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The Wilder Blog

Endurance runner Hanny Allston hitting her stride in sport and business

by Find Your Feet 28 Mar 2015

Mercury Newspaper


Hanny Allston believes we need to experience hard times to make the good times feel great. Picture: RICHARD JUPE

Despite challenging personal issues and fears sheโ€™d never run again, orienteering gold medallist Hanny Allston has hit her stride both as a coach and in the business world, all while continuing to compete at the highest level


Hanny Allston at a recent training session.

In the ultra-competitive world of sports, where technique and training regimes are often closely guarded secrets, it is uncommon to nd a top athlete striving to share their knowledge with as wide an audience as possible.
But Hanny Allston is far from a typical sporting star. Without a trace of egotism and with the wisdom of someone much older, Allston is turning the notion of what it means to be an elite athlete on its head.

Having overcome great odds to become the first non-European to claim a World Orienteering Championship title, Allston has learnt never to accept a limit on her abilities.
Her life has been a roller-coaster ride, but along the way she has discovered the things that seemed like a wrong turn at the time have in fact set her up for a remarkable opportunity to help and inspire others.
Through her business, Find Your Feet, Allston is coaching and mentoring a growing cohort of runners around Australia and setting new ground in fitness tourism. She and her partner Graham Hammond returned late last year to Hobart, from where they are introducing a new breed of adventurous tourists to all Tasmania has to offer.
Between coaching and hosting running tours in Tasmania and overseas, Allston volunteers her time coaching Australiaโ€™s junior orienteering team, which is preparing for competition in Norway later this year.
And yet, as an athlete, the 29-year-old is still breaking new race records on the national stage, including at the Six Foot Track Marathon in New South Wales a fortnight ago.
Under the guidance of a new coach, Allston is switching focus from orienteering and marathon running to the gruelling sport of high-altitude endurance racing. In this yearโ€™s Skyrunner World Series she will take on some of the highest mountains in Europe and Asia, pitting her mental and physical strength against some of the toughest athletes on the planet.
Without a doubt, Allston is a sportswoman - and an entrepreneur - to keep an eye on.
At 20, in 2006, Allston made history as the first Australian to win gold at the World Orienteering Championships, having outperformed 150 competitors from 35 countries. It was the first time a junior had taken out the main prize.

Allston receives her World Orienteering Championship gold medal in Denmark in 2006.

At the medal ceremony in Denmark, Allston was presented with her gold medal by Crown Prince Frederik, whose wife is Tasmanian born Mary. As news reports said at the time, it was an extraordinary achievement for someone so young and from outside Europe, where orienteering is a lucrative high-profile sport.
But what the reporters at the time did not know was Allston had been told by surgeons eight months earlier she would never run again.
It was during the Orienteering World Championships in Japan in 2005, when Allston was almost through her first year of medicine at the University of Tasmania, that she suffered the injury that looked to spell the end of her racing career. โ€œI was running down a hill to the first control in the competition and just rolled my ankle really badly,โ€ she says.
Despite the pain, she went on to finish sixth, her best result for Australia. But a few months later she had a full ankle reconstruction in Melbourne.
The injury coincided with a devastating family crisis. Her father Simon, who with her mother Julia had been a bedrock of support, suffered a breakdown and tried to take his life. Allstonโ€™s world as she knew it was crumbling around her.
She sought refuge in her sport, convincing herself if she could not only run again, but win on the world stage, everything else would fall into place.

โ€œEvery rock and every goal I ever had shifted pretty dramatically. I wasnโ€™t on track anymore to be a doctor, I wasnโ€™t on track to being an athlete, family was a very different shape to what I used to know and I think I was just pretty lost and was driving myself really hard to decide what I was going to do with my life.โ€

โ€œI felt like I was in a huge hole and if I could achieve those goals I had set myself in orienteering, I could prove to myself I had got out of the hole,โ€ Allston says.
In many ways, her gold medal at the World Championships in Denmark the next year came too soon. Working towards the audaciously ambitious goal had been her escape from the crisis that was tearing her family apart. โ€œStanding on the dais I remember just thinking, โ€˜Iโ€™m still the same Hanny and Iโ€™ve still got the same issues that Iโ€™ve got to go home and resolve and face up toโ€™,โ€ she says.
Her dad recovered from the severe bipolar episode that almost claimed his life and enjoyed a successful career as Tasmanian Ombudsman. He has since spoken publicly about his experience to help raise awareness about depression and prove a full recovery is possible. He says his illness and the subsequent breakdown of his marriage to Julia were too much for his daughter to cope with.
Her new-found fame also brought with it a burden of expectation and pressure.
โ€œWhen you achieve that sort of accolade or success when you are not emotionally ready for it, it can be quite destructive - and for Hanny it happened at the time of this family crisis,โ€ he says.
โ€œIt derailed her for a while. She didnโ€™t know where to go next.โ€ She may have been a world champion, but Allston found herself - like many young high achievers - struggling to find her way in the world.
โ€œMy parents were going through a divorce, I moved out of home probably prematurely, they sold the family farm, my brother moved to Melbourne and I dropped out of medical school,โ€ she says. Allston was plagued by depression, an illness fuelled by her self doubt.
In 2008, she suffered yet another blow with the death of her coach Max Cherry. โ€œEvery rock and every goal I ever had shifted pretty dramatically,โ€ she says. โ€œI wasnโ€™t on track anymore to be a doctor, I wasnโ€™t on track to being an athlete, family was a very different shape to what I used to know and I think I was just pretty lost and was driving myself really hard to decide what I was going to do with my life.โ€
With a health science degree under her belt but no desire to work in research, Allston studied teaching in Auckland, a move she describes in hindsight as a form of โ€œrunning awayโ€.
After a year at Melbourne Girls Grammar, she returned home to Hobart feeling as lost as ever. โ€œWhen I got back from Melbourne I didnโ€™t know what I wanted to do. I didnโ€™t really enjoy teaching in schools and I didnโ€™t want to work in medical research, which was my other degree,โ€ Allston says. โ€œI kept finding myself saying, โ€˜Iโ€™m just trying to find my feetโ€™, so that was where the business Find Your Feet came from.

Allston and her partner Graham Hammond in their Find Your Feet shop.

โ€œWhat started with Allston hosting group running sessions grew into a business coaching individuals and sporting groups including the North Melbourne Football Club on its pre-season training camps in Tasmania.
Suddenly, with her health and teaching qualifications and some hard-earned life lessons, Allston found she had good advice to give.
โ€œI realised I had a lot to offer and all this knowledge about life and mental health and health in general,โ€ she says.
โ€œI could feel myself getting stronger through helping others. Itโ€™s such a rewarding and healing thing and gives you a sense of place.โ€
Allston began her sporting life as a nationally competitive swimmer, following in the path of her mother, who also swam competitively. Together, mother and daughter would get up every morning at 5.30am to make it to training at the Hobart Aquatic Centre before school, returning for another session in the afternoon.
But Allston says she โ€œplateauedโ€ in her mid-teens, just as her elder brother James was getting serious about orienteering.
โ€œI used to think orienteering was incredibly daggy and doing it in Tasmania in the middle of winter is pretty hard work,โ€ Allston laughs.
That attitude changed forever as soon as she made the Australian orienteering team and found herself on a plane with her teammates to New Zealand and then Estonia. โ€œSuddenly I went from seeing myself as living locally in Tasmania to seeing a lot of opportunities that have taken me now to more than 35 countries and racing in more than 30 of them and living in six,โ€ Allston says.

Allston with coach Max Cherry, who died in 2008.

โ€œItโ€™s been an incredible journey.โ€ Orienteering Australia director Mike Dowling describes Allston as a โ€œonce-in-a-generation athleteโ€.ย 
As well as competing at the World Orienteering Championships in Scotland later this year, Allston is coaching Australiaโ€™s junior team as it prepares for competition in Norway.
โ€œCan you think of any other sports where you have one of your No.1-ranked athletes willing to take on a volunteer coaching role with juniors at such a high level while still continuing to compete as a serious international athlete?โ€
Dowling says. โ€œTo me, thatโ€™s damn impressive. Thatโ€™s a real testament to her as a person that she wants to share her experiences with other people.โ€
Allston remains the only person from outside Europe to win a senior World Orienteering title.
โ€œFor somebody to come from good old Tasmania and be that one person from outside Europe whoโ€™s ever won a World Championship at a senior level is a remarkable thing,โ€ Dowling says.
โ€œI think sheโ€™s an amazing athlete. We havenโ€™t seen anyone of her calibre before and I think it will be many many years - particularly in the sport of orienteering - before weโ€™ll see somebody again in that capacity to come out of this country.โ€
An act of kindness by then-Formula One driver Mark Webber was a defining moment in Allstonโ€™s life. It helps explain her willingness to give so much of herself to others. At the end of 2006, Webber handed her a hefty cheque as thanks for her help and support organising his Tasmanian adventure race the Mark Webber Challenge.
โ€œAll he requested of me was to pass it on down the track,โ€ Allston says. โ€œIt was so humbling and so amazing and I really believe in trying to give assistance back to people who are trying to make a go of it.โ€
Find Your Feet has grown naturally through word of mouth, even while Allston worked with the Australian Institute of Sport in Canberra for a few years.
She now coaches clients in every state and territory, ranging from โ€œrecreationally eliteโ€ athletes to aspiring fun runners.
Allston and her ski-instructor partner Graham Hammond returned from Canberra late last year to set up a shop front for Find Your Feet in Hobart, selling adventure and running gear.

Allston is about to embark on her toughest year of competition to date, taking on the worldโ€™s best high-altitude endurance athletes in the Skyrunner World Series in Italy, Switzerland and Hong Kong.

An exhibition space upstairs is used to host seminars and display artwork by Tasmaniaโ€™s talented wilderness photographers. The pair met about 15 years ago while working at the Paddy Pallin camping store in Hobart.
It took several years for their relationship to blossom into more than friendship, with their well-travelled paths rarely crossing (Allston is a summer athlete while Hammond is always chasing the ski season).
Together they have created a new breed of business, drawing on their combined experiences overseas to share with others their love of travel and using online technology to deliver Allstonโ€™s coaching, nutrition and hydration advice to athletes around Australia. The coupleโ€™s โ€œGone Runningโ€ tours - basically a running version of a guided multi-day walk - in Tasmania and favourite destinations overseas sell out almost as soon as they go online.
Allstonโ€™s goalposts have shifted dramatically since her swimming days when the Olympics was, in her mind, the pinnacle of sporting achievement.
She is about to embark on her toughest year of competition to date, taking on the worldโ€™s best high-altitude endurance athletes in the Skyrunner World Series in Italy, Switzerland and Hong Kong.
It is no longer the Olympics she wants to conquer, but some of the worldโ€™s most spectacular mountains. If her performance at the Six Foot Track Marathon across the Blue Mountains on March 14 is anything to go by, high-altitude running is a good fit. Allston was in a league of her own in the legendary 45km race that attracts 900 entrants from around the world. She finished half an hour ahead of her nearest female rival, experienced ultra marathon runner Gill Fowler, and shaved more than three minutes off the womenโ€™s race record.

โ€œI said to Graham over breakfast the next day, โ€˜This is going to make orienteering feel easy physicallyโ€™,โ€ Allston laughs.
โ€œYouโ€™re just running at the edge of your capacity all the time, thereโ€™s just no down time. I love everything about trail racing, it can take you to magical places and one day is never the same as another.
โ€œ Allstonโ€™s training for the Skyrunner series will begin in earnest in a couple of months when she heads to New Zealand, where her new coach and longtime friend James Keugler is based.
For her father, it is a joy after so many turbulent years to see his daughter using her past challenges to help others and to see her competing for all the right reasons. โ€œShe competes because she enjoys it, not to win, and she competes with a humility and an awareness of the dangers of having a high profile,โ€ he says.

โ€œI wouldnโ€™t change any aspect of the journey Iโ€™ve been on because you need those really hard times to shape you into who you become and to make the good times feel great.โ€

โ€œTo have learnt that at her age is really great.โ€ Allston recently passed up a prestigious scholarship to study at the International Olympic Committee in Switzerland this year in favour of building a life and business with Hammond in Hobart.
โ€œThey said no one had ever turned it down before,โ€ Allston says. โ€œBut for me the timing wasnโ€™t right and I felt Tasmania was somehow going to have greater opportunities.
โ€œBetween Graham and I weโ€™ve been to nearly 50 countries, yet we believe Tasmania has some of the best potential that remains untapped and starting to be tapped into.โ€ She tells Tas Weekend she has never felt happier or more grounded. โ€œI openly say to people now I love life. Iโ€™m so blessed to live with the most amazing person on the planet,โ€ Allston says. โ€œI wouldnโ€™t change any aspect of the journey Iโ€™ve been on because you need those really hard times to shape you into who you become and to make the good times feel great.โ€
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