Archive for the ‘Great Outdoors’ Category

Walking or Running? Jogging or Yogging?

Saturday, April 26th, 2008

What’s the difference between walking and running? This question popped into my head the other day and I had to look up what the difference? If you don’t know, think about it for a minute and try to figure it out before you read the answer.  (It’s not the speed).

I also found out that jogging (originally called “roadwork” when athletes like boxers would run for training) was a new fad in the 1970s and anchormen of the day probably wouldn’t even know how to pronounce the word.

“Veronica and I are trying this new fad called uh, jogging. I believe it’s jogging or yogging. It might be a soft j. I’m not sure, but apparently you just run for an extended period of time. It’s supposed to be wild.”

Pictures from Honda Superbike Classic

Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008

Here are a few pictures from the Honda Superbike Classic this past weekend in Leeds, AL. See the sideshow below or higher resolution pictures here.

Honda Superbike Classic – this weekend at Barbers Motorsports Park

Friday, April 18th, 2008

banner

The annual Honda Superbike Classic is this weekend, April 18-20, at the beautiful Barbers Motorsports Park in Birmingham (Leeds). The forecast is for great weather too, highs in the 70s and no rain.

Schedule of events

A few pictures from previous years:

2005 spiders

Springtime at Lake Calhoun

Sunday, April 6th, 2008

Don’t let the large, lingering snowbanks or the (melting) ice on the lake fool you, it really felt like a warm spring day Saturday! More and higher resolution pictures here.

snowbank

Now that it’s mid-spring, winter is finally melting away…

winter

Everyone was out enjoying the wonderful weather.

504 515 waterpump

523 meditation walkingonice

beach snowbank2 park

Dogs aren’t afraid of the ice
coolingoff dog

dogonice

Even dogskateboarding (summer form of dogsledding)

dogskateboarding

Playing some lawn games (croquet, bocce ball, block throwing/stacking)

croquet bocce
blocks

Just waiting for the ice to melt.

boats

And, of course, there were still some brave kiteskiers out on the lake

dangersign

kiteskier1 kiteskier2

Historical note about the first dwelling in Minneapolis, built by two missionaries on the east side of Lake Calhoun in 1834.

marker1 1sthouse

Minneapolis skyline

skyline1 skyline2

Cool treehouse in St. Louis Park

treehouse

More here:

Springtime at Lakes Calhoun & Harriet

Hours of daylight

Saturday, April 5th, 2008

The days are getting longer and longer as we approach summer. Here’s a little chart comparing the hours of daylight in Birmingham and Minneapolis. Currently, MN gets 20 minutes more daylight. During the summer, it stays light pretty late into the evening the further north you are so I’ll have to compare again in a couple months.

daylight

The snow has mostly melted… mostly

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

So the snow has mostly melted in Minnesota… mostly.

They got 8″ last weekend, so the Wild Mountain ski & snowboard hill was still open this weekend. What is left most places is the melting mounds of snow that was piled up during the winter in parking lots and some snow in fields that are partly shaded.

I was also surprised to see car car pulled over on the interstate last night. Who know what that Camry driver was up to… However, while I was driving around today I saw ZERO cops the entire day. Maybe they are in un-marked cars? Or maybe they are still in hibernation?

On to some pictures from the area today.

Nice farm, with a racetrack carved in the lake in the foreground
farm

Still driving around on the lakes… gathering their ice fishing houses?
trucks-on-lake

Welcome to Lindström
welcomesign

Wild Mountain – not as wild as I imagined
wildmtn

How did that get there? Must have jumped out of a moving truck.
deerhead

St. Croix Falls Dam & Hyrdopower Plant
hydroplant

This hydro plant located in St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin on the St. Croix River, is owned and operated by Xcel Energy Inc. The plant was constructed between 1905 and 1906. According to Xcel, the St. Croix Falls Hydro Plant is its 2nd highest producer of electricity among the Xcel’s-Wisconsin’s 19 hydro plants. The plant utilizes eight hydro turbines, and has the capability of producing up to 117,363 kilowatts of power annually.

Here are a couple before and after shots to illustrate the difference in snow from two months ago to today:

Target parking lot
target1 target2

Movie theater parking lot
movie1 movie2

More pictures in this album:

2008-03-29 MN-Wis. Sat

Museum of Modern Ice

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Speaking of exhibits in Chicago, you should stop by Millenium Park (just behind the bean) and check out the Museum of Modern Ice, featuring a fascinating display of cut ice titled Paintings Below Zero by Gordon Halloran. Check out some of the work:

night ice art day ice art

More pictures at the event blog.

Ice fishing and more on Lake Minnetonka

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

I got to drive across a lake for the first time this past Sunday afternoon. The 50 mph lake speed limit on Lake Minnetonka was no problem to follow (inside the 150 foot shore-zone the limit is only 15 mph). People I talked to around here assure me that it has been frozen for a long time now (so it must be pretty thick), but no one has been able to say how thick the ice is.

car on lake

Driving on a huge lake gives you that same feeling you get on a huge roller coaster. You think in the back of your head that you might fall through a crack in the ice and freeze to death while at the same time you reassure yourself that there is the chance of that happening is practically zero and besides, there are so many other people doing it, so don’t worry!

State law says that all ice fishing houses have to be off the lake by April 1st, so if you want to come see one, you had better hurry! green-orange

Besides the ice fishing there was snowmobiling, four-wheeling, motorcycle racing end even one person para-gliding.

paraglider motorcycle various
motorcycles icehouse

More pictures here:

Ice Fishing and other Snow Sports on Lake Minnetonka, 2008-01-27

Too Cold to Exercise? Try Another Excuse

Monday, January 28th, 2008

So says Gina Kolata of the New York Times.

“The big question was, ‘Is it ever too cold?’” Dr. Castellani said. “The answer is no. People go to the poles, people are out there when it’s minus-50 degrees, people do incredible things, and safely. There really isn’t a point where you can tell people it is not safe anymore.”

Dr. Timothy Noakes, an exercise physiologist at the University of Cape Town in South Africa who was a reviewer of that position paper, even supervised a swimmer, Lewis Gordon Pugh, who swam 1 km or (.62 miles) in 19 minutes at the North Pole last July, in water that was between 29 and 32 degrees.

The problem with exercising in the cold, exercise physiologists say, is that people may be hobbled by myths that lead them to overdress or to stop moving, risky things to do.

Some worry that cold air will injure their lungs or elicit asthma symptoms. Or they are convinced that they are more susceptible to injury when it is cold and that they have to move more slowly — forget about sprinting or running at a fast clip.

But lungs are not damaged by cold, said Kenneth W. Rundell, the director of respiratory research and the human physiology laboratory at Marywood University in Scranton, Pa. No matter how cold the air is, by the time it reaches your lungs, it is body temperature, he explained.

Some people complain that they get exercise-induced asthma from the cold. But that sort of irritation of the respiratory tract is caused by dryness, not cold, Dr. Rundell said. “Cold air just happens not to hold much water and is quite dry,” he said. You’d have the same effect exercising in air that was equally dry but warm.

Dr. Rundell and Tina Evans, a Ph.D. candidate, showed this a few years ago in a study designed to dispel what Dr. Rundell called the myth that cold air can induce asthma. Volunteers with exercise-induced asthma, whose airways tended to narrow after exercise in the cold, breathed cold air or room temperature air that was equally dry. Their airways narrowed in response to the dryness of the air, not its temperature, Dr. Rundell said.

Another myth is that you have to acclimatize to cold, just as you do to heat. It’s true that peoples’ bodies adapt to hot weather and that adaptation makes people feel better when they exercise in the heat. It also improves performance. With heat adaptation, you sweat more profusely, your sweat is less salty and your blood volume increases.

But exercise physiologists find only modest adaptation to cold. The body’s main responses to cold — constricting blood vessels near the skin, shunting blood to the body’s core and shivering — do not improve if you spend more time in the cold. Nor are the physically fit any better at adaptation than the sedentary.

Snowkiting on Lake Calhoun

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

This weekend I had a chance to watch see what kind of outdoor sports folks around here like to do. I wasn’t planning to stop at Lake Calhoun, but when I saw all the kites I decided to see what was going on. Here I found a bunch of people snowkiting or kiteskiing/boarding or whatever they call it these days plus even more spectators and joggers. Several groups were on site giving lessons and renting equipment. Lake Calhoun is located just southwest of downtown Minneapolis. Apparently, motorized vehicles are prohibited on this lake.

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This dog was getting a lot of extra exercise pulling the skier.
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Outdoor water leak in the winter in Minnesota.
water leak

More pictures of Lake Calhoun here:

Snow-kiting on Lake Calhoun, 2008-01-26