About   |   Projects   |   Elsewhere   |   Work   |   Feeds   |   Contact

Archive for 22 October 2003

Update

More for my benefit I suppose, but here’s what’s been going on:

August
Scrapped one project (with the Large Retailer) on the basis that it was going nowhere, and started another with Not Quite So Large B2B Supplier (names have been changed to protect the innocent). Large amounts of hassle all round.
Decided to get the hell out of Leeds and go to York instead. Started looking for properties in York, found this.

September
Moved in to York. Wrote up dissertation, after much gnashing of teeth crunching numbers for hierarchical cluster analysis (don’t ask). Did various bits of work on the business. Installed the systems for the Spark incubators in Leeds and Wakefield. With no excuses left, find a decent route and start running along it

October
Finished the dissertation and handed the damn thing in. Sighs of relief. Business work starts in earnest. Win some, then lose them. All looks a bit dodgy, then other prospects pop out of the woodwork. Panicking? Not quite yet, but still the possibility.

22 October 2003

Play

No comments yet

Snickleways

Last night’s club run was through the Snickleways – which is York-speak for ‘gap between building just narrow enough for one person to fit down semi-sideways’. Not the most obvious route for 20-odd runners to pound through, but effective – it’s not particularly fast, but as you don’t spend more than 30 seconds at any one pace in any one direction, it very rapidly gets heart rates up. Not just of runners, either – there were more than a few wandering tourists who were startled by a line of runners who exploded from a 3-foot wide alley exit, ran two doors down the street and almost immediately dived down the next gap between buildings.

We were out for about 1h20, and the consensus was that the distance came to about 10 miles. I’ve no idea if that’s anywhere near correct or not, by the time I’d been in the lanes for 10 minutes I was completely disoriented and lost track of where I’d been let alone where I was going. But the route back took us down the main road past the racecourse, and by the time I’d reached that point I hit the wall. It’s the first time in a very long while I can remember this happening (which probably means I’m not going far or fast enough), but within the space of about 30 seconds my legs turned to lead and my lungs became about as much use as a pair of paper bags. The thing that amazed me was the sheer speed that it happened – one moment I was feeling relaxed and in control of the pace, and the next I was reduced to hobbling along while the rest of the group accelerated off into the darkness. The last mile or so was at least half the speed of the previous nine, as I shuffled over the railway bridge giving a reasonable impression of having had a hip transplant.

22 October 2003

Play

No comments yet