parkrun

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Halb

53,012 posts

184 months

Sunday 1st October 2017
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Jimboka said:
In case anyone didn’t know, the Parkrun app is pretty handy for tracking progress.
Wasn't aware there as one. biggrin

Had my first one for two months yesterday. Just nice to get round.

Evanivitch

20,171 posts

123 months

Sunday 1st October 2017
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Found a small, local Parkrun. Picked a weekend with a major running event on. Add a bit of autumn rain... Finished third! Best position I'll probably ever achieve (1st and 2nd were quite a way ahead).

madbadger

11,566 posts

245 months

Sunday 1st October 2017
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I did the new run at Flatts Lane yesterday. 128m of elevation gain. yikes


tenohfive

6,276 posts

183 months

Sunday 1st October 2017
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madbadger said:
I did the new run at Flatts Lane yesterday. 128m of elevation gain. yikes

Very jealous, wish I had something that lumpy nearby.
The only time I've ever come top 3 at a Parkrun was on a relatively hilly off-road course; the more hills the better is my view - it's the only time I can compete with the roadies.

Flibble

6,476 posts

182 months

Sunday 1st October 2017
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Evanivitch said:
Found a small, local Parkrun. Picked a weekend with a major running event on. Add a bit of autumn rain... Finished third! Best position I'll probably ever achieve (1st and 2nd were quite a way ahead).
Crikey, winning time at mine was 17 minutes. I'm not getting anywhere near that soon!

Evanivitch

20,171 posts

123 months

Monday 2nd October 2017
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Flibble said:
Evanivitch said:
Found a small, local Parkrun. Picked a weekend with a major running event on. Add a bit of autumn rain... Finished third! Best position I'll probably ever achieve (1st and 2nd were quite a way ahead).
Crikey, winning time at mine was 17 minutes. I'm not getting anywhere near that soon!
1st place this week would have finished 9th the week before and more than 2 minutes off the pace!

It was just a perfect storm of circumstances for a high placed finish.

Gilhooligan

2,214 posts

145 months

Monday 2nd October 2017
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Seem to be having some bad luck recently with getting a result. The last 2 out of 3 parkruns I've been an 'unknown' in the results page despite having barcode with me.

Luckily a quick email to event resolved the issue and I got my time.

Major respect to the folk who keep these events going every week. I can think of better things to do with my Saturday afternoon than having to manually update the results.

I'm overdue another volunteer stint so off to go sign up..

john2443

Original Poster:

6,341 posts

212 months

Monday 2nd October 2017
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Gilhooligan said:
Major respect to the folk who keep these events going every week. I can think of better things to do with my Saturday afternoon than having to manually update the results.
Thanks smile - we don't spend all afternoon doing it!

At my event there are 3 of us who do it, we collect the emails up and do a quick update sometime on Sat or Sun, I usually do it while watching the TV so doesn't cause much inconvenience and it only takes a few minutes.

Halb

53,012 posts

184 months

Tuesday 3rd October 2017
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madbadger said:
I did the new run at Flatts Lane yesterday. 128m of elevation gain. yikes

Is that an app?
I have Penny Flash and Worsly Woods near me that I'd like to see the elevation.

Gilhooligan

2,214 posts

145 months

Tuesday 3rd October 2017
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Halb said:
Is that an app?
I have Penny Flash and Worsly Woods near me that I'd like to see the elevation.
Looks like the Garmin Connect app. Use Strava on your phone if you don't have a GPS watch to get similar data.

madbadger

11,566 posts

245 months

Tuesday 3rd October 2017
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Gilhooligan said:
Halb said:
Is that an app?
I have Penny Flash and Worsly Woods near me that I'd like to see the elevation.
Looks like the Garmin Connect app. Use Strava on your phone if you don't have a GPS watch to get similar data.
yes

It's a screen grab from Garmin Connect.

KTF

9,816 posts

151 months

Tuesday 3rd October 2017
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An update on the t-shirt situation: http://www.parkrun.com/news/2017/10/03/the-future-...

Halb

53,012 posts

184 months

Wednesday 4th October 2017
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"As we prepare to celebrate our 13th birthday this weekend, it’s hard not to reflect on how far we have come in such a short space of time. 13 runners and a handful of volunteers at our first event has grown into a global community of more than 2.5 million participants. And while the numbers are impressive, it’s the friendships, the life-changing stories and the positivity that I have always seen as the true measure of our success.

For a while now I’ve been contemplating what parkrun really is and the values we represent. It’s no secret that I was an injured runner when I came up with the idea of parkrun, and the 5k run was the ‘hook’ to get my mates to the park at 9am each Saturday. Really though, it was all about creating an opportunity to catch up with those friends in the park cafe afterwards.

Of course parkrun has adapted and evolved since those early days, but the reason that so many communities have embraced it hasn’t changed - it brings people together in a social, supportive and non-competitive environment. parkruns are not races, there are no winners, and we celebrate participation - whether it be walking, running or volunteering - over performance.

Yes parkruns are timed for people who want to keep track of their own personal improvements, there are finishing positions and age grading percentages too, all of these though are instruments for measuring personal progression, if that’s what you want. We regularly hear stories of people who are achieving what they never thought possible, but for many parkrunners it is simply about running or walking with like-minded people and being part of their local community. We value everyone at parkrun equally and the fact that 80,000 people who previously did no physical activity have become active through parkrun over the past three years alone, demonstrates how successful we have been at breaking down the barriers to taking part in regular physical activity.

Yet despite growing into the world’s largest running event, there are still people in running circles who don’t quite understand parkrun in the same way we do. As many of you will know, the editor of Runner’s World magazine in the UK recently asked a journalist to attend a parkrun to secretly ‘cheat’ by not completing the full 5k, and then write about his experience.

I share the disappointment that was clearly expressed by both parkrunners and the wider running community in response to this article. I’m most disappointed at the foundations and fabric of our community being challenged by an established and respected publication, by the deliberate attempt to undermine the authority of the team of volunteers delivering the event, and the impact the article could have in dismissing the achievements of so many parkrunners.

I’d have expected the role of a major running publication to be to positively promote participation in running and volunteering, not attempt to undermine it for the sake of a publicity stunt. It was the behaviour I would expect of the gutter press, not a supposedly pro-running magazine, and I shall exercise my personal right to not purchase that magazine any more as I feel it has let all runners and volunteers down.

Of course, the subject of the article is a pointless one. Our events are not races, it is not a competition. 13 years ago, when I started our first event, I called it ‘Bushy Park Time Trial’. It was always a timed run, offering the opportunity to measure progress on a weekly basis, and those principles still exist: there are no winners, or prizes, and so should someone choose to cheat, they choose only to cheat themselves. It is not the responsibility of our volunteers to officiate, and it isn’t something that other parkrunners should be concerned about.

My first ever experience of parkrun was as a volunteer, and volunteering has been the cornerstone of parkrun since the beginning. It should be a positive and life-affirming experience, and it saddens me that this wasn’t the case for these volunteers in the Runner’s World article, who feel the magazine attempted to humiliate them. It didn’t succeed though; all Runner’s World managed to do was humiliate itself.

So on that note, I would like to say a personal thank you to the team of volunteers at that event that day, and to each and every one of you, who all play an important role in promoting the values that we stand for. parkrun is so much more than a traditional running event and spreading that message far and wide is helping us to create a healthier and happier planet.

Whichever parkrun you are walking, jogging, running or volunteering at this weekend, I would like to wish you a happy International parkrun Day.

Paul Sinton-Hewitt, CBE
parkrun Founder"

john2443

Original Poster:

6,341 posts

212 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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Halb said:
"..... the Runner’s World article, who feel the magazine attempted to humiliate them. It didn’t succeed though; all Runner’s World managed to do was humiliate itself."
If you haven't seen the article, journo ran one lap (at Alice Holt), hid in the bushes, waited til the leader passed, came out of the bushes to finish P6 with a 2 minute PB.

His power of 10 now shows parkrun DQ which must be a first!

I think the point was to show how easy it was to cheat, but mostly just made him look like a knob.

The jiffle king

6,921 posts

259 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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john2443 said:
If you haven't seen the article, journo ran one lap (at Alice Holt), hid in the bushes, waited til the leader passed, came out of the bushes to finish P6 with a 2 minute PB.

His power of 10 now shows parkrun DQ which must be a first!

I think the point was to show how easy it was to cheat, but mostly just made him look like a knob.
I expect the RW will lose a lot of readers from this. The point about only cheating yourself is well made and thankfully parkrunners will rise above cheats.


Smitters

4,006 posts

158 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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I'll read the article first, but my gut instinct is to bin off RW. It does smack of shoddy journalism. PSH is right. You only cheat yourself. In this case, out of readers.

RizzoTheRat

25,211 posts

193 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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I assume the article's not online anywhere yet, but a rather strange idea from a running magazine. A quick search of their website show several pro-parkrun articles.

Mind you having run Alice Holt I can understand the temptation to cheat, that hill's a bh biggrin

egor110

16,901 posts

204 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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What was the point of the journalist cheating at a park run ?

I'd assume a runners world journalist is going to be a pretty experienced runner so the distance wouldn't be a problem ?

Surely you could write a good article by just rocking up , talking to people and experiencing the whole park run ethos , i've only done a few but my mrs loves them but my impression was it was far bigger than i was expecting and the real friendly family feel of park run .

KTF

9,816 posts

151 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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Here is the article. You may have to make it full screen as its a bit fuzzy.



Am not sure what it was trying to prove but there are plenty of outraged people who are outraged because PSH is outraged and they haven't actually read it.

RizzoTheRat

25,211 posts

193 months

Thursday 5th October 2017
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Meh, hardly anything to get outraged about IMO. Seems an odd thing to do though as it's obviously pretty easy to cheat.

I agree with his "Not a race but..." comments though. In France they don't publish the results in time order, and I don't think they even give you a position, due to some legal thing about it definitely not being a race. To be honest that's a pain in the arse so hope the UK doesn't ever go that far.