Saturday, March 31, 2007

Soccer Game

First soccer game of the season today for M. 8:15 on the field for warmups. Perfect weather. (Click for big.)

100 touches drill.

Shot on goal! M in a pack at the front.

More attacking.

Prettiest goal of the day. A wonderful cross by the boy at the far left. Half a second later the ball was in the net.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Trail riding



With the wet season mostly behind us in the Bay Area, and drier this year than most, my attention is turning to trail riding. This summer I'll be picking up a new 29er frame in the UK. While collecting parts for this project, I'm increasingly daydreaming about forest rides, and yesterday I had a chance to act. I stripped the fenders off my Peugeot in order to make way for fatter tires. 55 mm IRC Notos were perhaps 2 mm too wide, so I settled for 44 mm Mythos XC tires. I headed out from Alameda through Oakland streets using the 37x15 gearing, heading for the bottom of Joaquin Miller Rd. An online preview had piqued my interest around trails riding in Joaquin Miller Park, an Oakland city park I often ride past while riding up Butters Rd and Skyline Blvd. There's an apparently out-of-date map on the web. I printed it but didn't take it along, believing a ranger hut near the entry to the park would have fresh ones. But I entered the park from the back side and missed the hut, riding up the very steep access via the bottom of Sanborn Dr. instead of the top. Huffing to a stop at the Nursery plot, I asked for advice from a volunteer who was tending the gardens. "Do you know the name of the nearest trail?" - I asked, hoping to re-orient myself. "Do I?!" came the response, "I've hiked every trail in this park with a GPS device to generate a new map." And she had a draft printout in the shed that I was allowed to take with me, a map with much helpful detail. Switching to 37x18 gearing via the flip-flop hub, I set off on a loop on the Sunset Trail, then N on the Bayview-Sequoia Trail, hike-a-biked down the Chaparral Trail, and finished near Lookout Point with a view across the Bay. I had great fun. It was excessively sunny as I left Alameda, and I worried that I was overdressed, but halfway up the hills to the park the fog rolled in. It would have been cool under the trees but for my level of exertion. The Bayview trail was the highlight, following the contour halfway between ridgetop and creek below, fully in trees with occasional peeks across the bay. On my way down the steepest bits I was passed by a mountain unicyclist riding a very fat tire and accompanied by his two dogs. He rode down trail sections that were impassable on bicycle and challenging on foot. When he stopped to rest he drew an interested crowd, me included.

I'll be coming back to explore more trails in this hidden gem.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Elijah, SF Symphony & Chorus

Last night C. and I attended a special dress rehearsal of Mendelssohn's oratorio, "Elijah", performed by the San Francisco Symphony and Chorus. Special, in that only contributors were invited - even our small annual donation qualified. Former SFS director Herbert Blomstedt conducted. The chorus' sound was a little muddy in Part 1, and the dynamic range wasn't strong enough. But Part II was a different story. The chorus sounded much crisper in the energetic choruses, sweet and angelic in the redemtive movements. The highlights of the night were two of the four soloists, Juliane Banse (soprano) and Alan Opie (baritone.) She was captivating to watch - how did such a penetrating sound come from such a slight body? She had ease reaching high notes and put her whole body into phrasing, often rising onto her toes. He had a dramatic voice and face, full of percussive force during Elijah's more dramatic pronouncements. Both were obviously engaged by the whole work, either acknowledging with glances contributions by chorus or instruments, or joining their voices to the choral parts from their seats downstage. To top it all off, the first chair cellist added a vibrant accompaniment to one of Elijah's late arias. We entered the hall drained from a long day and full week, but left full of zip after the close.

Elijah is one of my favorite works, and I think Part II deserves a permanent place on my music player.

Wednesday, February 21, 2007

Jet Blue

(email to JetBlue customer service)

I saw an AP story (published today in the SF Chronicle) that finished with a sentence from an "industry expert" decrying your new customer bill of rights policy as setting a bad precedent for the industry.

On the contrary, I think your move is a very positive development for the industry. We'd be lucky if it became a precedent. Meanwhile, I have been impressed with the service level and price points offered by JetBlue, notably your service between Oakland and Boston. In addition to the inflight experience, I have been assisted by unusually capable and friendly staff on every occasion where I have phoned your company. While the experience of travelers during the recent storm clearly highlights deficiencies that I hope you will be able to address, I'm proud to place my business with a company that responds the way you have - taking the high road for customer service. Yesterday I booked new travel on Jet Blue.

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

Unidentified Bicycle Object

I rode my fixed Bike Friday to work today. This is my most minimalist bicycle - front brake only, low bars, no attachments on the braze-ons, no bags or fenders. My route takes me through a wide-open parking lot of a local home supply store. I homeless man was toting four bags of empty aluminum cans; I passed through the parking lot about 20 yards away from him. I guess my setup looked a little unusual - 6 ft guy on a tiny-wheeled bicycle whizzing by. From over my shoulder I heard him exclaim loudly and with enthusiasm: "Hay-ell, well god-DAMN!"

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Can we just get along

Car & bike episode. Riding home from work I reach a newly-installed light alongside a railroad crossing. Left turn lane and separate left-turn signal. I wait through one light cycle, then realize that this is not a loop detector light and my presence at the signal won't induce the left signal to go green. As the last light in the sequence passes to yellow, I jump into the intersection and turn left before the cars entering the intersection from the right have a chance to react to their new green light. I cross the tracks and turn right into the next street. I'm coming off a street with a major bike lane and entering a bike boulevard. I don't hold up any car traffic during this maneuver.

Nevertheless, as I make that last right turn, I hear a driver yelling "generally people wait for a green light before proceeding." I instinctively flap my hand in his direction, in a "blah, blah, blah" signal - keep talking, I'm riding.

A few yards later I wish I'd asked him to pull over and talk instead of doing a shoutby. He's peeved because I'm just another law-breaking bicyclist. I want him to appreciate that he wouldn't be so jazzed either about having to wait through endless light cycles without ever getting a green. My maneuver is reasonable and doesn't hurt anyone. Perhaps it was a passing opportunity for some understanding?

....ever the optimist.

Sunday, February 04, 2007

Kids on Skis

We're back from a weekend at Lake Tahoe, setting for the cub scouts' Winter Camp. All but the upper third of our state has had a dry winter, so when packing for the trip I even wondered whether there was any sense to packing snow gear. Luckily we did. The pass in Tahoe and the peaks around the lake were only lightly touched by snow - cross country skiing was out - but many of the skiing resorts with snow-making had some snow, and when you start the weekend expecting nothing, this turns out to be a pleasant surprise. Not a bad weekend to be up there, with many staying away because of the poor conditions, and others kept home with Super Bowl plans.


On Saturday H and M were easily talked into trying skiing. The engaging staff at the children's ski school swept them up in the adventure, and soon C and I were leaving them for the morning, on our own way to rent equipment and ski. When we picked them up at lunchtime, they were in good spirits, making snowplows ("pizzas") and ready for an afternoon of skiing with us. To this point they had been on a gentle slope with a carpet lift in the school area.


The afternoon with them was wonderful. They were courageous, adaptable, fast-learners, and having fun. First time onto a chairlift: done. First exit down the ramp at the end of the lift: done. Down a real 1/4 mile slope: done. Down every green trail on the mountain by the time lifts closed: done. I never expected to be skiing with them on the first day. And back on skis myself for the first time in 8 years, I remembered how exhilarating a day on the slopes is, and enjoyed with my kids the opening vista of their own enjoyment of the sport.