![]() ![]() The most expensive place to rent is London, with tenants paying an average of £2,039 a month - the highest amount ever recorded, according to the company's latest data. We are again urging landlords to consider Rent Guarantee insurance as the likelihood of tenants struggling to pay their rent grows with each passing month," said Andy Halstead, HomeLet & Let Alliance chief executive officer. "Rental prices remain high, which brings a level of risk for both tenants and landlords. That marks a 1.2% increase from the average £1,199 bill in April. This stat was created by Mel Erbacher on episode 158 of the parkrun Adventurers podcast.Average rents across the UK have gone up again, rising to £1,213 a month, according to HomeLet. If you have volunteered in 4 different roles at least 4 times, your v-index is 4. The number of volunteer roles which have been performed at least v times. if you were a marshal, did course setup, and close-down, that adds 3 to this stat. Note - this can include multiple roles per week e.g. How many of the different volunteering roles have been completed. Note - this statistic is only available for the athlete configured in the extension options, as it needs to know which home parkrun to base the calculation from. The nearest parkrun event to your home parkrun that you have not done yet. The furthest away parkrun you have been to (calculated from the home parkrun configured in the extension’s options). The closest parkrun event to your average parkrun location. If, however, you visit all over the world, who knows where you will be on average - probably in the sea! If you commonly run only at your home parkrun and only occasionally visit other parkruns then the location will be heavily weighted towards your home parkrun. This is the basic average of the lat/lon position of each parkrun result in your results table. The average latitude/longitude of all your parkrun attendances. If everything is working this should match the number of flags under your badges! The total number of countries that you have parkrunned in. This is naturally going to be woefully inaccurate and is intended only to give a general guide for how much travel was required to go to the events in your results table. This is calculated by adding together the straight-line distance between each parkrun event in your results table. The cumulative distance you have travelled between each parkrun event. How many parkrun events you have completed during this calendar year. If this happens to include your ‘home’ parkrun, this still counts in the calculation. The longest unbroken run of different events visited. If you never repeat a parkrun event it will be 100%, if you never tourist at all it will tend towards 0%. The percentage of parkrun events attended that you had not been to before. The number of different parkrun events you have completed. The number of full years you have been going to parkrun since you completed your first event. Unfortunately we can’t find the date you first volunteered as this only takes into account your parkrun results table. The day you joined the parkrun family! This is the day you completed your first parkrun. They do not have to be in order, so you can go back and fill in numbers later. To start off your streak, this requires that you have run at an inaugural event (controversial!), and then to increase the value to 2 you need to run at event #2 somewhere (not necessarily the same event as you ran at the inaugural event). The maximum contiguous series of parkrun event numbers you have attended (at any event), starting at 1. If you have never run at an event twice, then your p-index will only be 1! If you have run 4 different parkruns at least 4 times each, your p-index is 4. The number of parkruns that satisfy the equation ‘p parkruns run at least p times’, e.g. The highest number of parkruns attended in a calendar year. The total distance achieved from adding up 5k for a parkrun, and 2k for a junior parkrun. The highest number of consecutive PBs achieved across all parkrun events. You are marked as a ‘First Timer’ the first time you visit a parkrun event, and the next time you visit that even you have the chance to get your first PB there. parkrun counts PBs on a per-event basis, not across all events. The total number of PBs achieved across all parkruns. ![]() The Running Challenges extension currently calculates Ones that are hard to calculate such as the furthest distance from home you have There are many stats that parkrunners keep, and a few of these are obvious suchĪs the number of parkruns you have done, or how many different parkruns you haveīeen to, but there are also some more mysterious ones, such as the p-index or ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |