weekend


26
Jan 14

Out for a Sunday ride

Worked in a fun little 26 mile route this afternoon. It was a crisp, sunny and beautiful day for a ride. These are base miles or reacquainting myself with the saddle miles. Probably more of the latter, sadly. But great fun anyway!

Ren

(I should take more photos while I’m riding. I see other people’s shots — a guy who works for Apple and a newspaper editor I know are big culprits — and wonder how they do this, ride for as long and as hard as they want to, and then stop and take some incredible shots. Those are from Angelo Calilap, the guy who works for Apple, who is also a bike racer. And then he finds someone else’s beautiful cycling shots and says inspires him “to want to bring another camera other than my iPhone during a bike ride.” Like I’m carrying a real camera on my bike. Like I’m going to actually build up some momentum approaching respectable, see some nice view and then stop. I need my momentum! But I see those pictures and I want to go ride again. How’s right now for you?)

We worked our way through the back of the neighborhood, down one half of the time trial route and then past the city limit sign. We went by all of the shopping, through a sleepy little stretch of road that really lets you work out your legs and then down, down to a creek bed.

Ren

Which only means you have to come back up. And it feels like a long way up. It isn’t, really, numerically speaking. But I’m not a climber. And so when you crack on the first hill, know you have to still turn right and go up another one … well … I should be a better climber.

Ren

Thing I learned on the bike today: A few doughnuts and a banana are not good fuel.

I knew this already, but it is good to reinforce the basics.

Other thing I reinforced on the bike today: I enjoy riding my bike with her, especially on days when I can actually keep up. I even passed her a few times today, hence the pictures.

We were almost home and she said she had a craving for broccoli and brussel sprouts. She also remembered the rule about doughnuts and a banana. So we had vegetables for dinner. Is that something else worth learning? Eat what you crave on the bike?

May have to test that idea.


25
Jan 14

Photo week – Saturday

That was meant to be tongue-in-cheek, about the classy parties that we go to. We visit friends who have other friends over for dinner. Last night it was tacos. It happens to be that the friends are all thoughtful, learned people. I sit and listen a lot. Also, I nod.

And then we play a board game, just to shake things up. This can go on for a while. It is all good fun, and then it is time to go home.

On the way back last night we talked about karaoke.

karaoke

We discovered this channel on the cable system sometime around the holidays. Karaoke on demand. Now there’s an idea whose time has come. You just scroll through a list of dozens or hundreds of options and then you realize how off key you are, in the private, forgiving confines of your own home.

School work today. School work tomorrow. School work from here on in. I start back next week. Should be fun!


19
Jan 14

Catching up

The weekly post that allows for older photographs that haven’t landed anywhere yet. Easy Sunday? You bet.

This is my grandmother. She was pretending to fuss at her granddaughter, so I could send her this picture. She doesn’t know how it all works, but she thought it was neat that I could show her pictures of her granddaughter’s children on my phone. She’s a sweetheart:

grandmother

My grandmother has always been a big advocate of salve. Got a cut? Let’s put some salve on it. Burn your hand on the stove? Here, let me get the salve. Have a splinter? I have a salve for that. Concussion from a high impact fall? Don’t you want me to get the salve? Got a blister? Salve. Traumatic amputation? Here’s the salve.

So when I saw this at a store over Christmas, and it had her name on it and everything …

salve

I also saw this around Christmastime, I think. Next year I’m picking some up for gifts:

Chia

Next week may be a bit slow around here, but there will be something every day. So thanks for coming, thanks in advance for even more patience with what you find here. But please do stop by when you can.


18
Jan 14

Pink and purple

Yesterday was something of a trying day. We were holding vigil with friends all over the country as their little girl fought for her life. This adorable little 3-year-old suddenly got ill. It seems the first hospital missed something big and by the time the next morning rolled around bad had gone to worse and now tragic.

It has shown the best of us, though. People who are hurting for their friends now suddenly dealing with this huge hole in their world. And strangers who are generous because they read a good appeal and they saw a few beautiful photographs. Folks who empathized, maybe, because it could have been their child. In two days the Internet has helped raise almost $50,000 for that family’s hospital bills. You people are quite remarkable.

We’d ordered some things on Amazon to have shipped to them at the hospital. And then suddenly the facts on the ground made the shipment seem inappropriate, so we tried to cancel them. Four items were in the pipeline. I called Amazon, and Rachel told me that they have a half-hour cancellation policy. However, she was able to cancel three of the orders while we were on the phone. This, I thought, was great. The fourth item, though, had already passed Go. She contacted the merchant and the shippers this morning and got that item stopped. Amazon and Rachel didn’t have to do that, but they did. And she called to tell me about it this afternoon.

(Also, we spend so much time complaining about customer service, we should compliment the good examples, too.)

We ran today. I got in 4.25 miles, chasing The Yankee around the local running trail and down an adjoining road. I outran two horses. Of course they were being walked, slowly, but let’s not concentrate on that.

Also, at the pool yesterday, I swam 1.29 miles. Swimming is supposed to be mentioned in yards. I count it in laps. My online tracker uses miles. It was 2,250 yards if you’re interested.

Most important was that I did half of that freestyle. That’s 1,125 yards. My shoulder isn’t limiting me. Muscle fatigue, that’s a different story. Also, there was an Olympic swimmer on the pool deck. And I was told that my stroke looked good.

The Olympian didn’t say that, but it is pretty awesome when it reads that way, right?

Things to read … which even Olympians care about.

Alabama looks for next generation of farmers:

Farming and forestry are big business in Alabama. Combined, they account for nearly 12 percent of all of the state’s economic activity.

But after generations of change, the state’s bell cow industries may need some nurturing.

Over the past half century, the number of Alabama farms has dwindled from about 250,000 to around 60,000. Large farming operations have thrived but many medium-sized, family farms died away, said Alabama Cooperative Extension System Director Gary Lemme.

Department of Justice finds conditions at Julia Tutwiler Prison to be unconstitutional:

The U.S. Department of Justice said today that conditions at Julia Tutwiler Prison violate the Constitution, citing what it called “a history of unabated staff-on-prisoner sexual abuses and harassment.”

DOJ sent investigators to Tutwiler last April and reported their findings in a 36-page letter to Gov. Robert Bentley.
“The women at Tutwiler universally fear for their safety,” the report stated.

The New York Times’ Most Popular Story of 2013 Was Not an Article:

Think about that. A news app, a piece of software about the news made by in-house developers, generated more clicks than any article. And it did this in a tiny amount of time: The app only came out on December 21, 2013. That means that in the 11 days it was online in 2013, it generated more visits than any other piece.

I’ll repeat: It took a news app only 11 days to “beat” every other story the Times published in 2013. It’s staggering.

You don’t know them, but do a little dance — or a few burpees, she liked burpees — for ZB and her parents. Pink and purple were her favorite colors. Wearing those might be a nice touch.


12
Jan 14

Catching up

These are a little bit old, from Christmas, but there’s no time like the present.

We did a Christmas event at my great-grandparents’ home. They’re both gone now, but there are still family events and kids and life and presents and running water and things. This is right above the steps on their side porch, where everyone entered, into the kitchen:

nails

I always wondered what kind of wood they used there. It has aged well, considering how long the house and that porch have stood there. I like to thing that worn away spot is a sign of many happy visits to see good people.

Years ago I got my first real camera for Christmas and I shot some of the first rolls of film here. As we left after this particular Christmas event I made sure to notice with much happiness, and relief, that the old dinner bell was still in the yard. That was one of those first pictures. When I was being “artistic” or something. And now, here I am, taking pictures of nails on my phone.

My grandfather pulled out some old pictures he’d found while working his way through his parents things. This is the first one he pulled out. It isn’t exactly crisp. I didn’t have a scanner in my pocket and had to make do with a picture of a picture. He said it was all gone now. He didn’t know who the man was and the only thing that might be left, anywhere, was the plow over to the left margin.

Even still, I couldn’t help but look at every barn from here to there and wonder:

photo

I asked him if he’d thought about taking these photographs to church. It is a community that has stuck together quite nicely over the decades. Maybe someone there would recognize an old family face. He didn’t seem too optimistic:

photo

When you look at the entire series of photographs he’d found, in the nice crisp shots under better light, you could tell that a lot of the same faces kept popping up. So these are people somewhere in his family. In this picture two or three of those faces have similar features to some people he knows:

photo

This is that same family. The original shot is fairly blurry, too. But they’d gotten out, put aside their chores and put on a nice jacket and went and stood outside the homestead for this shot. Now no one knows who these people are anymore, which is somehow both sad and a happy mystery.

Probably they are in Alabama here. Most of my families, I’ve found, settled here before it was a state, which of course pre-dates photography of this kind. If not in Alabama, these ghosts are more-than-likely standing in Tennessee.

photo

Even still, there are family events and kids and life and presents and running water and things. It takes more than nails to hold a place together, to allow for the time to wear down that solid wood.