Baslow, Curbar and Froggatt have become one of my favourite
and most accessible places in the peak district, having previously only visited
on the rare occasion, and in fact, I hadn’t even been on Baslow edge, or not
that I remember, until last year. The
edges offer fabulous views, varied terrain, great running and walking, and are
in easy reach. I can take a long lunch
from Chesterfield and with a 15 minute drive be parked up at Curbar Gap or the
Clodhall Lane, Sheffield Road Crossroads.
From the national trust car park or the free spaces just
over the brow of the hill you can do a great 6 miles along Curbar and Froggatt
edges, past the Grouse Inn and on towards the White Edge Lodge before cutting
back along White edge. Or, from the
crossroads, start towards Curbar on the road, then take the path to the left
giving a flatish run to Wellington’s monument and Eagle Stone before running along
Baslow edge, Curbar, up to Froggatt and then cutting across the moor onto White
Edge for a nice 5 mile circular.
The views both over the edges and across the moors are
terrific, but on my last visit I was in no state to appreciate them or even take
them in. The only view I remember was when
straining to see the Grindleford playing fields in an attempt to make them seem
closer that they were. This was the end
of the Grindleford Gallup and my legs had already told me they’d had enough.
The Gallup is a race you have to be very sharp on signing up
with on registration day, with entries gone in under 20 minutes. Having never run 21 miles before, signing up
early did at least mean I had plenty of time to try and work up to the
distance.
Race day sign on was smooth and thanks to a lift with Meg
and Rachel I wasn’t running late for a change.
Plenty of time for a kit check and warm up. Kit didn’t seem mandatory but I carried my
back pack as I wanted to have my drink and food with me anyway.
Having crossed the road to the starting field I was quite
surprised by the speed of the pack as it raced away from the start line. A
number of early stiles probably the main reason behind this but as I had tried
to go with the early pace I wasn’t queuing for too long. Plenty of early mud on
the first few fields showing fell shoes were the only sensibly option.
The fields continued up to Yam and the first checkpoint came
and went with Ed Goober easing past and a guy from Ripley asking me if I was
ok, bit early for that I thought. Best part of the run, up and over Longstone
Moor with plenty of stiles and good moorland running.
After a long downhill it’s a 20 minute stretch on the Monsal
trail broken up by a feeding station at Hassop station. This did seem a bit of a drag but is soon
followed by the steepest climb of the route.
Bit of walking here before turning into the Chatsworth estate and a
lovely run down to Edensor.
So far so good but on the path that takes you over to
Chatsworth it was like someone has flicked a switch and I am all of a sudden
struggling to keep any sort of decent pace going. I just about keep the running going through
to Baslow. After that it’s a stumble up
Baslow hill onto the edges where the cramps set in and the numbers of people
going past me reaches a steady trickle.
With Baslow edge ticked off, it’s a treat to see the wife
and son number 1, out on a run of their own, waiting for me near the highest
point of Curbar. Very good of them also,
to hang around for a bit, cheering the other runners on, before setting off
after me, for fear of overtaking me.
After the rocks on Froggatt, it’s pretty much, a very
welcome, downhill all the way to the finish, but not something, with the state
of my legs, I’m able to make the most off.
But still I manage to roll in to the finish, just under three and a half
hours. A very reasonable effort.
The Grindleford Gallup is a well-established event, really
well organised and they do look after the entrants. Route finding was not a problem for a middle
of the pack runner such as myself, but even if I hadn’t had other runners
around me the map, directions and video on the web site give you plenty of
opportunity to get to know the route enough without a recce.
The water and feed stations were well manned with plenty of
goodies on. Picked up a few Jelly Babies early on, and a piece of marshmallow
pop at the fantastically well stock tables at Baslow. Surely they did not get through all that
cake.
And back at the sports ground all runners are provided with
hot soup, bread, bread cheese and more cake which was fantastic. A great event to do once for sure, would I do
it again, yes, but maybe not next year.
Bit of an absence of photos on this blog, despite all the great
views, me having my phone with me and plenty of opportunities for some nice
pics, I completely forgot and the phone stayed in my pocket the whole way
round. So here’s a lovely picture of the
cows that roam around near Eagle stone taken earlier in the year and a view
from Curbar Edge at the top.
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