never fail to astound me albeit the family poke fun at me as I look like a ‘mummy and smell funny’ !

Fractelhttps://fractel.com.au/ ) have your performance headgear covered. I love the colours and the functionality of these hats, I guarantee there is one model you’ll fall in love with.

Fractel headgear, just ace.

Shokz headphones, let you keep in touch with the world around while losing yourself in quality tunes or podcasts. ( https://shokz.com.au/ )

Best running headphones EVER !

T8 running apparel is the best you can get, second to none. Designed for the ultra humid Hong Kong conditions the owners live in.  It is light and does away with any chaffing worries. T8 is the name given to the highest typhoon warning in Honk Kong,  storms and typhoons with gusts exceeding 180kph, which explains the branding. ( https://t8.run/)

Altra supply the best trail shoes on the planet, in my opinion, and none better than the Olympus five. Do yourself a favour and buy a pair. ( https://www.altrarunning.com.au/ )
https://www.osprey.com/au/en/category/hydration/trail-running/ Osprey Australia have come onboard and are supplying me with two running backpacks and travelling luggage for the Run Britannia adventure. I particularly like their running backpacks and am excited to test them over the event. I’ll be using the Duro 6 and the Duro 1.5 backpacks.
Excited to have Coros onboard who have supplied me with the new Apex 2 Pro GPS watch. I already owned the Apex 2 and was stoked when Coros reached out and offered me an upgrade. Even more battery life, can you believe 75 hours using GPS, wow! The watch itself is awesome, so light and well made. The watch is paired with a incredible application to keep track of all your stats, and runners love stats ! .  ( https://coros.net.au/ )
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Running is better with friends, sometimes.

It was a sad day in the Matthews household today as I passed on my Bionic Runner Gen 1 to the local legend that is Phil Gore. The Bionic is one of three stand-up bikes I own and I’m just not using it , so gifted it to Phil.  The Bionic was an Australian invention ultimately  let down by shoddy Chinese manufacturing which caused the frame to crack on the generation two and Predator models. If you’re interested there is a Facebook page dedicated to the bionic and if you can get hold of one I highly recommend them. ( facebook.com/groups/1507045689572412 )

Post handover Phil and I met another local legend, Simon Bennet, in Bold Park and knocked out a hilly 10k. We had to put a wiggle on as Phil needed to be at a physio appointment later that afternoon and we also needed to fit in a pie at Georges Cafe in City Beach.  Si was meeting us towards the end of a 50km training run for WTF 100 Miler in a few weeks time.

Bionic Gen1 , this thing is a monster !

Now the title of this post is running is better with friends but I must add the caveat that it is better with friends of equal fitness, not so much when you’re running with two friends at the peak of their respective training programs while you’ve been pontificating for six weeks and hiding from the inclement weather.  Trust me the chickens well and truly come home to roost when you run a hilly 10km , there is nowhere to hide. Lucky for me Phil only had a short window of opportunity for a run pre-lunch and I was more than happy to pull the pin just short of ten kilometres.  Simon continued on to finish his 50km training run while Phil and I scuttled off to Georges to try on of his famous beef pies, freshly made after I told him I was coming in for lunch earlier in the day.

All smiles at the end of our Bold Park loop with Simon and Phil

Although I found the run tough the time did disappear quickly, there was lots of running talk and planning for future events with goal discussions and generally putting the world to right, it’s what three males do when left alone. Of course these discussions are like the fight club, you can never talk about it but in the solitude of Bold Park the three of us kept the conversation flowing. Simon is aiming for a win at the WTF 100 miler in a few weeks and the way he was running I wouldn’t bet against him, albeit he is infamous for navigational challenges.  Si and I ran together for a large chunk of the Delirious West 200 miler earlier in the year and had a great time. ( https://deliriouswest200miler.com.au/ ) We have both entered for 2025 and if I do decide to ‘race it’ , compared to ‘finish it‘ will be spending more time together.  This is a good thing, plenty of conversation makes the time and distance disappear, especially in a 200 miler.  Between the two of us we have plenty of stories from the event this year and I’m sure we’ll add to these in 2025.

Two finely tuned 200 miler eating machines, like striking cobra’s, poised.

Post run Phil and I staggered, well I staggered Phil glided, into Georges for one of his famous beef pies, freshly out of the oven.  So fresh infact he was mixing the ingredients as we entered the cafe. Good news for me as I having a very ‘just cooked, fresh out of the oven’ pie, bad news for Phil as he would have to make do with a sausage roll as he couldn’t wait.  Georges is also running Delirious next year to finally get his double plugger trophy, five years from his first event, albeit he hasn’t really ran for the last four years and hasn’t actually started training yet.  In his spare time he has become quite the painter of note and the painting behind him in the image below is one of his. He does very well funnily enough, although he is French so it’s probably in his blood?  On a side note he paid for his race entry for Delirious by selling the Race Director one of his paintings.

Selfies all around at Georges , with Phil and Georges.

I couldn’t finish the post without an image of the beef pie, it really was special, literally just out of the oven , swimming in tomato sauce. Don’t judge me you can never take out the English in me and we add ketchup to most foods.

Gorges is a bloody good chef and his beef pie is incredible, with ketchup of course….
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On a side note I found my post in Xterra recently, ( https://www.xterraplanet.com/  ) worth another look I reckon for those who missed it : https://www.xterraplanet.com/story/from-roads-to-rugged-paths-a-trail-runners-journey

I have added a post I wrote on the benefit of friends when I was recovering from a bad dose of Plantar Fasciitis, I hate even typing those words ! Reading the post I think my ‘lunch diet’ was either abstinence or my now infamous sardines in tomato sauce diet. My logic was fish is good for you so eating fish every lunchtime would help me lose weight and also be good for me. I didn’t account for the calories in fish swimming in tomato sauce/paste. I eventually gave up when I started to put on weight. I am not a nutritionist by any stretch of the imagination.

You really do need friends to run better.

The last three months have been a dark time in my running career as I was struck down by first a blood disorder , mainly due to my “no lunch” diet (what was I thinking?) and lately a bad case of Plantar Fasciitis. The worst part of not running is not the not running part but missing time with my mates.

Over the years my non-running friends have fallen by the wayside as I became more and more focused on running and less and less focused on sociable activities, much to my Wife’s disgust. My Wife has often remarked how she’d like me to put on weight and drink more ! Not the normal grumblings of a partner of course, it’s usually the opposite. Anyhow when you’re injured there is no one to share your grief with. (because it is grief! )  Funnily enough I have written a post on grief , in relation to running… https://www.runbkrun.com/2017/04/17/injury-what-injury-the-five-stages-of-grief/

What run do I miss the most ? Need you ask, my Thursday morning 14k progressive, starting at 5:30am and finishing at the best café in Perth to take onboard the best muffin and coffee in the Southern Hemisphere. If you are lucky enough to live in Perth, or even Australia, you need to go to Yelo at Trigg and indulge with one of their banana and dark chocolate or even berry and chocolate muffins, warmed up of course. They really are so good, there is a caveat of course. Once you taste a Yelo muffin you will never be able to eat a muffin from another source, they really are that good.  The coffee is also very good or that may be just because your taste buds are enjoying them muffin so much anything tastes good !

As this is a running blog and not a culinary one I need to justify that last paragraph. To earn the muffin and coffee combination we would have run a 14k progressive run which is one tough affair,  with the obligatory sprint for the last 4-5k as each runner pushes themselves, and each other towards the Yelo café. To make this run special you need friends to initially talk to for the first 7k and then, finally,  to run against for the final 7k. Runners pride will always make you put in that extra bit of effort when chasing (or being chased) by running mates.

Then there is the long runs on Sunday. These , for me, are mainly for the food and conversation after the run, to tell you truth I prefer to run twice a day compared to one long run , all bar the Sunday run. This is do able because of the company, by myself a long run is torture.  We’ve had some great experiences over the years running long on Sundays , as most runners will attest to.  As a group we tend to run at a reasonable pace on the outward journey but pick up the pace as we turn and head back towards the coffee and pancakes, I’m sure all running groups are the same.  The photo below is from a 30k Yaberoo trail run a few months ago in the heat of the Perth summer. The T-train has organized a water drop but it was too little , too late for the journey home. As the group splintered it was every man for himself in the race back to the car and air conditioned safety.

Return journey, a few less smiles , more grimacing. ?

 

As well as the Sunday long runs there are the “special’ runs. These are organized, normally annually, and nearly always ‘up the ante’ with either more mileage or elevation. In the photo below its racing against a train which makes the ‘choo-choo’  run so special. Again I have written a couple of posts on this run which are worth a read and a chuckle… 2016 : https://www.runbkrun.com/2016/11/15/the-choo-choo-run-an-exercise-in-living-on-the-edge/   and last year https://www.runbkrun.com/2017/09/15/choo-choo-run-2017-man-against-train/ (Still not sure how Mike made it last year ? I suspect Uber?)  For those living in Perth this run is scheduled for two weeks after the Perth City to Surf marathon, so probably early September. There is a facebook page somewhere ? Just heard from Simon Coates,  the Choo-Choo this year is on September 23rd, the long weekend in WA. If you get lost at least you got a few days to get home…

 

Choc milk time at the Deli, job done.

Then there is the work lunch run. Working on St. Georges Terrace, Perth, we had some great running tops made up thanks to Rhys and Mel. This photo was taken at the height of the St Georges Terrace Running Club glory days when we always had a good contingent that would meet every midday at the lights outside the Woodside building.  Together we’d explore the various bike paths around the city  and trails in Kings park and it was a welcome relief from the work related problems that would often plague you. As with all runs they would start at a leisurely pace before Jeff or Andrea got to the front and then it was on for young and old.   Today the group has splintered to some extent but most of the people pictured below still make an effort and regularly get out there just not together as much, all bar Big Paul (front right) who wandered to the dark side of lycra wearing cycling due to a bad knee.

The St. Georges Terrace Running club.

 

Couldn’t leave without one more photo of the Yelo café with some of the usual suspects, in the photo below you have Gareth, Mike and the elusive Mark Lee, a rare sight but always good for some quality banter. Happy days and I hope to be back with the lads soon, just got to get rid of this Plantar Fasciitis but that’s a post for another day….

 

Yelo muffin carbo-load frenzy..why wouldn’t you?

Big shout out to fisiocrem , this product is just incredible for tired and aching legs. I use it daily and have noticed a vast improvement in recovery.

Bix hydration is just ace, a product brought to life by Vlad Ixel a professional ultra runner who knows a thing or two about hydration. ( https://www.bixvitamins.com/ )  The best thing about Bix is it tastes good with many different flavours and you never get sick of drinking it, this is a big plus as Maurten and Tailwind (both great products)  can be difficult to digest later in the event.  From the website :-

As an Australian elite multiple trail running champion, with wins in over 40 ultra-marathon races across Asia, recovery from training and races has always been my top priority. 

In searching for a solid recovery and hydration supplement, I recognized that critical vitamins and minerals – both in diversity and quantity – were missing from almost all supplements on the market. I had the feeling that in an effort to maximize their bottom-lines, companies in the hydration space, failed to deliver a product that could meaningfully assist athlete performance. 

In order to address this, I began the development of a hydration product. After two and a half years of development alongside a leading German sports scientist, BIX Recovery, an advanced, high-quality recovery drink was born. 

BIX boosts 12 active ingredients scientifically balanced to replace lost electrolytes and assist in immune function. It’s designed with quality vitamins and minerals, in quantities that work! 

BIX is a recovery solution for everyone, that will get you to the top of your game!

Great hydration.

What can I say about HumanTecar,  ( https://athleticus.com.au/ ) it looks great, smells great and is awesome for recovery or even pre-run/workout. Read about the science behind it first and then try the products. The compression bandages are just magical after a long event. Put these on and the next day you are recovered, I have used them on a number of occasions and they never fail to astound me albeit the family poke fun at me as I look like a ‘mummy and smell funny’ !

Fractelhttps://fractel.com.au/ ) have your performance headgear covered. I love the colours and the functionality of these hats, I guarantee there is one model you’ll fall in love with.

Fractel headgear, just ace.

Shokz headphones, let you keep in touch with the world around while losing yourself in quality tunes or podcasts. ( https://shokz.com.au/ )

Best running headphones EVER !

T8 running apparel is the best you can get, second to none. Designed for the ultra humid Hong Kong conditions the owners live in.  It is light and does away with any chaffing worries. T8 is the name given to the highest typhoon warning in Honk Kong,  storms and typhoons with gusts exceeding 180kph, which explains the branding. ( https://t8.run/)

Altra supply the best trail shoes on the planet, in my opinion, and none better than the Olympus five. Do yourself a favour and buy a pair. ( https://www.altrarunning.com.au/ )
https://www.osprey.com/au/en/category/hydration/trail-running/ Osprey Australia have come onboard and are supplying me with two running backpacks and travelling luggage for the Run Britannia adventure. I particularly like their running backpacks and am excited to test them over the event. I’ll be using the Duro 6 and the Duro 1.5 backpacks.
Excited to have Coros onboard who have supplied me with the new Apex 2 Pro GPS watch. I already owned the Apex 2 and was stoked when Coros reached out and offered me an upgrade. Even more battery life, can you believe 75 hours using GPS, wow! The watch itself is awesome, so light and well made. The watch is paired with a incredible application to keep track of all your stats, and runners love stats ! .  ( https://coros.net.au/ )
Feel free to follow me on Strava.


Follow me on
Strava

or follow me on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/runbkrun/

or facebook  RUNBKRUNOZ