Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Stephen Graduates College!



Stephen graduated from the University of Tennessee on May 12 with a degree in Journalism and Electronic Media! We had a party for him and his friends. It was a happy day. Oh happy day. Now what?

Friday, May 13, 2011

That Dam May Training


Dear Dam Racers,


I apologize for being late with May’s inspirational missive. Finishing up this semester at Harvard was quite traumatic for me and Russel. But we have now recovered and are feeling much better; so is Mary.


May is a great month for training. Here are a few lines that MAY inspire you as you continue your dam training.


April is a promise that May is bound to keep.

~Hal Borland (That means you should have reached your dam goal of 4.7 miles in under an hour in May.)


He that is in a towne in May loseth his spring. ~George Herber (That means you should be in the country, Mantua, in July—that's possibly a bit of a stretch, but then stretching is important.)


"The world's favorite season is the spring. 
All things seem possible in May."
- Edwin Way Teale (That means it is possible to reach your dam goals.)


"By the time one is eighty, it is said, there is no longer a tug of war in the garden with the May flowers hauling like mad against the claims of the other months. All is at last in balance and all is serene. The gardener is usually dead, of course."
- Henry Mitchell, The Essential Earthman (That means you’re not 80 yet, so you’re not dead, and you should be doing your dam training.)


'But I must gather knots of flowers,

And buds and garlands gay,

For I'm to be Queen o' the May,

mother,
I'm to be Queen o' the May.'

-Alfred Lord Tennyson

(That means each dam racer will come in first in his or her Dam Race age group.)


"Sweet April showers
Do spring May flowers."


-Thomas Tusser, A Hundred Good Points of Husbandry, 1557

(That should really say, “April showers Do spring May dam runners.)


Is it so small a thing

To have enjoy'd the sun,

To have lived light in the spring,

To have loved,

To have thought,

To have done [run]...

- Matthew Arnold (That means tis no small thing to have prepared for the Dam Race.)



May the dam force be with you and May you stay Forever Young.


Rebecca


Pic: The May Queen preparing for the dam race. (Barefoot, of course. It's all the rage.)

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Rhodendrons




Thankfully, in the big hail storm of 2011, my rhododendrons had not started to blossom; they were still in a very tight bud. Plus they were protected on one side by the house. So while pretty much everything else got stripped--the day lilies, the clematis, the just-purchased gerber daisy, the asian lilies that were doing so wonderfully, my rhododendrons survived. And they bloomed, just in time for mother's day. Now isn't that sweet?! Rhodendrons are tricky to grow because they like frequent water, but need good drainage. You have to plant them above the soil a bit. I should know, I have lost my share of them. This is the second season for this one, and it looks like it is going to make it.

I think my day lilies will comeback, since the stalks had not yet shot up. So, despite the mangled foliage, hopefully they will appear in June along with the magnolias.

Mary pr'd (personal record) today in three events at the heptathlon at Yale: the hurdles, the shot put, the 200. She was in first place until the 200's, because even though she pr'd, she's not that great at the 200s. So she is in second place going into day 2. . . . now if it just weren't for the 800s!

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

24 in real life




The Navy Seal operation to get Osama looked like it was lifted right out of the show 24. On the television show when they showed the segments of the president and his/her cabinet watching a realtime dangerous operation going down via satellite, I thought it was pure theatrics. And the fact that the Seals all got out alive, was movie worthy as well--though these days in a tv show, a couple of Seals would have been killed. It's nice that at least in this case, real life was way better. Now in the tv series 24, all of them would have been killed, except one who was badly injured and one who heroically finished the operation and rescued the injured man. And that one heroic person would have been, uh, duh, Jack Bauer.

I saw on the morning news an interview with an ex Elite Navy Seal from team six who has written a memoir about his life as a Navy Seal; it is due out the end of May. Wow! what good timing. I'm getting it.