06 April 2025

First race of the Tuesday Night Series

I hadn't really been thinking about the Tuesday night series when I signed up to Welsh class. On Tuesday night. To be honest, I also hadn't quite been thinking about cave rescue, which also does its activities mainly on Tuesday night. I clearly wasn't thinking very much at all!

When the Tuesday Night Series came up I got a little bit too tempted. The first race is around y Fron, and that area is very beautiful. It also didn't look like one of those over the top fell races where are you are almost always on a slope that is so steep you can neither run up nor down. And if you show up for one of the first races, you can pay for the whole series and be done with it. Then you can just show up and run. 

I also knew what the course material for that evening's Welsh class would be, and I figured it was a part that I could catch up on myself. Also, it was stunning weather. So I decided to go!

I drove up to  y Fron I barely recognised the place. It was absolutely clogged with cars. It is normally rather sleepy village, but not now! I found a little corner to squeeze my car into and headed for registration. I was starting to already see familiar faces around me. I am getting to know an increasing number of people in the local running scene. 

Y Fron, but different 


Registration was quick. And I found Geoff and Josh, who had already seen the start. It was close to where we had parked. So we headed that way, and I dropped off my bag and jacket in the car. I was ready to run!

At the start I saw many more people I knew: Thursday runners, Eryri Harriers, Eryri Orienteers, and even an evolutionary biologist. It was nice! And I made sure I wasn't too close to the front when we were lined up for the start. This was a fell race, after all. I am rubbish at those!

We set off, and in the beginning it was very crowded, but that sorted itself out. It was a beautiful run! The area is so gorgeous, and it was all bathed in beautiful evening light. We ran among quarrying remains. And at some particularly steep bit of a spoil heap there was a bit of a queue, but I didn't mind. Later my shoelace came undone. That was a bit annoying, but also not a big deal.

Pic by Thomas Owen

Pic by Thomas Owen

The race ended in a descent on a tiny little path, where I took it easy, and then the last bit on a gravel road. I am more at home there! I managed to overtake some people in the last few hundred metres. I didn't run a particularly good time, but I had immensely enjoyed it. And I was cheered over the finish by a clump of Thursday runners. That was lovely!

The finish

There was a bit of catching up at the finish, which included some Thursday runners trying to persuade me to go for pizza after the next Thursday run. I think they were successful. Stay tuned! But then I figured I should go back to my car. It was a bit exposed at the finish, and I was in my sweaty running shirt. So I jogged back, and drove back while the sun was beautifully setting in the sea. Next week I will be a good girl and be in Welsh class. But I hope I can do a few of these races! They are fun!

05 April 2025

Last geology field trip of the academic year

We have six trips in the geological module, and we now have got to number five. I have a timetable clash for the sixth one, so this was my last. But it was a good one to end with.

This was the trip to Rhosneigr, with a little bonus of blueschists with the Marquess of Anglesey (or more accurately, a statue of him) on top. The blueschists are a clear indicator of subduction. And it’s pretty as well!

The Marquess

The blueschists, looking green because of algae growing on top of them. Am I pointing at two pillows from pillow lava? 


We had some slight trouble with the vehicle we were using; more often than not it was claiming that there was a door open, and still claiming that if we had slammed all of them shut with really more force than needed to get them properly closed. We are not quite sure what that was about.  

In the Rhosneigr area we first look at some contact metamorphism; there is a (Precambrian) granitic intrusion in that area, and there are also some rocks exposed to that have been baked by this. So we look at both. And then we make a bit of a jump. From there we go straight to Ordovician sandstones and conglomerate. That is something where Jaco go out with sediment dynamics. 

Llyn Maelog 

Talking about rocks with a lot of disruption 


We finish it off on the beach, where there are more sedimentary rocks, but with these we focus on the deformation. It's mudstone with interbedded turbidites, and these are beautifully deformed. 

Beautifully deformed rock


It was stunning weather for this trip! That did have the unwanted effect, though, that it was fine weather for flying around, and the location is really close to a military airport. Propeller airplanes flying overhead makes it impossible to make yourself heard, but a fighter jet flying overhead actually hurts your ears.

I think it was a good trip. And then next week the two gentlemen round things off without me. And then we'll do it all again next year! 



04 April 2025

Back to Llyn Alwen with Kate and Bryn

The best thing you can have when your heart is a bit bruised is friends. And if they have pets that’s a nice bonus! So after my last romantic dead end I checked if Kate was around over the weekend. And she was! I suggested we might just walk the dog together, and Kate suggested a rerun of our Llyn Alwen walk from some 15 months ago. That sounded good. 

It was a gorgeous day! Maybe a little bit more wind than would have been ideal, but sunny. It was good to catch up. And Bryn was his usual funny but obnoxious self. It was a perfect way to spend a Sunday afternoon! 

The dam

The lake

First selfie attempt: dog not in view

Dog in view now: he’s sneaking in a kiss while Kate is distracted by taking the picture 

03 April 2025

First longish leisure run in a while

Since recovering from my ankle injury, I had not done any long runs that weren’t races. But I had an empty weekend ahead, so I figured it was time! And I decided to do an old favourite: around Moel Wnion. And I went after breakfast, as it would be raining in the afternoon.

It was dry, but it was windier than I had anticipated. But initially I had the wind in the back. I went anticlockwise this time.

Between Moel Wnion and y Drosgl


It was nice to run into the hills again! I hadn't done much of that recently. And I don't get beyond y Gyrn much. 

When I got to Ffridd Ddu the sun came out. But it still was very windy! I started to get tired of the endless noise in my ears. And there pretty much was no shelter at all along the way. I just plodded on.

Sea views from the other side of Ffridd Ddu 

Over the stepping stones through the boggy terrain

Where the path curves into Bwlch ym Mhwll Lle there was shelter. It was lovely! So quiet. But also very brief.

Close to the village I bumped into walking ladies, one of which was Sara, the first person I followed on Bluesky. And then I was home.

It has been a veritable plod! But it seems to be good for you to sometimes do that. Not everything has to be high intensity. And the views had been great! And with it being spring now, I might do this more often. In winter I often end up on the roads because the hills are just too soggy. But this is a lot nicer!

02 April 2025

Stem cell donor

I routinely donate blood. I am also a registered organ donor. I am too old to be an egg donor. And my hair is too grey and too dreadlocked to be eligible for donation for wigs. So I thought that was it. But then I got a message from Miles in which he mentioned stem cell donation. I didn't know that was a thing! But it clearly is. And it sounds like such a good thing to do. The very next day I googled it, and signed up. It's not like blood donation; they don't just take your stem cells and assume they will find someone who can use them. You just end up in a database, and they might never find a match, so you might never actively donate. But if they do, you can really make a difference in someone's life. It will probably be a bit of a hassle as you probably have to get to England have your stem cells harvested, but I will cross that bridge when I get there.

I got my test kit! It's a swab test like a Covid test. Very easy to do. It's now on its way to be analysed. I will get a confirmation when they get it. And then time will tell if they ever identify me as a match…



01 April 2025

Sport Science research seminar

I was just running the Thursday Hills when one of my fellow runners, Geoff from Sports Science, mentioned that the following week, the Sports Science talk would actually involve marine science. Maybe I was interested? It involved diving seals. It sounded interesting so I said I'd mail him to remind him to give me the details. And I turned out to be available that day.

On the day I biked to Normal Site, an obscure part of the university between Ocean Sciences and main campus. Apparently, that is where sports science is. I got to the correct building, and to my surprise, my key card gave access to it. I quickly found Geoff, the seminar organiser, and Josh, one of the speakers, who had also been in the previous night’s race.

Geoff introducing the first speaker

The first speaker, the one who was talking about seals, spoke online from St Andrews. He talked of the relationship between heart rate, blood oxygen saturation, and suchlike, in diving creatures. His facility had a license for capturing seals, involving them in their research for a while, and then releasing them back into the wild. So they sometimes had seals do some swimming underwater with a sensor on their heads that would measure the parameters they were interested in. And he did say something about that they can just turn their heart rate down to as low as 3 bpm if they anticipate that they will be underwater for a while.

He also mentioned that it is a lot of faff to have to catch a wild seal, anaesthetise it so you can fit it with instrumentation, and then have it dive around in your pool for a while. It was a lot easier to work with humans. You can just politely ask if they are willing to have instrumentation on their heads, and then do a dive. And humans are pretty rubbish divers in comparison to seals, but they could work with that.

He had also done research on people with a freediving habit, such as some Korean women who dive for mollusks and suchlike. Their physiology seem to be amazing.

I was wondering a bit how talented seals are in guessing how long their next dive is going to be. If you misjudged it, you can get into trouble. But then he also showed the graph of the diving behaviour of an elephant seal over a few days, and there was a very clear pattern in that. It really looked like these marine mammals know, and plan, what they're doing. I still wondered, though, if you could take advantage of it. If you see a seal do shallow dives, and you are a clever predator, you might be able to disrupt its surfacing, and know that they would be in distress pretty quickly because their heart rate is too high.

The next speaker was Josh, talking about chimpanzees. He was interested in cardiovascular disease, and chimpanzees just don't get that. It doesn't matter how old they get. And he said that if you have a captive chimpanzee and you give it junk food, they still don't get the diseases we get. I'm not sure how anyone would get ethical clearance for this, but it might have been an experiment done decades ago.

Josh with his research questions 

He showed us the heartbeat pattern of a healthy chimp, and that of a healthy human. It was indeed quite different! He said that the chimps’ pattern looks like that of a human in heat stress, or just after exercising. And he said it doesn't respond much to changes in temperature or activity levels and things like that. And it seems that our circulation seems to be tailored to excellent heat regulation. We seem to do that a lot better than chimpanzees! But that comes with the problem that we don't seem to have the robustness that they have. But I suppose that means the chimp has to stay in the forest. They might need the shadow!

He also said that chimpanzees still live in the habitat they evolved for. We don't. We evolved for being on the move. Where chimpanzees and humans started to separately descend from our common ancestor, savannahs had just come into fashion, and the chimps weren't interested, but the humans went there, and started to chase after prey. And that's tiring! So we learned to conserve energy. But now we get our food from the supermarket, which we may very well drive too, and we still want to conserve energy. And that goes wrong. And because we know spent most of our time indoors, we don't really need that thermal regulation so much anymore. But we have it, with all its drawbacks.

He had not only studied chimpanzee; like the previous speaker, he had also studied humans. And he was interested in subsistence farmers, because although they are not hunter-gatherers anymore, they are still quite close to but we are humans are supposed to be. And he was measuring things such as their activity levels and blood pressure overtime. And he compared that to people from a subsistence farming background who had fairly recently (In the last decades) moved into cities, and to people of European descent (the research had been known in Mexico) who had been living in cities for generations. No prizes for guessing who had the best cardiovascular health.

I found it quite funny that this guy is clearly quite an enthusiastic runner. He stays close to his roots! He might not frequent the African savannah, but he stays on the move. He knows what's good for him!

At the end of the talk we chatted a bit more. Some of it about running! He and Geoff were going to do a fell race the next day, and do the first Tuesday Night Fell Race the week after. But then it was time to leave. I took home some of the leftover brownies; there hadn’t been much of a turnout, so there were many of them. In spite of both Ocean Sciences and Natural Sciences having been invited! And then I got onto my bike. I had plenty to think about. I love sometimes going to seminars that have nothing to do with my own field of expertise. You always learn something new!

31 March 2025

Bethesda Map Run

I had decided to try the Wednesday running training, and skip the Thursday Hill session. I was thinking of what the running coach had said. My body sometimes needs a break! 

One of the Thursday runners, Geoff, had mentioned a ‘map run’ in Bethesda on the Thursday. I wasn’t sure what he meant. But Fliss, the lady leading the Wednesday training, mentioned it as well, and she gave a bit more detail. It was basically orienteering in a built-up area. And it sounded fun! And when I googled it I noticed that race headquarters were the pub just around the corner, less than 100m from my house. How could I resist a race like that? So I registered. And they gave you two options of doing it: with technology, or with pen and paper. And I opted for pen and paper.

On the day I got an email: the pen and paper option was not available. Everyone would have to log their checkpoints with technology. So I downloaded the app, downloaded another app you need for getting the app also on your watch, then put it on my watch, and uploaded the data of this specific race. I wasn't quite sure what's next but I figured I could ask at registration.

I went early, and indeed had both chaps of the organisation to myself. So they could talk me through how it all worked. And it turned out I seemed to have correctly installed the software, and the only thing I needed to do was start it when the race started. I was impressed with myself. But when other runners started to appear I briefly went home for a last cup of tea and toilet visit. Then I got back. I had a bit of a chat with the other competitors, including Geoff and his friend Josh. 

After a while we were asked to go outside, where we would get our maps and could start the software. Our watches or phones would register if we would reach a checkpoint. So after the countdown I opened my map. There was quite a wide variety of places you could go! I decided to head east. Why not? And I figured the first checkpoint I could take was near the church. My watch didn't seem to be responding to anything. So I continued. But at the next checkpoint, still nothing happened. By then I was fairly certain my watch wasn't registering anything at all. Oh well! I could just do this for shits and giggles.

I continued on my way. A few more checkpoints in I had to negotiate a flirtatious pug. That was quite sweet. And I got to some checkpoints in the Braichmelyn area. Then I crossed the road and the river and tried to get all of them on the other side. I did make an unnecessary loop, but I did get them. And then I figured I still had time to hoover a few up in the direction of Tan y Foel. And then I only had five minutes left, and had to leg it back down to the finish. I was back almost on time!


It looked like I had indeed not registered anything. That's fine. At least I had started to log the run on Strava after the second or third checkpoint, so at least I had a record of where I had been. I could check how many points I would have had had the technology worked. I think it was 480, but I came in a few minutes late so I would probably have been docked 60 points (the going rate is 20 points per minute). If that is true I would just have managed to outperform Geoff! Unlikely, but not impossible. For context, the overall winner had 810. And the next time (if there is a next time) I will not leave the start until the technology works. I'm sure the people starting you off should be able to help with that. I'm sure it is more satisfying if you actively log something!

After the race I had a small beer with Geoff and Josh, and then we went home. A bit of a weird introduction to orienteering, but at least it had been enjoyable!