25 April 2026

Fighting water wastage

There was water coming out of the asphalt of a little street around the corner. That's not good! This was happening on a dry day, so it didn't look like sewage seeping through. I suspected it was drinking water. So I contacted Welsh Water. Nothing happened for a while, but then I got a text. It thanked me for my message, and warned about that doing something about it might take a long time. It warned, for instance, that if a road closure would be necessary, it could take twelve weeks to obtain permission for that. I could imagine one was indeed needed.

Almost two weeks later I got another text. I was warned about potential low water pressure. I was sure it was related. And indeed: the next time I went to work I saw the road had been closed. (No months of permission seeking going on here!) Someone was already warning people about it. It's a tiny road, but it does lead to a school, so I can imagine closing it significantly affects the school run. People would have to approach that school from the other side.

And something was indeed happening! When I got home later that day there was a hole in the road surface. It looked like I had been right! And it had been a leaking water mains. I was glad I had contributed to stopping that.

The next day I left for work there was activity there, and when I got home the hole in the surface had already been filled. There had been nothing happening these few weeks in the beginning, but after that, the water company seemed to have been very much on the ball! That is great. For a country with so much rainfall we seem to have surprisingly many water shortages. And I think one should never take Drinkwater for granted. Letting it just leak through the road is not a good idea!

A leak?

Road closed, hole dug

The hole


24 April 2026

Race loot, a year later

Last year I had a category win in the Trawsfynydd race. It is a charity race, and the prizes are donated by local businesses. The year before I had walked home with local honey. But this time I had spotted a £50 voucher for outdoor kit! That would come in handy. Nobody else had claimed it when my name was called, so I nabbed it. 

In the year that went by since I did not pass through Betws, where the shop is, very often, and the times I did I either forgot the voucher or had no time to stop. So in the end I banked it on the day of the next race along! The shop was on route. 

I knew one thing I definitely wanted to buy with it: a new flask for hiking. I missed the one that had given up the ghost. If I went out now, I tend to go with the whole collection of smaller flasks, and that is not very practical. And I had already seen on their website that they also did wide-necked flasks for hot meals. I'm sure that will sometimes come in handy! 

I added some little safety lights, great for making sure you can be seen from behind when you go for a run in the dark, and a little dry bag, to get to the amount of the voucher. The little lights will probably not come in handy for a few months, but that's OK! I'm sure the dry bag will see some action in summer. 

I know I've just blogged about getting rid of stuff, but that did not involve flasks! I can use an almost infinite number of flasks. And rear lights. I’m not feeling any clutter-anxiety with this loot. 

The bloke at the till had a bit of a problem with the voucher as it had a code, which was handwritten. It wasn't necessarily clear which letters were uppercase and which were lowercase. The software would only accept it if he got everything right! It took a while. And then I could go home with my treasure.

This might be the best prize I've ever won in a race! Which is a bit weird, given that this was only a category win, and I have managed everything up to gold in the past. But so be it! I will enjoy this for many years to come…

 



23 April 2026

Ras Llyn Trawsfynydd 2026

I really like this race! It strikes a lovely balance between beautiful landscapes and even terrain. At 14 km it is also a nice distance. And the proceeds go to a good cause: the South Snowdonia Search and Rescue Team. What's not like? And I suppose it helped that the first time I ran it, I ended up on the podium. So when the 2026 edition approached I was really looking forward to it. 

The weather was lovely. I got my race number and did a bit of a warmup, on my lovely hybrid shoes which are really good for a race like this. And then I lined up at the start. 

At the start


In the beginning I took it easy. I wanted to do the course faster than last year, but the way to do that is not by burning out. And after not too much time, there is a fair amount of going up and down, and that is something I tend to do on feeling. But I was feeling relatively confident. 

Steffan, who would win, already looking pained a few kms in

Me looking happier. The lady right behind me would still be in that position at the finish! 

When I ended up flat part of the race on the southwestern side of the lake, I could try again. I was thinking of my breathing, and try to do it slow. And while doing so, run reasonably fast. I was enjoying it!

About halfway, there was a lady with a dog along the course. She shouted at me that I was in fourth position, and that the lady in third position was only just in front of me. That was very interesting. I could try to overtake her! I could see a cluster of people in front of me, and none of them looked particularly feminine to me, but they were so far I couldn't be sure. I just tried to get closer. 

By the time we ran into the village, I had overtaken the closest one of the clump of people. And all the others I was now close to also looked like men. Where was this cryptic third lady? Maybe she had accelerated away. And in the meantime I kept an eye on whether anyone was approaching from behind. I might be chasing someone, but someone might be chasing me at the same time!

I spent the rest of the route battling it out with the remainder of the clump. Some I got ahead of, and some I didn't. It didn't really matter, they were all men, and I'm not directly competing with those. I never saw the lady I was chasing. But I could tell from my watch that I had a good chance of indeed improving on my time of last year. And then the finish was nearby and I thundered over it. In exactly 1:02! That was just over 3 minutes faster than last year. A few seconds would have been enough! But I will take the minutes. 

I had a little chat with other finishers by the finish line, then I decided to go to my car to get my recovery drink, more drinks, and my phone. I was a bit thirsty, and I was keen to let Neil know how I had got on. And when I got my phone, I saw I had indeed been fourth woman, and the fastest woman over 50. Great! And that also meant waiting for the presentation. 

With my backpack I went back to the finish line, cheered on more runners, chatted with more finishers, and drank several beverages. As time moved on it got quieter. They won't do the presentation until everyone has finished, and many people won't await that. I got chatting with a lady who turned out to be Steffan Sayer’s mother. Steffan had won! And not only that; he had taken about a minute off the course record. I was very impressed. And also; he runs in the 40+ category. It is never trivial to run a minute faster than anybody else has ever done in a race, but I find it even cooler for  veteran runners! 

When the presentation happened I went nostalgic and chose the same prize I had one two years ago: Mawddach honey. Other options were Purple Moose beer, a box with things such as bara brith in, and envelopes with vouchers. I had had a look at the prize table beforehand, and of the edibles the honey really was my favourite, but the envelopes hadn't been out yet. Or I hadn't seen them. But I had made my choice. It looked like the vouchers were things such as breakfast for two. Sounds romantic! But this is quite a southern race. The local businesses who are providing the prizes are generally also quite southern. I could imagine it would be a bit of a logistic nightmare to use these vouchers. I stuck with my honey. Steffan’s mum volunteered to take pictures of me. That was really sweet of her.

Presentation 

Then a man approached Steffan and me. He had noticed our identical-sounding last names. He was from the local newspaper, and he was wondering if he could get a picture. We explained that we weren't related and our names weren’t spelled the same, but he liked the idea of people winning prizes with such similar names. We're going to be famous!

Then everybody went home. When I got there I realised I was quite tired. I had clearly given it quite a lot! But well, you have to pay for that 3 minutes faster time somehow. Well worth it! 



http://mmmmargot.blogspot.com/2025/04/ras-llyn-trawsfynydd-2025.html

https://mmmmargot.blogspot.com/2025/05/back-to-parkrun.html

 


22 April 2026

Cutting back the willow

I have a sizeable willow in the garden. I have felt the need before to cut it down to size a bit. It gives a lot of shadow in quite a large part of the garden, and the plants in the raised bed underneath that don't like that. I had been thinking about taking some of the trunks out. And one Saturday Neil and I tackled it. 

Starting 

It went super fast! We managed to cut several trunks out without dropping them on our heads. And we barely dropped them on vulnerable plants. We could cut off all the branches in no time as Neil had brought powerful loppers. And we cut the trunks in two if otherwise they wouldn’t fit in the garage. They will be firewood! 

We worked until we got hungry and wanted lunch. We had only started after 11! I suppose we weren’t at it more than an hour. Afterwards we went for a nice walk.  But we really changed the light availability in the garden. And that after the work the neighbour did. It’s a different garden now! I hope the plants that get more light now will thrive. Time will tell! 

Finished


21 April 2026

Getting rid of things

I have made a start doing a bit of a cull of my stuff. I had been wanting to do that for quite a while already, but I never really got around to it. I suppose the fact that I'm actually making some progress at least partially because of Neil's inspiration

Some of what I get rid of is going into the bin. But some of it might be of use to other people. I already got rid of my hiking snow shovel. I haven't done a winter hike in many years! That's the only time you need it. That one I actually sold to a student who was about to have a winter adventure in the Alps.

The snow shovel

I also got rid of a kitchen appliance I wasn't actually using. And an item of which I didn't even know what it was. I should've got rid of it years ago! I've been on the verge of throwing it away twice. But this time, I just asked on Facebook if anyone wanted it, and there were a lot of reactions. It has a new home now!

The unidentified thing


This is only a start. I hope to keep going with this. It would be nice to do a bit of decluttering. Surely I don't need everything I own. And some of it should really get a new lease of life!

20 April 2026

Hot water bottle

I have been showering cold for years now. It’s fine! I feel really invigorated afterwards. But I do admit I sometimes come out with cold hands and/or feet. Especially in winter, of course. 

The hands are not a problem. The feet aren’t when I am just coming home from work. I make sure to shower pretty much straight away, as then I have hours to get them to warm up again before it’s bedtime. But it's not unusual for me to come home later. That tends to happen on Tuesdays and Thursdays, for reasons of Track Tuesday and Thursday Night Hill training. I often am home about 8:30 on Tuesday and 9:00 on Thursday. And I try to go to bed at 10:00. So that doesn't leave a lot of time to warm up my feet.

My standard attempt is to just light a fire. If the whole room gets warm, then sooner or later my feet get warm. And I can also put them quite close to the fire. It tends to work. But warming up an entire room to get warm feet is not very efficient; neither with regard to fuel nor time. 

The answer is obvious, of course. But I just wasn't used to it. Someone reminded me of the existence of hot water bottles and I figured I should probably give that a go. Just heating half a litre of water is quite quick! And I don't have a dedicated water bottle, but if you just put a metal water bottle in a thick sock you have the same thing.

I've tried it a few times now. It works! I put it in my bed and place my feet on either side of it. And then I can sleep like a log.

As it is now April, and fully spring, so I don't think I will be using it a lot more. But I will make sure that my little water bottle and my sock are ready when autumn hits again!




19 April 2026

Reclaiming the lawn

My garden is always trying to get wilder, and I have episodic bursts of trying to move it in the opposite direction. This general Easter period was one of those bursts. And one of the first things I did was trim back the hedge. And that triggered another action. 

Most of my garden is lawn, and on several sides, other plants are trying to encroach. Ivy is trying to come from several directions, and one of these is from underneath the hedge. And that had become extra obvious now that the hedge was smaller. I had had a lingering desire to and do that for years, But the hedge work pushed that to the top of the to do list. 

I removed the ivy and whatever other plants had colonised this strip, and then removed the leaf litter. I’ve greatly boosted my compost heap. And then I raked back some top soil, spread grass seed, and raked the top soil back.

I first did that houseward of the raised bed. Then on the riverward side, but only until some lump. I think it’s an old tree trunk. I think I will clear up around the lump too, but I ran out of time. And when I was done, nature watered it. 

I hope the grass seed (a leftover) is still viable. I hope so! Then I can soon enjoy my extended lawn…

Before of the riverward bit

After