The Joy of Berries: Add Colour to Your Runs

Orangey red berries and pink leaves
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Berries radiate joy.

A burst of colour poking through a hedgerow, twitching in the wind. Their shades of red, blue and violet, dancing in the sun.

This week’s Joy Run is an invitation to swap grey pavements for the trails. To rewild your runs and re-engage and delight in the natural world.

Berries may seem a niche theme, but Joy Runs is about celebrating the small things in life, and they don’t get much smaller than berries. And it’s only when we slow down to appreciate tiny details does the world seem bigger and better. 

How to run this theme: berries

Different berries grow in different seasons and there’s berry-bearing trees and bushes all around us in the UK. Late Summer is particularly plentiful, lovingly known as free food season.

Your Joy Run might be:

  • the hedgerows of city parks and fields
  • brambles when running in the woods
  • cowberries and cloudberries on coastal paths
  • a trek on heaths and moors
  • the gift of street and garden trees
  • rich pickings on the trails

Or simply head out for a free range run and see what berry thrills find you.

Remember to post your runs and on Instagram and/or TikTok, tagging in Joy Runs. You can also share how you found this Joy Run theme and how it made you feel in the comments box below.

How to Joy Run

Hopefully you stumble upon a juicy mouthful on your run!

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Where a joy of berries took me

The Cleveland Way National Trail.

The Cleveland Way National Trail is a 109 mile (175km) walking/running route through beautiful and ever-changing landscapes and scenery of the North York Moors National Park. It starts at Helmsley and ends on Filey Brigg. The Trail is one of two halves, with approximately 50 miles of dramatic coastline and 50 miles of heather moorland.

The Trail covers ruined abbeys and castles, old fishing villages and seal colonies, plus an abundance of berries!

My run by the sea was on a bite-sized section of the path, near Ravenscar and Robin Hoods Bay.

Here’s what I found…

Dog Rose Hips (Rosa Canina)

Hawthorn berries (Crataegus monogyna) against a blue sky

Appearance: clusters of orange-red oval shaped hips

Where: hedgerows, woodland edges and on scrubland

When: September to December

Eating:  traditionally used to make syrups to boost Vitamin C levels

Blackthorn Sloes (Prunus Spinose)

Appearance: very round blue-black fruits

Where: scrub, woodland and hedges

When: September to December

Eating: sloe gin anyone?

Blackberries (Rubus Fruticosus)

Appearance: green to red to black as they ripen

Where: woodlands, hedges, heaths

Season: August to October

Eating: Freshly picked or make into jam, smoothies, cakes or breakfast toppings

Making a concerted effort to look for berries reminded me of playing and running in woodland as a child. Emblems of my youth, I would play out far too long between meals in the summer holidays and pick them to keep my energy levels up. There’s still a simple joy in finding untouched hedgerows full of wild blackberries and enjoying mouthfuls of freshly-picked fruit under the sun.

Berries on the ground of the Cleveland Way

This Joy Run theme is also about renewal. In botanical terms, a berry is a fruit made from the seeds and fleshy pulp of a single flower. An indigestible coating protects the seed inside as it travels through the digestive system of birds, who will disperse them far from the parent plant. Taking a moment to appreciate the ecology of the area in which you’re running can only be a good thing.

One final thought on berries...

Needless to say, if you’re tempted to forage for wild berries on your run then do your own research first.

 

→ Other ‘Running in Nature‘ themes

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So, how was this Joy Run for you?

2 Responses

  1. Looking for things on a run always makes you appreciate your “normal route” a lot more! I was able to find quite a few berries on this run but sadly the blackberries were looking a bit sad so decided on the rosehips instead 🙂

  2. This week’s Berries theme meant that I was practicing more awareness of my surroundings – particularly nature! – when out on my runs which I found relaxing and peaceful 🙂

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