Peaks: Belstone Tor, Oke Tor, Steeperton Tor, Cosdon Beacon)
Time/Position: 1.25.45 (5th from 40)
You might expect the landscape that
inspired the Hound of the Baskervilles to play host to some decent fell races. It does indeed, and the Sticklepath Horseshoe is perhaps the best and longest
established of all the Dartmoor events. The route is a classic horseshoe, just shy
of 10 miles, over four distinct summits. It doesn’t have much climbing in
comparison to a typical Welsh or Lake District mountain race, but this Devon
terrain is surprisingly awkward: a mixture of bog and boulders in places. The local runners and organisers were a
very welcoming bunch, and the field was
small, but drawn from a good range of South-West English clubs. After a loop around fields near the
picture-postcard thatched village of Sticklepath, we headed up steep tracks to
the equally scenic Devon village of Belstone and the first checkpoint. A group
of five of us broke away from the rest of the field after half a mile. At
Belstone, this little group also began to fragment. Two lead runners, much
quicker than me, flew up the first real summit (Belstone Tor: already reccied with the family 11 days ago) with me hanging
on to the back of two slightly slower local runners. I stayed with a guy from
the local Okehampton club until the top of Belstone Tor, desperately trying to
stick with him as he knew all the best lines. But at the summit he pelted away
and I couldn’t match his pace so reverted to my usual ponderous plod, with
nobody visible behind. Only then did I notice that the four
runners in front of me had all dispensed with map and kit: I suddenly felt
handicapped by my old bumbag, full waterproofs, map and compass. A superbly runnable ridge followed, all the
way over Oke Tor to the top of the remote Steeperton Tor. As its name seems to suggest, a
sharp descent into a gorge follows, before a hands-and-knees climb to the top
of the next peak. I momentarily thought I might catch the two lads in front at
this point, but soon conceded defeat as I slowed for the long final climb over the
highpoint of Cosdon Beacon. The final descent was confusing for a
non-local, and I made two minor errors, but they didn’t cost me too much time
and I finished in fifth place in 1:25. I finished in a similar position in the
big-field Tywardraeth Trotter race during our last Cornish holiday two years
ago. No chance of staying for prize giving or
enjoying the homemade flapjacks though. My impatient offspring then insisted I
get straight in the car and drive five hours home to Flintshire in my running
shorts, Devonian mud still plastered to my legs.
2 comments:
Hi Simon
I did this race 12 years ago! Came either 2nd or 3rd to Kevin Hagley who comes up to do a lot of North Wales races. We then did the Sourton Tor race the next day. Thoroughly enjoyed the weekend!
Martin C
Nice to hear from you Martin - thought you might have done it! The other races in the area do look good - would like to do them some day. Hope all well.
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