https://live.opentracking.co.uk/l24r23ab/?fbclid=PAAaZPiC8e0XtMQt9PDhHaQKzh...
He sets off tonight at midnight. Has a schedule for 79 peaks. He has some A-List support runners. I reckon he has a good chance of taking the record.
This just blows my mind. Something like the Bob Graham seems superhuman at 42 peaks, then there's this wizardry.
Berry's L1 was an hour quicker than Collinson's equivalent leg (which was Leg 7 due to the different starting locations).
Berry's L2 was about 27 minutes slower than Collinson's equivalent leg 1.
All to play for on L3.
What's the criteria for counting as a peak?
Avoiding Bakestall, counting Combe (next to knott), not counting Knott Rigg as a peak... Haycock looks like a lengthy diversion for a "maybe".
It's a great weather window for it, good luck to him!
Do they really go direct up Blisco from Stool End? I’ve come down it that way in the Great Lakes fell race and that was hard enough.
> What's the criteria for counting as a peak?
Mostly just tradition tbh.
Nowadays new tops need to be over 2000' with a quarter-mile and 250' of separation but some of the older ones don't meet that. Even the original BGR has anomalies like counting Steeple but not Scoat Fell (which is clearly the parent summit and you can't avoid running back over). All part of the charm!
There is a list of peaks which meet the criteria, so the easiest one on the list was Haycock.
However, he has missed his go/no-go time at Red pike so has omitted Haycock, now to take the record he has to get back to Newlands in less than 23:45:32
It looks like he is currently due to finish in about 23:45:32
Out of signal right now. Touch and go as to a new record. Good luck.
15 minutes up on Collinson with 2 peaks to go. Baring a calamity, it’s in the bag.
Thanks for this thread. What an effort, nearly there.
Indeed, but I have a question.. is it really necessary to go north of the a66? There are relatively few peaks there and the distance is significant. Couldn’t alternatives further south be more efficient? I’m guessing not, but it surprising to me..
Any new record has to include all the peaks of the existing record.
Ok, well that explains it! Ta
For anyone who's interested Strava here: https://www.strava.com/activities/9109372170
> Success in 23:23:20, Fine effort.
Great run, such a shame he wasn't 3 seconds slower 😁
Good to see a successful attempt on the record, hopefully someone else fancies having a crack and we all get another fine 24 hours of dot watching.
> Any new record has to include all the peaks of the existing record.
Dare I ask why?
You should know better than to ask 'why' when fell/hill running idiosyncrasies are involved!
I assume that it's historical and continuity purposes for the Lakes 24h - as mentioned above, some of the 'peaks' would now not make the re-ascent/distance requirements now in place, and it keeps a strong lineage in the record. There was a set of articles in the Fellrunner covering this in recent years.
However, the Munro round has moved around a bit as that's just any Munros starting/ending in the same place - though of course peaks getting demoted/promoted from/to Munro status has added its own idiosyncrasies. iirc, it started in Lochaber, then moved to Kintail, before the last 4 (3 men's, 1 women's) records were set in Cairngorms.
Given Lakes is based on the Bob Graham round, and Monro's has the Charlie Ramsey round in its lineage (please correct me if I'm wrong), there is some divergence in method here, but again I think it's beacuse there's always been a defined list of Munro's (even if this sometimes changes), whereas there's not always been a list of what constitutes a peak in the Lakes. You could do a 'Wainwright's 24h' record, but then this is also to some extent a fairly random list, based mainly on views and not a numerical specification..
They're all originally based on extending the BG round, and then extending that by adding one or more (!!! not nowadays) peaks or doing the same peaks quicker.
So in that respect they're not really "most peaks possible in 24 hours", more a sort of "anything you can do I can do better" type challenge.
> You could do a 'Wainwright's 24h' record,
Not counted them rigourously but from a quick scan there's at least 60 in that route