Imbarchi
With ten
minutes to spare, Anna and I were able to check our bag with SAS at Malpensa
Airport after spending a rather intense hour on the busy four-lane autostrade
of Milan. Still, there is an obvious charm in vacation maxing and being able to
enjoy a glass of white wine in the lounge prior to boarding.
Now high
above the Alps aboard Thor Viking, I can look back on an incredible race
experience full of Italian energy and confusion. Having registered in the
“non-competitive category” to avoid having to pay for a medical certificate, I
started at the back of the pack and had to spend a lot of energy during the
first kilometres overtaking other runners. Still, passing the ten-kilometre
mark after 45 minutes, I was roughly within the window required to beat my
previous half marathon PR of 1 hour and 35 minutes. But already then I knew
that, despite all the scenery and the ice-cold snow on the mountains in front
of me, the searing sun was taking its toll, as was my lack of training over the
last few months.
Despite pushing myself as hard as I possibly could with an average heart rate of 173 bpm, the race was gradually slipping out of my hands, and by 15k I knew for sure that a PR was not to be had. Still, I kept going, finishing in 1 hour and 43 minutes in the heart of Verbania, which turned out to be the loveliest of towns.
After downing a water bottle, a banana, and a Coke, I asked for the pre-paid transportation back to the start in Stresa where Anna was waiting in the lobby of the Regina Palace Hotel. But this being Italy, no one would point me to the chartered ferries that were running back and forth across the lake; instead, I was sent up a hill to where the buses would normally depart. Once there, there were indeed special shuttle buses, only they went to the start of the 10k race. After waiting twenty minutes in a warm bus with other confused runners, someone found a post on a Facebook page and, in no time at all, I was instead on a boat passing the Borromeo Islands. By that time, everything was forgotten and I felt only immense joy for being alive and being able to do these kinds of things.
Picking up Anna and our Alfa Romeo, I then drove into the very centre of Milan, parking in a deep underground garage (always a favourite of mine), before exploring the iconic sites on foot for a couple of hours. All in all, we drove 477 kilometres over the weekend and I would not hesitate to do it all again in a heartbeat.

























