
The One Date That Marks Winter Running Season - Day 1973 Reflections
Today marked a milestone I both expect and dread each year. The first time my hands get too cold to feel them whilst filming my daily run. After 1,973 consecutive days of running, this moment has become my personal marker for the transition from summer to winter running season.
Standing here this morning, camera in hand, fingers numb despite it being late October, I realised we've reached that pivotal point. The date varies each year - some seasons I've needed gloves as early as September, others I've made it through to early November. This year, getting three-quarters through October without gloves feels like a small victory.
What struck me wasn't just the physical discomfort, but what this moment represents. As runners who commit to year-round consistency, we don't really talk about four seasons. For us, there are two distinct chapters: summer running and winter running. Spring and autumn are just brief interludes between these main acts.
The mathematics of endurance became clear as I calculated what lies ahead. November, December, January, February, and March stretch before me - five full months of winter conditions. January and February typically bring the harshest temperatures, when every step becomes an act of determination rather than pleasure.
I've always been honest about preferring summer running. The ease of lighter clothing, the comfort of warm muscles, the simple pleasure of not battling against elements with every stride. Winter running strips away these comforts and reveals what you're truly made of.
But here's what 1,973 days has taught me about seasonal transitions: they're not obstacles to overcome, they're opportunities to deepen resilience. Each year when my hands first go numb, I'm reminded that consistency isn't about maintaining performance only when conditions are ideal. It's about showing up especially when everything feels harder.
The physical challenge is obvious - numb fingers make filming more difficult, cold muscles need longer warm-ups, shorter daylight hours compress training windows. What's less obvious is the mental recalibration required. Summer running can feel effortless, almost recreational. Winter running demands intentionality with every step.
This seasonal shift also brings perspective on the bigger mission. With 19,730 kilometres behind me and 20,345 still ahead to complete this lap of the world, I'm looking at roughly another three years of daily running. That means facing this winter transition at least three more times, each one teaching new lessons about persistence.
The fundraising mission takes on different meaning during winter months too. When I'm battling through February sleet or January ice, the thought of children facing far greater challenges in hospital wards provides perspective that no amount of physical comfort could match. Their courage makes my cold hands seem trivial.
What interests me is how this annual marker has shifted later over recent years. Climate patterns change, but the principle remains constant: there will always be a day when conditions shift from manageable to challenging. The date matters less than the recognition and preparation.
Winter running teaches lessons that summer never could. It strips away excuses, reveals character, and builds the kind of mental fortitude that extends far beyond running. When your hands are too cold to feel the camera, when your breath creates clouds, when every instinct says "stay inside" - that's when real growth happens.
For the next five months, each daily episode will be filmed with numb fingers, each run completed in conditions that test resolve rather than reward effort. But that's exactly the point. Consistency isn't about maintaining streaks only when it's convenient. It's about showing up especially when it's not.
Every runner who commits to year-round training knows this feeling. That first day when gloves become non-negotiable, when layers multiply, when the alarm clock feels like an enemy rather than a friend. It's a universal experience that connects us all.
The mission continues regardless of season. Children's lives don't pause for winter weather, and neither can the effort to raise £1 million for their causes. Each cold morning run, each numb-fingered filming session, each step through these challenging months contributes to something far bigger than personal achievement.
As I look ahead to five months of winter conditions, I'm not filled with dread but with quiet determination. This is where real character gets built. This is where the mission deepens beyond summer enthusiasm into winter resolve.





