Painful Montréal Marathon, 1:50

pain-marathon

The picture is from lap 8 of Sunday’s Montréal Roller Marathon. Ouch, what a race.

First of all, the weather – 6 degrees at the start, and very windy. The race is around the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve – on an island in the St Lawrence river. Hence little protection from the wind.

Secondly, there were only 197 participants, and more than half of those were rather professional. So apart from lap 2 I failed to find a group of skaters to work with against the wind – all the groups were just too fast for me. This basically meant that the race was like a 42km time trial in windy conditions… hence the rather poor time of 1:50, 15 minutes off my personal best from Berlin last year. Full results are here.

Anyway, lessons learnt from this race… I’ll do better next time! :-)

The power of the image – reflections on the atheist bus campaign

Toronto Atheist Bus - CC / Flickr

Toronto Atheist Bus - CC / Flickr

As things finally start to calm down with the Atheist Bus Campaign in London it’s worth reflecting a bit on some of the aspects of the campaign. I’ll post more reflections here as I begin in my own mind to draw some conclusions from how things developed. I’ll also be presenting the web strategy for the campaign at re:publica ’09 conference in Berlin on 3rd April.

The first lesson to draw is the importance of the images we used throughout the campaign. This was an advertising campaign, and it was about the buses and the bus ads. The whole thing started off with this bus mockup on my blog. When we launched the campaign proper on 23rd October we asked people to submit their own mockups to give a better impression of what our campaign would look like – we received some fabulous work from Base on Mars, R. Longmuir and cbit. When the buses hit the streets we promptly made more than 60 bus pics available for use by journalists (and indeed anyone else) and uploaded more than 60 photos of the launch event with Ariane Sherine, Richard Dawkins and Polly Toynbee. There were also extra high resolution images on the press page of the Atheist Bus site and I was also personally determined that the first public photo of one of the buses would be one of mine.

Contrast that with the Canadian atheist bus campaign that is now running (bus and subway ads are already in Toronto). When the first press stories about the Canadian campaign appeared they complained on their website (text subsequently removed!) that the Canadian press was still using the images of the London buses. Well folks, at that stage there were no images at all – not even mockups – of the Candian buses. So no surprise then! There are now some images on Flickr, and one is shown above, but the max resolution for download is still only 1024×768 pixels. The same is now happening with the French language campaign in Montréal – this is the only image I can find of a Montréal bus and that’s not close to adequate quality for anyone to use.

Last but not least the visual aspects have led to some of the most amusing aspects of the campaign, not least the fabulous Bus Slogan Generator (based on a photo I took). So here’s the conclusion to this blog entry, as shown on a bus!

bus

3 of the best skate routes anywhere in the world

In the last week I’ve skated in three of the very best places it’s possible to imagine – along the Hudson River on the west side of Manhattan, around the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montréal, and along the St Lawrence River in Québec.

The Manhattan and Montréal routes are super easy – long, flat paths with good quality tarmac but with the possibility (especially in Montréal) to skate at real speed. The Québec route, especially the part marked in red, is longer and harder, but probably more rewarding, with excellent views of the city and a long straight path on the Lévis side of the river. You can also take a beer in the excellent Corsaire Microbrasserie (marked on the map) at the end of the route.

Here are the Google Maps of all 3 locations for your convenience. If you are ever in one of these cities and you have your inline skates then you won’t regret skating either route.

Hudson Path, Manhattan

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Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Montréal

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St Lawrence River, Québec

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