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The Running Channel, Taking On The RAMSAY ROUND Pt 1

Taking On The RAMSAY ROUND Pt 1

My name is Sabrina Pace-Humphreys and I'm a lot of things to a lot of people. I'm a

mother, a grandmother, an Innovate ambassador, an ultra runner, but I'm also the co-founder

of Black Trail Runners and this is us taking on the Ramsay Round.

Running in the outdoors should be for everyone, but Black runners are underrepresented in

the culture of trail running. While Black people make up 4.5% of the UK population,

we make up less than 1% of trail runners. The Ramsay Round is one of the big three UK

mountain rounds covering 56 miles, 28 and a half thousand feet of elevation and taking

in 23 Munro, including Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in the UK. It was conceived in 1978

by a Black Scottish mountain runner called Charlie Ramsay. So we're following in Charlie's

footsteps, quite literally, by taking on the Ramsay Round. Six runners, three days, led

by trail running guides, Girls on Hills. You can't be what you can't see and we want as

many people as possible to see that the outdoors is for everyone no matter your ethnicity,

gender, or ability.

Oh, Charlie, how are you?

Nice to see you. Nice to see you.

When I leave you today, I head up to Fort William. The weather window has changed and

we've changed slightly what we're doing because of that. Bearing all that in mind and knowing

the route, what pieces of advice would you give me and the team?

I think the first thing you've got to acknowledge would be your own strengths and weaknesses.

And you're at a disadvantage because you're running on hills you're not familiar with.

But I think, that said, you're in good hands with the Girls on Hills. So I think to rely

heavily on them and listen to what they say, watch what they do, and just pick things up.

They may do things that you, "I never knew about that." You've got to look after each

other because, as I say, you're on different hills, different terrain and running on these

hills is different to the Lake District and different to the [inaudible]. They're all

subtly different in their own quiet way.

So I think that's an important thing. Learn the skills, as such things as navigation,

that's important, map reading. Even if you're out without a guide, you say "that's just great". Map

fits in the back pocket and off I go. Still get the map out, "I'm checking this and

checking that, oh that's interesting." Okay, fine. You learn to relate the ground terrain

to the map and that is a saviour because if the chips are down and you're on your lonesome,

then you're, "What do I do?" So if you're going out with a group, use it as a learning

curve, and as I said to you the other day on the phone, if you go to the hills, learn

the skills. That's important. That's my advice to you.

We're taking on the Round clockwise and in order to make the most of the time we have

up here, we've had to make a few tweaks to the order because of the weather conditions

we're facing.

Carrie's planned it, when we've been talking all weekend about it, she's really planned

it so that we really ... Not just that we make the most of the weather, but that we've

got the weather on our side as well. So she said to me, which you never think about really

like, "The wind, we wouldn't want to go ..." You said about the wind like it is, there's nothing

more miserable than running into the wind all the time, so part of redoing the route

is that we have the wind behind us and stuff like that. So it works.

I mean, it's going to be a bit on the side of us tomorrow, but then I'm kind of focused

a little bit on day three, because it's the big day. And that day it's going to be right

on our backs all day and still quite a strong wind. That'd be really nice to have that.

We don't want to be doing that [inaudible] so yeah, it just means we don't finish in

the same place, but it makes it doable as opposed to having a relentless slog in here.

Obviously, I'm doing this specifically for Black people. And I am representing for Black

people, regardless of what's going on around the world. There's so many things going on.

So that's why I'm here. And that's why I'm doing it.

I just feel a bit nauseous because it's just been such a long time in the planning and

I so want it to go well, but I need to stop trying to be a control freak about these things

because we're here. Girls on Hills briefed us on day one, but it's freezing, it's so

cold. I'm so glad that I have a lot of layers because it's absolutely freezing and I know

that it is going to get colder and wetter and windier.

Morning. It's five past four on Tuesday the 15th of June. I've been up about half an hour.

I've just finished preparing my food. Cheese and pickle sandwiches for the win today.

How you doing man? You good?

How you doing today, you all right?

Yeah, good, good, good, good. I think, elbow. Yeah, okay. And there's Ni. Say hi, Ni,

to everybody.

Hi, guys! All right?

We're coming up. Morning, morning, morning! We all ready? Hey!

We're here. It's the start. It's half past five and there're loads of midges, but we

don't care because we're going to get going in a minute.

So, see these people, there's Nat, Deo, Girls on Hills, Kerry, everyone. [crosstalk]. There's

Johnny. Simba, look at you! The midge net! I need to do that!

It's a good idea, well done.

Deo, Zukie. Getting eaten alive here. Yeah, I'm going to put my midgy net on.

Day one starts at Kinlochleven and takes in nine Munros covering almost 20 miles and 10,000

feet of elevation, finishing at the famous youth hostel in Fort William where Charlie

Ramsay finished his challenge.

Yes, still going. Got to the top here.

So we're just stopping because this is the last water, kind of flowing water for a while.

So we're just having a drink and refilling our water before we get up higher and we lose

the water. That water... We could bottle it and sell it.

Oh, definitely, yeah. Effective spring.

Wow, it's a bit special, isn't it?

It's a moment, it's a moment.

I'm absolutely knackered. Came from all down there, all up here and got that little bit

again to go. Knackered. But it's so beautiful, absolutely beautiful. Highly recommend it.

So I just went through just a bit of a low. Simba has come off the hill because he is

suffering with his ankle injury. So he wants to go and recover. Yeah, I just kind of went

through a bit of a mental low on the climb before checkpoint five. Just feel really lacking

in energy. My water supply is also getting really low too, so just need to get to the

next water source. Hope that the fuel that I've just taken on board is going to start

to kick in. This is what we're traversing at the moment.

The Black Trail Runners team taking on the Ramsay Round is such a mix of abilities and paces,

something that was so important to us when we chose who would be taking it on. This is

Nethilee's toughest trail challenge to date. And we're so proud that she has bagged as

many Munros as she did. You don't have to be the strongest, the fastest or the most experienced

runner to take on these challenges. But you do have to have the courage to try. Something

Nethilee has in buckets.

It's a relief and its wonderful. I've done so much. Just being on that hot bath now.

And food, of course. No, it feels great. It does really feel good. I've achieved, I think,

a lot so ...

Yeah, definitely. Definitely. A big day.

Yeah, I'm up and onward. Onwards to tomorrow.

We're at Stob Ban. Is it Stob Ban? I'm finding it increasingly hard.

So we've done this ridge. Oh, we've done everything basically. And Kerry, the weather

has been kind.

The weather has been really kind.

Which is always nice.

So the final peak is where?

On that little pinpoint in the distance.

All right. Okay.

What that little pinpoint over there?

After 12 hours, 21 miles and 10,000 feet, day one of the Ramsay Round is done. For me,

the toughest part was the ridge scrambling. Due to past negative experiences on ridges,

I was really scared of falling. This part of the day pushed me to my absolute limit.

I felt honoured and blessed to be on those mountains with my team, my friends, looking

around at where we had been, where we were going and showing in real life how each barrier

to diversifying the outdoors had and was being addressed with everything that I, we, had

dreamed of. It was such an emotional moment coming into the youth hostel at Fort William

where, all those years ago, Charlie Ramsey finished his Round. Seeing our team together

at that iconic location felt incredible.

Within our community of Black Trail Runners, we have, and actually moreso these days, people

that are brand new to the trails, people that have maybe been road runners and see the beautiful

pictures or the videos that we post about being out there and were like, "Wow, that

looks amazing. How do I get that?" For me, growing up as a kid, I never experienced anything

like that because that wasn't something that our family did and the people I surrounded myself

with, all the people that I grew up with, trail running or mountains, it was something

that other people did. I guess, what I hope from what we're going to be doing over the

next three days is that those people that maybe don't have that immediate family or

friends support can see in the film and in pictures and in what we are saying and doing.

Maybe even if I only do a Mamore or get up to the Round and do a Mamore, that's...

That's an achievement.

That's an achievement!

As I said to you on the phone the other day, "Success is a series of small achievements."

Yes.

I think that's important to hang your hat on that. And even just getting out of the

car and going up so far and coming back down again, that's an achievement, right? Let's

see if we can go further next time. If you can nurture that then you'd be surprised how

far you can actually go.

Day two of our Ramsay Round adventure starts at Fersit Dam, at the Northern end of Loch

Treig. It's just over 40 kilometers in total for the day and we've got five Munros to bank.

We've made the decision as a team that Nethilee will join us partway through so that she can

stick within her own limits.

We've just come from ... In the distance you can see car park all the way up. Big first climb.

The Ramsay Round is such a remote route that getting onto it can be tricky. So Nethilee

is taking the train out from Fort William to Corrour with one of the Girls on Hills

guides and then running in from there.

We decided that we wanted to ... do the three Munros and then come off, because we want to do tomorrow

as a complete team and it's going to be a massive, massive day. To get three Munros out

of five was a big thing for us, but then we knew that we wanted to come home and get some


Taking On The RAMSAY ROUND Pt 1 Le RAMSAY ROUND Pt 1 ラムジー・ラウンドに挑む その1 挑戰拉姆齊第一輪

My name is Sabrina Pace-Humphreys and I'm a lot of things to a lot of people. I'm a

mother, a grandmother, an Innovate ambassador, an ultra runner, but I'm also the co-founder

of Black Trail Runners and this is us taking on the Ramsay Round.

Running in the outdoors should be for everyone, but Black runners are underrepresented in

the culture of trail running. While Black people make up 4.5% of the UK population,

we make up less than 1% of trail runners. The Ramsay Round is one of the big three UK

mountain rounds covering 56 miles, 28 and a half thousand feet of elevation and taking

in 23 Munro, including Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in the UK. It was conceived in 1978

by a Black Scottish mountain runner called Charlie Ramsay. So we're following in Charlie's

footsteps, quite literally, by taking on the Ramsay Round. Six runners, three days, led

by trail running guides, Girls on Hills. You can't be what you can't see and we want as

many people as possible to see that the outdoors is for everyone no matter your ethnicity,

gender, or ability.

Oh, Charlie, how are you?

Nice to see you. Nice to see you.

When I leave you today, I head up to Fort William. The weather window has changed and

we've changed slightly what we're doing because of that. Bearing all that in mind and knowing

the route, what pieces of advice would you give me and the team?

I think the first thing you've got to acknowledge would be your own strengths and weaknesses.

And you're at a disadvantage because you're running on hills you're not familiar with.

But I think, that said, you're in good hands with the Girls on Hills. So I think to rely

heavily on them and listen to what they say, watch what they do, and just pick things up.

They may do things that you, "I never knew about that." You've got to look after each

other because, as I say, you're on different hills, different terrain and running on these

hills is different to the Lake District and different to the [inaudible]. They're all

subtly different in their own quiet way.

So I think that's an important thing. Learn the skills, as such things as navigation,

that's important, map reading. Even if you're out without a guide, you say "that's just great". Map

fits in the back pocket and off I go. Still get the map out, "I'm checking this and

checking that, oh that's interesting." Okay, fine. You learn to relate the ground terrain

to the map and that is a saviour because if the chips are down and you're on your lonesome,

then you're, "What do I do?" So if you're going out with a group, use it as a learning

curve, and as I said to you the other day on the phone, if you go to the hills, learn

the skills. That's important. That's my advice to you.

We're taking on the Round clockwise and in order to make the most of the time we have

up here, we've had to make a few tweaks to the order because of the weather conditions

we're facing.

Carrie's planned it, when we've been talking all weekend about it, she's really planned

it so that we really ... Not just that we make the most of the weather, but that we've

got the weather on our side as well. So she said to me, which you never think about really

like, "The wind, we wouldn't want to go ..." You said about the wind like it is, there's nothing

more miserable than running into the wind all the time, so part of redoing the route

is that we have the wind behind us and stuff like that. So it works.

I mean, it's going to be a bit on the side of us tomorrow, but then I'm kind of focused

a little bit on day three, because it's the big day. And that day it's going to be right

on our backs all day and still quite a strong wind. That'd be really nice to have that.

We don't want to be doing that [inaudible] so yeah, it just means we don't finish in

the same place, but it makes it doable as opposed to having a relentless slog in here.

Obviously, I'm doing this specifically for Black people. And I am representing for Black

people, regardless of what's going on around the world. There's so many things going on.

So that's why I'm here. And that's why I'm doing it.

I just feel a bit nauseous because it's just been such a long time in the planning and

I so want it to go well, but I need to stop trying to be a control freak about these things

because we're here. Girls on Hills briefed us on day one, but it's freezing, it's so

cold. I'm so glad that I have a lot of layers because it's absolutely freezing and I know

that it is going to get colder and wetter and windier.

Morning. It's five past four on Tuesday the 15th of June. I've been up about half an hour.

I've just finished preparing my food. Cheese and pickle sandwiches for the win today.

How you doing man? You good?

How you doing today, you all right?

Yeah, good, good, good, good. I think, elbow. Yeah, okay. And there's Ni. Say hi, Ni,

to everybody.

Hi, guys! All right?

We're coming up. Morning, morning, morning! We all ready? Hey!

We're here. It's the start. It's half past five and there're loads of midges, but we

don't care because we're going to get going in a minute.

So, see these people, there's Nat, Deo, Girls on Hills, Kerry, everyone. [crosstalk]. There's

Johnny. Simba, look at you! The midge net! I need to do that!

It's a good idea, well done.

Deo, Zukie. Getting eaten alive here. Yeah, I'm going to put my midgy net on.

Day one starts at Kinlochleven and takes in nine Munros covering almost 20 miles and 10,000

feet of elevation, finishing at the famous youth hostel in Fort William where Charlie

Ramsay finished his challenge.

Yes, still going. Got to the top here.

So we're just stopping because this is the last water, kind of flowing water for a while.

So we're just having a drink and refilling our water before we get up higher and we lose

the water. That water... We could bottle it and sell it.

Oh, definitely, yeah. Effective spring.

Wow, it's a bit special, isn't it?

It's a moment, it's a moment.

I'm absolutely knackered. Came from all down there, all up here and got that little bit

again to go. Knackered. But it's so beautiful, absolutely beautiful. Highly recommend it.

So I just went through just a bit of a low. Simba has come off the hill because he is

suffering with his ankle injury. So he wants to go and recover. Yeah, I just kind of went

through a bit of a mental low on the climb before checkpoint five. Just feel really lacking

in energy. My water supply is also getting really low too, so just need to get to the

next water source. Hope that the fuel that I've just taken on board is going to start

to kick in. This is what we're traversing at the moment.

The Black Trail Runners team taking on the Ramsay Round is such a mix of abilities and paces,

something that was so important to us when we chose who would be taking it on. This is

Nethilee's toughest trail challenge to date. And we're so proud that she has bagged as

many Munros as she did. You don't have to be the strongest, the fastest or the most experienced

runner to take on these challenges. But you do have to have the courage to try. Something

Nethilee has in buckets.

It's a relief and its wonderful. I've done so much. Just being on that hot bath now.

And food, of course. No, it feels great. It does really feel good. I've achieved, I think,

a lot so ...

Yeah, definitely. Definitely. A big day.

Yeah, I'm up and onward. Onwards to tomorrow.

We're at Stob Ban. Is it Stob Ban? I'm finding it increasingly hard.

So we've done this ridge. Oh, we've done everything basically. And Kerry, the weather

has been kind.

The weather has been really kind.

Which is always nice.

So the final peak is where?

On that little pinpoint in the distance.

All right. Okay.

What that little pinpoint over there?

After 12 hours, 21 miles and 10,000 feet, day one of the Ramsay Round is done. For me,

the toughest part was the ridge scrambling. Due to past negative experiences on ridges,

I was really scared of falling. This part of the day pushed me to my absolute limit.

I felt honoured and blessed to be on those mountains with my team, my friends, looking

around at where we had been, where we were going and showing in real life how each barrier

to diversifying the outdoors had and was being addressed with everything that I, we, had

dreamed of. It was such an emotional moment coming into the youth hostel at Fort William

where, all those years ago, Charlie Ramsey finished his Round. Seeing our team together

at that iconic location felt incredible.

Within our community of Black Trail Runners, we have, and actually moreso these days, people

that are brand new to the trails, people that have maybe been road runners and see the beautiful

pictures or the videos that we post about being out there and were like, "Wow, that

looks amazing. How do I get that?" For me, growing up as a kid, I never experienced anything

like that because that wasn't something that our family did and the people I surrounded myself

with, all the people that I grew up with, trail running or mountains, it was something

that other people did. I guess, what I hope from what we're going to be doing over the

next three days is that those people that maybe don't have that immediate family or

friends support can see in the film and in pictures and in what we are saying and doing.

Maybe even if I only do a Mamore or get up to the Round and do a Mamore, that's...

That's an achievement.

That's an achievement!

As I said to you on the phone the other day, "Success is a series of small achievements."

Yes.

I think that's important to hang your hat on that. And even just getting out of the

car and going up so far and coming back down again, that's an achievement, right? Let's

see if we can go further next time. If you can nurture that then you'd be surprised how

far you can actually go.

Day two of our Ramsay Round adventure starts at Fersit Dam, at the Northern end of Loch

Treig. It's just over 40 kilometers in total for the day and we've got five Munros to bank.

We've made the decision as a team that Nethilee will join us partway through so that she can

stick within her own limits.

We've just come from ... In the distance you can see car park all the way up. Big first climb.

The Ramsay Round is such a remote route that getting onto it can be tricky. So Nethilee

is taking the train out from Fort William to Corrour with one of the Girls on Hills

guides and then running in from there.

We decided that we wanted to ... do the three Munros and then come off, because we want to do tomorrow

as a complete team and it's going to be a massive, massive day. To get three Munros out

of five was a big thing for us, but then we knew that we wanted to come home and get some