Dean of Women

August 20th, 2009

I was saying I wanted to get involved in racing again now that I’m out of school; I didn’t mean to jump in with both feet.  But the team needed an experienced woman racer who has time to coordinate the women’s program, especially with some promising cat 4s this year but less depth to the program than in some years.  I’m not the best, but I’ve been doing this for a while, and I like mentoring new riders.  Riding with the guys is fun, but it will be a treat to have some women’s rides and hopefully help the new racers jump into it.

We survived HotROD

August 1st, 2009

Whew.  Michael and I completed RAMROD (Ride Around Mt. Rainier in One Day) on the tandem, despite record heat.  For those not familiar with the ride, it is a 154-mile, one day event which completely circles a 14,000 foot volcano in Washington state.  Usually it is lovely.  One legendary year it snowed on the mountain during the ride (in July!)  This year it started at a comfortable 78 degrees F before dawn at the base of the mountain, and hit 100 degrees before 11am.  There is a long, long exposed climb up a south-facing slope midday, but breezes across the pass when you finally make it to the top.  Unfortunately, the denouement after the final pass was a descent into a blast furnace; it was well over 100F at the finish line in the afternoon.

Our ride this year was a complete success, if by “success” you mean “finished the ride,” “avoided heat-related illness,” and “were still speaking with each other.” The organizers provided fantastic support – handing out ice-filled tube socks at the base of the longest, hottest climb was a stroke of genius.

File in the category of “things we can check off our list and don’t need to do again.”

Afterward I modified the t-shirt design … just a little…

Hotrod Tee 2009

Graduation Day: so soon?

June 27th, 2009

Graduating after two years of full-time study in the Drawing and Painting Atelier at Gage Academy of Art.  It’s exciting.  It’s scary.  It’s past time.  It’s way too soon.  It’s one thing to win palmares in school where the rules are defined, another to live up to them in real life.

I’ve learned so much in the past two years.  Developing my artistic technique was only a small part of it: it has changed even the way I look at art.

“Questioning Silence”, ArtsWest playhouse, West Seattle

May 30th, 2008

I am showing work in the exhibit Questioning Silence through June 21 at ArtsWest in West Seattle, with Andrew Hare and Stephen Rock. The gallery show accompanies ArtsWest’s current theater play, I Am My Own Wife. I look forward to seeing the play, it sounds fascinating.

All’s well that ends well

May 20th, 2008

Pre-season track racing began in early May at Marymoor Velodrome. I have raced May 9th and 16th so far, and had a great time. Training has taken a far back seat to art and school this year, but fortunately there seems to still be enough in my legs to hang in, contest a few sprints, and generally have a whole lotta fun. It’s great motivation to work on tactics and ride smart. May 16th was particularly fun due to a good women’s turnout and unseasonably warm weather. What a beautiful evening. Check out Stephen Rusk’s flikr site for photos of racing on the 9th.

All’s well that ends well, as the bard said. My vision is nearly 100% again. Something finally clicked (metaphorically) about three weeks after the last surgery, and one day I simply realized I had been using stereo vision all morning. The convergence continued improving and now functions in most of my visual range. I rarely notice double vision anymore. It makes a big difference to many activities we take for granted: pouring a glass of water, accepting change at the store, driving, walking down stairs, and of course riding in a pack of cyclists. Pacelines feel so much easier and safer now, I’m amazed looking back on it that I was able to compete in mass-start races at all last year! Apparently I’m stupider and far more stubborn than I ever thought; it would have been much simpler and very sensible to have just given up racing. Huge thanks to Dr. Raghu Mudumbai and the other doctors at UW Medical and Harborview where I had my surgeries.

DoubleDouble VisionVision

January 30th, 2008

My second strabismus (double vision) surgery was successful, and I’m recovering well. I am still frustrated by slight double vision (though less extreme than before), but I’m told that should lessen with use, once my brain gets used to making the images converge again.

Happy New Year!

December 30th, 2007

Happy new year! In 2008 I’m looking forward to a trip to New York, an atelier group show in the spring, and a show at ArtsWest in West Seattle in May.

The bike racing bug has been burned out of my head for a while by competing at Nationals and several big regional races last year. So I will continue training only as time permits and take Friday night racing casually – if Friday nights at Marymoor Velodrome can be called “casual!”

End of term

December 15th, 2007

First atelier quarter successfully navigated! The ateliers had a great party to celebrate the end of term. I have not had time for much of my own work, mainly class exercises. I was pretty happy with my work before this, and it got a lot of praise. But now I realize how much further I can take it. To my credit, I think I always have pushed myself, but I have seen more development just this term than in the entire previous year.

Getting repaired

October 24th, 2007

I had surgery on the 22nd to try to correct the double vision I’ve suffered since a bike racing crash in 2006. It was partially successful, but not entirely. We’ll try to get it the rest of the way in January, or rather, Dr. Mudumbai will try. I will simply try not to whine. Both eyes are sore as a result of the surgery, and I have limited stamina before I have to close them for a while. But it’s more boring than painful.

Crack the art whip

September 22nd, 2007

The atelier is every bit as tough as I had hoped. By a week into the course I already felt four days behind… Mark is a great instructor and my fellow students are talented, creative, and inspiring. I hope to be able to continue my own work during this period; I know it will improve.