17/05/2026
Andrew Bradley’s account of the Seathwaite Trials continues. One paragraph has been edited with some reluctance by a party who would rather not say why, but whose modesty, for once, got the better of him.
2006: A Marquee Nobody Could Build and a Champion Who Never Lost
For the second time in the Trial’s history, Seathwaite in Borrowdale played host. The year was 2006. The 54th edition.
Jane Buckley — Mrs. Jane Buckley from the 1956 results — was invited back to present the prizes. Fifty years on. The written account of the day noted, with great solemnity, that the weather was exceptionally good, that nobody could work out how to erect the marquee, that there had been considerable revelry on the campsite the night before, and that the toilets had been used by people who were not running. It was also the first year of online entries. Progress marches on, though the marquee problem is, frankly, timeless.
The Men’s Classic was 29km with 2,100m of climb, planned by Mick Garratt. He had 24 Trials to his name, a Blue Belt in Judo — retired through injury, since you ask — and a self-imposed rule of only using features that had a name on the map. A reasonable principle, provided one can find the map. The checkpoints included Blackbeck Tarn, Mickledore and Crinkle Crags, which are all findable. They also included Little Gill Head and Wrist Knott. Wrist Knott does not appear obviously on the OS map. Nobody seems entirely certain where it is, including, it must be said, the man who put it on the course. Somewhere north of Glaramara, apparently. He heard the name from someone. He cannot now recall who.
The winner was Johnny Bland, who farms a couple of miles from the start line. His time was 3:51:28. Mick had aimed for a winning time of four hours, so close enough. The team prize went to Borrowdale — their 11th of an eventual 13 team wins between 1998 and 2010.
The Women’s Trial — 21km, 1,240m — was won by Angela Brand Barker in just under four hours. It was her sixth win. She won every Trial she entered. Every single one. Whether that record stands alone in the history of the event is a question worth someone investigating.
Second home was Kirsty Bryan-Jones, who went on to win in 2014 and 2015.
There was also a Short Trial, won by a young Hector Haines in under three hours, with Derek Ratcliffe second. Hector’s father Peter has 38 completions, including 21 Classics. He used to partner Mick Garratt in two-day mountain marathons — they came second in the 1980 KIMM, or they did not, since they were disqualified. Bill Smith’s book does not elaborate on that point. They also ran a Bob Graham together. It is a small world and a long memory.
So — 2026 marks a third visit to Borrowdale’s Seathwaite. Who is doing the planning, and what has this corner of the Lake District got in store?