In part it depends on the weather on the day.
As a minimum, if it was hot, I'd certainly take an emergency pouch of drink in my bag as well as having a bottle transported to Ribblehead. I'd carry that one with me; it'd last to the Hill Inn and I'd refill it there.
A bit - but seriously, to carry water with you - it weighs 1kg per litre after all - is totally unnecessary - have a drink before the start, having hydrated well for the 24 hours beforehand - and you should have no trouble getting to Ribblehead - drink what you want, then do the same again at Hill Inn. Remember: using glycogen liberates water, and carbohydrate/fat plus O2 makes energy, CO2 and water. Most people drink far too much in races and on long runs. By all means carry - and consume - an energy bar or 2 or 3 - but carrying water is really pointless in this event, even if it is held in the ferocious heat of late April.
Hi MG, I would carry your usual water bottle with a weak mix energy drink or whatever you are used to on your long runs, put two easily ID bottles of drink out for the drinks drop (large cheap pop bottles??) and fill your 'carry' bottle at the two stops.
Carry a couple of gels and/or bag of jellie's for later in the race, but don't eat too soon or you may bonk.
I strapped an extra energy gel to my bottle for the second drink drop when i did this race, but someone may nick it, so be aware!!
If you have anyone spectating, get them to look after your bottle or hand it to you (the top guys probably do)
Last thing, get used to your drinks and gels on your practise runs to make sure you can stomach them.
[QUOTE=Mountain Goatess;395732]Thankyou for the sensible advice Mr Bother! :thumbup:
Don't worry hinny it won't happen again![]()