Showing posts with label adventures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adventures. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Eight The Hard Way - Official Merchandising Images


Hey Folks!
Unlike my usual obsession with intellectual property rights, the images below, commemorating the 2014 Aquanut adventure can be downloaded and used freely. 

Make a t-shirt, an apron, a temporary tattoo! Share them with friends!










Don't forget to follow the live updates beginning at 8 a.m. EDT on Wednesday June 25.

(All artwork by my long-suffering and ever more beautiful wife Nan.)

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Eight the Hard Way

The Aquanuts return in 2014! We will pre-position the night of June 24 and set off at the crack of dawn. We don't think anyone has ever done this. Glad to hear from anyone who has!


 Eight the Hard Way
Proposed Itinerary
Wednesday June 25, 2014

Sunrise at Fenwick Island, DE – 5:37 a.m.

Swim Ocean City MD  - 6 a.m.

Swim Fenwick Island DE – 6:15 a.m.

Depart Fenwick Island – 7:30 a.m.

Arrive Lewes DE– 8:15 a.m.

Depart Lewes by Ferry – 8:45 a.m. (ETD)

Arrive Cape May – 10:10 a.m. (ETA)

Swim Cape May NJ – 10:45 a.m.

Depart Cape May – 11:00 a.m

Arrive Rye, NY – 2:30 p.m.

Swim Rye

Depart Rye – 3 p.m.

Arrive Sherwood Island, CT - 3:45 p.m.

Swim Sherwood Island

Depart Sherwood Island – 4:00 p.m.

Arrive Salisbury, MA – 7:00 p.m.

Swim Salisbury, MA - 7:05 p.m.

Swim Seabrook, NH – 7:10 p.m.

Depart Seabrook – 7:15 p.m.

Arrive York, ME – 8:00 p.m.

Swim Short Sands Beach, York ME

Sundown 8:26 p.m.


Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Six-Six-Six



 
 
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L to R
Trireme, Agave, Peitho, Tyche, Halia, Menestho
(If the names are unfamiliar, I suggest pulling down your copy of Hesiod’s Theogony. Most can be found there.)
 
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As in past years I have persuaded a group of very incautious swimmers to join me on an “adventure” as I like to call it. The one on November 16 was not the one we had all planned. We had planned to do “Dukes in a Day” or “The Full Bartholomew.” That is, swim at one beach in each of the seven towns in Dukes County MA. (Bartholomew Gosnold is the European widely credited with “discovering” both Martha’s Vineyard and the nearby Elizabeth Islands. The town of Gosnold comprises the Elizabeths and there are six towns on the Vineyard: Tisbury, Oak Bluffs, Edgartown, West Tisbury, Aquinnah, and Chilmark.)

This plan was thwarted by the premature arrival of a very handsome grandson and in postponing the trip we lost several swimmers and the chance to get to Gosnold. Ahab had put his trusty vessel up for the winter, Pasithoe was required to labor for others, and Dionysus was courting a maiden. This left only the six of us to attempt six beaches in six towns.

The forecast called for moderate temperatures and clearing skies late on the Islands, so we decided to give it a go. Considering the lateness of the season, and the modified nature of the adventure, I tried to reassure everyone that there was no challenge involved; people could swim as much or as little or not at all. I thought I would at least give it a try since I have been swimming in the ocean at least once in each of the last 68 months.

We assembled in the Boston suburbs and after a quick Starbucks run we set off. Some sprinkles on the ferry dock in Woods Hole did not dampen spirits and we all boarded the MV Martha’s Vineyard in a timely fashion (just). Trireme broke out some spirits of her devising and the passage was smooth.




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When we disembarked in Vineyard Haven (a village of the town of Tisbury) Tyche, Menestho and Halia went into the terminal to don wetsuits. Both the need for them and the appearance of those wearing them were met with discussion bordering on derision. We moved on anyway, noting Menestho’s desire to return and have a beer at the Black Dog. We think he was channeling Bill Clinton or something.
 
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First beach was just a few blocks away at Owen Park Beach. This is a tiny beach in the harbor, the site of the Harbor Master’s office, a playground, a dock, and lots of moorings. A surprising number of large and small vessels were still in the water. A local fisherman pulled up with his very unhappy girlfriend. He was gleeful in reporting the water temperature to be a refreshing 52 degrees Fahrenheit. He spared us the need to convert from Kelvin.







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All but Trireme (recovering from an injury incurred earlier in the year on the Vineyard) took the plunge. We had done it! We all agreed that even if we never got further, we could count ourselves brave adventurers. A quick towel off, some outerwear donned, and we were off.
 
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After a short drive east, we came to a beach known as The Inkwell in the town of Oak Bluffs. The signage thoughtfully reminded us that the lifeguards were off duty. This is a long stretch of beach facing East across Nantucket Sound. We bounded out of the van, into the water and back out again. 52 degrees was not felt to be an overestimate.





 
 
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The road from there leads with not much trouble right down to South Beach/Katama Beach in Edgartown. Along the way we saw a donkey and llamas. We scoffed at the notion we were the Katama llama ding-dongs and arrived at the shockingly modest parking lot. This south-facing beach is very beautiful, protected by dunes, and stretches for miles in either direction. While there is a larger parking lot at the west end of Atlantic Drive, the spaces here number about a dozen. 


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Katama brought us real surf and real sunshine. Made it feel like a beach day. The water was noticeably warmer, the sand felt warm underfoot (in the sunshine only) and the mood of the adventurers noticeably improved. 





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At this point I warned the Aquanuts that the fourth beach was reachable only with some difficulty. There would be few amenities along the way, and maybe none when we arrived. The sturdy band informed me they needed nothing in order to continue, and so we did. Peitho showed no interest in Menestho’s question about taking the Chappaquiddick ferry. We had our own problems and did not need a second troubled Democratic politician to complicate things.

The fourth beach was located in the town of West Tisbury. While there is a lot of south facing oceanfront in West Tis, most of it is inaccessible unless you are a plutocrat. The Trustees of Reservations has a large property at Long Pond, but the long access road is (consciously) poorly marked, subject to closure, and unpaved. The Trustees were running a program called the Duck Hunt and so the road was open. We thought it might really be a duck hunt, which gave some of us pause. It was instead a family-oriented crafts day. After navigating the rutted, sandy lane, backing up to let cars proceed past us, and wondering at the arrogance of “some people” we parked in the Trustees lot.

The long walk to the ocean was enhanced by the beauty of the marsh, the continued sunshine and by Trireme’s discovery of an ant. The beach itself was long and sandy. The surf was moderate and we all (?) succeeded in our task of a complete immersion. Some of the women think there is a separate set of rules for them, but then they always do. At around this point someone skipped a beach, but who’s counting. After the dip I repaired to the Trustees headquarters to use the facilities. Had a nice chat with the very fresh-faced staff who gave us some suggestions for the last two towns.


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Rather than take a long break at Long Pond, we pressed on out the sandy trail to the paved road and proceeded westward to the commercial center of West Tisbury. With a big enough handkerchief you could cover it all. Agave suggested we picnic in the parking lot of the Grange and so we did. This was as choice a setup as you could imagine. Picnic tables in the sun, waste baskets for the detritus, and an open W. Tisbury town hall adjacent with the best public restrooms of any municipality in several counties.

Trireme brought out the famous tuna sandwiches and the last of the special beverage. Halia cracked open the container of homemade brownies, and Peitho offered everyone a “Full Trayvon” - a box of Skittles and an Arizona Iced Tea.

As tempting as the warm sun and snappy banter was, we pressed on down State Road southwest toward Aquinnah, soon to be the Las Vegas of Dukes County. Shortly we were stopped by the State Police who informed us that the road was closed for an indeterminate period. The trooper directed us to a detour down another dirt byway that he promised would eventually lead to Beetlebung Corner. 

If you read that place name in a Stephen King story you would credit him with a dark imagination. In some parts of New England very little imagination is required. 

After a while, we reached Beetlebung and the sign for Aquinnah. I overshot the road we wanted to take to the beach and had to turn around at the entrance to the Wampanoag Reservation. A large sign announced a deer tagging station and I figured this had something to do with the road closure.

 
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Philbin Beach was found and we proceeded up the big dune on the landward side. Tyche suggested the long path to the left. Peitho scoffed and proceeded straight ahead. As warned, Peitho found the beach covered with large cobbles, which continued all the way into the water. There the cobbles were joined by some alarmingly large rocks both submerged and emergent. Tyche and Peitho gave it a try, but to no avail. Back up to the top of the dune, down the other path and along the beach until we found a smooth sandy patch. All in and all out safely, we towelled off and set out for the last beach of the day. We began to look closely at the sun and to discuss the time of sunset. Turns out it set at 4:22 p.m E.S.T. and we were just about going to make it.
 
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Some GPS work by Menestho got us to Menemsha Harbor in the town of Chilmark in good order and we faced the last challenge of the day. Good thing it was the last. Energy was beginning to flag and the water was as cold as it had been all day. Good feeling to have completed the challenge, but an even better feeling to finally put on warm dry clothes. We convinced a local to take our picture and we were off for Vineyard Haven and the Black Dog Tavern.

Now some of us had hinted to Menestho that Tisbury/VH is a “dry” town, but since the Dog is right next to the ferry staging area, and we were on track to catch an earlier sailing anyway, it made no difference to this jolly band of adventurers. As it happens, the Black Dog Tavern is something of a misnomer. You cannot get a drink at the bar because there is none. You could get beer or wine with a meal, but we had a ferry to catch. 


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After pausing to admire the Frost Moon over the harbor, we boarded the MV Island Home for the trip back to the mainland. This vessel did have a bar and we all partook of a round in celebration.

After a very pedestrian quality dinner at a Wood’s Hole restaurant I will not name here, and a quick view of the place (“the west and seaward end of the Eel Pond Bridge”) where Ahab was to have picked us up in September we drove north along Buzzard’s Bay. Our exhausted ride home featured choral singing to the sound track of “The Harder They Come”, (an Aquanut tradition by now) and Tyche’s very tasty falsetto accompaniment to Marc Cohn’s version of Smokey Robinson’s classic “Tears of a Clown.”

 

















 

Tuesday, April 5, 2011

Santa Anita Trip Notes



March 17-20 2011

Thursday
Saw one of my Starbucks regulars in the departure lounge for Virgin America Thursday morning. Virgin America is no great shakes of an airline, especially in Coach. Can’t see what all the fuss is about. I followed the website directions from LAX to the park. Someone made a nice choice to have folks get off on Orange Grove in Pasadena. This is the kind of street where you can find yourself stuck behind a van with the sign “Architectural Tours of Los Angeles by an Architectural Historian.”  Sets a very posh tone.

I had made prior arrangements with Mike Willman and Debbie Olsen of the Publicity Department for a media credential. The helpful guy at the gate directed me to park by an orange tree. None of those where I come from. Bird of paradise flowers in the parking lot. Not a lot of those blooming in March back home either. The big fountain by the statue of Seabiscuit was flowing green for St. Patrick’s Day. Not exactly like dyeing the Chicago River for the day, but a kind of cheesy reminder I was at the racetrack, not the Norton-Simon Museum.

Now this is a real racetrack. When I got inside I found the elevator to the press box. This was manned by a charming guy who did not want to admit he drew the short straw  and got stuck working in a little box all day with the beauty of California right outside. Are the last elevator operators in the world working the press box elevators at racetracks? Maybe the White House.

Mike Willman was busy and distracted, but Debbie Olsen was charming in providing the credential and inviting me to make myself at home. In my limited experience, this is a first-class operation. They had hot food in the press box!! Sat in Jay Hovdey’s seat. There were actual working press guys there - talking about the NCAA Men’s. Best ever.

My impression throughout was that the crowd was surprisingly bland. Not as “cowboy” as I would have thought. Not very Mexican either Maybe it is because it was a Thursday. My companion suggests that those folks have to work for a living. Later it seems all of this area is like that. Hollywood and San Diego, too. Maybe I just can’t get off by myself enough, but the whole region seems bleached out, corporate, branded. I haven’t been back for almost 25 years and my existence when I lived here more than thirty years ago was pretty marginal. Maybe more marginal than I ever realized.

One nice touch is the South African (Thanks Ron Z.) track announcer, Trevor Denman, with his very plummy accent. An off note is the use of the word “hornblower” to describe the guy who plays the call to the post. It just sounds weird. The only references I can find for this usage are at here at Santa Anita and in cites for the Marx Brothers movie, “A Day at the Races” (1937). Saratoga, Woodbine, even the races at the Northern California fairs call him the “bugler.”


What began as a cool and foggy day brightens. It seems like I can see the race along the backstretch extraordinarily well. My companion says it may be the cool green of the mountain backdrop.  Make a note to check with my long-suffering and ever more beautiful artist wife when I get home.



Lost $5, despite cashing 4 tickets.

Friday
The Workouts
Mike Willman had said that if I wanted to see the morning workouts I should get out by 7 a.m. Drove by a bar in Arcadia called “The Drinker’s Hall of Fame.” Serious question about what I would have done if I had seen that sign last night on St. Patrick’s Day. The only thing I remember about my last St.Patrick’s day in LA was running out of gas on the way home.

Arrived at 6:45 in darkness to find the workouts in full swing. Sun just about to come up. It smelled like horse shit. I took this as a very good sign. The workouts are advertised and  are open to the public for free. I actually saw a clocker with a stopwatch as I walked over. Again, this is the real deal.

The workouts are big. They have a coffee shop with hot meals, waiters in bow ties, guys drying the dew off the seats, freestanding gas heaters (ubiquitous now in Southern California apparently). Could have had breakfast there instead of wasting my time eating at Denny’s. Got a cup of coffee and sat down to watch the action. They have two tracks working simultaneously – the main dirt track and an inner training loop inside the turf course. This appears to have a different surface – grey in color as opposed to the sandy brown of the main track.

The sun JUMPS up over the San Gabriel mountains over by the first turn. Some minor excitement over a loose horse. A small crowd of professionals and gawkers. A family on vacation from Boston, some older folks. I am NOT the only guy there wearing a suit and tie. The ubiquitous Bob Baffert. The sun begins to warm the air and a waiter offers to warm up my coffee. I wonder, “Is this the best breakfast I ever had?” Ranks right up there anyway.


Hazy blue sky, folded hills with some steep declivities. A small residential community appears perched on the lower slopes. Wonder if they can see in? My old firm once rented an apartment in Chicago with an obstructed view of Soldiers Field, but I never stayed the weekend to see the Bears play. Maybe it is like the folks in Chicago who rent their rooftops to folks to watch the Cubs.

Still way less cowboy and less Mexican than I could have imagined, even with a high percentage of professionals. Several people with dogs. Do dogs act cool around horses?

Things stop for reconditioning the track surfaces. When workouts resume, there are far fewer horses out. Earlier there was a pleasant blur of activity. There is no way for a novice like me to know what is really happening, not even which horse is which.

The Races
I meet a guy at the paddock who declares it to be his lucky day. It is his name day – Sandor from Hungary. Seems pleased to meet someone who knows not only that yesterday was St. Patrick’s, but that tomorrow is St. Joseph’s.

I wander around this BIG plant and discover the basement. On a sunny day in March in California, the basement of a race track is for true degenerates, but like the rest of the place it is clean and neat and the crowd looks respectable. Pitiable, but respectable. Part of the interior of the grandstand is cordoned off for a blood drive and in another part (I told you it was big.) there are signs announcing that a TV show (The HBO drama "Luck.") is being filmed and that we have all consented to the use of our likenesses. I scram before they find out I am 32 years in arrears on my AFTRA dues.

Just out of the gate for Race 1


 Gilligan, with Joe Talamo up wins Race 1


Chantal Sutherland up on PowerofVoodoo before Race 2



The break in Race 2

Living Our Dream with Rafael Bejarano up wins Race 2

There are a couple of fancy horse and carriage rigs ferrying folks around the main track between races. Again that Old Pasadena/Tournament of Roses feel. I thoroughly enjoy the day, especially the sunshine.

 Star Billing in the walking ring. The winner of Race 3. 

Lord Avalon with jockey Martin Garcia wins Race 4

Even with no distractions, I manage to lose $10.

Sunday
Back after a short trip to San Diego to air out the Old School Tie. Got a very late start and felt a little bad because I had a loose agreement to meet an “internaute” (as the French would say) friend at the track. A little cool and cloudy down south, more moisture as I hit Pomona, teeming when I get to Arcadia. 


I found my contact and we watched some horses in the saddling paddock and one race from the clubhouse walkway. We both had some things to do and different ways to do them so I watched the last two races on my own from the doorway of the grandstand. There were, surprisingly, some folks actually in the infield in the pouring rain. All in all a very sparse crowd and very quiet.

On a recommendation from a website I am starting to follow, I bet a longshot for $2 across the board and the $22.20 Show payout got me even for the weekend. Pretty good time to zip up the wallet and go to dinner.

Monday, October 26, 2009

The Quick Six

At the urging of some kind friends, I did write up a version of the big beach adventure of August. It was therapeutic. I felt I exorcised something, maybe a sense of guilt at not pulling it off for the others.

I sent the piece off to six or eight publications, both print and on-line. So far I have received TWO rejection letters! One from a publication which last week featured both T. C. Boyle and Joyce Carol Oates. I feel successful already.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Diabolus ex Machina

When I have had a chance to process this day, I may post again. My mind is reeling with cliches from classical literature. I feel that defeat was snatched from the jaws of victory. We must have offended the gods somehow.

I know I have the best family and friends in the world.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

The Quick Six

August 2009
Monday the 17th will mark the inaugural running of The Quick Six. This event involves swimming (at least one full head to toes immersion in the ocean) at six different beaches in six different states during one period of daylight. At least four participants are lined up and eager to go.

More (with photos) upon completion.