Year End Post

Japanese Garden Bridge

The photo with this post is of a bridge. It is symbolic of the journey we take tonight, from one year to the next. It is a crooked bridge, for a crooked path. It is a path more across time than space. So, goodbye 2011 and hello, 2012! We’ll see you all on the other side. Alright, enough of this metaphysical mumbo jumbo, let’s get back to the real world. Let’s go to where the rubber meets the road, the bike tire rubber that is.

Anne and I launched towards the park, but our goal was Lafayette Park and Park Avenue Coffee. Our mission was to deliver a Christmas present to Kubie. Anne had knitted her a hat. We got there early and had pumpkin spiced lattes to while away the time. Mission accomplished, we headed for home. Have I left anything out? Oh yeah, there was our little run-in with the law.

This being New Year’s Eve the SLPD and likely all law enforcement agencies are on heightened alert. On our out-bound leg we were not, but we should have been. We were cruising east on Clayton Avenue, passing by the Barnes Hospital complex, which is always a ghost town on a Saturday. We came upon a stop sign, looked around, but didn’t see anyone. So, we did what we always do, we made a Saint Louis stop and just rolled right through it without actually stopping. We should have checked six, because right behind us was a SLPD patrol car. He chirped his siren, rolled down his rear window and as he moved on, let his canine partner chew us out. Whoop! Woof! Woof! Don’t let the dogs out! Whoop! Woof! Woof! Who let the dogs out? So if you are going out tonight, drive carefully.

We rode 27 miles today, which is longer than we normally ride, and is also counterintuitive to our expected goal of staying up to midnight tonight. The reason for this exercise was to give Anne 2150 miles for the year. And me? In short, I don’t know. At the beginning of the year, I made the zen-like decision not to record my miles for the year. This is the first time for that in seventeen years. Anne thinks that she has more miles than I and she may be right, I just don’t know. If she is right, then this would be the first time for that in seventeen years too. As a new years resolution, I promise to record my miles next year. This ought to keep those of my bike buddies happy. I’m speaking of the sub-genre know as the mileage weenies. Happy New Year all!

Bird Call, Roll Call

The Bird Paparazzi send the Northern Shovelers to flight

Friday, Anne and I drove up to the Riverlands Migratory Bird Sanctuary. Starting out, the day seemed warm, in the fifties, but it was also very windy, with gust up to 40 MPH. When we started out, our little iPhone Weather Channel App said that the temperature was fifty-three and that it felt like fifty-three. This was not true. Maybe they don’t bother to compute windchill when the temperature is in the fifties, but I think that they should.

Anne compiled the following list of the birds that we saw, a count estimate for each species and sighting details where applicable. I should say, to be more accurate, this is the list of birds that she saw. I missed many of them, while trying to operate my camera. She’s got a little list, a very little list, a list of the sanctuary’s birds that we did not miss.

  • Seagulls – The most common and most active of all the birds that were sighted
  • Pelicans – Two or three
  • Great Blue Herons – Three or four, they looked skinny next to the Canada Geese
  • American Kestral – One, it was hovering over a field, hunting, faced into the wind, but we never could make out any facial marks
  • Northern Shovelers – Several (Six are pictured above)
  • Goldeneye – Several
  • Bald Eagles – Two for sure, we saw them together, possibly more, we saw them all day
  • Trumpeter Swans – Two dozen or more, most of them coming in at sunset, Honk! Honk!
  • Canada Geese – Lots of them
  • Mallards – Several
  • Cormorants – Half a dozen

We did a tour through the Riverlands, never straying too far or too long from the warmth of our electric car/blind. Anne says we saw two eagles, “for sure”, but I think that it was more likely several times that, but she is the Count and she vill count the eagles.

After a while, we decided to do lunch. We ducked across the river to Alton, IL and My Just Desserts. We were going to go to Fast Eddie’s Bon Air, a biker bar, (the leather kind, not the spandex) with Dave, but he had gone MIA the night before. At My Just Desserts, Anne saw two people that she had worked with at the Corps and I saw a woman who I work with. Is Saint Louis really this small a town, or have we lived here too long?

After our late lunch, we returned to the Riverlands, to await the Trumpeter Swans return at sunset. We staked out our spot overlooking one of the inland sloughs. They came at sunset, from out of the north, which happened to be the wind’s direction. They came on fast like a down bound barge, overshot the slough, circled and then landed into the wind. The low light combined with the high-speed action proved too much for me and my camera.

They were still coming in as we left the Riverlands after sunset. It was still fifty-three too, but it didn’t feel like fifty-three to me. The boys were home when we returned and we had our first family dinner together since Christmas.

What I did on Christmas Vacation

So, what did we do this holiday week? The short answer is, not much. With everyone home this week and off from school or work, we should have more to say for ourselves then we do, but that’s life. Since this is my first real extemporaneous blog post this week, so let’s have at it.

We went to see the new Sherlock Holmes movie. It was very Steampunk. For the unenlightened, Steampunk is a sub-genre of science fiction, fantasy, alternate history, and speculative fiction. Steampunk involves a setting where steam power is still widely used, like Victorian era Britain. It was also very action oriented and not particularly cerebral, like Sherlock Holmes is supposed to be. The Esquire was also charging “special” holiday prices, $12.50. Fortunately, we had free tickets and gift cards from work, lucky us! Anne and Dave liked the movie. I found it meh, but I’ll probably watch it again, when it comes out on DVD. At least now, I can check off the holiday movie box.

Anne and the boys got to visit the Floss Nazi this week. “Ve have ways of making you floss.” I visited her last week. “Is it safe?” I got Dave’s car checked out and the da boyz need to get new glasses. This will have to pass for housekeeping.

We biked. Since the Cyclopath post, I biked 16 miles by myself on Wednesday; Anne was still suffering from her turn in the chair, with the Floss Nazis’ enhanced interrogation techniques, so begged off. “Is it safe?” “Is what safe?” It was way nicer weather than the previous day’s ride and I saw plenty of other bicyclists.

Thursday, we biked together and got 20 miles. This time it was my turn to feel punked out. “Is it safe?” “Yes, it’s safe!” “Is it safe?” We had lunch at Local Harvest, on Morgan Ford, near Arsenal. Believe it or not, we enjoyed patio dinning in late December. Afterwards, we toured the Botanical Gardens. Anne took the photograph of bamboo in the Chinese Garden. Anne also embarked upon an alphabet quest. Her quest involves finding shapes in the real world that look like the letters of the alphabet. This is not our original idea; we’ve seen examples at art fairs. Anne has a quest for a particular word or phrase. Can I have Words for $20? Look for it in the future.

Purdue beat Western Michigan this week, in the Little Caesar’s Bowl, in Detroit, but we ordered Imo’s Pizza instead. Yes, we now have another Big Ten school to root for against Ohio State. How many does that make now, eleven, or twelve? Imo’s is archetypical of Saint Louis style pizza, thin crust, square of cross-hatch cut, and with a sweet cheese topping. It is the square beyond compare.

In truth, it is only Friday morning and I have another holiday day weekend stretching out before me. So don’t give up hope on us yet, we may yet do something blog-worthy this holiday break. Afterall, to paraphrase Scarlett O’Hara, tomorrow is another blog post.

2012 Calendar

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I made a calendar for 2010, but I never got around to finishing one for this year. I have made one for 2012. It uses some photographs that were taken in 2010 and some from this year. This post’s slideshow has the calendar’s cover art and each month’s main picture. New to this calendar that the 2010 one didn’t have are smaller photos, generally three per month that adds a lot more character to this product that the older one didn’t have. Also new to this calendar are the birthdays for most of the recipients. I’ll try to do better next time and get everyone’s. The final thing that I’ll need to add next time is at least a caption, if not an explanation, for the main photos. Until then, here is the explanation for the 2012 calendar’s photographs:

  • Cover – Header Sunset: Readers might recognize this photo as the one that graced this blog as the header photograph for most of this year. It is of course a cabin sunset. I could have made an entire calendar out of sunsets, but I limited myself to two, plus one sunrise.
  • January – Trumpeter Swans: These swans winter here near Saint Louis. They are the largest waterfowl in North America. This photo was shot at the Riverlands.
  • February – The Three Sisters: These three rocks are part of the Missouri Botanical Garden’s Japanese Garden. I think that the Japanese Garden looks prettier in winter than at any other time. Anne shot this photo and many of the other photos that appeared in the calendar.
  • March – Song Sparrow: This is a recent Riverlands photograph. I saw it sitting on the guard rail, and using the Prius as a blind, I electric glided up to it. The snap of the camera’s shutter startled it and it flew away.
  • April – Elephant Seal: Año Nuevo State Park is located just north of Santa Cruz, California. It is the mating and calving grounds for the Elephant Seal. A German tourist couple steered me to this seal. I got to within 50′ of it for this picture. It was sleeping when I approached, but woke up for the shot.
  • May – Pagoda Circle Sunrise: This sunrise bike ride photo was featured in my first post to be promoted on the WordPress Freshly Pressed web page. That was a giddy weekend of viral fandom.
  • June – Cabin Parking Lot: Look up! Sometimes you’ll see the most amazing things.
  • July – Cone Flower: Ubiquitous, in our front yard, this colony flower comes im many different colors.
  • August – Swimmer’s Sunset: Yep, that’s me in the picture. Who else could it be? No one else ever swims in the lake these days, except for polar bear Val. 😉
  • September – Water Lily: This is my favorite photograph of the bunch. It has perfect light, color and focus. Well, pretty good light color and focus, the best that I can do.
  • October – King Vulture: Taken in the Saint Louis Zoo’s Bird House, this bird is part weird and part creepy.
  • November – Maple Leaf: Color, light and detail made this photograph. You can’t really see the detail in the slideshow, but trust me it’s there.
  • December – Skating Santa: This is a great Christmas shot from last year. This year, on Christmas Eve, we saw Santa bicycling to the ice rink. Biking, skating, he has to do something to work off all those cookies.

My Wife, the Cyclopath

Anne has bicycled more than 2,000 miles this year. This is more miles that she has ridden in any year since 1982, the year of our Great Adventure. That year we rode over 5,000 miles, but we took off from work for six months and were also about thirty years younger. Last year, she rode 1,000 miles, which begs the question of which kind of progression will she shoot for next year, arithmetic or geometric? With an arithmetic progression, her goal would be an ambitious 3,000 miles, but with a geometric progression, her goal would be a truly cyclopathic 4,000 miles. Whatever she decides on and then does, I’ll be there for her. I’ll ride with her. I’ll support her. I’ll be her domestique and she can be my peloton leader.

Throughout our life together, Anne and I have traded off the lead in our cyclogical partnership. She started it all with her ’72 bicycling vacation to Great Britain. During college, our cycling enthusiasm seemed to wane. When we moved to Saint Louis in ’80, new friends combined with organized rides culminated in the Great Adventure of ’82. Then came child rasing and another lapse. In 1996, my brother Chris sold me his old bike and I started riding again. Anne was left home with the boys, a bike widow, while I rode off to the park each day. Soon, I had bike buddies, most of them were actually old friends that had also discovered bicycling. This led to riding the MS-150, Team TWA, and finally Team Kaldi’s. When Anne started attending the team potlucks, the allure of bicycling proved too much to resist. Five years ago, most of the time that I rode, I rode alone. Now, most of the time that I ride, I ride with her.

During my years of riding alone, I developed this cyclogical test for sanity. Simply put, if I saw six or more other cyclists out on a ride, I was sane. Less than six, well then, I had cyclogical issues. Anne and I rode in the park. It had snowed overnight, but by afternoon, the roads and bike path were clear. It had turned cold and blustery, but we launched towards the park. We hadn’t seen any other cyclists, when we turned towards home. Climbing Skinker, we did see two, including one bombing crazily downhill with two blazing LED headlights. We stopped at Kaldi’s, on DeMun and saw a third rider. While we were still three under par, what had started to look like an act of insanity, had turned into a coffee shop ride. I married a cyclopath, but I am one too.

2011 – Our Year In Review

It is customary, at this time of year to take stock in life and review the passing year. These annual compilations don’t tend to announce any new news, but do serve the useful purpose of review, just in case you missed something. Hopefully, most readers will find this exercise instructive.

Now class, when I say, “ready to teach”, you say, “ready to learn”. Ready? “ready to teach”, “ready to learn”, “ready to teach”, “ready to learn”, “ready to teach”, “ready to learn”. That was great class, so let’s begin teaching and learning.

Compiling the above twelve representative photos, I’ve noticed this trend in my life that my most interesting activities occur in the warmer months. I attribute this to my winter habit of hibernation. Most representative of this behavior, was last February’s storm damage. I slept through the storm. Realization of the damage only dawned the next morning, while looking out the front windows, at the crowd of neighbors that had gathered to gawk.

The placeholders for March and December are just that. December’s photo at least is inline with the retrospective theme of this post, but March, with its dullness, is just mocking me. In real life, January was just as dull, but in the virtual world of this blog, it came alive. Anne’s cousin Mac, asked me to post about his friend, Raymond Davis. They were bike buddies and Mr. Davis was in the news. He was being held captive in Pakistan, as a CIA spy. This one post garnered quite a few hits. Most of the comments made were supportive of Davis, but some were not. I elected not to publish those comments.

The most sorrowful event of 2011, was the passing of my mother, in May. She had been ill for some time, so it was not unexpected. She lived a full life that involved travel around the world. My father’s photo of my mother, epitomizes this and captures the moment, as they float together in a hot air balloon above the Serengeti at dawn. She is missed by her husband, her three sons, two daughters-in-law three grandsons, and many friends.

Our two sons, Dan and Dave, the artist and the engineer, are in graduate school this year. At year’s end, Dan has one more semester to go at CalArts, for his Masters of Art, and Dave has one semester down and TBD to go at Purdue, for his Doctorate, in biomedical engineering. Also this year, Dan had a summer internship at Ox-Bow, in Saugatuck and Dave finished up a year-long internship at NIH.

The summer months were full of travel, mainly to Michigan. In preparation for these travels, we bought a Prius. Prius, iPhones and Lattes, we have arrived. Anne, Jay and Carl left for Michigan first, by way of Tennessee, not exactly a shortcut. I eventually arrived on the shores of Gitchy Gumee, but then only briefly. We headed down-state to the Indiana line, left the Prius with Dan and proceeded to bicycle up the Lake Michigan coastline to the Mackinac Bridge, some 500 miles, with 500 friends, some from Saint Louis, most new to us. It was a great time and put us in fine fettle for our annual MS-150 bicycle ride, in September. Also in September, on one of our local rides to the park, Anne had opportunity to rescue a balloonist, she really threw herself into the task.

So, another year has come and gone. I’m older and wiser now, well, at least older. 2011 was a year marked with loss, but it also showed signs of promise. Near the end of their season, this year’s Saint Louis Cardinals miraculously came alive. They went on to capture the championship, but not before passing through the fire that was the 6th game of the World Series. That game was probably the most excruciating and delightful that I have ever seen.

At year’s end, we find ourselves thankful for what we have, family and friends and the good health to enjoy both. We are mindful for what we have lost, but also remember what we once had. At the cusp of the new year, we are hopeful for what it might bring.