Another year and time for a new running blog. At 4:00am one night in January, I heard the rainwater lashing against my bedroom window and the idea suddenly appeared as a vision - run the River Bann. It's just 100 miles long, including around Lough Neagh, so we should be back in time for Christmas.
Colin, Brian and MOD were mad enough to join me today. We set off from Hilltown on a sunny March morning. The highest point of the town is a fish - maybe a good omen for a river run?
The River Bann story starts at its source on Slieve Muck in the Mournes. This took some finding but Brian was able to verify the spot by tasting the water.
I've taken a bottle full of this holy water which we will add to the tea at a Victoria parkrun. It's good stuff for runners, much more healthy than the usual Proseco so favoured by some of the women there.
We got down from the mountain, with a lot of slipping (wrong shoes), and made for Spelga Dam. What a beautiful place this is. I've given up on mountain running (too messy and dangerous for an old man) but still love jogging along these high roads through the Mournes.
This sheep was surveying an interesting thing below Spelga Dam ....
....... the Magnetic Hill, where it looks like you are going uphill but you are actually going down. There's money to be made here on bets - so bring your friends along one day.
It was then all downhill to Hilltown - named after the Hills and not the hills, you probably need to be Irish to understand that.
Brian decided to take to the water at this point and we fished him out again downstream in Hilltown.
The tradition is to end each of these runs with a plate full of food. Here Michael demolishes the local speciality - a Gutbuster Fry - at K's cafe in Hilltown.
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DISCLAIMER
Participation
in runs by invitation only. All participants are to ensure their general health
and physical fitness to complete the planned distance, and are to exercise
their individual appropriate caution for all sections of the route including
road traffic awareness. Any reference, in run blogs or other published
material, to access over privately owned land should not be taken as an
indication of a right of public access; in all such cases, check with the
relevant landowner.
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