Monday, August 6, 2012

Dear Diary: How's my trip to Oregon thus far?

Arrive at noon Friday. Bro hid keys to Mom's car in gas cap. Check.
Drive to Florence and unwind with the kids and Mom. Check.
Swim with kids. Check.

Saturday run 9 miles. Check.
Soon after, on the way to visit Dad at Regency Nursing home get ticket for speeding in a 25mph zone & driving uninsured vehicle. Check.
Swim with kids. Check.
Saturday night, make delicious meal w/Scott and Ann's CSA plus regional wild caught Coho--perfection. Check.
Sunday morning, long run staged through the town: 2 miles solo, 3 miles with running buddies Kris and Kathy, 3 more miles to Regency to drink cranberry juice with Dad,  2 miles to Scott & Ann's for power bar and sports drink, 5 more miles home.  Took three hours, but it sort of added up to my 15 Iron Training. Check.
Then to the big celebration, Zelma's 100th birthday party!  Years ago, I used to play tennis with Zelma's husband, Virgil, and a whole host of players in a daily round-robin tournament.  Those were my summer days at Addie's age.  
Swim with kids. Check.

Quite an occasion for a party.

Daughter Dolores, left, organized the whole thing for Zelma.

 By the end of Sunday, the kids are running bikes and bare feet up and down our quiet street.  Laughing and working on this misty evening. Poetry.  I love these kids.
I LOVE my teenager!!!!

Tired and finally motionless.
 Monday morning. More running (of course). After Mom's mammogram we were able to pay a visit to the Florence Courthouse/Justice Center.  I had evidence to prove that we did indeed have insurance on the car (which will knock 260 bucks off of my ticket), but I have to wait until the ticket enters the system to do anything about the moving violation.  When I learn that it may not be in the system until later in the week I worry that I may be gone by then, but the friendly guy behind the counter ensured that I can do it all over the phone. In fact, I may be able to go to traffic school ONLINE!  Happiest news I've heard yet on this trip.   He asked me if I had a computer, and I said, "Yes...more than one!"
I'm gonna go into that courthouse and reverse this injustice!

Look! It's a stuffed bear & a number that I can call in a week! How civilized!

In other words...we're not in Illinois anymore!
 And then, finally, Therapy time for Dad.  The kids park themselves in Dad's room while he sleeps.  When the therapist arrives and tells him it's time for exercise he complains like a pro, but by the time we get him into the therapy room he rallies and behaves like the champion he always was.
Over What hill? Where? When?

Just pedal and keep the green smiley face on the screen.
Looking at Dad's cycling program, I couldn't help but think it's merely an extension of all the training that I do.  One of my fondest memories is of the Manatee Open Water swim that I competed in a number of times in Lake Del Valle.  One year, my Dad and I participated (each swimming one mile), and another year Peter and I did the relay.  Today as Dad's session neared an end, the therapist eyed me and indicated that this was some of his best work, today.  I was proud of my guy, but also sad, knowing that it's impossible for me to somehow provide that sort of inspiration long term, when I am far away.  This isn't a condition that is gentle on the mind, and honestly, when I'm not there talking about our trip along the Oregon Coast or about the swim we did or about Dad's relentless exercise at the Elks, well, he sort of slumps in his seat and stares into space.  That's where We're at.  So. If you're trying to figure out what to do with the rest of your day/month/year/life, you might as well get going!

Sunday, July 29, 2012

2000 Pins...It's a virtual Bumper Sticker!!!!




2000 pins on Pinterest. What does this mean? Why do I do this? Have I lost my mind? Pinboard: "Oh, You're a Clever Girl!":


From the Pinboard: "Oh, you're a clever girl!"

Time suck? Pinboard: Eichler-ish:

Pinboard: Eichler-ish
Source: tumblr.com via Karen on Pinterest

 Pure addiction? Pinboard: Cycling, Elswhere.

Pinboard: cycling, elsewhere
Source: google.com via Karen on Pinterest


















Commodification of all that exists, good and bad? Pinboard: Objects for living in a house:
Pinboard: Objects for living in a house.
Source: tippoys.com via Karen on Pinterest


OK, OK, maybe. But here's an attempt at a sincere justification. When I pin, I pin with an agenda.  Folks who know me, know that I have a strong opinion about everything.  After all, Julie and Mary, years ago knew me well enough to give me the much-celebrated bumper sticker called: Not Neutral! Ask my Opinion!

From the board: "Thoughts whilst training: Ironman"












So this is a not-so-subtle way to attach images to thoughts, often excluding the thoughts.  Whoever sees the pin can draw their own conclusions, ponder my meaning, or go ahead and send it forward to their followers.  I love bumper stickers, so perhaps it's not such a surprise that I love Pinterest.

Pinboard: Art Cars



Given that Pinterest is an image factory, there is no avoiding the fact that most of the images found on Pinterest are very alluring ones.  Be they of clothing, travel destinations, home exterior, home interior, or celebrity, the beautiful grandiose images are robust and rampant.  The images that I choose, in my opinion, are probably just as sexy as any others, in their own way, but I'm trying to keep the images grounded in some sort of aesthetic based upon what we remember to be, sometimes with sadness and sometimes with happiness.

Pinboard: Remember when...or was it a dream?

from the board: Remember when...or was it a dream?

  Even when pinning images involving home improvement or design, I am attracted to an aesthetic that gives us a little bit of yearning for what was, or what might have been, or the dreams that we had, long ago.  I adore the board Mobile Home, for so many reasons, and I've found other sympathetic souls out there in the world.  I know that my own board dedicated to mobile homes is different from the similar boards that others have created.
Source: flickr.com via Karen on Pinterest




So what am I doing?  Am I not creating some sort of cosmic wish list for myself? Am I not recreating images that I aspire to?  What's the idea here?  I am trying to cultivate a scrapbook, a sampling of the things that really turn me on.  Take, for example, my board called "The End of Things." On this board, I've collected images of lost heroes, and lost places, even images that remind us that, as we used to hear so often: "The End is Near." Detroit Boat Club, Belle Isle, Detroit, MI.


And on and on.  This has been a terribly difficult blog post to drag together.  It's been the better part of a week, and I still feel that I can't create a story out of it, so maybe Pinterest is a lazy woman's game. A way to simply click and pin on "turn-ons" and insist my audience, however small or large, make sense of it, or just stay away from it. And so, here it is, my two thousandth pin!!! It's a repin from one of my Yarn Goddess, Heroes, Babuka Babukatorium.  This yarn bombed chair is whimsical, beautiful, something that I love and aspire to!!! And there I go, onto my own Pinboard: Yarn Factory:


Friday, July 27, 2012

The World's Largest Granny Square...it grows!!!!

The World's Largest Granny Square...it grows!!!! Oh, how I love a perfect day at the beach. Let me count the ways.  Joyce Carol Oates newest novel: Mudwoman, child playing in the water, swim to the barn & back, for me, and the absence of intense heat, bugs, and all that hype.  It doesn't get much better than this.
have crochet, have JCO, shade, water view, check!

OK, it's not as big as the largest AFGHAN, but Granny Square, for now we're making progress!

OK, ya'll time to unleash an agenda.
And it grows!!!!  But we might as well talk about something that matters, now that I've dragged you along this far.  Middle westerners take note. This is a bay in the Green Bay, of Lake Michigan.  See the water behind me?  I can personally attest to the drop in water level by the tune of 6 or more feet in our swimming area in the past 10 years.  Seriously!  So, when people start talking about losing freshwater in our incredible Great Lakes Area it is no joke.  So, summer fun aside, what can we do?  Pay attention, this matters, doesn't it?

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

What good is a triathlon without a picture of training buddy rubbing your bod into a wetsuit and abs at the finish line?




Here we go again, another triathlon...

Hardly time for a race report in ol' Door County. I love it here too much, and so little internet and computer time (thank the goddesses).  But here's a bit of the fun that was thrown my way on Sunday the 22nd.  After two weeks of "the itchiest summer in history" and no training whatsoever, I hauled my Iron-gear up to Egg Harbor and ponied up to the start line of a half-ironman.  Here I am, getting ready to start the 1.2 mile swim.  What's happening here?  Dear friend, Jim, is shoving all of myself into my wetsuit.  Obviously, Peter took the photo, so we're a wild a wacky family, but you knew that already, dear reader??? OF course! 
If it's not fun, why do it??? (Ben, of Ben & Jerry's).

 Practically six hours later and I'm done!  You wonder, LF, what happened in between....but who cares? I'm done!!!!! 17 days of de-training and I can still finish this puppy with a smile on my face and abs intact.  Lo and behold, it's a middle aged woman still having fun at her hobby!!!  Take a look at the arm coolers, my attempt to stop scratching everything that itches, and it worked!!! The only thing that itched today were my quadriceps and that subsided as soon as that nasty blister popped up on my right, then my left foot (ouch!).  It was Donegan to the rescue, again, who found me on the course and gave me his own darned socks.  Now, Tri-afficionadoes, y'all know this is DQ territory, especially as my training buddy finished 7 more miles With Me.  But heck if I care, I started with the last wave of ol' ladies at practically 9 AM and sheesh, no drafting and all I did was pass people on the bike and suffer on the run (duh, what else is new?)....so when Jimmy D. ran it in with me I called it a training workout and took it for what it was.  Another day in Beautiful Door County with great friends and wonderful family....did I mention that Peter drove up for a mere 24 hours to be with me for race day? Where on Earth did I find this man? Only surpassing Jack W. Steward himself in the arena of loyalty.  I think I'm in love, after all.
Here I go again, screaming: "wave fifteen, wave fifteen!"
Yes, just like Ridgeland Common!
 So after a crazy July, I pulled in a 13th in my division and I'll take it.  Pick up the training, run in Madison, and I've got a shot at another great Ironman.  Maybe not blistering fast, but fast enough for the unencumbered woman, right on!!!!  As Jilly says: "you really don't have to train that much."  Ha Ha, but I sure was sore the next day!
And here I am, in the Door County Special Cooling Tank!!!! Yes!!!!! Forget WTC, and go with the boutique races! Only a week ago I was arguing with a race director  about the need for ice for athletes.  We had ice ALL DAY LONG and an ice tank for the finish line.  NOW we're talking about return on those exorbitant race registration fees!








Me and Ashby, post-race. Money in the Bank.

Monday, July 16, 2012

Triathlon Spectating: an event unto itself...

It's time for the Racine 70.3 Half Ironman!  A day at the races, and it was a hot one!  I'm so grateful that I was just along for the ride, cheering friends on and enjoying a sunny summer day.  An opportunity to take a few pictures and enjoy the view.  I tagged along with friends Jilly and Beth, who are veteran Racine-racers.  Jilly has a closet full of race bling, including this light-catching medal from 1986! Yes, 1986, and she was on the podium, of course!
Racine on the Lake, 1986
It's an early day, as usual. Here are Jilly and friend Beth setting up their transition area at about 5AM.  Bikes were racked on the day prior.  All they need to do is set up their gear, lay out bike/run clothing and shoes, race number, helmet, nutrition if needed (water, gel food for ride, and anything else that they deem necessary).  This is a participant's opportunity to obsess over every tiny detail, as if they haven't done so already. It's also a great time to make sure that gearing is set properly on the bike, lest somebody jump onto a bike and attempt to ride up a hill out of transition in a difficult gear (witnessed numerous times coming out of transition).  
 And then it's sunrise time!  Racine's view over Lake Michigan on a summer morning is simply spectacular!  We sat and ate a light breakfast, chatted, got out some nervous energy and the pit crew focussed on trying to get a few good shots.
Beth's husband, Brad, had a much more impressive camera with which to photograph sunrise.
 We ran into my friend Bob Bell and his daughter, Sarah. Bob is another of the gang that I was eager to support today.  I wasn't surprised that Bob and Jilly were able to spark a conversation pretty quickly.
Bob & Jilly
 My pit crew services came in handy when I was able to spring for a coffee for Sarah & give a sip of mine to Bob.  You never know what these athletes are going to want once they've relinquished their wallets, phones, glasses and the like in order to get ready for a long day of triathlon-ing.  Nervous chatter and race planning, and then, we're off, hiking 1.2 miles up the sandy shore, because the course is a point-to-point race, necessitating that racers must walk a great distance to start line.  My friends thought that the half marathon should be shortened accordingly, but I think we all know the answer to "that" question.  Having achieved the status of an Ironman sanctioned event, this already popular event has ballooned in size in the past five or so years, as I understand.  Lucky for the athletes, there are wave starts, spread out over almost an hour, so the swim isn't too rough.  The water looked calm, but at least one companion complained that it's always too cold in Lake Michigan.  A problem answered not long after, as the temps of the ambient air rose throughout the day.
Listening to the cannon go off, to start our first racers.
 And so they're off!  Lots of fun and excitement in the air.  Me?  Enjoying the sun, before it becomes blistering-hot.  I hike back to the swim finish and prepare for my friends' water exits.  Here's one of my favorite racers of the day, Kris!!! This was her first half Iron and she trained like a superstar.  I knew she was primed for a great race.  Swimming comes easily to girlfriend, so here she is coming out of the water.
Thinking about what is ahead.

Check out the back on her!
 Here is friend Bob Bell, attempting to finish half iron at 74 years!!! A hero to many, I was eager to be a small part of his big day.  The weather was daunting, but he was energized and good to go.  His swim time gave him the assurance that he had a pretty good shot at finishing in the allotted time.
Bob must be moving so fast that I wasn't able to get his face in focus.
 After the swim I was able to jump on my cruiser bike and move around town easily.  Although too hot for racing, it was a great day for riding around, enjoying people and the race.  Downtown Racine has that incredible midwestern sadness of abandonment dabbled with spots of hopeful rejuvenation.  Lots of empty storefronts, like this grand deco store, Porter's, which I soon learned was a high end furniture company, back in the day.  Boarded up, we can only hope that the core of this truly beautiful city can sustain it's lovely architectural heritage.
Porter's Furniture Store
 Breakfast was awaiting me, at about the only open storefront, Robert's Roost, which is a bar/breakfast joint, packed with triathlon crowds and locals alike.  My new friend, Lance, is a working artist who has made his home in sleepy Racine for 30 years.  He told me all about Porter's, his foam core sculpture, and the gallery scene in Racine.
"Come back to Racine...we need more people like you."
 And it was time to haul back to our lovely race venue, jam-packed with triathletes and their posses.  I missed Jilly finishing on the bike (she's just too fast), but I saw Beth fly by with a bright red road rash on her shoulder (Beth is 56 and an absolute rock--I'm scared of her!).  Beth's husband shrugged when I acknowledged she must be tough, yeah, and a great viola teacher/player, also!!!  But I digress,  I waited around for Kris to pass on the bike, not meaning that she was far behind our veteran athletes, but she had started in a later wave.  When she turned the final corner, indicating that she was under three hours for the ride, I jumped on my own bike and hightailed it down to transition so I could cheer her on as she left the transition area.  Kris was out on the run route lickety-split and man was I proud of her!!!  Kris' run training has come a long way this year, and I've been watching her run past my house while I blog and pin and Facebook for about 7 months now!
Kris, we all love her effervescence and muscle!!!!
 Kris said she felt great and ran onward. She threw something at me, a pair of stinky sweaty cycling gloves.  I felt useful!!! It was truly wonderful to just show up and celebrate somebody else's race, also less nerve-racking!
Here, take these!!!
 So I positioned myself along the run course where I could begin to track a number of my friends.  This overlook can see mile 1, mile 5, mile 12, so a great place to be in order to get a sense of where people are/were.  Also a fabulous view of our wonderful Lake Michigan!
 I love meeting people, and it makes the blogging more fun.  A local man, a young guy, rode up on his bike and asked if anyone could watch his bike.  I said, "sure" as long as it wasn't for too long.  He jumps off his bike and heads down the giant staircase all the way to the beach.  He's going swimming, of course!!!
Hey...can you watch my bike?

There he is, in the water.
 I'm always kind of curious about the impact of thousands of triathletes and their gear and operations and families descending on little quiet beautiful places all over the world.  This was one of those moments of interfacing.  Usually, he could ride a lot closer, park his bike and get in.  He was doing his own triathlon, as far as I could tell.  Old school.

Alas. Back to my spectating work.. Here's Jilly, either about to finish or at mile 5.  I actually can't remember anymore...it was a long day with a lot of athlete tracking.  Jilly's the one with the old-school bikini. Amazing.

Second back, knee surgery this spring, Jilly is hardly running these days.  Still whip-fast.  Rock star.
 Back and forth, back and forth.  I saw most of my people, plus a lot of other area athletes that I know.  It was a lot of fun, especially when I was sitting in the shade as they shuffled and ran past me.  Unbelievable, really, the whole thing to watch when I'm not doing it.  Am I ever going to do this distance again?  Looks hard. When I had assured myself that my people were finished safely, I skipped the finish line because as the day progressed I realized that I had lost track of Bob!  I went to the finish of the bike and tried to discern when and if he had come in.  Bob's daughter was running, herself, so I had to figure it out on my own.  I rode out to the mile 2.5/8 area and stayed put, knowing that if he was out there I'd find him sooner or later.  Jilly and I set a meet-up time for 2:30, in case I couldn't find him.  Lucky, Sarah wizzed by me with a smile on her face!!! I asked her if her father was out there and she said, "yes! he'll finish!"  And then it was all gravy.  Here's Bob starting his SECOND loop of the run course, at about mile 8.
"Did you get a good picture?"  I hope so!
 I jog alongside with Bob, and get a bit of a report that he feels good and I assure that I will be cheering him on as time progresses.  I race back to the finish line to meet friends and celebrate that we've located our hero.  Kris, Jilly, Beth, and many others have finished by now and it's tough to find them in a sea of triathletes unless there is an agreed upon meeting place.  I meet Jilly and crew. They look awesome and I buy them popsicle from the ice cream guy.  I feel needed, again!  I say goodbye to awesome friends, they need to drive home and recover.  I head back out, determined to support Bob, but to also enjoy Racine.  I was wowed by the collection of beautiful midcentury homes in Racine, many overlooking the lake.
A new friend in front of this gem told me both houses next door were for sale. "buy one! come to Racnine!"

View of the lighthouse and lake from my Racine midcentury dream home.
 When Bob was coming in with about a mile left to go, I told him that I was going to get some great pictures of him running in front of the houses that I love.  Bob is an architect, and has a terrific aesthetic.  What a man!
For sale.  Bob wasn't really interested in houses today.

Moving right along.

We're joking about something. What a true gentleman.  Kind, intelligent, fierce.
 And then I say goodbye again and race ahead to the finish line.  Here he comes, and the announcer wisely announces that at 74, Bob is the oldest finisher of the race up to that time of event. Running forth, fists up, smile emerges.  Awesome!
Bob Bell!

You!

Are!

An Ironman!!!!!
 Big hugs afterwards, I said "hi" to a few of Bob's friends, and it was time for my own return to Oak Park.  As I neared my car the sun was dipping just a tiny bit behind buildings. Late afternoon, a beautiful time of day.  I get to the car, only to realize that all of my running and biking and jangling around had loosed the car key from my keychain.  No key to speak of.  So what do I do? I go to a bar, naturally.
I wondered why the joint was empty at 4.  AC and buck fifty beers?  My new friend said: "i don't think out of state athletes want to be drinking after their race"  yeah.  that's true, i agree.
 The Michigan's Pub, right across from where my car had been parked since 4:30 AM.  I ask the tender if I can hang out, charge my phone, and start making calls.  "Sure, and here's a water!"  I employ the assistance of Peter (he's driving up) after I realize that my roadside assistance can do me no help.  While I wait for Peter, I head back out into the world for one final fruitless search for my missing key.  It's the perfect time of day for  a ride, and I soak up the feel of late summer afternoon families at the beach, and the ever-beckoning lake.  I stop at the Oasis, which is the very spot that Jilly, Beth and I sat at about five this morning to gather our nerves.  This late in the day, there are lots of folks, a band, buckets of beer, and lively chatter.  I feel like dropping into the scene and hanging out, but after I check the lost and found, I'm back on my ride, north, all the way to the lighthouse.  I retrace the course of the run, and  again admire the neighborhoods.
The Oasis. Heart central of Racine Beachtime. Band, brew, brats.
 I'm especially tickled when I meet a guy in a golf cart who is picking up IM equipment.   He calls himself the race director of another major 70.3, and we get talking about the races and being middle aged in a sport of hopeful youthfulness.  We discuss the heat, and he shares a story about a racer asking for ice to cool oneself and this man insists that only enough ice is provided to cool the product that athletes will be ingesting.  That number, I learn, is 12,000 pounds of ice, in one day.  He tells me that the Mont Treblanc 70.3 is the new race to do, and I best get myself to Canada and do it soon.  I reply that I like my midwest races, and I'm racing in Door County this coming weekend.  He offers to buy me an ice cream off the truck, but I've already had a popsicle.  I decline, then am off, all the way to the lighthouse and back.  A spectacular sight at the end of the day, all detritus from Ironman mostly cleaned up, short of a few chalked signs on the road.
 Just at the edge of Racine it feels a bit like other parts of Wisconsin.  A bit rural, grass blowing in evening breeze, and some farm animals on a little plot of land.  Hard to believe I'm going to be sleeping in the big city this evening, but it's true, finally back home.  Peter arrived, I introduced him to my friend the bartender with warm goodbyes, we grabbed dinner, and drove the ninety minutes home, in our separate, bumper-sticker clad cars.  Another adventure concludes.  I'm satisfied, and ready for rest.