Another late version of SMLR. Sunday mornings have been my sleep catch-up day, so SMLR gets bumped right. I’m still on the “post-every-week” wagon though…
//
My coffee this morning is Henry’s House of Coffee – Kenya. I ran across this coffee in Safeway, and decided to give a go. The roast is a good intermediate light-medium; it has the light roast crispness, but with a bit of that medium-roast roastiness on the back end. It is very smooth, and I think I’ll keep drinking it this week. As my coffees tend towards the light-light end of the spectrum, I’m actually enjoying this little bit of roasty variation.
Note – this is the fourth SMLR coffee review, and so far they’ve all been positive. That’s selection bias – I only drink coffees I like. But I will branch out, I will assume some risk and try new, unknown, or sketchy-looking coffees. And I will power through the occasional bad coffee, ruining my Sunday morning in the process, in order to provide you detailed reviews of what not to drink. I have a request in for chicory-coffee, so that may be coming soon.
//
I really want to try paragliding. It probably won’t happen anytime soon, but it’s on my short-list of hobbies to take up someday. I don’t think it’s really a thing in Hawaii, so it’ll likely stay in the queue while we’re there.
I have some experience skydiving, and although freefall is inherently exhilarating, I really prefer being under canopy. Paragliding is like skydiving, minus the skidiving – it’s just the under-canopy part. And the “harness” – what you sit in under canopy – is designed (in paragliding) for comfort; it basically looks like a air-filled recliner. Plus, if you do it right, I understand you can stay airborne for long periods of time. The canopies are designed to keep you up, unlike traditional skydiving canopies, which are designed to get you down. When I get a few minutes and the right environmentals, I’m going to take it up (no pun).
//
My 100 miler is this coming Friday. Thursday is a travel day, then the race starts at 6am Friday. It runs through the mountains from Logan, UT to Fishhaven ID. I may jot some pre-race thoughts down during the 2 hour flight from San Jose to SLC, and post them Thursday evening. Check back Thurs/Fri for pre-race thoughts.
Speaking of race-blogs – I recently perused some other peoples’ ultra-marathon race recap posts. I had an epiphany: race recaps are boring! It’s not boring to write, but man is it boring to read, even to a fellow runner. “I ran such and such section, legs hurt, I ate some food, I was tired, legs hurt more, etc etc etc, then I finished and was happy.” That’s pretty much all race recaps in a nutshell.
As such – I will try to mix mine up a bit in my next one and depart from the standard form race recap. I’ll still capture the experience, but in a way that is interesting to read, not just write.
//
Finley and I have a few daddy-daughter bonding activities, but her favorite by far is picking up dog poo. Or more accurately, helping me pick up dog poo. We call it Poo-patrol, and we go on patrol every few days.
We have a good division-of-labor system: she is the “searcher/locator” and I am the “scooper/bagger.” She is pretty passionate about it. It’s kind of a like an easter-egg hunt, except with unsavory, stinky, and misshapen eggs. She’s got a honed locator system, and can now discern a dry turd from a brown rock. We still haven’t quite learned that foot-stomping a dog poo does not make it go away, but we’re getting there. I realize that one day she will learn to be self-sufficient and will no longer need or want daddy’s scooper/bagger capabilities, and will set out on her own solo poo-patrols. It will be a sad but proud moment.
The dog-turd community in our backyard is pretty resilient, and regenerates itself to a healthy population size within a few days after poo-patrol clearance ops. Left unchecked, it would quickly overrun us and turn the backyard into a brown lumpy soup – like beef stroganoff but not as good. It would be a tough task for me to try to take on alone, but I have my daughter to help keep the poop in check. I don’t know what I’d do without her.
//
Podcast of the week:
American History Tellers – Cold War Series. I got turned on to this through a class I took last quarter, as a way to get smart on the Cold War for a project I was working on. The American History Tellers podcasts does several mini-series, each focused on a different theme from American history. The Cold War series is seven podcasts long, each one about 40 minutes. It is told mostly narrative-style, so it’s very easy to listen to. I think it does a good job capturing the big issues from the Cold War, which are many and complex, in a style that is easy to follow. It conveys a few things notably well: the domestic civil atmosphere in the 50s and 60s during the red scare, the second-order effects of nuclear testing and the arms race, and how it ties related themes (like civil-liberties) to the ideological contest between capitalism and communism.
Love the poo-patrol story! THAT is publishable!
Funny insight on post-race blogs. I only read yours, so I still find yours interesting. I don’t think that would be the case reading numerous blogs from people I don’t know. Guess you’ll have to pick which audience you’re writing to if you want to make it more interesting. But I also like your approach that says that you’re writing primarily for yourself, as part of your own processing. I always really like your lessons learned – both tactical and more personal at the end.
Enjoy your taper week. Talk soon. Love dad
LikeLike