Visual Soliloquy #50 Today is your day, your mountain is waiting…

Today is your day, your mountain is waiting, so get on your way.
– Dr Seuss

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Visual Soliloquy #49 Time is a sort of river of passing events…

Time is a sort of river of passing events, and strong is its current; no sooner is a thing brought to sight than it is swept by and another takes its place, and this too will be swept away.–Marcus Aurelius

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Visual Soliloquy #48 The road of life twists and turns…

The road of life twists and turns and no two directions are ever the same. Yet our lessons come from the journey, not the destination.–Don Williams, Jr.

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Visual Soliloquy #47 The idea is to write it so that people hear it…

The idea is to write it so that people hear it and it slides through the brain and goes straight to the heart.
–Maya Angelou

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Visual Soliloquy #46 Fear is the lengthened shadow of ignorance.

Fear is the lengthened shadow of ignorance.

–Arnold H. Glasow

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Visual Soliloquy #45 Stop acting as if life is a rehearsal…

Stop acting as if life is a rehearsal. Live this day as if it were your last. The past is over and gone. The future is not guaranteed.
–Wayne Dyer

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Wanted: Hat Options for the Hat Trick of the Americas

G’Day,

The countdown to the Hat Trick of the Americas has begun and there is one critical decision left to be answered? Which hat should I wear for the climb? Which hat will be called to service on the volcano to keep my head warm and then will be thrown into the air in celebration at the summit? Which hat has all the right attributes for the occasion? As I began to contemplate such a momentous decision, I realized that perhaps more input could be helpful…does anyone out there have the perfect hat they would be willing to add to my collection?

What would the perfect hat be? You tell me…my only requirement is that it be warm and not too heavy to carry/wear…other than that…the possibilities are sky high (like mountain summits) If you would like to contribute a hat for consideration, please send it to me at 7 Wood Street, St. John’s, NL A1C 3K8 Canada. I’ll make the big call on Dec. 14 and I will donate all of the contenders to the Mitten Tree to help keep others warm this winter. I’ll post pictures of the contenders as they arrive. Below are the contenders thus far…

Thanks,

TA

TA wearing her hcokey toque

The Leading Contender thus far...the Hockey toque from Lulu...first seen at the Vancouver Olympics and recently worn during the Canada-US final at the Four Nations Cup...warm, befitting of the occasion...can it be dethroned?

TA wearing an orienteering flag

The Orienteering Flag: Stylish, my favourite colour of late, not terribly warm but likely to draw attention and show the way

TA modelling her penguin toque

My most recent addition to my toque collection...The Penguin...warm, double ear protection, the wings flap when you walk...and guaranteed to bring a smile in the hard moments

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Visual Soliloquy #44 When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but…

When one door of happiness closes, another opens; but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one which has been opened for us.

–Helen Keller

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Visual Soliloquy #43 You can grunt and heave, sweat and strain, wear yourself out…

You can grunt and heave, sweat and strain, wear yourself out, and unless you simply forget about it and step up, you won’t even get off the ground.
— Mike Borghoff.

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Visual Soliloquy #42

God is really only another artist. He invented the giraffe, the elephant and the cat. He has no real style. He just goes on trying other things.

–Pablo Picasso

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Nose to the Grindstone

Buenos Domingo,

Marian laying it on the line waiting for the Fogo Island Ferry

Marian laying it on the line waiting for the Fogo Island Ferry

Marian and I are stepping up both our physical training and our Spanish language training in the weeks leading up to our departure for Guatemala and Tajumulco. It’s time to put our noses to the grindstone! We’ve been walking to work, hitting step aerobics class, and spent much of the weekend hiking (both in the city yesterday and out on the East Coast trail today). It’s important that we get enough “feet time” so we can enjoy every moment of the seven volcanoes we will be climbing.

The weather is brisk here these days with temps dropping below zero most days. Out in the coastal wind, the chill runs deep into our unacclimated bodies. And our noses ran constantly today we as hiked along the ECTA from Shoe Cove towards Stiles Cove. I wondered to myself, “Why do our noses run in the cold?” I alternately sniffed back or did the outdoors nose blow method as a way to stem the tide of postnasal drip. What purpose could this constant loss of liquid have? Turning to the source of all current knowledge (at least according to my students), I googled, “Why do noses run in the cold?”

TA with a very cold nose on Denali having just arrived back at high camp after the long summit bid!

TA with a very cold nose on Denali having just arrived back at high camp after the long summit bid!

After studying a few websites, I learned that ordinarily our noses produce about a litre of mucus a day to help catch all the nasties before they can reach our sensitive parts and give us colds, infections, and the flu. When it is cold out, the blood vessels that supply the mucus factory swell to increase blood flow to the area to keep our noses warm in the cold. This increased blood supply results in an increased supply of mucus, which we can’t keep up with in our normal manner (by swallowing) and thus it drips from our noses. Wow-who knew?

I was always amazed when reading of Shakleton’s expedition to the Antarctic that his men so struggled with dripping noses. Because their ship was caught in the ice, they faced an epic struggle for survival for nearly a year and a half in the far reaches of the Southern world. As they camped on ice floes etc. for all of that time, the extra mucus their noses produced would freeze into an icicle that would hang from their noses. If there were not careful in removing the frozen bit from their nose, a piece of skin would come with it. Eventually, most of Shakleton’s men ended up with ulcerated sores beneath their noses. Ouch! …this was only one of the hundreds of things they put up with as they fought for their lives (and miraculously survived living out an Antarctic winter!)

Two of my friends will soon face the dreaded dripping nose of Antarctica. Alan Arnette is off later this week to begin his quest: The 7 Summits Climb for Alzheimer’s: Memories are Everything. He’s climbing Mount Vinson with Phil Ershler and International Mountain Guides. I climbed Mount Elbrus with Phil in 2006 and enjoyed meeting up with him this year in Lukla on the way to Everest. Alan is climbing the Seven Summits in honour of his mother, Ida, whose life was ravaged by Alzheimer’s Disease. Alan’s goal is to raise 1 million dollars to help move the research to find a cure forward. I had hoped at one point to join both Alan and Phil on this climb but couldn’t get enough sponsorship on board this fall to join them. I wish them both good luck with getting to (and from) Antarctica on-time and getting safety up and down the mountain. (I hear flights to the ice have been delayed thus far this season). I will be eagerly awaiting Alan’s daily dispatches from the mountain.

Tigger in the Fogo Island Ferry Line Up

Tigger waiting in the Fogo Island Ferry Line Up...since the presentation was at 7:00 pm. It was critical that we make the 3:00 pm boat! We were early-no surprise there-I am my father's daughter.

A highlight of the week was presenting on Fogo Island at both the Church of the Holy Spirit and Fogo Island High School. Marian made the big road trip with me and we learned the intricacies of getting to Fogo when only a small ferry is running (spend two hours sitting in the ferry line up).

We didn’t end up getting to see much of Fogo Island but we need sample much of the local hospitality and even a pie from the bakery. The students paid rapt attention and their thoughtful questions made the ten hours of driving more than worth the trip. I thank the Church of the Holy Spirit for bringing me out to the island and making it possible for me to continue my youth outreach program.

My mom continues to heal well from her back surgery. Thank you all for your thoughts and prayers for her recovery. I’m heading out to Edmonton next week so I can be there to recognize the end of the year of firsts on December 4th (as well as celebrate St. Nicklaus Day since we’ll be in Guatemala for Christmas this year).

Have a good week,

TA

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Visual Soliloquy #41

Just don’t give up on trying to do what you really want to do. Where there is love and inspiration, I don’t think you can go wrong.

–Ella Fitzgerald

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Visual Soliloquy #40

…I prefer to be a dreamer among the humblest, with visions to be realised, than lord among those without dreams and desires. – Kahlil Gibran

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Visual Soliloquy #39

Your feet will bring you to where your heart is.

– Irish Proverb

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Visual Soliloquy #38

If you spend your whole life waiting for the storm, you’ll never enjoy the sunshine.

–Morris West

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Visual Soliloquy #37

Frustration, although quite painful at times, is a very positive and essential part of success.
–Bo Bennett

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Visual Soliloquy #36

Poetry is an echo, asking a shadow to dance.

–Carl Sandburg

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Visual Soliloquy #35

The beginning of love is to let those we love be perfectly themselves, and not to twist them to fit our own image. Otherwise we love only the reflection of ourselves we find in them.

–Thomas Merton

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Visual Soliloquy #34

Life can either be accepted or changed. If it is not accepted, it must be changed. If it cannot be changed, then it must be accepted.

–Unknown

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Congratulations to Team Canada

An amazing evening of hockey in front of a sell out crowd in St. John’s. A night not soon forgotten! Team Canada wins the Four Nations Cup in overtime over Team USA.

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Barefoot Ascent of PEI’s Highest Point

A few weeks back-well rather a month or so ago, Jane Macgrath and I had a grand hike and talk up and around Signal Hill. It was great to reconnect and share stories and adventures from the academe. We got onto talking about climbing Canada’s highest points and voila, an expedition was born. I often enjoy reading the blogs of other adventurers and here is a delightful entry from expedition that Jane led to PEI’s summit!

Barefoot Hiking: Joining PEI’s Highest Point Club

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Visual Soliloquy #33

I believe that whether a person follows any religion or not is unimportant, he or she must have a good heart, a warm heart.

–Dalai Lama

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Remembering Anew

I was almost out the door when I heard Marian playing something on her computer. It caught my attention and I came over to see what was playing. As the music and images played, the tears began to cascade down my cheeks and slide down my jacket to the floor. I was heading off to a meeting and I cursed the intrusion of the welling emotion.

This Remembrance Day seems more poignant than most I remember and along with cursing the volatile emotions, I’ve also given thanks for that access to my most human of vulnerabilities, grief. Perhaps this Remembrance Day touches me more this year than others because I am still facing “The Year of Firsts. ” Recognizing the intense loss that rushes like floodwaters on dates like December 24, June 14, June 24, and soon to be November 14. Moments of such deep longing for my Dad that arise like hot fiery lava when I notice “This is the first … without my dad.”

On these “big dates,” the grief comes in like a tsunami leaving me battered and beaten from the stormy seas. On other days, it comes in quiet surprise. A thought here. A tear there. A connection between this moment and my dad and then remembering that he is gone from my present moment. And that I can’t call him and ask for advice about how to put my motorbike away for winter. That I can’t email him and share my excitement for the next big climb. That I can only reach him in my memory. On these days, the grief slips in like morning dew that clings to a blade of grass until the sun evaporates it away.

My mom and dad at the Hang Fire Ball

This is my mom and dad at the Hang Fire Ball. My dad was a huge fan of hisotrical military uniforms.

Remembering as I did this morning that my dad was a veteran. It was only something I learned about him in the year before he died. He, at the age of sixteen, snuck away to join the US Marines. He served for two years, I think, before his age and citizenship were discovered and he was discharged. My dad’s dad was also a soldier. I’m struck today that I have never, before today, made the connection between Remembrance Day and my family’s service in the military. I guess it can be hard to put two and two together sometimes.

So today, I observe Remembrance Day in a new way and with a new appreciation for all the loss and sacrifice that has been made and continues to be made in pursuit of freedom and peacekeeping. Today, I’m grateful to my dad, to my opa, and to all who we remember today.

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Visual Soliloquy #32

I wear a poppy so that others can see

That I respect those who died for me

The bright red shows of the blood that was shed

For me and for others who live far ahead

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Visual Soliloquy #31

Remembrance and reflection how allied. What thin partitions divides sense from thought.

–Alexander Pope

And from Rick Mercer…Remember to Remember.

 

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Lessons in Seeing

How do I find the words to describe a week that spanned from the stunningly deep silence of canyon wanderings to the vibrant, almost abusive, cacophonous stimulation of Las Vegas? From a gentle dawning light of day dancing on ever reddening sandstone boundaries to the honking, flashing, clanging sea of lights and sound magnified by ever-present mirrors? From connection woven on the dabbling loom of a desert stream to street corner rudeness tempered strong through separation?

Indeed, the transition from backpacking in Escalante canyon country in Utah with a dear friend was abrupt and fostered membership in the “Bad Attitude Club” as we headed back to the confines of the concrete world of Las Vegas. It was initially hard to make peace with the locale of our Association for Experiential Education conference being situated on the glitzy Strip of Sin City with the only nature in sight being waterfalls and volcanoes formed from fiberglass molds and carpets of artificial grass. It was a challenge to move beyond instant grumpiness and overstimulation to a place of openness to what could unfold if I let it.

When I stopped the almost constant river of complaining between my two ears, I could grasp the sweet song of the two birds nested outside the hotel window. When I slowed enough to really look, I saw the blessing that our aging hotel still had windows that opened and I could invite “real” air into the room (as well as more bird song).

I am reminded of a quote of Terry Tempest Williams that I copied down at the Escalante Visitor’s Centre, “When one of us says ‘Look, there is nothing out there, what we are really saying is, ‘I cannot see.” It is often hard to be where we are not comfortable. To close down. To write off. To go into survival mode. To stop seeing.

That was my struggle this week as I moved from an environment that many of my friends would describe as hard, unwelcoming, and empty to one that many of my friends would love that I would describe as hard, unwelcoming, and empty. When you fly through Pearson airport in Toronto, each jetway is adorned with ads for Hong Kong Bank that feature two disparate images such as a rock musician and a Indian sitar player coupled with words such as noise and music. To one set of ears, rock is music and to another it is noise. To many, Las Vegas is the vacation destination of choice and to others (i.e. me) it raises questions about the fate of humanity.

I often profess to the value of being uncomfortable and to seeking opportunities to practice staying with the discomfort. The ability to tolerate discomfort (of any and many sorts) gives us much greater latitude in our lives to see new perspectives, question our values, and see in new ways. Sitting here in the Las Vegas airport peering out to the mountains that frame the backdrop of the Strip, I am grateful for the humbling reminder of “However I do anything is how I do everything.” (Not sure who said that-I’ve seen various attributions for the quote on the web)

If I close to the challenges of being in Las Vegas, what else do I close myself off to? What connections am I missing? Who I am missing? What I am not seeing?

I leave this week with a renewed commitment to accept the invitation that appears at the bottom of my Buddhist Personal Trainer’s email (Congrats to Susan in her new journey as grandmother)…

The everyday practice is simply to develop complete acceptance and openness to all situations and emotions, and to all people, experiencing everything totally without reservations or blockages so that one never withdraws or centralizes into oneself.
–Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche

Thanks and have a great week!

TA

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Visual Soliloquy #30

Just as your car runs more smoothly and requires less energy to go faster and farther when the wheels are in perfect alignment, you perform better when your thoughts, feelings, emotions, goals, and values are in balance.
–Brian Tracy

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Visual Soliloquy #29

The difference between utility and utility plus beauty is the difference between telephone wires and the spider web.

–Edwin Way Teale

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Visual Soliloquy #28

Flow with whatever may happen and let your mind be free. Stay centered by accepting whatever you are doing. This is the ultimate.

–Zhuangzi

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Visual Soliloquy #27

For everything you have missed, you have gained something else, and for everything you gain, you lose something else.

– Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Visual Soliloquy #26

I am only one, but still I am one. I cannot do everything, but still I can do something; and because I cannot do everything, I will not refuse to do something that I can do.

–Helen Keller

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Visual Soliloquy #25

At sunrise everything is luminous but not clear.

It is those we live with and love and should know who elude us.

You can love completely without complete understanding.

–Norman Maclean

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Visual Soliloquy #24

Do not let arguments of expediency persuade you. That is the slow road to oblivion.

That is the tortured path to undoing step by step, bit by bit, as the river creates a canyon, the way of life that we love.

–Charles Schumer

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Visual Soliloquy #23

Sometimes the more goal-oriented we are, the less likely we are to obtain that goal. If you really, really want something, you have to forget how much you want it. Or else you’ll be too nervous to get it. But dear Lord, that’s a cruel and paradoxical system evolution has devised. – A.J. Jacobs

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Visual Soliloquy #22

The most difficult thing is the decision to act, the rest is merely tenacity.  The fears are paper tigers. You can do anything you decide to do.  You can act to change and control your life; and the procedure, the process is its own reward. –Amelia Earhart

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Visual Soliloquy #21

Before I can tell my life what I want to do with it,

I must listen to my life telling me who I am.

Parker Palmer

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Visual Soliloquy #20

“Sometimes questions are more important than answers.” –Nancy Willard

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Visual Soliloquy #19

The true measure of one’s worth is not where you come to be at journey’s end, but in the lives you touch along the way.

–Anonymous

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Hat Trick of the Americas: Volcán Tajumulco (4220m)

What is TA climbing next? I had many more clues planned…like this one:

and this one:

But alas and congrats, the great mystery of what I am climbing next has been solved by MC and Carla. They deciphered the clues: Aconcagua plus a hat trick plus a vulcan plus Denali equals “The Hat Trick of the Americas” or my next climbing objective… Volcán Tajumulco. At 4220 metres above sea level, it is the highest peak in Guatemala and the highest peak in Central America!

Marian and I will leave for Guatemala in mid December and will climb seven of Guatemala’s volcanoes in two weeks with (hopefully) a trip up to the top of the highest one! I loved that I share my name with part of the volcano’s name and chose it since I liked the idea of a “mountain hat trick” and combining both of my two activity loves: mountaineering and hockey! I also studied Spanish in Guatemala over ten years ago and have always wanted to go back. We’ve started trying to reactivate the Spanish speaking part of my brain by listening to podcasts. Never terribly skilled in languages, and having learned parts of French, Spanish, Japanese, and Shona, I fear my over taxed hypoxia drained brain is only capable of “Franish ” or ‘Spench” at the moment. I start a sentence in one language and finish in another!

I have a fondness for volcanoes and look forward to learning more about them in the upcoming months. Here’s another detective challenge (for those of you who are about to go through withdrawal since the game is over)…what are all the volcanoes I’ve had the privilege of standing atop of? How many have I attempted? What are the names of the Volcanic Seven Summits? Have the Volcanic Seven Summits been completed? Have I completed any of the Volcanic Seven Summits?

As you can see from the above questions, there are many lists/climbs/adventures to have in the world. I think one of the reasons it took me awhile to decide what to climb next was that since I set a goal of “The Seven Summits” and since I only had two left and since I was still in post-partem from the one and hadn’t yet raised the funds to attempt the other, my original goal list was a bit confining so I began to look for other lists or connections or purposes. Moments of brilliance would come and go…I would just about think I had a plan and then a logistical snafu would creep up (dates wouldn’t match up or would miss by a day), an attempted coup shut down another plan, and so on…time of year factored in and the amount of vacation time we had stored up…so I was delighted when Tajumlco presented itself to my heart in a moment of synchronicity (or inadvertent surfing depending on how you frame it).

It won’t be my hardest challenge to date. It won’t be the highest. Or the coldest. Or the furthest…It doesn’t need to be right now! It’s about getting back on the horse and sharing a wonderful adventure with the woman that I love (and all of you) and capping off standing atop the three highest peaks of North, South, and Central America! It’s also what I do after not summitting Everest, I go climb a volcano in a Spanish speaking country :-)!!! (What was the name of the one I attempted in 2007)?

Here is a borrowed picture of Tajumulco…I’m eager to add some of my own!

Thanks for coming along on another adventure–it’s truly a joy to share the journey with you,

TA

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Your Guess is As Good as Mine

Howdy,

So after months of hemming and hawing, sorting and sighing, planning and proposing, looking and logisticating…I’ve finally decided what to climb next BUT I’m not telling just yet. In the spirit of fun and frivolity, I’ve been releasing a photo clue each day on my blog and readers have been guessing. The person with the first correct guess will receive a souvenir from the climb. If you want to join the fun, you can visit my blog (https://taloeffler.com/tas-blog/ ) to see the first four photo clues and you can post your guess to the comments section there. The climb is occurring in December and so far, I think we’ve added about ten climbs to my overall life list–not good if I want to settle down and sit on the couch 🙂

TA chasing down the puck!

It was great to finally make a decision about what adventure was happening next and buy a plane ticket. Always good to have a plane ticket in my back pocket. I’ll slowly start ramping up training again now and hockey will soon be going full tilt (one of the photo clues pertains to hockey). Scored a hat trick last night and one today so life on skates is feeling rather divine at the moment. Got a few more presentations upcoming this week and can’t believe that November is just around the corner.

Congrats to Marian-she can now leave me in the dust since she has her full motorcycle licence.

Congrats to Marian who passed her motorcycle road test yesterday! After a short celebration at Tim’s, we had the most heavenly ride on the gravel roads behind the Goulds. We both now have complete body armour (and as a result look rather like robo cops-especially when we take our protective jackets off at Tim’s) and so we felt much freer to experiment with different riding techniques in the dirt.

Life is Good!

The weather was alternately rainy and grey, brilliant sun, and rainbows with every transition between the two. The fall air was heavy with the earthy tomes of rotting leaves and manure, a scent that reaches deeply in and signals both the change of season and often other things as well. I felt, at times, as though I were one with the bike and at other times, felt as if I was weaving down the fall line of a mountain ski slope in perfect powder. I leaned the bike from side to side alternating the waiting on each foot peg–just like carving a transcendental downhill turn! It was a good ride-can you tell? 🙂

Here’s a link to our training rides getting Marian ready for her road test:

A short update this week since a picture is worth a 1000 words…and there are four pictures already this week…so that’s 4000 words just waiting for you! A reminder that if you don’t want to miss an update or post to my blog, you can subscribe on the right hand side and updates will be sent either daily or weekly-you get to decide. The new blog architecture is working well for me and is streamlining things somewhat so that will be great during the December climb because it will make it easy to share pictures and stories along the way. Thanks and have a great week!

TA

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