BY: MARK COHEN • run • 20.09.2022
With daylight fading and winter around the corner, many runners start facing up to the fact that to get miles in, they’re going to have to run in the dark. Dismal to some, yet to others, late autumn and winter is a welcome reprieve from the relentlessness of running in the heat. A chance to set a PB, think about 2023 goals, or even tick a late season challenge.
So, how do you stay motivated to run in lower light? And just as importantly, how do you make sure your colder weather running gets done safely? We ask everyday athlete and runner Jake Catterall for his inputs – how he stays focused on running year-round.
“Training doesn’t stop as long as you have goals in mind,” he says over email and while ramping up his muscular endurance training ahead of an 8-week stint in Svalbard – a Norwegian archipelago in the Arctic Ocean. “Sure, the early starts in the dark are less glamorous, but you will draw energy from training despite your environment. Ultimately the goal holds it all together. It keeps you motivated to get out whenever your schedule allows.”