Wed 23 April 2008; 113

My Sun Run 2008

23:36 Wed 23 April 2008; 113 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

I had gone to sleep at about 3:00 after my long flight delay and gotten up at about 7:10. While waiting for the plane I was determined to run even if my flight got in so late that I had to get off the plane and start running. Luckily, I did get some sleep.

It was pretty cold, about 3 degrees. It had actually snowed earlier that weekend.

I ate a banana and a pecan butter tart and drank some mint tea. I got dressed and wasn’t sure whether to wear warmup gear to keep warm. I decided to just go longsleeve and no sweater. It was pretty chilly.

I also wondered about bringing my camera, but didn’t and I regretted it. There were so many crazy scenes that morning.

We walked down to the Starbucks. The one at Pender and Seymour. On the southwest corner, heh, heh. That’s where Chuffy was meeting his team captain and get his racing number and timing chip.

Then Ooms and I went to her old office and got our chips and numbers from Newst.

Then we headed up to Georgia to join the huge column of people waiting to start the race. Because there are so many people in the race, 59,179, they have to start it in stages. I was not in the green group like Ooms and Chuffy, so I had to go up to Burrard.

There are 2.4-metre metal barriers along the starting area. I walked along them outside, but when I got to Burrard there was no opening and a crowd gathering around the outside.

Some dudes were climbing over and jumping down inside the barrier. A dude beside me pushed up the top connector of the barrier module but couldn’t open the space. A woman tried lifting the fencing off the base, but couldn’t do it.

That gave me and idea. I lifted the fencing off the base and we all streamed into the starting area.
Before the race begins there are speeches and music and people leading an aerobic-style warmup. Soon the race started.

I crossed the start line about four minutes after the gun.

Even though I was in the second fastest stage, people with gold numbers like me were jogging, going slowly and getting in the way.

While the first person finishes long before the first person starts, if you packed all the people onto the race route, there would be about six people per metre of the course. It is pretty crowded.

We ran west down Georgia turned some corners and ran along English Bay, around and up over Burrard Bridge down to Cambie and over the bridge to the stadium.

It went a lot faster than last year, since I was already familiar with the route.

There were bands along the way mostly with fast music, but I heard a Sar Maclachlan song.

Last year I was in green and people were even slower so it was like swimming upstream to run at a reasonable pace and I poured it on at the end. This year I was able to go more steadily, but didn’t have mush left at the end. The sleep also probs played a role.

In the stadium I ate bananas, power bars, chocolate milk, juice, orages. A band played. I ran into Corey whom I hadn’t seen in about 10 years. He’s moving to Australia soon. We chatted a bit.

Then met up with Dave, Bob, Newst, Ooms, Chuffy, J and Niks.

I beat my time from last year. Ooms and Chuffy beat and hour. J and Niks beat … hmm 1:09.

And the UBC Nursing team beat the UBC Triathlon Club.

The Sun Run is Big in Vancouver

09:28 Wed 23 April 2008; 113 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

In Vancouver the Sun Run is a strong part of the city’s culture. Not just because it has a big proportion of joggers. Not just because tens of thousands participate, though that’s part of it. Everyone talks about it too.

When you go downtown the morning of the race, everyone is in running gear. People are in the coffee shop in reflective windbreaker and New Balance shoes or a lulu running skirt and a pink Descente zip. It is like a strange world made up of only jogging enthusiasts. There aren’t any cars around either because they can’t get past the race route.

When I picked up the paper with the race results and reports. Oh yeah, just a note about the Vancouver Sun Run. It’s not primarily named after Sol the star at centre of the solar system. It’s named after a newspaper that sponsors it. Also, that newspaper it is named after is not the the Sun newspapers in other cities.

So, when I got the paper, the clerk pointed to a dot in the thousands of people in the start line photo on the cover and said that’s me. I would have done the same, but I didn’t appear in the photo. I was there though.

The elderly lady behind me told us that she saw the runners and there were so many and it’s a great event. Later that morning people at the south terminal were talking about it.

It is kind of a big deal around here.

Vancouver Sun cover for Sun Run

Mon 21 April 2008; 111

Plane delayed, met Amy

21:18 Mon 21 April 2008; 111 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

After I had boarded the airplane she walked by me toward the back of the plane. I caught a glimpse, but I was sure it was her.

On her way back I said, “Amy.”

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Sat 19 April 2008; 109

Vacation beginning

21:19 Sat 19 April 2008; 109 | by Ryan | in uncategorized
Tomorrow is my first day off work in four weeks. That is except for a Tuesday in the middle there but it was our town hall meeting at work, so I was at work then too. Now I am off for bit and it will be great.

It isn’t starting that great I had to rush from work to get my luggage and pack food for the flight. Jess drove me to the airport. Now I am sitting in an airplane, but it is not airplaning, it is sitting on the ground.

First officer told us that there is a maintenace problem and we are waiting to get it fixed.

Saw Air India 182 at Hot Docs

10:19 Sat 19 April 2008; 109 | by Ryan | in uncategorized
We went to the opening night of the Hot Docs festival Thursday. It wasn’t the hot dog festival which might have been similarly exciting.We saw Air India 182, an film about the flight that had the most deadly terrorist attack on Canadians.

The film was a mix interviews, dramatization, and real footage. The interviews had family members, retired law enforcement agents, airline personell, and other people involved talking in front of white.

The film followed activies of Sikh extremists under surveillance, the hours before and during the flight, and the memories of those touched by the events.

The memories are what drove the movie. The dramatisations were largely just visualisations of what people described in interview. Thusly it could have been more aptly named “memories of air india 182.”

The film ended after the recovery effort and didn’t depict the trial much later. That was a reasonable choice. But relying on the interview narrative limited and exluded some of the most interesting stories, like the sick bomb sniffing dog.

I think it is worth seeing for the subject and the stories are woven together well.

It is primarily a film about people who were left behind after that terrible attack. It ends up being more depressing than illuminating.

Fri 18 April 2008; 108

Checked out Castle on King

20:35 Fri 18 April 2008; 108 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

After planning on going and not making it for a whole term, Dave and I checked out Castle on King.

At our fall end of term dinner last November, which was at the Holiday Inn on Fairway, we were at the hotel bar beforehand and tried Grand River’s seasonal pumpkin ale.The bartender recommended the castle for beer selection. After trying to schedule over five months, Dave finished exams on Wednesday and we headed downtown.

Castle on King pub kitchener

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Tue 15 April 2008; 105

Unexpected flowers

14:36 Tue 15 April 2008; 105 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

What kind of plants do you expect to produce nice flowers . . . well, flowers. Many other plants that aren’t known for flowers produce nice ones too though.

white yellow potato flower

Several weeks ago, I found some rotting, sprouted potatoes under the sink. Instead of disposing of them and plugging up the landfill, I planted them. They grew into plants and now they have flowered.

white yellow potato flower

I like the white and yellow potato flowers that open and close with the coming of the sun.

Another benefit is that they are sequestering carbon, by absorbing carbon dioxide and keeping the carbon in organic compounds in their plant flesh. So, there is more than one benefit.

Music festival in a house

14:06 Tue 15 April 2008; 105 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

Remember when I went to the art gallery in the attic? Well they are having a music festival, likely not in the attic.The name of the festival is Carl!! You are supposed to make the air punctuation with your fingers when you say it, as shown on the button.

carl!! music festival button

Here is some more information. If you want even more information go to their website.

Carl!! Music Festival - a festival in a house

April 25-27 2008
130 King St. N.
Waterloo
Ontario

Carl!! is a 3 day, open minded, independent music festival at an alternative venue space. Carl!! will be celebrating vital independent Canadian music and vibrant local arts at our very own Trepid House in Waterloo.

So, come to the music festival in a house — Carl!!! (The first two exclamation points are part of the name; the third one is an exclamation point.)

Mon 14 April 2008; 104

Met with lawyer

21:59 Mon 14 April 2008; 104 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

Last week I sat in on a meeting with a lawyer about the patent defence.

I knew the lawyer from before. He explained things well and we had a good discussion. Parts of the office action seems random and convoluted, so it was good to get an experienced perspective and an expolanation of what those parts mean.

Patent language 3 Apr 2008

Tue 08 April 2008; 98

Our visit to Niagara in pictures

12:27 Tue 08 April 2008; 98 | by Ryan | in uncategorized

Last Tuesday I worked in Hamilton in the morning after that we drove to Niagara for the rest of the day.

It was a windy day out on the peninsula, but the sun shone too.

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