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Monday 30 October 2017

Munich Half Marathon


Stornoway running club....and guests!
This was the annual Stornoway Running Club trip to Europe that we had kindly been invited along to by Ross and Jim. In all there were over 40 of us in the group and many were just making a weekend of it however, having spent very little time in Germany, Simon and I decided to stay on for a week after the race and make a proper holiday of it. Having taken part in many European marathons over recent years Stornoway Running Club have developed close ties with runners from Austria and Germany who come over to Scotland on a regular basis to compete in races in the Hebrides. This was a great opportunity to visit Munich, a fantastic city, catch up with old friends and make some new ones.

We arrived in Munich early evening and went to find the train to get us from the airport to our hotel. Most of us managed to get off at the right stop but the doors to the trains didn’t seem to allow for unsure hesitant tourists and so three of our party were swiftly whisked away, an amusing look of horror on their faces as they departed…. Fortunately, they managed to get off at the next stop and made their way back to where the rest of us were waiting on the platform. Our hotel being a little way out of the centre of Munich required a second train journey on the underground system so it was all aboard the next one that came along. Until the sudden realisation that it was going in exactly the wrong direction. Off we piled off at the next stop before boarded the next train that went back to where we had just come from. Happily, this game of musical trains finished right outside our hotel which was good as it was late by then and I was weary and so looking forward to my bed. It was not to be. The hotel had botched up our booking so it was another 45 minutes and 300 euros before we could finally get into our room. A quick beer and it was time to collapse into bed.
Trying to find the right train
The following morning we made our way to the Olympic Stadium where the marathon expo and race registration was. You go in the main door and are directed past a huge variety of stalls selling all manner of running related items and assorted tat as well as stalls advertising exciting looking races in European mountains (not to mention your clothes bag and race t-shirt pick up point) before you reach the number collection. Once you reach the number collection point you are directed past all those stalls again until you reach the clothes bag and race t-shirt pick up points which you had already passed earlier on your way to race number collection thus maximising your chances of making some form of purchase. Crafty work by the organisers. It worked though, I succumbed to a new fleecy winter top.*sigh*

Obviously 40 is a big group and as moving around Munich as a herd wasn’t practical a splinter group of Rob, Cath, Ivor, Simon and I decided to head into Munich city centre to get some lunch of traditional Bavarian fare of sausage and sauerkraut in the open victuals market. This did the job before Ivor, led us all on a tour of Munich. 
Al Fresco dining at the victuals market


Tour guide Ivor

Ivor leading the tour
Dinner that night was much of the same type of Bavarian dishes. When you are racing in another country food can often be a challenge, different foods, less than hygienic practices etc can cause issues but Germany isn’t a country I would theses associate problems with food with and so I didn’t realise it at the time but I was soon going to find the meat and heavy stodge based diet exactly that challenge. The traditional diet as far as I could work out appeared to be all meat, and very large portions at that usually accompanied by a big heavy stodgy potato or dumpling concoction. Don’t get me wrong, its lovely and very tasty and high quality but I did struggle with the sheer quantity of meat, it is not something I eat in great quantities at home and it made me feel heavy, bloated and sluggish at times. There was a noticeable lack of green vegetables served up too. One night I admitted defeat and had a salad – but even that had strips of pork thrown into it. God knows how the vegetarians and vegans fared.
Pre-race dinner and beers
After a fitful nights’ sleep (the hotel air conditioning had one setting which seemed to be about 35 deg C) it was race day. While the marathon and 10k runners had the usual early start the half marathoners had a far more leisurely 1.30pm start and so we made our way to our subway stop alongside other runners with no train related navigational incidents.
Looking forward to the race guys...?
That'll be a "no" then!




Startline antics
We started out in the suburbs somewhere and I settled into my pace as Simon, Ross and Rob disappeared into the distance. For the most part the course was wide, flat and the weather was cool so pretty ideal conditions all in all. Things got a little more interesting as we ran into the city centre with bands playing and spectators cheering and we started to catch up with the tail enders of the marathon race that had started earlier that morning being careful not to run into the back of any of them especially when they stopped for a wee walk. I started to feel a bit weary around 7 miles so for the first time ever in a road half marathon I took a gel. Yes, I know, it’s not wise to do something in a race that hasn’t been tried and tested in training however I got progressively faster towards the end of the race so I can only conclude it might have given me the sugar boost I needed. My guts also got progressively grumblier so I can also conclude it was a caffeine containing gel and as such I might have been better taking it nearer the end of the race. 

It didn’t seem long until I reached the outskirts of the Olympic stadium and then had the magical experience of running through the tunnel on to the track. I guess that’s about the only time I will have a taster of what an Olympic athlete experiences. The tunnel was dark and had some sort of atmospheric lighting and smoke thing going on and you only hear the sound of your own footsteps and the those of the runners around you and then you burst out into the light and noise of the stadium. I expect it fell a little short of the full Olympic experience as the stadium wasn’t packed with spectators and they weren’t all cheering me on but still, it was fun. 
Running through the tunnel into the Olympic stadium
As I turned out of the tunnel on to the track I spotted Simon ahead of me, not moving particularly quickly. A dilemma. Do I do the nice thing and say something encouraging or do I sneak past on the outside unnoticed and steal the all important win? My conscience got the better of me and I tapped Simon on the shoulder….and he promptly sprinted off round the track like a scalded cat. Meh! As I turned into the back straight I found him waiting for me his conscience having got the better of him and we ran over the finish line together. I had assumed that we would be awarded the same finishing time and I was assuming that Simon thought the same as he would never allow me to finish in front of him but what we had failed to remember was that I had started further back in the field on the start line so I was unexpectedly awarded a time 2 seconds faster than Simon. As you might imagine I didn’t let him forget it for the remainder of the week although I knew I would pay for it sooner or later. My time was some 15 minutes faster than i had been running for the Heb halfs earlier that summer so at least the Iron tablets seem to be kicking in now, well I'm putting it down to that as I've certainly not been doing any additional training!
Crossing the finish line together...awww sweet!


Post race beers
Race medal
Stornoway running club have their own travelling support!
I couldn’t find the stand serving water and Lucozade or similar but quickly located the beer stall (my excuse and I’m sticking to it – and so were quite a few others by the looks of it). After locating our bags Simon went to get his medal engraved and then we met up with the other runners and then headed back to the hotel for showers, beers and the usual post-race festivities and more traditional Bavarian food.
Celebrating with a post race dinner
Ethel was celebrating her 80th Birthday on this trip with a 10k race and a surprise special award from the Western isles local authority for her services to her sport.
I hope i can still run 10k races when im 80!

The following morning people started to head home and we headed to our new hotel for the rest of the week. Packing was a wee bit of a struggle with an immense hangover and the air conditioning temperature at the hotel seeming to be increasing be the hour but once outside of the hotel into the cool air I felt a bit better and after the days’ activities of a sight seeing bus tour and another trip to a beer hall I was right as rain again. Norman, Murdo and Shona also stayed on for the week and did a different set of sight-seeing activities to the ones that we did including a trip to Salzberg which I was very jealous about. There is a lot to see and do in Munich and the surrounding area and a wee surf of the internet indicates that there is also a mountain marathon in the mountains of Bavaria not too far away….I wonder how to break the news to Simon….I suppose I could always use a trip to the Audi museum as an incentive.
Team photo at the finish
A leisurely bus tour. The perfect activity for sore legs and a thumping hangover



BMA World

The Olympic stadium

The view from the top of the tower. BMW world and the BMW museum below
View of the Olympic stadium from the tower
The very sombre memorial to the Dachau Concentration camp.
The crematoria at the Dachau concentration camp
The Eagles nest, Hitlers tea house at Bertesgarten in the Bavarian Alps
No trip to Munich would be complete without a visit to a traditional beer hall
1 litre Stein glasses. The large portions of food they serve you in the beer hall mean that its a struggle to drink too many of these without your stomach feeling as though its about to burst!

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