TALES FROM THE TRAIL (AND SOMETIMES THE ROAD TOO)

Monday, January 1, 2024

Good to be Exhausted

2023. Fastest year ever. It was like a whirlwind. It seems like I had to force time to catch a breath (only when absolutely necessary mental health-wise – I’m last minute like that). 2023 is almost all a blur now, that is until I open up my phone and travel through the year. What a trip. I am in the future. 2023 at my fingertips. At first thought, I didn’t accomplish much in 2023. I came up short on goals, physical goals, writing goals, even reading goals. My phone however is here to remind me that I did do much in 2023. I lived in 2023.

A Chronical of the year that hit me like a whirlwind and left me exhausted (It’s good to be exhausted):

January
1 JAN 26Spring semester began, I was teaching 3 days a week. I also enrolled in another piano course and one day a week after my class, walked to the music building next-door to Business Sciences for piano. I stayed local mostly because I was having car trouble (my gauge wasn’t measuring gas in the tank accurately. Twice I ran out of gas, once thankfully in my driveway). So, I hiked beaches and used my bus pass happily (I was tired of driving anyway, and tired of gas prices too).

3 march 281 JAN 6

February

2 FEB 10Chiquito Falls were flowing once again. All of our creeks flowed like crazy – in the coastal hills and mountains. The wild grass was fresh and green. New growth was everywhere. California got enough rain to end our most recent drought. But I did not venture out much with classes to plan, committee meetings to attend, new music to learn, etc. 

2 Feb2 feb 12

March

3 MARCH 24The rain continued to fill our creeks. Attended my son’s Junior Recital at his university and a dear friend’s wedding at a lovely spot in the mountains. It rained almost all of the time, even during the wedding (but that’s what made it even more enchanting). Began attending Thursday night Lent supper services at church. I was still riding the bus to work which meant I had a lot of much cherished reading time and finally finished a book that I had been reading for a while. I think that was the beginning of my exhaustion. (Great book though).

3 MARCH 5         3 MARCH 12

April

Continued attending Lent soup dinner services on Thursday nights. Attended more concerts. I was so looking forward to my hike to Baker Cross on Good Friday. But one week prior to this finale, I caught COVID19, my first bout. I went down pretty hard, I think mainly because I hiked ten miles in Black Star Canyon without knowing I was already ill. I was out of commission for a bit. I tested negative pretty quickly and most symptoms vanished  but fatigue and depression lingered. I was in a funk for a while. 

4 april

May

Fully back to work but a time of recovery. More lovely concerts and also the university music award banquet for my son. The blackberries began to blossom in the backyard and spring was bursting out all over due to our late rains. (During drought, spring flowers are long gone by May.)

IMG_9171    5 MAY 315 MAY 16

June

6 june 19Youngest son graduated high school, oldest son flew in from East 6 JUNE 21Coast. Had dinner with the entire family for the first time in a few years. It was a lovely time. But only the beginning! Flew out to NYC with husband, my middle son and girlfriend to see him play in a guitar orchestra at the Manhattan School of Music. Oldest son flew out too. It was a time of chaos at the airports (lots of cancellations) but we did amazingly well. We ate wonderful food, saw the sights (Central Park, Times Square, Statue of Liberty, Ellis Island, etc). Later, we drove to Maryland to stay with oldest son and his girlfriend. Ate homemade tortillas at his place, wonderful crab at a local joint then enjoyed more sights and excellent seafood at the National Harbor. I was calling the trip a “Foodcation” by this point. Ended East Coast trip with a stay at an Airbnb in Arlington, Va (Crystal City) where we enjoyed the National Mall in DC and excellent dining in Virginia. It was a long trip home with a layover in Charlotte that was delayed and eventually cancelled (but we had already found another flight before the cancellation!) I taught summer online classes during the trip. I pre-recorded my lectures but still had tutoring hours to adhere to. Even so, I had fallen a little behind, especially with the new piano class I had enrolled in for the short semester. House was still standing when we arrived back at home. Youngest son kept the garden flowers alive. Smile
 6 june 25 6 june 27

July

7 JULY 30Continued teaching online courses, worked on catching up with everything: unpacking, cleaning, gardening, piano, grading, and trying to get a date nailed down with the US Forest Service for the marathon. On the last Sunday of the month, I attended my 35th High School Reunion.  35 years since I had graduated from high school --  Yikes.

7 july 5

 August

8 aug 10cMore rain, lovely summer rain. We had an earthquake as well (five something on the Richter scale if my memory serves correctly). Attended son’s summer concert at our church, helped sons move into dorms, prepped classes for fall semester and attended piano classes online from my Livingroom.

8 aug 10a

September

9 SEPT 23Got an answer on a marathon date (November, not enough time!). Back in the air for another trip, this time with husband to see family in Texas and pack up things from storage to have shipped home. Flew into Austin, saw family for a few days south of Dallas and rented a U-haul. Drove to Waco to unload into a U-box and met our oldest son at Austin airport. Saw family places in Giddings, spent time at the Wendish museum in Serbin then returned next day for the Wendish festival. Was a wonderful ending to a stressful trip. Spent last night in Texas at the worst hotel ever, across from the Capitol, seriously don’t ever stay at the La Quinta Inn across from the state capitol – it was comical. Flight home was turbulent but made it without any cancellations (not so for our son).

9 SEPT 24 9 sept 24a

October

10 oct 26 bOctober I finally got back on the trails. The lush green hillsides had turned brown, flowers at home were blooming in abundance. Felt a little bit in a race against time putting the marathon together. It was going to be a small race and I wasn’t sure when to pull the trigger on the shirts, medals etc. Stressful month. And then I was back in the air again. This time, for a business conference in Florida that I felt really fortunate to be a part of. Thing was, it came at a tough time. Left early on a Wednesday with a colleague, stayed in an awesome Orlando hotel, was catered to with fine food, spent an evening at Epcot and was back by the weekend (late Friday night). Talk about whirlwind.

 10 OCT 2610 oct 26a

November

Got lots of hiking in, scouting and prepping trails for race. Received11 NOV 19A bad news about my beloved uncle on life support week prior to race, then day of, while marking Viejo Tie, learned my mother was in hospital for heart issues. We had the marathon, was a small race, old-school you might say. A lot of runners liked it, a couple didn’t appreciate that it was long. Was great to be back in Blue Jay. The next week, I drove out to Nevada, stayed the night in Spring Valley to be with my uncle. On return stopped by the Liberty Sculpture Garden down a dirt road outside of Yermo, California and spent some time wandering about the anti-communist monuments that I only seen from the highway but had never investigated close up (I had no idea even the topic). Had a quiet Thanksgiving in Fallbrook with the family, mother recuperating with a date scheduled for surgery. Was super good to be with family.

 11 NOV 1111 nov 19 11 nov 20

December

12 DEC 9Christmas Boat light parade down at the harbor, the NutCracker Suite with my niece in a staring role. Youngest son went to emergency hospital for internal bleeding. As he healed, oldest son flew out for pre-Christmas visit. Drove with eldest out to Vegas and stayed downtown after spending time with my uncle. Worked on race permits. Mother had heart surgery. Went to Disneyland with all 3 sons and their girlfriends. Closed up fall semester, Christmas shopped, stayed two days in Redlands with middle son and girlfriend. Christmas celebration in Fallbrook. Day after Christmas, drove to Nevada and got a hotel in Vegas, met Cousin’s son and we spent time with my uncle. Walked on the beach on the last day of the year and spent a quiet time at home with my husband meeting the new year.

12 dec 1812 DEC 29

Sunday, November 26, 2023

Saddleback Marathon Race Report

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We had a nice old school, mountain marathon on Veterans day this year (11/11/23) – small & cozy. The weather was perfect, cold in the morning (around 50F), warmer in the afternoon (70F plus some). We were blessed with blue skies, beautiful trails and the entire campground, both upper and lower, all to ourselves. That’s right, though most of the campground’s renovations seem nearly completed, the place remains closed to the public.  Thank you Forest Service for permitting our event!

We had a total of 25 registrants, 5 DNS (did not show), 7 DNF (did not finish), and 13 Finishers. It was a super tough course (and long to boot). The course also was a re-route again this year (trails still haven’t re-opened after #HolyFire). We saw lots of triumphs and some tough defeats on the course as is always the case with sports, especially trail runs. Every one of the runners did an awesome job.

The original course (Under “Big Baz) was short by 3 miles. I really didn’t mind that one bit. It was difficult enough. My preference is to go over on mileage though. Calico 30k is always more than 30k. Even one San Diego Rock n’ roll marathon I ran, I came in over 27 miles on my garmin. On these Saddleback Mountain re-routes, I especially aim for the 26 miles and go over some just to make sure. My measurements came to 26.8. As is with the case taking measurements with our gps tools, others who ran the race reported from 27 to 28 plus some. This of course made the 2023 Saddleback Marathon even more difficult.

Looking down toward Start/Finish (lower Blue Jay) from Long Cyn Rd
IMG_1366

Lower Blue Jay
IMG_1386IMG_1406       
Top 3 Finishers

Dan Friedman                      4:50:57
Michael Karch 4:54:06
Cameron Robles 5:53:52

Full results here. Females not listed above because all females were “Early Start”, which technically do not place, though do receive an official finishing time.

Top 3 Finishers
IMG_1431IMG_1444IMG_1456IMG_1477  Candy Store (San Juan Loop) Aid Station (photos courtesy Leon Gray)
401518981_10225576839033590_1896280819596761945_n401511505_10225576840353623_4806354983483175903_nDFL Lawrence Kosick below arriving to the finish in awesome spirits, a true sportsman. We had him marked as DNF but Bib #666 Chris Larson insisted there was a runner behind him. So, I drove up to Julie on Long Cyn Road to check her roster when sure enough, Lawrence popped up off San Juan Trail, smiling, followed by Matt, the sweep. BTW, we had the BEST volunteers -- Julie, Rick H, Matt, Scott, Whitney, Leon, Rick A, Nancy, Tracy, Dave, Lucas, & Avery. They did a huge amount of work, we are so grateful! 

It was an awesome day. I learned much. Looking forward to 11/9/24, the next marathon, this time, Big Baz’s original course!

DFL
20231111_155056IMG_1394

Tuesday, October 24, 2023

Scouting Saddleback Marathon Trails

IMG_0837I managed to head to The Saddleback Mountains this past Sunday to scout some of the marathon trails. It was a warm Autumn day for sure – our cool down trend has not occurred but is much anticipated. Anyway, Blue Jay Campground was closed for improvements. They’re fixing it up for us! I cannot tell you how great it was to be back up in that campground. (Yes, I snuck in!).

Anyway, below are some quick pictures of mainly San Juan Trail and The Viejo Tie which are part of the marathon course. We’ve got fresh poison oak out there, which is normal. And only one fallen tree (so far). Overall, except for some overgrowth, the trails look great.

More previews to follow.

The Main Divide on the Way in:IMG_0715IMG_0723

Poison OakPoison Oak

San Juan Trail:SJ Trail 2SJ Trail 3SJ Trail 5SJ Trail 6

San Juan Trail, close to Viejo TieSJ Trail 8SJ Trail 9SJ Trail 7

Viejo TieVT 1VT 2

Saturday, October 21, 2023

‘Bout Time

IMG_0602

IMG_0619I last made my way to trails way back in April (6 months ago!) – during what Christians call our Holy Week. I was so looking forward to hiking to Baker’s Cross on Good Friday but I could not because I was sick in bed, exhausted with Covid. Anyway, that’s ancient history. I’ve done plenty of walking and exploring since then (New York, DC, TX). It feels like a whirlwind. I just haven’t had the time to do one of the things that I love most: get out on those mountain trails.

It’s always a little emotional returning after an absence. Seeing those mountains off in the distance is like seeing a long lost friend.

So, all I have to say is, it’s bout time! This past Saturday, during an Annular Eclipse, I returned to the scene of the crime, that is my Covid hike, Black Star Canyon. Beautiful as ever, though dry and lots of brown, I made my way up the canyon to one of the historic sites, the “Indian Village” (Indian as in Native Americans). The weather was still quite warm, cool in the morning, but quickly I needed to stop and layer down. I spent quite a bit of time in the “village”. Walked about a bit, tried out a couple of spots. Then I ate lunch perched on a shaded boulder over looking the valley, breaking an extended fast. It was a lovely time, and as I already wrote but must write again, it’s about time!

I will be back out very soon. I have trails to scout.

Just shy of 10.5 miles covered.

IMG_0612IMG_0625IMG_0626IMG_0630IMG_0632

Monday, October 9, 2023

Saddleback Marathon -- 11/11/23

Time keeps marching on. And it always seems a little faster every day. Working lots of hours, some of them online, though I did need to take a few days off for a Texas trip in September. Not my first time to Texas, but I saw Austin for the first time and went to the Wendish Fest in Serbin. It was quite an adventure that I told already family and friends all about, not to mention hand wrote a journal version on acid free paper. So, I’ll be marching right on past that, onward to more relevant items, mainly the Saddleback Mountains, my giant secret place.

IMG_0551First: I finally got back to see my great love Old Saddleback, as they used to call it. My Covid hike was the last time I stepped foot into my beloved mountains, which is my longest absence in many years (about 6 months!). This trip was short, and LONG overdue and also apropos (more on how a little lower). The occasion was Madame Helena Modjeska’s birthday. This October 12, she would have been 182 years old. Many people don’t know of her, but we know of Madame Modjeska in The OC. Helena was the Shakespearean actress from Poland who built a home out here in Old  Saddleback during the late 1800s. We have a canyon and a major peak named after her now. Both are lovely places to visit. I’ve scrambled up Modjeska peak many times to sit in solitude above The OC, and I’ve driven through her canyon countless times, as it is the road to many wonderful trails and secret places.

Madame Modjeska’s Home:IMG_0525

So, why is my return to Old Saddleback so apropos? Well, this year, the Saddleback Marathon has returned. Registration has been open since September and I’m busy trying to get the word out. We’re super excited about the race this year. Same start / same finish, lower Blue Jay campgrounds. We’ve got a great team putting this together. Check us out and help us spread the word!

otrraces.com

saddleback marathon postcard FRONT
saddleback marathon postcard BACK