Life of Dave

Life of Dave

Thursday, April 25, 2013

Sun Run 2013

You know Spring has really sprung when the Sun Run arrives. Shauna and I participated again this year.

The day before the event involved some shopping. Since the weather was forecast to be cold in the morning, and we are familiar with the startline delay, we decided to dress warmly. I had a fleece pull-over that I was going to donate, but Shauna needed a suitable garment. Off to Value Village we went; we picked up another sweater with none other than a chocolate manufacturer's logo!

Then of course we had to find a yellow accessory to compliment our blue, in solidarity with Boston.We were a bit late off the starting block on that idea; the yellow sports wear racks were picked clean by Saturday. In the end we resorted to sharing one pair of yellow shoelaces between us.

Watching the runners cross the finish line on the big screens inside BC Place post-run I saw a guy in a Boston Bruins jersey. It's probably the only occasion in that guy's memory that he hasn't been harrassed into hiding for wearing it, what with the Boston/ Vancouver hockey rivalry in this town, especially as we inch closer to the playoffs.

My elapsed time wasn't stellar; 60:58. Oh well, that's pretty much my average over 8 SunRuns. I'm trying not to get hung up on it. I did jog the whole thing, which was my overall goal, with only 3 brief walks to consume some H2O at water stations. Over the years I've found it impossible to actually swallow any water from those little sample cups while trying to maintain a jogging pace.
And the best part is (besides being able to participate with my lovely wife, of course!) was that we didn't get rained on during the event. Upon awaking that morning it was raining, but the weather report assured me that downtown was dry at that point. As our staging area neared release onto the course patches of blue sky began to appear. During the Run it was mostly sunny. However after brunch, upon emerging from a Roundhouse-area restaurant, the wind had picked up fiercely and ominous grey clouds predicted a soaking. We ducked into the Yaletown subway and hightailed it to Oakridge whereupon we were subjected to a hail shower(!), minus the warm fleece pull-overs we'd previously donated at the start line. And departing the Fraser bus we walked into a 45 degree angle pelting from the heavens. Better then than mid-run I suppose.

How's that for a late Mother Nature's April Fool's prank?

Monday, April 8, 2013

Old versus New again

You know how some people have fantasy hockey or football pools? Well I seem to be afflicted with a fantasy air-cooled Beetle obsession. Or at least it’ll probably remain a fantasy until the mortgage is paid off.

This may be another example similar to my recent previous post concerning having a thought rolling around in the back of one’s head long enough to attract other similar themed ideas. This process always reminds of an insurance commercial I saw once of a guy tripping at the top of a steep hill. As he catapults arse-over-teakettle he develops a kind of velcro attraction to just about anything in his path, morphing into a massive ball of everything. Ultimately the flailing sphere reaches the bottom of the hill and explodes upon impact with a building (to Youtube it just type in key search words including Ball Rolling Funny Commercial). I get such a better mental image from that rolling orb than the infinitely more banal comparison to a snowball rolling downhill.

The idea metamorphosis connection is that I’ve wanted another early Beetle since I sold my last one; 14 years ago. Up until very recently my goal has been an oval window model, those produced between mid-'53 and the end of '57. It's now transitioning towards a 70's Super Beetle.

My Early Oval-versus-Macpherson strut internal debate may have germinated (pun definitely intended) in the recent news that Shauna’s friend and former work colleague is returning to Vancouver for a visit in order to participate in the SunRun. She’s going to stay at our place. Years ago, just prior to their move East, her husband Nick asked to store his Beetle in our garage. It is a ’74 I think, right in the middle of the 1973-75 North American production run of Macpherson-strutted Super Beetle sedans. (Surprisingly, I just checked my photo library, and lo and behold, Nick’s Beetle is not as I remembered a Super Beetle at all!)
Nick's Bug.
There are two distinct camps of modified-air-cooled VW nuts; those that modify 50s and 60s Beetles into Cal-lookers, and those that modify kafers to exemplify the German-look. They’re similar in that both use a lowered suspension as a base platform, but that’s about it for modification similarities.
The Oval that I have my eye on (and have had since last August) is a 1957 Agave green sedan, lowered with Porsche rims, high performance engine and a fully restored body and interior. It’s perfect in every way possible, except that it’s in North Carolina. And it’s eighteen-five, just reduced from nineteen yesterday.
1957 Agave green sedan
The other style, favoured across the pond, focuses on the enhanced chassis design of the Super Beetle. The Macpherson strut front end greatly enhances the handling of a Beetle, bringing it ever so much closer to a modern production car. The engine-modded old ones were fine for straight-line performance, but cornering wasn’t stellar. European tuners can have the best of both worlds with a SB, acceleration and cornering. And nowadays there are even more super-cool parts to add to the Super Beetle platform with the introduction of the Boxster/ Cayman models, in addition to the tried and true 911. Lowered Mac struts, accessory anti-sways bars and strut tower brace, high performance Type 4 engine, deep-dish wheels and leather seats from a Boxster/ Cayman/ 911...where is my cheque book anyway?
Modified '73-75 era Super Beetle with 911 rims.

Another late model favourite, although not a SB.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

A Little Blue Bag

Since catching up with the past 4-1/2 seasons of Breaking Bad (we started just after Christmas), we decided to see what else was on Netflix. The Canadian version of this service isn't quite as up to snuff as the US version so I'm told, but we did run across Jeff Who Lives at Home. Quite an entertaining movie. When it was initially released and I saw the trailer I remember thinking I'd like it, and I did. It's a bit slow at the beginning, but it does draw you in. It kinda reminded me of Punch Drunk Love with Adam Sandler. (I normally avoid his movies, but there have been about three (out of about 500) that I've liked.)

Anyway, I had a rather odd experience the other day regarding finding some long-lost (and rather forgotten) items over the weekend that, in retrospect, I would tend to attribute to a theme in that movie.

Jeff, the central figure in the movie, is somewhat of a misunderstood layabout. A name gets stuck in his head at the beginning of the day that he thinks he must follow in order to understand some larger picture. He follows various trails of "Kevin" to the end of the movie, and of course, emerges victorious.

My Easter long weekend was drastically different from Jeff's, but I did seem to ruminate on one subject after it sort of appeared in my head over night. I had been building Lego trucks with my nephew...or rather, I had been building them and he'd been playing with them. After the build session I was thinking about all the small kits that had gone into my semi-large stash of blocks. When we were kids my cousin (coincidentally also named Jeff) and I would spend our time building trucks. We fine-tuned our basic design to always incorporate fenders and a certain type of door. I had forgotten where those specialized pieces came from.

Then, for some unexplainable reason, I started to think about a small blue canvas-type bag I'd had as a child. I wasn't even completely sure what it had contained, but I guessed it had been Lego. The image of that small blue bag stayed with me all day.

As the weekend ended I decided I'd ride my bike to work the next day, and promptly set about searching for my panniers. I haven't ridden to work since probably September, and do you think I could find those stupid panniers? I searched all the usual suspects. Shelves, drawers, storage rooms, closets. And cabinets. And that's where I found the little blue bag.  It's heft and fluidity suggested it was a bag of marbles, which it was, except that it also contained many small colour brochures issued by Lego in and around 1970, mostly for small trucks, tractors, trains and cars. Talk about a score! Quelle vintage time capsule!

There's power in the sub-conscious mind. It goes to work when we're sleeping, weaving together seemingly random thoughts, events and even sensations. It creates associations and neural connections far too complex to be explained by the likes of me. My wonderfully relaxing 4-day sunny (!) weekend (this season's first application of sunscreen, btw) included dining out, hosting the family Easter dinner, building (Lego, and also continuating with basement renovations), jogging, playing with my dog and planning to ride my bike on Tuesday morning. All of it somehow coalesced overnight into one conscious thought; a blue Lego bag, culminating with the bonus discovery of vintage Lego brochures I'd forgotten I'd kept since childhood.
Note the doors and fenders I used on the latest evolution of my truck design from kits pictured in the vintage brochures below.






Monday, April 1, 2013

Noah's Topiary Ark

The weather this past Easter long weekend was fabulous. Warm with sunny blue sky. Perfect jogging weather, too.

On Saturday morning our SunRun training group happened upon a particularly seasonally appropriate topiary display in an East Van front yard. Shrubs and hedges had been sculpted into a wide variety of animals; some Easter-themed rabbits, plus ducks, chickens (I think), a llama, and even a snake stretched along the side of the house.

And the cherry-blossomed street was a perfect bonus backdrop. There were plenty of oohs and ahhs from our jogging group as we past. I stopped by on the way home to get some photographs.

Oh, and BTW, I finally opportuned of this sunny Spring weekend to take down the Christmas lights. Easter lights never quite caught on.