Category Archives: HOTW Posts

HOTW 5 – Sam

Written by: Nancy Britten

Greetings Haries and happy Monday! I’m back again with your 5th Harie of the Week, Sam! In this interview we discussed all-things East Districts, Canada antics and a potential football/ tiktok career on the cards. The choice of coffee spot this week was an Edinburgh classic, Black Medicine, which Sam told me felt like a full circle moment because this was where his first HOTW interview was (with Jess) too. Wholesome. Enjoy the interview…

Name: Sam Griffin
Degree: 4th year Economics and Accounting

What made you choose it?
I had no idea what I wanted to do after school, still questioning it now to be honest. Basically I quite like maths but didn’t want to study pure maths. I felt like it could be a good degree for opportunities after uni.

Interview Location: Black Medicine 

Coffee order:
I don’t drink coffee regularly. I try to limit caffeine until I really need it. Might have a coffee before a race, bog standard instant. Went for a “yellow submarine” smoothie today. (the smoothie choice may have also been an attempt at restoration after the previous night’s beerienteering). 

Favourite lunch spot in Edinburgh:
Mosque Kitchen. The underground one, not the corner spot. Get whatever curry of the day is on and the garlic naan. (if I had a pound for every member of the haries who has recommended mosque kitchen recently, i would have £2)

Where are you from?
Aberdeen (aberdream).

Why did you choose to come to Edinburgh?
Mainly for the running. I wanted to stay in Scotland and I knew Edinburgh had some nice hills.

How did you get into running?
My parents always ran. I did a charity race in school and won, but mainly played football at the time. I realized I wasn’t going to go pro in football, so I sacked it in for the running. Actually on an IM football team this year (in goal, so I don’t get injured). Maybe when I hang up the spikes I’ll go back to football.

How was your study abroad experience?
It was amazing, definitely one of the best decisions I’ve made, no regrets. The lack of work made it feel like it was basically a gap year. I did a lot of skiing too. My second year in Edinburgh was rough so it was good just being somewhere different and having a change of scenery. Might consider moving to Canada for a few years, not long-term. 

How did East Districts go?
Really well actually! Bit of a shame we didn’t medal as a team, but the field was stacked. I thought I ran well, committed early, and held on. First cross country in a while so it was good to get it out the way. 

Goals for the year:
Running: Race as much as possible after a break, maybe try for a Scotland vest, enjoy uni racing for the last year.
Non-running: Get through fourth year, start some side hustles. Possibly post-uni influencer work is on the cards, maybe start hustling TikTok. (An unexpected pivot into influencer territory here but I can see it)

What is the next race on the cards?
National relays

If you didn’t run, what sport would you do?
Lawn bowls. Less effort, more chill. My grandad plays it. I’ve never played it but full kit, pub after, seems like a good laugh. The dream. (possibly the most confident answer of the entire interview, zero hesitation whatsoever here.)

If you didn’t study your degree, what would you study?
P.E. teaching, seems fun, and I’d get to play sport all day.

If you could only race one distance forever, what would it be?
100 metres. For longevity purposes, I’m not running anything longer than that when I’m 80.  (thinking long game- sensible answer). 

Highlight of your running career so far:
Finishing the beer mile this year. I did finish in second year but my performance this year was much better. It was really terrible in first year. 

How was beerienteering?
Heavier than I intended for it to be but as always, a good night. It was probably my last one too.

If you could have 3 dream dinner party guests, who would they be and why?

Michael Rimicans and Mark Roland. I’d be interested to see their interaction. (*Sam specifically requested only two guests so he could be the third “as a fly on the wall.”)

A non-running related fun fact?
I can ride a unicycle. I got one for my 10th birthday and eventually learned. I can’t say I get to use that skill a lot.

Favourite…

Meal to cook? Lasagne. Time-consuming but great for dinner parties and easy to make vegetarian.

Place Travelled? Langdon Beck (Pennines trip). It has a good pub, a proper English pub.

Harie? “After last night, Oliver Morrison.” (I did not ask any further questions here)

Hill in Edinburgh? Viewforth. It may be a street, but it’s also technically a hill. (and more importantly for Sam, the location of the cottage. How very outside the box) 

Favourite running route? Canal. When it branches left to the WOL path, it’s heaven. Perfect for Sunday mornings.

Dream sponsor: Tron. Even though it’s O’Neills now it will always be Tron in my eyes.

Would you rather:

  • Run all XC races in road shoes or all road races in spikes? Cross country in road shoes.
  • Every long run as Meadows laps or up and down Innocent Railway? Meadows laps.

Only run Seat laps again or only Meadows laps again? Meadows laps. The Seat is closed currently. (as of this interview being published, I can now confirm Arthur’s seat is now open!!! yay)

HOTW 4 – Jamie

Written by: Nancy Britten

Hello everyone, I hope you’re all having a wonderful week so far. I’m here to deliver your fourth Harie of the week interview, this time with Jamie! He’s here on exchange from Melbourne for the semester and has already become a brilliant addition to the team. Our catch-up took us to Uplands, an unorthodox interview set up in the great outdoors which, in the aftermath of some stormy weather, saw us having to briefly pause at one point because I poured half of my hot chocolate down myself mid-conversation. Classic. Anyway- enjoy the chat, and let this serve as a warning: for those among you considering attacking an overloaded hot chocolate on a windy day… it is not for the weak.

1. Name?
Jamie Blackburn 

2. Degree?
Business, second year.

3. What made you choose it?
It was between Business and Geography. It was hard to get into Business, so when I got the grades, I decided to stick with it and hopefully get a job out of it. Lots of thought and passion went into that decision. I’m very dedicated to my studies (there was a touch of sarcasm here).

4. Coffee order?
I like coffee, but it gives me a headache. I want to meet up with people and have a coffee, but I regret it for the rest of the day (drinking the coffee, not meeting the people I’m going to assume.) Sometimes I fall into the trap of getting a latte to feel grown up, but as I mature, I’m leaning into hot chocolate. That’s why it’s great here at Uplands, hot chocolate is their thing so I don’t feel self-conscious ordering it.

5. Favourite coffee shop/ uncaffeinated beverage spot in Edinburgh? 
The first night we arrived, we didn’t know where to go, so a few exchange friends and I walked to the closest pub near Pollock (after some stalking on google maps we confirmed this was called “The Drouthy Neebors”). No one was there, but the locals were lovely. It felt very authentic and was a great way to start off. We were very pleased with ourselves and our beers.

6. Where are you from?
I’ve been in Melbourne for the last eight years, but I’ve also lived in Sydney, Adelaide, and Singapore. Melbourne’s definitely my family’s favourite.

7. Why did you choose to come to Edinburgh?
I’ve told myself a few different stories about that, but the most common one is: I wanted to be in Europe without having to learn a new language. America seemed a bit intense, and since I have a British passport, I didn’t need a visa, which was great because I’ve had some traumatic visa experiences. I just rocked up, and they wanted me!

8. How are you finding Edinburgh so far?
It’s been lovely. I’ve fully committed myself to the Haries (great decision). Living on campus is great too! In Australia, it’s more common to live at home, so this is a new experience. Loving hanging out with all my friends.

9. How about the weather…is an Australian winter colder?
It’s about the same as winter in Australia. I’m hanging in there fine, but I know I’ll suffer in about a month. I’m mentally preparing …and layering up. Can confirm I have some good gloves too.

10. How did you get into running?
When I was in Singapore, my class was really small. I wasn’t very good, but I was the best of the worst, which meant I somehow won a cross-country race in Year 5/6. I’ve kept running since then. My lovely principal even said on the microphone, “Jamie, you’ll go to the Olympics one day.” And I thought, “Wow Miss Humphries, I didn’t know that was a possibility for me!” 

11. Goals for the semester in Edinburgh?

Running: Represent Hare and Hounds. The uni cross country scene looks great, and I’m keen for the Easts.

Non-running: Travel a lot and pass my courses, ideally not fail anything. I want to make the most of the Scottish experience. I’ve already been to the Highlands, the Pennines, Belfast, and soon the Baltics. We’ve got our free weekends locked in.

12. Are you looking forward to East Districts?
Yes though I’m worried Scottish cross country might be a different ball game. Excited to embrace it though! I’ve got some spikes to borrow, so that’ll help. Don’t want to let the team down. (As I type this retrospectively, I can confirm it was a great run!)

13. Tell us about the Pennines trip… something about a cardboard box? Any tips?
I’d never played the cardboard box game before, but it turns out it’s my new calling in life. Hoping to go professional, just haven’t found the leagues for it yet. It came down to me and President Caitlyn; she performed valiantly, but I turned out to be a bit more flexible and grabbed the final shred of paper. However lame it sounds, I felt quite victorious and cool. I told my exchange friends, they loved it and want to play too. 

14. If you didn’t run, what sport would you do?
Cycling, definitely. I have terrible hand-eye coordination, so ball sports are out. Whenever I get injured running, I do a lot of cycling. It’s a constant cycle (pun intended?) of either breaking a bone cycling or getting back to running.

15. If you didn’t study Business, what would you study?
Geography. I like the idea of teaching, that’s the backup plan. I’d love to be an Economics or Geography teacher.

16. If you could only race one distance forever?
5km. Hopefully when I’m old, I’ll still be able to whip around a parkrun and zoom past the young kids. That’s the dream, to be the impressive 70-year-old everyone writes news articles about. 

17. Highlight of your running career so far?
This summer I won the Australian Uni 10,000m, (Jamie tried to be humble and preface this by saying it’s held on the Gold Coast, so most people go to the race to party- but let’s be clear, this is seriously impressive!) 

19. A non-running fun fact about you?

I played Bill in mamma mia for my final high school musical. 

(I will say that the original fact provided was an unfortunate anecdote about tripping over some concrete, aged 11, breaking his wrist and having to miss out on all the swimming pool fun on the family holiday the following week. After deciding that this was neither fun, nor a fact he opted for the mamma mia moment. I thought i’d leave the story in just for extra context hehe)

20. Favourite meal to cook?
A burrito, but it has to be overstuffed. A really big warm burrito that is an experience to eat. We made them while we were travelling, definitely a top ten life moment in my life. 

18. Dream dinner party guests?
I’ve been thinking about this a lot. Could go soppy and say to my mum. (wholesome) I haven’t seen her in four months. But if it’s anyone ever, I’ll have to think about it.

*After thinking about this for a while he came back with: I guess just my friends and some burritos. 

21. Favourite place you’ve travelled?
Vietnam, my first trip without my parents. It was so memorable, and I went with one of my best friends.

22. Favourite hill in Edinburgh?
After a very windy and rainy Pentlands experience, I’ll settle on Salisbury Crags. Great view, close to Pollock, and not quite as tall as Arthur’s Seat, so you’re not dying when you reach the top.

23. Dream sponsor?
ON Running. I’ve never worn their shoes or bought any of their gear in my life (this sounds like a risky decision), but they seem like a cool brand with great training groups. Everyone looks like they’re having fun and enjoying themselves on their teams. 

Would you rather…

Run every session in Edinburgh drizzle or 35°C Australian heat?
The drizzle. 35°C is awful. You just feel ancient, like, “What’s the point?” You have to wake up early to avoid it, and you still end up dying anyway. Maybe I’m being naïve, I haven’t had too much of the cold here yet.

Marmite or Vegemite?
Vegemite. I’ve never tried Marmite, but I’ve heard terrible things. They’re apparently very different. I’ll commit to Vegemite. (did say that if someone brings it as a post-race snack he will try it. I think we should make this happen.)

Hill reps up Arthur’s Seat or sand sprints on Bondi Beach?
Hill reps up Arthur’s Seat. I don’t actually like beaches that much. I don’t surf either, the national pride just isn’t there. (how very un-australian!)

HOTW 3 – Abigail

Written by: Nancy Britten

Hello, hello Haries! Somehow it’s already week 3 (time flies!), which means it’s time for our third HOTW. This weekend, other than blown away by storm Amy, I had the pleasure of chatting with Abigail Campbell to get the ins and outs of all things marathon running and all things fifth-year medicine. The interview took place at 8 a.m., and perhaps it was the effect of having a flat white so soon after rolling out of bed, but our shared enthusiasm for peanut butter, baking, and coffee meant that a good half an hour of the conversation was spent monologuing about just that. Great vibes. Enjoy the read, and enjoy the rest of the week!! 

Name?
Abigail Campbell

Degree?
Fifth year Medicine.

How is that going so far?
It’s going well! I’m currently on week two of placement in the Borders. I still don’t know what I want to do (so please don’t ask!)

What made you choose it?
I honestly didn’t know what I wanted to do at school but I did some work experience in a hospital and enjoyed it. My mum was a nurse and didn’t want me to do nursing. 

Coffee order?
Today: oat flat white

However, my ideal situation is when I make my own at uplands – half long black, half steamed milk. (think: flat white with extra water. I later discussed this with my resident coffee expert Miss Amelie Dryer who tells me this is called an Americano Misto. Very cool.) Sometimes oat milk, sometimes normal. depends on my mood. 

Implement of choice to make coffee?
Instant coffee at home (It’s important to stay humble). At work in Uplands, I make it there with this espresso machine. 

How is working at uplands?
Really good! I worked full-time there for two summers and now one day a week during semester. It means free coffee and being sociable. Dreading the cold winter days though. Last year I think I got a permanent burn mark from my hot water bottle and it used to take me 15 minutes to get dressed in the morning with all the layers I would wear. 

Favourite Coffee Spot?
Uplands (officially) but honourable mentions to Machina and the Supper Hall.

Where are you from?
Glasgow, though I lived in Edinburgh until I was 11. I’m also half Irish!

What brought you back to Edinburgh for uni?
I wanted to do Medicine, live in a city, and move out. Edinburgh ticked all the boxes.

How did you get into running?
I mostly danced at school. My PE teacher loved cross country and if you did even moderately well, he pushed you to take it further. I started properly at 16/17, ran for a year before uni, probably overdid it and got injured in first year. I did triathlon for a while, but now I’m back to running and injury-free (at this point we touched every wooden surface in the vicinity so as not to jinx an injury into existence).

Favourite triathlon discipline?
Running, then cycling, then swimming.

You’ve just run a marathon!! Tell us all about it!
I just ran one! Loch Ness with a couple of medic friends. It was really fun. I’d always said I’d do one when I was older, but last semester I was running good mileage without injury, so I thought I’d better make the most of it. One hundred percent would do another!

Did you enjoy the training?
Loved it! I enjoy running, so doing more of it was great!

How was your summer?
Started strong with Harie Holiday – amazing group, amazing place. Long runs in the morning, chilling in the afternoon, happy hour in the evening. This was my first ever happy hour- two glasses of wine for €4… what’s not to like? After Chamonix I mostly worked, but I went to South Uist with my dad and brothers. Gorgeous but freezing, didn’t get above 5 degrees!

Do you have any goals for the year?
Running: more cross country. Starting with East Districts, hopefully National Relays too.
Also I want to be able to do a pull-up (been a goal for 5 years). Non-running:I want to make a croquembouche -not with choux, with macarons. Planning a croquembouche party with party hats, so hold me accountable for this please, it needs to happen 

(this is literally the best answer anyone could have given me to this question. If you don’t know what a croquembouche is: firstly, you need to watch the Bake Off more ardently, secondly google a picture- it’s spectacular. I don’t see how any goal could surpass mastering a croquembouche.)

How are your baking skills?
Love baking, though not much at uni. Better ingredients at home. I always make granola when I’m back ( with pecans, fruit, seeds) then give half to my mum and keep half (which I usually eat in a day). You have to keep an eye on the granola as it bakes though… it burns easily. (from experience, I can testify this is a wise, wise piece of advice).

Favourite granola ingredient?
Peanut butter. A friend gifted me a kilo of boujee Maillefer crunchy PB after my marathon. Life-changing. I even tried making my own, but Lidl’s was better. Want to try Pip & Nut sweet and salty.

Crunchy or smooth peanut butter?
Crunchy all the way.

If you didn’t run, what sport would you do?
Probably dancing, especially ballet. I stopped during Covid. I also played netball at school.

If you didn’t study medicine, what would you study?
Something language-y. Maybe French or Gaelic-related. I’m fluent in Gaelic, went to a Gaelic school, and can speak some French. (Mega kudos for the gaelic speaking ability)

If you could only race one distance forever?
Maybe 10 miles. I’ve never actually done one, but it seems manageable -not too fast, not too long. Half marathons might feel a bit far when I’m 70 years old.

Kilometres or miles?
Kilometres.

Highlight of last season? 
BUCS in Cardiff. Amazing weekend, amazing night out. Cardiff Union was great- think Big Cheese on steroids. I agreed to do a run with Grace Tindall at 7:30 a.m. the next morning before the bus, though I think I was still drunk. (impressive)

Dream dinner party guests?
One of the Off Menu guys: James Acaster or Ed Gamble (settled on James Acaster). Claudia Winkleman, she’s hilarious. And maybe someone serious to balance it out. Olivia Dean, I’m a huge fan of her album and would also like to borrow all of her clothes. (3 excellent choices)

A non-running fun fact?
I speak Gaelic (I decided that repeating this fact was more permissible because it’s frankly a fantastic fact). Also, I have four brothers.

Favourites…

  • Meal to cook? Prefer baking, but love cooking new themed dishes for potlucks.
  • Day to run? Every day is a running day! (I also asked for the least fave day to run… refused to answer as every day has its own run, how can she possibly choose?!)
  • Harie? No comment… but shoutout to my friend Kitty, who finally joined after four years of wanting to and so I am excited for her to get the Haries experience. 
  • Place travelled? The Western Isles. But Chamonix has something special too …that alpine air.
  • Hill in Edinburgh? Braids – quieter than Blackford. Though the Edinburgh “7 Hills, 7 Shots” day was great (described filling her running vest with everything to make DIY baby guinness shots – iconic.)
  • Running route? Hermitage (Total disgust when I admitted I hadn’t been yet this year.)
  • Dream sponsor? Saucony. I’ve been on the Saucony train for 18 months. Used to be big into ON, but Saucony just works for me.

HOTW 2 – Heidi

Written by: Nancy Britten

Hello Haries and a very happy Saturday to you all! It’s the second instalment of Harie of the Week and this time the spotlight’s on the lovely Heidi! Heidi has a strong start to the semester in her role as Wellness and Inclusion Officer, already pulling together some fantastic Friday sunset runs. We met at Kilimanjaro for a catch-up that started, naturally, with some running shoe chat (Heidi explained that she had spent her morning doing the far more important job of running-shoe shopping instead of studying). From there we segueed into dissecting the Celebrity Traitors line-up and decided that if we were ever famous, Traitors would definitely be our reality TV show of choice. Once we’d finished all of these pressing discussions, we got down to the official interview. Enjoy!

  1. Name?
    Heidi Robertshaw
  2. Degree?
    Psychology, 3rd year. I love and hate it. I hate the statistics and RStudio (If, like me, you have no idea what Studio is, it is in fact to do with coding). It’s horrible, it’s evil, but we push through. My actual psychology modules though, I’m loving.
  3. What made you choose it?
    I’ve always been fascinated by how the mind works and how people think. I used to listen to a lot of true-crime podcasts and was set on forensic psychology for a while, though I’ve moved on from that now.
  4. Can you read my mind?
    The question everyone asks, so I’ll confirm in advance: no, I can’t. You’re welcome.
  5. Coffee order?
    Iced mocha when I’m rinsing the club bank account. Coffee + Chocolate is an unbeatable combination. (I should add that it was uncharacteristically sunny on the day of our interview, and I also felt an iced coffee was the only option on such a day). If I’m paying myself: a classic flat white.
  6. Favourite Coffee Spot?
    This one! My dad and I came here on the Edinburgh open day. We’d stayed in a hotel the night before, then had a full Scottish breakfast here before visiting the uni. Partly sentimental, partly because the full Scottish is genuinely amazing. (This was the most wholesome reason for a favourite coffee spot ever. On the downside though, we discussed the lack of charging ports in this establishment. So Kilimanjaro, if you’re reading this: the people need more charging ports.)
  7. Where are you from?
    Sheffield. And for the record… it’s Yorkshire, not the Midlands. Don’t even try to argue otherwise. (For context: I made the mistake of incorrectly labelling this as the Midlands, thinking I had found some common ground. Heidi told me this was blasphemous. Many, many apologies for this )
  8. How did you get into running?
    My dad’s a runner and had me doing cross country for as long as I can remember (there are some VERY cute photos to prove it). He ran a lot at uni and still does, and we sometimes go for runs together in the Peaks and the Moors when I’m home.
  9. How was your summer?
    Chamonix was incredible. I’d go back in a heartbeat and hope we do this year. I ran more mileage in a single week there than ever before. Then a bit of travelling with Saskia and her school friend Hannah: the Balkans and Greece. Plus some chilled time at home, pub nights and, of course pub quizzes.
  10. “Pub quizzes?!” I excitedly exclaimed, “Tell me about the pub quizzes!!”
    We are terrible. We’ve never won, though the girls’ team always beats the guys.
  11. Best pub-quiz fun fact/ question?
    What food was banned from conclaves and why? Whole chickens because people were smuggling in bribes. (Fantastic. I’ll be dropping this fact into every conversation I have for the foreseeable future.)
  12. Freshers’ Week recap? How did it go?
    So good! I only went out three times and it still wiped me out- I’m still recovering. Haries freshers events were brilliant with an insane turnout for the well-being run. Huge thanks to Heggie and Caitlin for helping me lead such a big group.
  13. Why did you choose to come to Edinburgh?
    Psychology degrees are similar everywhere, but when I visited Edinburgh I instantly knew it was the one. I love how it feels small and big at the same time: a massive city with a tiny, friendly feel. The running and scenery sealed it. So easy to escape into the Pentlands, a bit like the Peak District back home.
  14. Do you have any goals for the year?
    Running: Edinburgh Half in May is the big one. I’ve only done a couple of road races, so I want more of those while keeping up with cross country.
    Non-running related: Save some money, figure out what’s next after uni… and not fail my degree. (I fully concur with these)
  15. How was the first wellbeing run of the year?
    Blackford Hill last week was unreal. Great turnout and the most ridiculous sunset by pure luck. Tomorrow (the interview was on a Thursday, so Heidi is referring to the Friday wellbeing run here) we’re heading for Calton Hill. The plan is to target all the hills of Edinburgh. And maybe a Portobello swim-run on the cards!
  16. If you didn’t run, what sport would you do?
    Rugby. I only ever played a bit in school PE but loved it. I’d like to try a proper team sport. Also inspired by the men’s team winning varsity this week, it was a great watch.
  17. If you didn’t study psychology what would you study?
    Is neuroscience too close? (Yes. Pick again). I’d go for biology, my other top choice when applying.
  18. If you could only race one distance forever?
    5 km. Because any shorter and I think it’s too fast. Any longer and I feel like I’m dying. Longer cross countries are the bane of my experience.
  19. Highlight of last season?
    Isle of Man. (I was then treated to a very entertaining recount of the trip, so in case you weren’t there, here’s what you need to know…) I slept through ten alarms and missed the bus despite Saskia banging on my door at 4 a.m. After some frantic Googling I realised the trains couldn’t get me there in time. My dad came to the rescue helping to organise a flight (legend!) So despite missing the 10km race, I arrived in time for the first evening, and raced the hill run in a bee onesie as a forfeit- hardest race of my life, absolutely roasting. We may have also “liberated” a keg from Manchester who hid it in the woods and poured pints before a swift escape. I’ll be back this year and I promise not to miss the bus.
  20. Dream dinner party guests?
    I’ve been thinking way too much about this since I saw the question in Martha’s interview. This response is very much swayed by me watching all of the athletics last week.
    Femke Bol – happiest person alive; I need that energy.
    Georgia Hunter Bell – so happy for her PB and would love a chat.
    Sabrina Carpenter – guaranteed fun chaos.
  21. How do you think the conversation would go?
    I think Sabrina would be quite confused by her presence there. Femke Bol would just be so happy. I think we’d all just have a great natter and get along really well. Would ask for training tips from Georgia and Femke and free tickets from Sabrina.
  22. A non-running related fun fact about you?
    I’ve eaten goat brains (and kinda liked them). (speechless.)
  23. Favourite …
    Meal to cook? A very elaborate curry. When I say I’m making curry, it could either be simple curry or, the main event: a whole curry night. A full feast. This involves a curry, maybe even two curries, deffo a dahl, naan bread, bhajis. (I will be requiring an imminent invite to curry feast night please and thank you)
  24. Harie? This is going to sound biased because she’s my flatmate, but I’m going with Maya. The sheer number of kit-related emails she’s sent in the last two weeks is heroic. I’ll forgive her for filling our flat with Harie’s kit.
  25. Place travelled? The Balkans: Dubrovnik, Kotor, Split, and Tirana. Amazing food, lovely people, quite cheap- Game of Thrones fans take note- lots of filming locations in Dubrovnik and Split. Saskia was very excited.
  26. Hill in Edinburgh? Arthur’s Seat. During exams last year, when revision was going horribly, I ran up it and instantly felt better- tourists aside.
  27. Running route? Hermitage trails and Blackford Hills. Anywhere off-road.
  28. Dream sponsor? Hoka! I need new shoes and theirs are gorgeous. Colourful shoes make me happy.
WOULD YOU RATHER…?
  • Have every long run detour through the Royal Mile crowds or have to dodge cyclists on the Union Canal path every single session? Royal Mile tourist dodging.
  • Race a mud-soaked Braids XC course in road flats or do a 10 km road race in full spikes? Muddy Braids XC.
  • Do all your Sunday long runs as endless loops of the Hermitage or only on the Innocent Railway tunnel out-and-back? Hermitage.
  • Run the full Seven Hills race every month or never be allowed on Blackford Hill again? Never be allowed on Blackford Hill again 😢
  • Have to finish every run at the top of Arthur’s Seat or finish every run with a dip in the sea at Portobello? Dip in the sea.

HOTW 1 – Martha

Written by: Nancy Britten

My first Harie of the week interview took place on a grey and windy Thursday morning. Unfortunately for Martha, I’d decided 9:30 am was the best time to meet. In hindsight, that was very antisocial of me- especially since she’d trekked all the way from morningside at such an hour! The ensuing interview, however, with a very smiley Martha did two things: first, it provided a great start to the day and offset the frankly miserable weather; second, it convinced me to pay a visit to run club on Sunday to experience the wholesome vibes for myself.

Name? Martha Hawksworth 
Degree? Earth Science and Physical Geography (3rd year)

What do you love about your course?
All the field trips! I love being outside and exploring. Geology is a great excuse to do both. 

Coffee order?
Hot chocolate. (Ahh we have ourselves a non-coffee enjoyer) 

Favourite Coffee Spot?

Summerhall is a favourite spot and Lady and the Bear is another go-to. (both solid picks-extra points for the subtle nod to our sponsors at Summerhall)

Where are you from?
Perth

How did you get into running?
Both parents ran, so I joined when I was younger but didn’t join a club until I was 12. I started out as a 400m runner on the track and gradually moved to longer distances. (a classic Harie origin story) 

Freshers’ Week recap? How did it go?
So good! Everything went so well. Out of three freshers’ weeks so far, this one was my favourite. Being on committee and planning everything was just as fun as taking part. 

Why did you choose to come to Edinburgh?
I wasn’t fixed on a university, but when I visited I loved the city. Great for running and I’ve really enjoyed living here. (Strong endorsement for the capital and the hills)

Do you have any goals for the year?
Looking forward to leading more run club sessions and meeting new people. I haven’t raced since school, so I’d love to try cross country again, although track will always have a special place in my heart. 

How was the first run club of the year?
It was so good and so much fun. Around 25–30 people came along (great turn-out!) plenty of new routes to explore. Last year I joined the jogging group and loved it. Thomasina took us on lots of nice routes too. Big shout out to Thomassina for the encouragement to lead this year. (Some top-tier headhunting from Thomasina here.)

If you didn’t run, what sport would you do?
Climbing would be so cool. Or maybe something rogue like golf- I used to play a lot in school and might pick it up again. Living next to Bruntsfield Links makes the idea of a quick pitch-and-putt pretty tempting. (Haries X Golf society collab pending?)

If you could only race one distance forever?
3 km. I’m still not a fan of long, long running- sprinting has a special place in my heart, so 3 km feels like the perfect in-between. 

Highlight of last season?
The final jogging group of the year in December. We finished at Uplands Roast, and it was so cosy even though it was freezing outside. (I’m convinced that the Uplands hot chocolate solves everything)

Dream dinner party guests?
Jakob Ingebrigtsen- he’s so cool, Femke Bol for some 400-hurdles chat, and Mikaël Attal- he’s a geology expert and all-round fun fact machine. (Martha elaborated that Mikaël Attal teaches at the uni and is universally considered a bit of a legend)

A non-running related fun fact?:
I play the violin for fun- started when I was about seven or eight. (Multi-talented and modest about it.)

Favourites

  • Meal to cook: Chilli con carne
  • Harie: Caitlin Heggie- because she worked so hard over Freshers’ Week to get everything going.(Caitlin, take a bow.)
  • Place travelled: Norway- it’s so scenic. 
  • Rock: Gneiss. It’s a beautifully banded metamorphic rock I spotted on a field trip to Inchnadamph. (Nice… gneiss… apologies for that one)
  • Hill in Edinburgh: Blackford Hill- less busy, great for a loop.
  • Running route: Up Blackford, toward King’s, then down through Morningside.
  • Dream sponsor: Lidl! Specifically the bakery. I have a cinnamon bun obsession. 

Would You Rather

  • Never run a Meadows lap again or only run Meadows laps? Never run a meadows lap again. (controversial)
  • Run up Arthur’s Seat in a blizzard or through New Town during the Fringe?Run up Arthur’s seat in a blizzard. (anything, literally anything to avoid the fringe carnage)
  • Only run at 6 a.m. or 9 p.m.? Only run at 6! I’m definitely more of a morning person (respect.)
  • Only run when it’s pouring with rain or when it’s boiling hot? Only when it’s rainy!