Thursday 19 December 2013

Jingle Ribbits, Blinging Westies, and Tree Trot Trips.

Thanks for coming out to the annual Trot to the tree on a warm and sunny Saturday morning. Will definitely not be the same tonight. Thanks to those below for helping decorate the tree for the 10th-ish year. 

I see Char, Neil, Joanne, Peter, Liz, and Lorianne up top with a little Merlin sweeping the floors.


Memories of an old trot with young friends. One of these people just celebrated a birthday on Friday the 13th. I will let you guess. One clue, she is wearing slick tights!
Merry Christmas from the Jingle Ribbits.
Willie, Kristin, John Arthur Itis?, Ally, Wendy, and Ken
Hello everybody. another foot of snow in Calgary makes for some great toboggan weather for when the little nieces arrive in T-3 days. Sunday at 8 am our Christmas vacation starts - and our free time ends! But I can't wait to dunk their little heads into the six foot high snow pile I have made in the back yard.

The little muchkins Mikaela and Nikita
A quick recap of last weeks events. As you may recall we participated in the annual Amble with Angus. We had a successful journey to the third highest fundraising team in the event. Thanks to all for your support.

Warmed by the fire of Flames Central - with Tamara and Carroll.
Carroll can't move her jaw it was so cold

Seeing the McDougall Centre and the busy politicians always gets a smile
This week we will have the usual trot from an unusual place. Let's head to Max Bell Arena and do a loop around the zoo. Shall we see you around 9 am? I thought so!

As for the next week or so, Tuesday and Thursday night are definitely out for me. I am sure Lauren at the Tech Shop will have some great deals for the group if you show up for the Boxing Day trot. With having the family in town until Jan 2 I might be conspicuous in my absence. Just don't forget to support the rest of the group and share the paths!

Speaking of Lauren and the Tech Shop. She is hosting a new learn to run class starting the first week of January. If you fell off the wagon, broke your leg, but have the gumption to get back out there and do it again, give her a dingle and I guarantee she will take care of you with check-backs and high-fives.

May you always have a little:
In your life and wear your seasonal colours well

Merry Christmas and thanks for being a running buddy.

Friday 13 December 2013

Friday the 13th is a great day for a trot.

Today is the 13th day of the 12th month of the 2013 year. With two '13' numbers this must be a lucky day. It was lucky of sorts for the Food Bank as Ally, Robbie, Greg, and the Rudolph's Runners below all trotted 5 km in the chill of the Calgary morning to the 12th Annual Amble with Angus. Thanks to all of you that supported our team to third place in fundraising for the Food Bank. If you can't remember if you donated to us, 'test' the donation page by clicking on our photo! Thank you to those special Thursday OJ members who I know supported the cause!

From left, Lorri, Cathy, April, and John
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I had been asked by Peter to consider a snowshoe trip for tomorrow. I would love to but...I can't do it myself. If you are interested in skipping a trot and doing a snowshoe I can put you in touch. Sorry Peter, I can't do it this weekend.

BUT...if you have the thought that supporting a bird or two survive the winter, please join me at the unconventional time of 930 am (Susan, Char, and the rest of you early hour-haters take note) at the Tech Shop in  Mission for the annual Christmas tree trot to Sandy Beach. Please bring a bird feed bell (many stores sell them for cheap) or the like to help decorate the tree. There are also regular ornaments and animal memorials posted on the tree of which you can add to the collection. I think Ally has a wonderful one for her dog from last year.
I think I see Merlin, Tamara, Neil, Liz, Peter, Joanne, and John
At least that is what I think!
If you can't make Saturday I expect we will have a redo trot on Thursday at 630 pm again from the Tech Shop.





Friday 6 December 2013

Frozen Nose and Toes (and other events that we love)

Holy is this cold! Yes, we have been out in colder, I think -55C with the wind chill was the coldest, but I am older and much more wiser. No Freeze Willie! If you don't know that story you will have to ask Willie the next time we trot.

Speaking of the next time we will see those who are foolish enough to push the duvet off and put insulated underwear on when we meet at Eau Claire for a 9 am start on Saturday. We shall see some of you soon. Who might be there?
Crazies from the other week. From left; Joy, Peter, Allyson, Zoong, Jodi, and Carroll.
Or perhaps the true crazies of Tamara and John. 
and those above on the trot. Look, we found Willie!
A couple of events coming up that you might find of interest. First from Greg:

And second is one that comes from my first marathon coach and the reason I am what I am when it comes to left-right-repeat. I rarely ask but would you consider sponsoring our team and know that your money has gone to the Food Bank? In April's words:


Dear trotters,
I’ll be participating in The 11th Annual “Amble with Angus” on Friday, December 13th 2013 @ 7:30am. 
This 5km fun run is in support of the CBC Calgary Suncor Energy Food Bank Drive.
Last year Team- “Rudolph’s Runners” were the top fundraisers!  Please help us repeat our success for the food bank! We can’t do it without your help so please join me in raising money for a great cause by sponsoring our campaign. Just click on the link below and it will take you to our team page where you can sponsor us:
Or- there is still time to join us.  The antlers are free and really quite fetching…
 Thank you in advance for your generosity!
Cheers

April
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In case you find that your sweating too much while exercising Sara provided us with an option that will not only make you more attractive to others, it will also help you get ready for breakfast.
Deodorant to the Starrs
or
Sweat never smelled so sweet
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And finally for Joy, perhaps a Christmas gift for me and the 50th Calgary Marathon race???


Friday 22 November 2013

Will the coyote ever catch the roadrunner?

Brought to you by Acme Inc.
One of the reasons I love trotting the trails is the ability to be closer to nature. Every once and a while you get the experieince as above illustrates. Click on the picture to see the whole story of a wiley coyote and the trailrunner. Beep Beep!
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Forgive me friends for it has been three weeks since my last post. There never seems to be enough time in the day to fully appreciate the need to type a few words to my fellow athletes.

Winter has spread its snow and ice on our paths which means for the most part we are defaulting. Unless otherwise perfect conditions appear we will be an Eau Claire communtiy for the next few months. A tough part of our freeze and thaw conditions is the black ice sheets that take down us hardy individuals. Joanne, Neil, and others have all met with the slide of unexpected slickness.

See you at Eau Claire for 9 am tomorrow.
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Some of you may know of my penchant for bacon and beer. Really, can you ever go wrong with the letter B? Thursday night rendezvous at Original Joe's Mission have been a staple in the group since they first opened their doors in 2002. Through the Stanley Cup run of 2004 and post flood 2013, It has been a rare Thursday not to find me and 2-20 others enjoying a post trot discussion over brown pop and fatty food.



The Fishtown Beer Runners gathered on June 28, 2012, at Morgan’s Pier in Philadelphia.
What should be our name?
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It is getting time to join my first marathon coach Angus Cowan for the annual Amble With Angus. If you are able please join hardy runners on December 13 to raise awareness and funds for the Food Bank. An aside to this, CBC and Suncor were just honored for their years of support of the food bank.

Friday 1 November 2013

Winter Started

 
Howdy all. Happy All Saints Day. We celebrate the day after Halloween with a bit of peace...and pieces of chocolate. Yum!
 
This weekend is the annual Winterstart Night Run. I have been a participant for almost every year since 1996 when Jo-Louise Munday introduced me to the race. She was the manager of the Tech Shop back then and introduced me to Jim Morris, the organizer of the event. He was a passionate investor to our trotting community (and full time savior to it as a Police Detective) until his early death earlier this year.
 
We will be honouring Jim at the event this year and I hope all of you are able to be there for the first Jim Morris Memorial award to be awarded. Come say hi if you see me carrying two beers to send cheers in honour of the 'stache.
 
As the event is in Banff I will be unable to host the most at the usual Saturday trot. If you are able please join the Winterstart non-starters as the meet at 9 am in the Eau Claire YMCA.
 
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I love F minus by Tony Carillo
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Hey Greg, is this one of your old buddies from Kansas City? 

KC Marathon Runner Knits His Way into a Record

Posted: Oct 20, 2013 12:42 PM by The Associated Press
Updated: Oct 20, 2013 12:52 PM
KANSAS CITY - A 41-year-old man who ran the Kansas City Marathon has apparently broken a record, but not for running.
David Babcock, a graphic design professor at the University of Central Missouri, broke the Guinness world record for longest scarf knitted while running a marathon.
The Kansas City Star reports Babcock knitted a scarf measuring more than 12 feet long while he ran the marathon Saturday. The Guinness scarf knitting record was previously held by Susie Hewer, for a 6 foot, nine inch scarf knitted during a London marathon in April.
Babcock's scarf was measured by the president of an accredited calibration service, who will verify to Guinness the authenticity of Babcock's accomplishment.
Babcock, who finished the marathon in under six hours, says he has a smooth gait.
 
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April Clay of www.bodymindmotion.com always provides some interesting insight into our world of trotting. when I read this I can't help but think about all the events that I used to train peeps to complete. when I was a foolish young runner the events were almost entirely entered by males. Now the 'other' half of the population have discovered the love of the trot. Of this change, women were the ones that understood training for an event was an important part of attaining the goal.

No Longer a Man's Race

Oct. 25, 2013 — Men might be faster, but women are stronger in numbers in the nation's largest 10-kilometer road running races, according to a Northwestern Medicine® study.
    
Researchers analyzed data from more than 400,000 runners who participated in 10 of the largest 10km (6.2 mile) races in the U.S. from as early as 2002 through 2011.
Other findings from the study, the first to analyze performance trends among the nation's 10km runners, include:
  • The top groups of men and women appear to be getting faster
  • The fastest men are also increasingly younger
  • There are more sub-hour finishers, with increasingly more women accomplishing this feat compared to men
  • An increasing percentage of finishers, however, are completing races in more than one hour
The study was published online in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research.
"It seems that as these large races have more people participating, we have slower runners, but I see that as a positive thing," said Dan Cushman, M.D., lead author of the study.
"It's not just elite runners or former high school athletes running today's 10km races, there are more everyday people running this distance," Cushman said. "One of the best things we can do to improve our health is exercise and taking on a 10km race is a great goal."
Cushman is a clinical instructor in physical medicine and rehabilitation at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine and chief resident at the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.
Ten-kilometer races have become increasingly popular in the U.S. over the past decade with 1.3 million people participating in such races in 2010. Women began outnumbering men in the 2006 and 2007 timeframe and today make up the majority of runners who participate in these 10 large 10km races in the U.S., Cushman said.
"Coaches and trainers can use this information to develop more women-specific 10km training programs to accommodate this surge of female middle-distance runners," Cushman said.

Friday 25 October 2013

Charting a victory

Howdy folks. Have to start talking in western-speak as Brad Paisley is going to strum his guitars for Joy and me (and 15000 others) tonight. Yee Haw!

I want to give a special congratulations to our trotting buddy Lorianne as last night she was honoured in Toronto as the Manager of the Year for her company, Chartwells. I don't know all the details but I do know Joy and me (and all of the trotters) are proud of you and your hard work. Well done!

As for tomorrow and our normal meet, let's meet at the Mount Pleasant arena (hockey season is here!) and a visit to Confederation Park for a light jaunt. Mount Pleasant arena is two blocks west of the McDonald's at 4 Street and 23 Avenue NW. We will meet inside the arena and take off to the park at 9 am. See you then. Breakfast might be at either 4th Spot or John's Diner.

Congrats to all those that participated in the runs of last weekend. I want to shout out to all those fast kids that did the Eikiden relay, the Confed 4*3 relay, and the MEC run. Because of you I was able to trot the route of the Gorilla Run and claim victory. Pedestrian as it was I will take it!

No picture from this year, but this is the Westie way!



Friday 18 October 2013

A weekend of monkeying around

Another week, another race. Last weekend was a fun Sunday up at the Grizzly ultra and relay. I want to shout out congratulations to Jen, Jamie, Jodi, Bob, and Tamara for a successful relay. As well we saw Ally, Greg, Carolyn, Lindsay, and Lindsay trotting the trails. Well done!

This weekend we will support the zoo with the annual Gorilla Run. Ten years ago Emm came to the tech shop with an idea which a decade later has supported gorilla conservation around the world. Well done Emm!

If anyone is interested in a Saturday trot perhaps we can meet at Glennfield Meadows for a Fish Creek trot.  Meet you at 9 am at the main lot.

If you are a fan of finishing, you might enjoy these finish line photos. All that is missing is Wendy's cartwheel. Enjoy. http://blogs.twincities.com/flashgarvin/2013/10/07/amazing-finish-line-moments/

Are you feeling stoked? Richelle has an interesting trot for you. What will Rose do?

Monday 7 October 2013

Harvesting a good day

Howdy folks. Trying my first post via naiad. Wish me luck on the editing. Tomorrow those that want to go for a trot can meet joy and me at Eau Claire for a short one. I will be doing a 5-8 km loop as I have a race Sunday. More on that later. Not sure what joy is doing as she is face down on a massage table up in the bedroom. Nothing too good for Joy! See you at 9 am for a reasonable morning start. Right Susan?

Last weekend four of the troop headed over to fish creek and the annual Harvest Half in honour of Tracey Flagg. We all did our best to earn the medal and shirt, one of the best combined race swags on the calendar. I will toot my own horn and let you know I ran a 1:40 even with stopping to say hi to many, including Jim Flagg, Tracey's father. I guess I still have it although I have more than before...
The peeps before perspiration
This weekend is the Grizzly trail run up in Canmore. We have Jen, Jamie, Jodi, Bob, and Tamara doing the relay and hopefully dragging me as I do the 50 km solo. I originally thought this was a Saturday run which I now know it will be an early start for the drive up Sunday. Hopefully we can be home for dinner at six! If pictures can say a thousand words, thanks again to Ally as it looks like she will be offering her talents as a volunteer this weekend. I expect a lively high five!


I don't remember all our Celiac members but I know a few of you are out there. Perhaps a dinner for you?

The Calgary Celiac Association has booked our Highwood dining room for their annual dinner on Wednesday October 30th at 6:00pm! Our Chef and students will create a full 5 course gluten-free menu. They still have availability for you to book with them directly! If interested please contact Kathy at http://www.kathy@calgaryceliac.ca or call 403-237-0304.

I constantly talk about wearing the right shoes for trotting and that is what works for you. As you see we have to be comfortable in our own shoes to be exceptional.

Even Albert wore sensible shoes.

Happy Thanksgiving everyone.


Friday 27 September 2013

Doors wide Open YYC

Brrr. Amazing what a little frost can do to your flowers. Yep, that time called fall has indeed caused the stems of the tallest plants to wilt in the cold. That said, what a glorious sunrise to witness!

Tomorrow is Doors Open YYC all across our town. For me at SAIT I will be hosting tours of our Home Lab where we build homes with our architects, engineers, carpenters, and many other trades we teach at SAIT. If you want to come visit, check out Walk SAIT to guide yourself around my work.

Our culinary garden, where we grow good food!
As I have to volunteer at 930 am, I will not be able to trot on Saturday. Please meet those that need the Saturday trot at Eau Claire for 8 am. Good news or bad, this will be the last 8 am run of the year. We will revert to 9 am for the fall and winter.
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Next weekend is the 13th annual Harvest Half in support of the Tracey Flagg memorial. Joy and I will be bookending the event so hopefully you will come and cheer us on or even better participate. Good luck to those doing the left right repeat next weekend.

Tomorrow is the annual Melissa's Road Race in Banff. The one day a year where you can't move anywhere in Banff...oh wait, that is every day in the summer! I know of Zoong and Lawrence out there tomorrow. Good luck to the rest of you too.

Two weeks until 50 km. Crap - I am undertrained...



Friday 20 September 2013

Making an Impact

Options, we have options. Tomorrow we have three options for those in the group. option one, join Joy and others at Eau Claire for a rendezvous around the downtown starting at 8 am. Too early for you? At 9 am come to Tim Horton's in West Hills shopping area (Sarcee and 33rd ave.) and Carroll is doing a hike in Bragg Creek. I will be heading to Barrier Lake and a loop of a higher elevation. I think we have you covered. See you somewhere tomorrow.

This was an interesting week of highs and lows. A new role at work is a high while an old work friend past away. I have had loads of time to reflect on a life cut short in his 30's. Adam Wood was one of my fine staff at the Tech Shop for a number of years while he worked toward his degree in Kinesiology at U of C and competed for our National Bobsled team around the world. He was a bright young man who had the world at his feet. Success at school, on the track, in marriage, and with his Travel Roller business. He had done so many things with great thought and persistence. Unfortunately his drive on the track may have caused his ultimate demise.

Years of bouncing off the walls of the world's best tracks caused many a head trauma. I think I heard today over 100 crashes in his career. His life was so high and then the multiple impacts of his chosen career took the life from his body. Too fast, too young, too tragic.

This got me thinking to my career at the Tech Shop and another former employee Poul. He had worked at the store since before I arrived and was a well seasoned man who enjoyed his retirement by helping at the store.

One day he just didn't get it. He stood blank at our till not knowing how to do anything. I was perplexed at how he could be unknowing of the simple parts of our store. The next day he past me on his bike and I waved. He spun by with ghostly eyes not saying a word. It wasn't till after he took his life that I found out Poul was bi-polar and I was witnessing the end of his enthusiasm for all he enjoyed. For many years his photo stayed on display at the Purple Perk in honour of one of our friends of Mission.

I bring up both stories as they relate to my work. We have a great program that as an employee is offered free for us to take. It is called "Mental health first aid". Knowing what I know in hindsight has reinforced the need for me (and hopefully you) to understand the need to understand those who are part of our everyday life.

It is easy to say that certain things are just 'crazy talk', but are we able to identify when someone needs us to help them with sanity in times of need? If you have the opportunity to take a program like this I think it may be worth it to perhaps be in front of someone to support them if they are falling.

Thanks for leading Adam. We will miss you.
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Okay, time for a little lighter fare. I think some of you might know I don't listen to music while running. I talk far too much and need the clear air to hear salacious gossip. I dug up an old story about trotting and music that I thought you would like.


This is how I listen to music while on the trot

The Herald is pulling in some stories from their freelancers that tend to agree with my thoughts of running shoes these days. There is so much control and cushion put into most shoes our body has forgotten how to deal with impact the way it was originally design to protect. Enjoy the story and hopefully it gives you some thought.


what shoe is right for you?

Friday 13 September 2013

Fatigue, Fun, and Flanders

Another week, another bright sunshiny Friday. If only we could spread out all that June rain into little 2-5 am sprinkles that keep the flowers happy. Watching the pictures I think our friends in Colorado have found our flooding issues. Hopefully their community bands together as ours to support those affected.

I don't have any pictures downloaded but I realize that it has been ten years ago this weekend that many of us made the trek to Oostende Belgium for the Flanders Field Marathon. For Ally, Willie, Jon B, (and not-John), Shauneen, Carroll, Dori, Ken, Kim, Cathy (times two), Pam, Sylvia, Tony, Jim (8th overall that day!), and me it was a great trip. Now who am I missing from ten years ago???
Flanders as I remember it at the All American Table Dance Bar...

As last week my schedule is full of fun. Tomorrow is an all day planning session for the next Stampede Parade. Yep, it all starts now. No trot for me tomorrow but Tamara, Peter, Joy, and others have confirmed an 8 am departure from Eau Claire. Don't forget your passport for this really big trip!

Our next parade float from work? It's called the SWAGon.
Sunday has four of us at work competing in the Calgary Corporate Challenge Bocce tournament. If you are a fan of bocce come and cheer us on starting at 9 am in Edworthy Park. If you are trotting that day pick the NW passage and give us a high-five on your way.
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A couple of interesting stories for us this week in the Herald. Click on the photos for the links.

The right combination is crucial
I bet he just squeaks past the cut-off
or, "Hear I come to save the day!"
or, cheeseus, marathons are hard!
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Congrats to our friend Kristin who is off to the World Championships of dragon boat racing after a strong performance in the over 55 (what???) mixed dragon team races in Victoria. Next year she will be off to Italy to represent us all. Hmm, does she need a bag-boy?

Speaking of World Champions, I hear that Ally is in London doing the same for triathlon. She literally was bouncing off the walls! Okay, if you are on Facebook you know what I mean but the good is she seems to be okay. She also is realizing that bikes and her riding them are a near-lethal combination. Can a duathlon be run-swim-run?
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As a parent of a West Highland Terrier, I wonder how this will apply to me? For all you moms and dads out there who think their kid is the next Gretzky, or the next Dumonceaux. Thanks April!

Sport Parents, have you ever wondered...

• How to define your role?
• What to do when your child behaves poorly at a competition?
• How to talk to your child about disappointments?
• If there is there such a thing as a “good push”?

Come attend the Winning Sport Parent Seminar and find out!

This session is now taking registration:

When: Tuesday October 22nd, 2013. 7:15-8:30 pm

Where: Strathcona Community Centre, 277 Strathcona Drive SW, Calgary Alberta

Cost: $45.00 per person BONUS:  after the seminar check your inbox as you’ll be receiving a FREE copy of the eBook, “Becoming a Winning Sport Parent: Practical strategies to help you and your child
get the most from their sport experience

Registration: Is limited, so don't delay!    GO HERE TO REGISTER

If you have any questions please don’t hesitate to contact me.  I look forward to seeing you on October 22nd.
April


April L Clay, R. Psych.
Bodymindmotion
Mental skills for sport and life
www.ridingoutofyourmind.com

Friday 6 September 2013

The calculation for a good trot

I was always good at math!
Good Friday to you all. Another glorious day in Calgary with some bright sunshine. So bright a colleague actually thought we may have snow on our soccer field. Thankfully it was only the sheen of our petroleum byproduct synthetic field.

This weekend is the official start of hockey. Yep, the Flames rookie camp is in swing while I start another season of whistle-blowing. I will be officiating Saturday morning and unable to lead our trusty group of trotters. Please join anyone else that believes the default is indeed a great idea. That is Saturday, 8 am at Eau Claire.

Good luck to Peter, Tamara, the Makaroff's, and everyone else doing the Kelowna Wine Half this weekend.

Shouldn't wine and running always be together?
I saw a couple of really good articles in the Herald over the last week and thought I should share. click on the photos to find the links.

Hills, why did it have to be hills?
The only way to travel, and survive...
Have a great weekend.

Friday 30 August 2013

Chi Chi and the greats

Can you believe it is the last weekend of August? While Calgary had severe flooding in June we have actually had a great summer. The lawn and flowers haven't loved the heat nor has sleeping been comfortable with the humidity. But here we are with a bright sunshine filled morning which hides the storm of last night.

Joy had me do a Tim's run this am and I didn't realize how strong that cell was that rolled through at 6 pm. A few of the big trees in the 'hood are down and covering our community. Now why couldn't the big poplar tree on the boulevard (the one that covers Sadie in saplings) been one of the victims?

Saturday looks like a terrific day for a trot so let's go back to the 'default' location of Eau Claire market and enjoy a scoot around the downtown. See you at 8 am. Thanks to the Makaroff's and Peter who followed the default rule! Too bad Joy and John didn't!
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So an argue err discussion ensued between Joy and me on the cause of our little Sadie starting to Snorfle this week. What is snorfling you ask? Our dog walker describes it as:

Snorfling is a combination of snorting and sniffling and is generally caused by little beasties in the nosal area, usual as a result of sticking one's nose where it doesn't belong. 
(definition from Darlene's Dictionary)
 
This might be a description that explains the angle of MY nose!
Does this look like a dog in distress?
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More to come but off to watch a bunch of old guys hit balls with Dave. Will we see Chi Chi?
 
They don't make them like this anymore...
 
 

Friday 16 August 2013

Sugary thoughts of a trip

Fridays in August are interesting. Work is getting done but it feels like vacation. Maybe it is due to the trip back to Ontario and a week of winding up the nieces at Canada's Wonderland and the Toronto Zoo. Sugar infused stops and enough deep fried food to feed a small country. Maybe work IS a vacation from the vacation? I wouldn't change a thing...

A couple of weeks ago Peter, Joy and me tried out Colour Me Rad, or Color Me Rad for those south of the border. Here is the before and after...not so bad but I think we took the easy route. Good luck this weekend to Tamara and others doing the Spartan Race on a motorcross track. I wonder if one of the challenges will be to avoid the bikes?




Hey, it's hot out there so I think trees are in order for the Saturday trot. Let's meet at the furthest west parking lot in Fish Creek of Shannon Terrace. To get there take Anderson Road to 37th Street. Turn left at 130 Ave and then your first right into the park. See you at the very end of the road at a crisp 8 am start.


We have quite a little group of peeps doing 1&1 run&walk over the last month led by Joy. If you have been shy of coming out as you fell off the bandwagon we may have a cure for you...


Friday 2 August 2013

Starrs, Streaks, and Strains


Hello my friends, it's great to see you. As I look across the Calgary skyline I see darkness as the south gets doused with rain. It must be a long weekend.

Long weekends are meant for fun and I think Joy and me are starting off right! Tomorrow we will miss the usual 8 am trot as we are off to Winsport and the first ever "Color Me Rad" (how un-Canadian of the organizers). We promise not to be quick over the five kilometre's and Joy hopes to keep her blonde hair blonde. Should I apologize to her now or after the streaks of rainbow attach to her locks?
Willie, Peter, and Jodi ready to tackle Nose Hill last weekend.
For those not joining us please do the usual Eau Claire default. If you are lucky like some you will meet Keifer, Matthew, or Demi. If you don't know who I mean you will have no chance getting lucky tomorrow morning. 
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We will continue our fun on Sunday as we join a plethora of Joy's boyfriends (I am merely the driver) at the Halo High Water fundraiser at the Jubilee. Paul (swoon) Brandt, and Jim (ahhh) Cuddy will keep my happy wife looking forward and for sure dancing in the aisles. Unfortunately the truly loved John (Johnny Reid) is playing the 'other' even on the 15th. Sorry Joy.
Joy tried to catch him but the crutches slowed her down
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I received notice that one of our friends has fallen to an injury bug. a repetitive injury has bit the leg once again. I suggested one cause but know the real reason...a missed OJ's Thursday night with the crew.

It reminded me of another friend who fell off the wagon but has found happiness once again. Thanks to April for sharing this many moons ago. From the New York Times...

get well PK.
When Repeat Injuries Can’t Dim an Athlete’s Passion
When Dr. Michael Joyner, an exercise researcher at the Mayo Clinic, heard I’d gotten a second stress fracture, high on my fibula, less than two years after recovering from my first one, in a metatarsal bone in my foot, he sent me some advice by e-mail.
 “I would urge you to take a year off of running,” he wrote. “Stop trying to rope-a-dope this. Cycle and do the elliptical and take some swimming lessons.” He added, “I did — took 10 years off of running and my perspective is different.”
Right. He’s got to be kidding. I am one of those people who seem to lurch from injury to injury but keep coming back to my sport. I also am a serious cyclist, but running is my true love.
I’m not alone. Margaret Martonosi, one of my running friends and an electrical engineering professor at Princeton University, is a runner and a competitive swimmer. Last year, she injured her Achilles’ tendon. She took a month off and finally saw a doctor, who told her that her running days were over and that at age 45, she really shouldn’t be running anyway.
That was “a bit incongruous,” Margaret told me, because she had just had her best times ever in the New York marathon and in a half marathon she ran while training for it.
She changed doctors.
What is the difference between Mike Joyner and athletes like Margaret or me? Or between us and the legions of others in the Joyner camp — people like Dr. Michael Weiner, an Alzheimer’s researcher who told me he used to run marathons but took up swimming when his back kept bothering him. Now he belongs to the Dolphin Club in San Francisco. He swims with them every morning at 5 a.m. in the San Francisco Bay — without a wet suit — and never looks back. Or Dr. Jason Karlawish, an associate professor of medicine and medical ethics at the University of Pennsylvania. He reluctantly abandoned running after he tore his meniscus, a crucial piece of cartilage in the knee.
“I was frankly demoralized that I’d be one of those people who ‘used to run’ and athletics would slowly become part of my past,” Jason said. It took time and effort to learn a new sport, he added. But now he loves swimming, especially, he says, the meditative aspect. “For 45 minutes, I can see little, hear only my thoughts, and talk to no one.”.
At least one expert, recommended by the American College of Sports Medicine for this column, would say we stubborn athletes have a psychological problem.
Our behavior, said the expert, Dr. Jon L. Schriner, an osteopath at the Michigan Center for Athletic Medicine, is “compulsive”: we let our egos get in the way, persisting beyond all reason.
But another expert recommended by the college, David B. Coppel, a clinical and sports psychologist at the University of Washington, has another perspective. There are several reasons some people find it hard to switch sports, he told me. Often, their friends do that sport, too; it is how these people identify themselves, part of their social life. And then there is another, more elusive factor.
“There is something about the experience — be it figure skating or running or cycling — that really produces a pleasurable experience,” Dr. Coppel said. “That connection is probably not only at a psychological level but probably also something physiological that potentially makes it harder for these people to transition to other sports.”
Jennifer Davis, a physical chemist who is my cycling, running and weight-lifting partner, adds another reason. Often we stubborn athletes — and Jen, an ultra runner who competes in races longer than marathons, includes herself in that group — have found that we do well, get trophies, win at least our age group in races. That makes it hard to stop.
My doctor, Joseph H. Feinberg at the Hospital for Special Surgery in Manhattan, says it’s not always necessary to give up a sport because of injuries.
“Some will say you need to stop,” he said. “But often correcting faulty mechanics, the right exercises or rehab, or just changes in training techniques are all that is needed.”
He knows what it’s like to have a passion for a sport. Dr. Feinberg, a runner, swimmer and cyclist, has had two stress fractures yet keeps running.
Meanwhile, Margaret Martonosi says her tendon has improved enough that she can run two miles five days a week. It’s not much, she said, but “I’ll take it.”
I too am starting to run again. I also did so much rigorous bicycling when I could not run that I am considering entering my first bike race, a 35-kilometer time trial, which means you ride as fast as you can for 21 miles. But running is still my passion.
And Mike Joyner? He went from running to swimming and is now doing triathlons. And he’s glad.
“Whenever I have switched sports it has been energizing because it is a new set of experiences and challenges,” he said. “There are new opportunities to P.R.” (The initials stand for personal record, the best time you’ve ever had.)
“Now that I am doing more running again it feels fresh, too,” he said, “and by essentially skipping 10 years, I did not have to deal with the existential death spiral associated with progressively slower times. I came back with a blank slate.”
Margaret understands that — her swimming times had leveled off, but with running, she says, “I feel in ways like I just started, and that I have a lot more to get out of the sport.” She says there might be a day when she gives up running, but she is not there yet.
But Mike will never convince people like Jen and me.
“I could give up cycling,” Jen said. “But I could never give up running.”