Easy Rider

Yesterday was my last workout before we leave for Steelhead.  My run on Wednesday felt like crap (but you’re supposed to feel like crap just before the race…right?), and I was a little nervous my bike would feel the same.  So I wasn’t particularly stoked on doing this ride.  But this week someone gave me an old pair of clip-on aerobars (the week of the race–bad idea), and I wanted to give them a try on the road before the actual race (good idea).  So around 7pm a friend and I set out for a 20 mile ride amongst the horse farms.

Kentucky isn’t the easiest place to train, especially coming from a place like San Diego or San Francisco (where yes, I realize, I was spoiled.)  Winters here can be cold and icy, and the summer heat oppressive.  There aren’t a whole lot of options for open water training, and the triathlon community is relatively small (we are, after all, the most sedentary city in the country.)

But ride or run a few miles out of the city and you find yourself on long stretches of empty, rolling country roads surrounded by miles of green hills lined with clean white fences, dotted with bales of hay and some of the most beautiful thoroughbreds in the world.

And so on this Thursday night, when I probably should have been paying attention to my heart rate and body position on the aerobars, or thinking about my strategy for this coming weekend, I found myself gliding along the hills under a pink and orange sky, chatting with my friend as the shadows got long and the sun dipped below the horizon, not looking at my watch once.

Because really, what’s the point of any of this if you can’t just enjoy the ride.

Interesting (Garden)Bedfellows

April, 2011

=

July, 2011

Morning glories next to the squash and zinnias in the tomatoes.  Makes for a colorful garden.

Speaking of tomatoes, we are overflowing with them, and they have been enormous and delicious (Paul is on a mission to can some tomato sauce…I’ll let you know how that goes).  But we have had issues with our veggies getting eaten by bugs and small animals.  Yesterday I came across this:

This tomato is bigger than my fist, and that is no small bite.  My first reaction was holy crap, that is a big animal that’s eating our produce…a possum maybe?  Meth rat?  And then…

Figures.  I guess it’s a lot easier than stealing his favorite baby carrots from the fridge.

Happy 4th!

Spike and me downtown. Attempted pic in front of a flag.

First up this muggy 4th of July: the Bluegrass 10K!

Full race report here.

Then a walk with Kristin and Spike downtown for a beer, the Lexington 4th of July parade, and some other displays of good ol’ ‘Merican culture.

(If you can’t read the shirt, it says “Infidel: Everything I need to know about Islam I learned on 9/11”.  I also stumbled across this article on Wonkette this morning.  God Bless America.)

To be fair, there was also a gay pride booth that my friend Roy was working at, and the roller derby girls had a float in the parade, so it wasn’t all anger and jihad.  Overall, it was a great day.

Happy 4th!

We’re #1…?

Time for another sidebar.  For this:

Yes, it’s another notch on the belt for Lexington, Kentucky.  Per Barefoot and Progressive (who also reported on the story):

If you’re keeping score, Lexington is now #1 in: biggest carbon footprint, sexual frustration, allergies and laziness. So if you’re into the whole coal-burning, coach potato, sneezy and celibate lifestyle, come to Lexington and join the fun! Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it. 

BUT this month we were also selected as Esquire’s most stylish state in the US.  (Yes, really).  So at least we’ll be looking good in our derby hats as we grow clots in our legs.

Full story here.

Dog days

Summer

is

here.

And with it comes 90+ degree weather plus humidity.  Fortunately we have friends with pools.  And for those of you who don’t know what Ale 8 is, you should come to Kentucky and find out.

Next post will be a full trip update, promise.

Garden update

I couldn’t even write about it when it happened like 3 weeks ago because I thought the blog would be getting too redundant, but after our last replant (after the greenhouse blew over for the second time), we had put our only surviving plants on the picnic table, and I walked outside to find said survivors spewed across the yard and Spike chomping on the biodegradable pots.  I really lost it and almost killed him, but Paul and I finally figured out a solution (5 attempts too late.)

A shelf.  In the yard.  Where the plants can get sun, and Spike can’t reach them.  Success.