 So behind me is the start line of the Tenere Blue Trail, 101 kilometres. 100 metres into the race, and we're just at the standstill trying to get through a bottleneck here. So here we are at the first aid station. 11 and a half kilometres into the Blue Trail, and we are climbing. We're about 800, 900 metres up now. You can see the town down there. It's an amazing view of lights all the way up the top. Absolutely incredible. Just running through the forest. There's been quite a bit of level or downhill running at the moment. And we've climbed about 1500 metres. So this is aid station number three at 21 kilometres. OK, so three hours, 39 minutes, and the cutoff is four hours, 15 minutes. So that's quite good. And we've got 10 and a half kilometres to the next stop. So this is the checkpoint at 31 kilometres, nearly 20 miles. We've climbed over 2000 metres. So about a third of the climbing that we've got to do is about five kilometres to the next aid station and then 12 to the next after that. And then it's a really big, steep climb all the way to the top of Manton. It's a real mixture of rummable ground, but also really rocky, difficult, volcanic terrain. OK, I've been running for just under seven hours and done 35 and a half kilometres. It's getting light now, definitely getting light. This aid station and then one more before the climb to the top. So there's still some work to do. Still some work to do. Over 20 km still to go to the top, 38 kilometres, seven hours, 26 minutes. It's light. We've made it through the night time. Let's hope I don't have to put head torch on again later on. 3000 metres climbed now. So we've arrived at quite a pretty little church backing on to Teve Mountain Volcano. And this is the final aid station before we head up there. Forty eight and a half kilometres. And we're doing OK. I feel I feel obviously I feel tired because it's such a lot of climbing. But relative to CCC and Transolcania, I'm actually doing all right. Yeah, tired, tired, tired. I am fatigued. OK, so we've done 54 kilometres. Now, as far as I understand it, the top of there, the top of Teve is 58 kilometres. So we've got four kilometres to go to the top. It is really hard. It's it's very hot, although there is a bit of a cool breeze because we're so high up. So that's one saving grace. I'm worried about my water because I've got a lot of water or coke left. So I'm trying to conserve that. And because of that, I'm parched as well. And it's a barren landscape. A lot of it is this sandy stuff here. And then a lot of it is just volcanic rocks, boulders to climb over. So better get on, I suppose, 4K to go to the aid station at the top. And it's taken me 11 hours and 19 minutes so far. Just about one kilometre to go to the top and to the aid station. But everybody's running out of water. It's so hot, we're all parched. So very amazingly, some of the well, obviously the race directors left loads of water down here for us, which is an absolute godsend. Unbelievable. This is the top of the climb. And he did it. And we did it. Well done. And you can see for miles, right? I'm so dizzy and tired with the altitude. So we're 3,500 metres above sea level here. OK, I've literally had 10 minutes rest in there. I had some tea, threw up massively, which was awesome. And now we've got 13 kilometres to go to the next aid station. We're all very tired. So for me, I didn't bring my watch charger with me. So my watch has died. So I'm now relying on other people to tell me how far to go to the next aid station and what the time is in the race. So we are at 72 and a half kilometres with Cibo, Kimado and we have another big descent to come. And then we've got that nasty climb right in the clouds now. I could probably take my sunglasses off, actually. I won't be needing them anymore. This descent has gone on far too long now and my legs have had it. My quads are absolutely wrecked. So look, we are here and we've got a big 500 metre, at least 500 metre climb now. And then it's down to the finish. So I've just done the 500 metre climb up through the forest, back touching the clouds again, we're that high. So now it's downhill to the next aid station. It was so hard. It was just never ending. And then hopefully back onto the beach to the finish line. And that there is what we just climbed up all the way to the top of that from down there. Do you remember my first transvolcania video where I was walking down the street backwards? Well, it's come to that again. We're going backwards and I think it's quicker. Still got 9K to go. K to go. Not long now. I'm not going to make it before the sun goes down behind the sea. To the aid station, 10 feet from the trail.