A birthday Treat

Life is all about moments and making them special.

Some moments or should I say, some dates are key.

In 2008 I met someone very special, Niandi. In 2011 she took a big step and moved from Paris to the UK… crazy I know! As several friends have said, ‘she must REALLY love you’.

I guess she must.

I hope this present shows how much I love her. Je T’aime Niandi xx

The Tour de France

July is all about the Tour de France for me. As an ex cyclist I still feel the adrenaline buzz from seeing all those guys day in and day out nailing it on the road. The 2011 edition has been the best Tour for some years. I am not going to go into a stage by stage overview as I don’t see the point. The race is done and we all know the end result.

Green with envy!

What I want to do though is mention several aspects of the race. Firstly the organization. This years route was superb. We had racing from beginning to end with the final outcome only being decided the day before Paris. You can’t ask for more than that. Always amazes me that a race that lasts three weeks can come down to seconds or minutes at the end. In addition to an excellent route, key changes have been made to the Polka Dot and Green Jersey classification. These changes have finally seen the respective jerseys going to the place that they belong. Of course, I could be showing some bias here with Cavendish getting the green. However, you would have to be a complete idiot not to recognize that Cav is ‘the man’ when it comes to a sprint. Should you need any clarification, 5 stage wins this year and 20 in total. The guy is only 26 and providing that he has injury free years ahead of him I think we will see him breaking many records.

Of course, the 2011 Tour will stand out from the perspective of Thomas Voeckler. What a ride he had…. He turned himself inside out day after day and retained the yellow jersey far longer than anyone expected and unfortunately missed the podium by just one place. It’s a real shame. I think everyone watching the race and particularly the French would love to have seen ‘Tommy’ make the podium. Tactically he rode a good race but for me made a big mistake on the Alpe D’Huez day when he chased after Contador and Schleck. He was alone and basically used up what reserves he had.

The best stage for some time?

And so the stage to beat all stages. The ‘Galibier’. After having a rough time in the press, Andy Schleck needed to prove himself and show that he was the ‘new’ man of the Tour. Attacking the group with some 60km to go, Contador and Evans let him ride away (still have no idea why?) and Schleck pulled minutes out of all the contenders. It was a stunning stage to watch. The Leopard/Trek team tactically played a blinder placing a couple of riders in early breaks up the road. These riders then acted as pacers for Andy until the final climb of the Galibier when Schleck rode away and soloed to an absolute stunning victory. It was a brave attack that could have so easily gone wrong. But in true Merckx tradition, this was an attack that defines a rider. Schleck got many new fans that day! Unfortunately, the climb was probably 1 or 2k too long. You could see the energy running from him. Down the road a worried Evans hit the front and pursued Schleck like a man possessed (stunning effort). The failing Schleck up front and the fast pursuing Evans reduced the time but it still gave Schleck a great time advantage that would put him in Yellow…. NO, somehow, Voeckler attached himself to Evans and saved the yellow jersey by 15 seconds. An absolutely epic stage.

The nearly man becomes the man

Cadel Evans is a class act; no doubt. I have followed his career for some time, even his pre ‘road’ days when he was a world class Moutain Bike rider. The nearly man of the Tour finally fulfilled his promise on the penultimate day of the Tour when he rode out of his skin to dominate his rivals in the ultimate test, the individual time trial. With a tremendous amount of pressure on him, he pushed hard on the pedals, regained the time Andy Schleck had over him and then continued to put well over a minute into the second place of the podium. He was by far the strongest rider in the Tour and as he showed on the Galibier stage and more importantly on the Alpe D’Huez stage, he was able to ride hard and pull back riders. Had he not had a mechanical issue on stage 19 I think we may very well have seen in attacking instead of reducing his losses.

Brotherly Love

When you get a one / two on the podium of the Tour de France you have to think to yourself that it is only a matter of time before one of the brothers stands on top in 1st place with a yellow jersey on the shoulders. Odds would say that this will be Andy. He has two second places now. This year though Frank was looking strong. Certainly having that family bond within the same team means that they will both ride hard for each other. You can’t help but think though that Frank felt as though he had been ‘worked’ a little on the Galibier stage. Only time will tell.

The Future

I can’t help but think that the Tour is in a good place for the future. We have British talent a plenty and with Cavendish we have the potential for fantastic publicity. In addition to this, the Sky team goes from strength to strength. We lost Bradley Wiggins this year to a crash and s we can only speculate on what might have been.

The racing this year was much closer. This for me signifies that the tarnished reputation of drugs and cheating is being removed from the sport. We are not getting the heroic efforts of previous years where one rider seems to have the strength of ten. The riders are much closer together, the racing is harder and the margins are smaller. All good signs.

Without doubt, Tour de France riders are a breed unto themselves.

What other sport do we see a rider knocked off the road by a car to land in a barbed wire fence, get up, continue to ride.

What other sport do they hurl themselves down a narrow mountain decent in the wet at 60 miles per hour. Riding on the edge either trying to gain time or pull back lost time. Constantly on the edge.

The Tour is a spectacle. Long may it remain.

James Adams

What a guy! I need to give a shout out to James Adams. A running friend who is currently 31 days ‘in’ to the epic LANY11 footrace. Ridiculous eh! 70 days to run 3220 miles from Los Angeles to New York.


I know James isn’t the first to do this and I am pretty darn sure he won’t be the last. But one can’t underestimate the level of commitment, determination, mental strength, physical strength and I guess stubbornness to cover this distance.

His journey so far has been quite epic. Covering on average 45 miles a day, James quite literally has been through the mill. Five to six days of illness nearly finished his race, however, he has managed to come out of the other side and is now back on the road and heading to New York.


James has been writing a blog as and when he can and I have been making sure that I post it on my Facebook page, Tweet it and also post on the ‘Marathon Talk’ Facebook page. Not only a great endurance runner, James is a great blogger. His daily stories from America have been an eye opener to the daily struggles he encounters. Often bringing a tear to the eye, James adds humour, passion and a humility to what is a journey of a lifetime.

You can read his blog here:
http://runningandstuff.squarespace.com/ram/

James has a long way ahead. He has some 39 days to go and an incredible distance still to cover. I look at my daily training, the highs and lows of motivation, the aches and pains from accumulative miles and then I think of James! How on earth do you get up each day, spend a full working day (and more) on your feet and then get up the next day and do it all again. It certainly is not for most people. I guess it’s not for me…? I love the idea of it. I love the idea of James doing it. I also love or have loved reading about other people doing it. In particular Marshall Ullrich has a great book out called ‘Running on Empty’. If you need a reality check of what running across America is like, I recommend this book. Of course James’ book will be so much better, but I guess we have at least a year to wait for that one!

I will update again on James. I guess at day 50 or so and then as he nears the end.

His story is quite incredible and hope you all enjoy reading about his journey.

Go get em James!!

– Posted using BlogPress from my iPad
http://www.runwildrunfree.co.uk

Road Angel

Gem

The Road Angel Group have been a great client over the past few years. We have pushed the visual envelope several times with some great imagery and some excellent campaigns. Our current work is no exception. We are currently in the process of photographing a series of ‘Angels’ to coincide with each of the groups products.

In addition to Photography, I will also be shooting video. All this will be packaged in a series of web based Micro Sites built by DevMac Systems Ltd.

Model : Sophie Mackaill (Model Bank)

Hair & Make Up : Katy Bird

Hello world!

Welcome to my blog.

I have always enjoyed writing a blog. Sometimes informative, sometimes a ramble… I find it a kind of therapy.

In the past my mutterings have mostly been about running and sport. I guess this blog will be no different. No, actually, this blog will be different. I want this to be more involved in all aspects of what I do. In particular my photography.

My posts have always been visual, I guess they should be for a photographer! This time though I ham going to have a page just for photography. It’s a new departure for me. It is a departure that I also think will be interesting. It will showcase commissioned work but it will also display shots, snaps, random pics taken on life’s journey.

Hope it proves to be interesting. Enjoy!