Plastic Firefighter

What a weekend. Pretty busy, but fun.

Friday Sue and I went to Silver City to see Finding Nemo. After seeing how busy it was, we decided to pass, and instead rent a movie. We headed off to Cinema Star Video. We decided on The Recruit ( Colin Farrell and Al Pacino ). They had VHS in, and these empty plastic DVD containers with The Recruit labels on them. I assumed this meant you take the plastic thing to the front counter, and they will put the movie in it. Nope. You need the fancy case to get the DVD. What???? Then what are these things for ??? We ended up getting the movie from BlockBuster. It was an excellent movie by the way. Definitely rent it if you like spy movies.

Saturday I picked up my new bike (announcement coming soon), went for a short spin, got come groceries, then headed off to a BBQ to celebrate a couple birthdays (Jason’s, and Sue’s). Lots of fun was had out at Centennial Park.

Sunday Sue and Karen ran the Firefighters 10 km Trail Run. She did a great time (according to me), and I was exhausted just watching these people. We stayed for the draw prizes. Sue drew a blank, but Karen won a gift certificate to 5th St Bar and Grill. Mmmm, I love that restaurant.

Sunday afternoon was a relaxing one. Sue napped, I played video games, and worked on this site. Then to cap off a fun weekend, Sue, Krista and I went out to Maude Hunters for dinner. Yumm, good burgers.

This week coming up is a busy one. Loads of things to do every night. Who needs sleep anyway?

Foreign Whipping

Driving is a dangerous activity. As such people should watch what they are doing when driving. I know I do.

I am even more vigilant when I am in a foreign city. I just don’t know what traffic is like, I don’t know the streets, and I don’t know the intersections.

On my way to work today I nearly shmucked a lady as she rounded a corner from Douglas onto Saanich. I had the green light on the cross traffic, so I drove through the intersection. I am watching this lady come whipping though through the field sign, and I am approaching. I slow, then realize she isn’t stopping, so I jam on the brakes, and lay on the horn. She swerves right (almost hitting the curb), then hits the gas. As she hightails it out of the area, I notice that she has Oregon plates. Sheesh. Welcome to tourist season!

Proud Whoosh

Weekend wrapup:

Volleyball on the rooftop of the Strathcona was awesome. After only playing for a few minutes I had to take a quick breather and tape up my wrist. Landing on it in the sand was causing a little pain, and I didn’t want to reinjure it. After taping, all was excellent. After cleaning up and showering, the v-ballers reconvened on Todd and Lisa’s for an excellent BBQ. V-ball and BBQ were both in celebration of Todd’s birthday.

Sunday morning arrived too quickly. The alarm went off at 6 so Sue could get to her triathlon by 7. I lounged around at home a bit, then headed over to watch her race. She did great, and I was very proud of her. After the race, we went home, got cleaned up, grabbed the pooch, and headed downtown to watch the elite mens race in the Bastion Square Grand Prix. What a thrill. The guys are so powerful and fast. The noise that comes off the peleton as they zip by was amazing. It definitely sounds like a whoosh.

We grabbed some Blenz drinks (coffee for me a hot chocolate for Sue) on the way back to the vehicle, then headed home for some rest. Well, Sue rested, I worked on the computer and imported my old content.

To top the weekend off, Sue and I went to Spinnakers Brewpub for some dinner and dessert. I had an excellent prime rib dinner alongside my pint of Mitchell’s Extra Special Bitter (ESB). Mmmmm, yummy.

Blinded Cook

There almost was a Coreman sighting today. In the vicinity of Cook and Vancouver I saw the Coremobile. The goldy/bronzy metallic paint nearly blinded me.

Sue and I went to Fort St cycle for her Triathlon for Healing bike and helmet check, then it was off to Frontrunners to pick up a couple things.

Soon we are off to the Sticky Wicket for roof top volleyball. Later we are heading to a BBQ. If you think today is busy, wait until you hear about tomorrow.

Gorgeous Mishap

peace outWhat a gorgeous weekend. Yesterday was a busy one. First it was Emily’s Christening, then I was off to my photography class field trip at Beacon Hill park. For dinner Sue and I had a couple friends over. In there I also cut the grass, and tidied the house. Phew, I was beat my 10pm.

Today, Mark, Sue, Yoshi and I went for a nice easy ride at the dump. Absolutely awesome. My wrist is still a little sore from last weekends mishap, but I did my best to take it easy. I walked way more things than I would have had I been completely healed.

I hope all had a good weekend, and got outside to enjoy the weather.

Instinctively Nervous (long and painful)

Hammerfest Ten is now over and what a weekend. Shane and I headed to Nanaimo on Friday so we could do practice runs on Saturday. No problem. We got up at a reasonable time Saturday morning, made our way to the course, grabbed a shuttle, and began our day.

The first run down was a slow roll. Shane needed to see the course, and I needed to see what had changed. There were a couple new sections that were a little tricky, and the last section to the pits was brand new. Actually the end bit was pretty nasty. A sandy uphill section, that then dropped into some really loose sandy berms before a step down jump to the finish line. We headed back up for a second slightly quicker run, and I felt a bit better about the berms.

Time for the third run. I thought I would pick up my speed a little and check out some of the sections at a little more speed. We got to the top, I got on the platform to start, and off I went. Shane was to follow me a few seconds later. I started off well, and felt pretty good. I got to the ladder drop, and decided to air off the top. I landed my rear wheel exactly where I wanted, and the front touched down a millisecond later. I went to slow and turn to avoid a tree when disaster struck. My right hand slipped off the bar. I couldn’t slow, and I couldn’t steer. I headed straight for the tree. All I was thinking was “Not again!“. I was going in, and there wasn’t a thing I could do about it. I instinctively brought my hands up to protect my face. I hit the tree hard, then my bike hit, and I bounced off landing on the ground with a thud. I lay there in the middle of the trail a little stunned for a couple minutes. I wanted to get up, but I couldn’t. A couple other riders that were watching came to see if I was alright. One of them must have had some first aid experience since he was checking the bones out. I heard the other guy yell rider down, just as Shane rounded the corner. My wrist was starting to swell, and I knew I had to go get it checked out. Shane seemed pretty concerned (thanks Shane), but I told him to finish the run, and I would meet him at the bottom (I was headed to the shuttle point to take it back down).

At the bottom I got checked out by the ambulance attendant. She poked, prodded, bent, twisted, pushed and pulled on my wrist, and after each test she would say that is good (since I wasn’t screaming in pain). I got off very lucky with only a sprain. The attendant wrapped my wrist, then taped it, and told me to test it out a bit before doing another run. I had a dull ache, so I took a breather for a couple hours while I iced my wrist. I lent my goggles to Shane, and told him to do a few runs. I ended up doing two more runs later that day, and for both of them my grip was a little weaker than it should have been, but at least there was no pain.

Sunday morning arrives, and I am tired, and more than a little sore. Shane and I are slow to get going, and that turned out to be a very bad thing. We got to the site, just in time to miss the last shuttle to the pits. We needed to get our mandatory training run in by 10, and it was around 9:30. Crap! We had to hoof it up to the pits pretty quickly. We then barged through the shuttle line, and crammed ourselves into the cube van. The van dropped us off at 9:55. We still had to get to the top of the course by 10. We hustled, and got there just in time. I finished suiting up, then ripped down the course. I felt pretty good about that run, so we waited at the bottom for our start time.

Race time approacheth. We jumped into the cube van for the last time. We got to the top with plenty of time to spare. We sat, rested, ate, and drank. Setting the gear up one last time for one last run. My race face comes on when I get into the line up for the starting gate. I down my PowerGel, snug up the straps on my pads, don my gloves, and flex my fingers to get some warmth. I set my bike in the right gear. A nervous energy fills me. Shane gets up on the starting block, the beeps count down, and he is away. I climb up, and mount my bike. One last time I flexed my sore wrist. It felt pretty good. I knew it only had to last at most 5 minutes longer.

All too soon the countdown beeps start. I think “wow that was quick”. I set my mind, I focus my stare, and I launch down the start ramp. The first little jump I get too sideways, and almost go off course. I curse myself to stay focused, and I slip in a couple pedal strokes. The ladder ramp/launch that I messed up the day previous is nearing, and I instinctively tap the brakes to slow. I curse myself, and move my fingers off the brakes, I pull up off the ramp, land, slow a bit, and slither past the tree that claimed me the day before. Yay! With that roadblock out of the way I pick up speed. I conserve energy where I can, but still keep my speed up. I near the first road crossing, and prepare for the drop. I messed up, and ended up way over to the left on the road crossing, so I hit the binders hard, and lean to the right. I dropped off the far side of the road, nicely lined up for the mud pit. I got sucked into one hole pretty bad, and I lost a lot of momentum. A few pedal strokes later I was again hurtling down the course. Over a couple jumps, around a few turns, and I was back into the trees. Over the rutty roots, and ahead is my least favorite corner of the run. I messed up badly. The turn before I needed to put my right foot out to save my balance. This meant I was ill prepared for the sharp left. As quick as I could I rolled the bike to the left, got my right foot on the pedal, and stuck out the left foot to push myself around the corner.

With that out of the way I pedal some more, do a couple drops, prejump the nasty rock garden, the drop to the right of a gap jump. Railing the berm I pedal hard to get through a bumpy section. Cutting the corners I try to make the straightest line possible, but by this time my thighs are burning. The first of the uphill climbs is right ahead. I sit and pedal hard as I ascend the ladder bridge. As I near the crest I am about to downshift, but I realized I was too far to the right, and I wouldn’t be able to make the corner which was fast approaching. Right at this instant my front tire washes out off the course, and I go down. I jump up, grab my bike, and run to the top of the hill. I jump back on and get set for the off camber rooty turn that is next. As I approach it I find my brake lever is twisted up from the crash. I bang on it to get it back in place while rolling down the course. I come to the third road crossing, and I almost had enough speed for the stepdown. In the back of my mind I hear Sue and Cathy cheering and yelling. I hear them say my name, but I was too focused to look around. Across the road, down the other side, and back into the trees.

Down, the up. There is the log crossing that claimed me a couple years ago. I am still feeling pretty good. One last road crossing, and one last uphill. This one is killer. The rain has helped pack it down, but it is still pretty loose. I keep up my speed, and wait until I can do some good pedaling. I crest the hill, shift up one gear, head past the nasty log (last one yay!), then into the berms. I managed to upshift again, but I should have gone up two or three times. I exit the berms, lift off the lip, get a little squirrely, launch the best I can over the last step down, then pedal as fast as I can across the line ( here is where I needed the extra high gear).

My time was 4:33.57, and I placed 22 out of 28. When all is said and done, my race run was definitely my quickest run on the weekend. I am happy with it, but reading back on this, there is definitely room for improvement. I had a good time this weekend, but I am a little stiff and sore today (especially my wrist). I may head home early today and ice my wrist.

Coaster Casing

Last night was supposed to be an easy ride to loosen the legs. It turned out to be much, much more. I met up with Shane and company whose destination was Sofa King. I had been to the trail many times before, but I am not a big fan of gap jumps. I decided to give a couple of the smaller ones a try. Hmm, I think I can now see why people like them so much! When you nail one, there is no other feeling like it. It is almost like a roller coaster cresting a hill. You feel the upwards motion, you feel a little weightlessness, then you feel a downward motion. There is no hard impact like doing a regular drop.

For me the hard part is getting over the hole in the middle. I am worried about coming up short on the gap, casing, and hurting myself. I rarely give myself enough credit for the skills I have. Maybe some day I will do all of Sofa King from top to bottom. I am almost ready!

Why was the ride so good? I am not entirely sure. It felt great to be on my bike again. My bike itself felt great. My cardio was hurting a little. It had to be the shoes. I bought new shoes for riding while I was in Kelowna, and they were amazing. I am not sure if they are a little too big or not. Haven’t decided. They certainly stick to the pedals though. Wow. I need to decide if I want to race in them though. I will probably do my practice day in them and see how it goes.

I am ready for Hammerfest. My bike is prepped, my gear is cleaned, and mentally I think I will do fine. My main goal is to go an have fun! I am definitely ready for fun.