Plucky competitors prepare to take on mud race
Chris Radburn/BBCHundreds of plucky competitors are bracing themselves to run, walk and crawl through a boggy riverbed.
They will be rushing across a 440m (1,443ft) stretch of the River Blackwater in the Maldon Mud Race on Sunday.
Chairman Brian Farrington warned participants they could emerge "bedraggled" and perhaps even missing some items of clothing.
"They think it's going to be easy - but no," he told Sonia Watson on BBC Essex.
The river temperature is expected to be about 8C when the race, which raised £30,000 for charity in 2025, begins at 14:30 BST.
While the event is usually taken on by the public, a second "Uber Fit Challenge Race" will follow it for the first time in 2026.
PA MediaFarrington said: "Some people are very brave, and they don't wear a lot, but some dress for the part, and it's great to see.
"They're a bit bedraggled when they come off because half of them have lost their costumes."
The race was born out of a dare made to the landlord of the Queen's Head pub in 1973, who had to serve a meal on a strip of land in the river at low tide.
Such was the excitement about the antics that similar activities were planned annually and eventually became the modern version of the race.
SuppliedAmong its alumni is Harriet Hemmings, who took part in 2025 and is returning for 2026.
She said: "A lot of people said before I did it that it was such a tough thing to do, and I thought, 'You're just running through mud, how hard can it be?'
"But, actually, it is a challenge. I was nearly fainting by the end."
Hemmings, from Chelmsford, said training for the race had also helped rehabilitate her from a broken back in 2019.
She added: "It motivates you to get in the gym, get fit and get strong, so it has benefitted me through my recovery and has been brilliant."
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