Whitstable 10K 2013
Entries are now open for the 2013 Whitstable 10k road race. This will be the fourteenth year Canterbury Harriers will be organising the road race and we hope that it will be an enjoyable event for all.
Entries are now open for the 2013 Whitstable 10k road race. This will be the fourteenth year Canterbury Harriers will be organising the road race and we hope that it will be an enjoyable event for all.
The 4 main training routes the Harriers use have been uploaded to the site to help runners familiarise themselves, especially for the dark winter months ahead.
The club staged its annual Whitstable 10K Road Race on the Monday Bank Holiday.Once again the entry limit for the race was exceeded well before the closing date for what has become one of the most popular road races in the South of England.
Following on from their “warm up” in the more conventional Hyde Park Relays Ric Austin`s squad excelled in the somewhat more exotic and challenging Hastings 1066 multi terrain relay event…
A total of 25 Harriers following Head Coach Gerry Reilly`s spring marathon programme competed in the Paris Brighton and London events, with excellent runs by all with a range of impressive debuts and PB`s
Four Harriers made the trip to sunny London for the Hyde Park Relays on the 3rd March. The event consisted of 6 legs of roughly 5.1 kilometres each around the Serpentine in the Park with an extra loop thrown in at the end. After meeting in the rather inconvenient Imperial student union on the wrong side of the park we were finally registered and heading over to the start by the bandstand.
Canterbury Harriers hosted the final race in the Kent Fitness League cross country race series at Blean Woods on Sunday 19th February with the largest ever field of 375 runners competing in the event.
A record 37 Harriers took part in the Canterbury 10 Mile Road Race on Sunday 29th January with a record number of PB`s being set by established members and a…
Marathons have a mystery to them. Almost like quantum Mechanics, it seems that strange unpredictable things can happen, despite 16 weeks and 600 miles of training.