Barton Springs and Deep Eddy have reopened – but more closures are coming

Barton Springs and Deep Eddy have reopened – but more closures are coming

Barton Springs Pool is reopening today after last week’s freeze. It will close again March 1-12 for annual maintenance. Pam LeBlanc photo

Go ahead and pull your swimsuit out of deep freeze, Austin.

Barton Springs Pool and Deep Eddy Pool reopened today after last week’s winter storm – and admission is free until further notice.

Big Stacy, Bartholomew and Springwood pools remain closed. They sustained damage during the cold snap and will reopen after structural and plumbing repairs are complete.

Barton Springs Pool is a spring-fed pool with a natural bottom in downtown Austin. Pam LeBlanc photo

Ready to take the plunge?

Barton Springs Pool is today through Sunday (swim at your own risk from 5-8 a.m. and 6-10 p.m.; guards on duty 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.), then closes for regularly scheduled maintenance from March 1-12. During the closure, crews will remove gravel from the bottom of the pool. Access to “dog beach” below the pool will be limited; it will be used as a staging area for gravel-removing equipment.

Deep Eddy will offer expanded hours for lap swimming while Barton Springs is closed. Hours are 9 a.m. until 7 p.m. today and March 1-12, with a few exceptions. The pool will be closed Friday, Feb. 26; Tuesday, March 2; and Tuesday, March 9.

For more information, call the Barton Springs Pool Hotline at 512-867-3080 or the Austin Parks and Recreation Department’s Aquatic Administration and Training Center at 512-974-9330.

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This Austin man kept his daily swim streak alive by kicking in a bathtub during Snowpocalypse

This Austin man kept his daily swim streak alive by kicking in a bathtub during Snowpocalypse

Keith Bell has been swimming every day for more than 30 years. Sandy Neilson-Bell photo

Think you’ve got an impressive exercise streak going?

I checked with Austin swimmer and sports psychologist Keith Bell, whom I last wrote about in September 2019, when he logged his 11,111th day – that’s about 30 years – in a row of swimming. (Read that entry here.) I wondered how he fared during last week’s Snowpocalypse, which delivered 6.5 inches of snow across Austin and knocked out power and water to people all over Texas.

Bell, indeed, managed to keep the streak alive. But instead of logging the usual 4,000 to 8,000 yards (roughly between 2.25 and 4.5 miles) in a pool or lake, he kicked and sculled his way through swim practice – in his home bathtub.

“It’s no big deal, it’s just me, it’s just what I do. I eat every day, too,” he said, as if we all have been exercising every day for three decades straight.

Keith Bell swims in Lake Travis. Sandy Neilson-Bell photo

Nope, the tub wasn’t as good as Deep Eddy, Barton Springs or Lake Travis, a few of his usual haunts. It wasn’t even good as the YMCA, where he did monster kicking sessions while recovering from shoulder surgery. (He swam the morning before surgery, then positioned himself at the edge of the pool so he could keep his shoulder dry while kicking in the water starting the next day. “I worked up to at one point kicking for two hours pretty darn hard with fins and doing sprints in middle,” he said.)

Bell’s swim streak began in April 1989. He didn’t intend to start something big, but about 6,000 days into it, his son took notice.

“I’m closing in on 12,000 days now,” he said this week.

He prefers cold water (he broke down and put on a wetsuit to brave the 50-something degree waters of Lake Travis recently), and in the summer tends to swim in the lake late at night, after dark, when it’s cooler, with his wife paddling a kayak alongside him.

Why such a dedicated routine, you might ask?

“I love everything about it,” he said of swimming. “In some ways it’s like meditating. It’s relaxing and there are always different challenges. You learn a lot about yourself and the decisions you make, and the water just plain feels good.”

Bell, 72, who swam at Kenyon College in Ohio, served as an assistant coach of the men’s swim team at the University of Texas, then coached the first intercollegiate women’s team there. He has also coached U.S. Masters programs and high school teams. He is married to Sandy Neilson-Bell, who won three gold medals in the 1972 Munich Olympics.

And while those bathtub workouts were memorable, he’s back in deeper water again. Neilson-Bell says he took a dip in 52-degree water this week.

 

 

 

 

 

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Registration is open for this year’s (virtual) Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Registration is open for this year’s (virtual) Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Pam LeBlanc stands with an unidentified participant in the 2018 Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run. This year’s run will once again be virtual. Chris LeBlanc photo

Time to lace up your racing shoes, ladies and gentlemen.

Registration is open for the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run, which once again will take place virtually this year.

Participants in the 5K can run anytime between now and May 31. A drive-through party where runners can pick up their commemorative T-shirts, plus nibbles and margaritas from Maudie’s TexMex, will take place on June 4.

This year marks the 18th year for the race, which benefits The Trail Foundation, a non-profit organization that works to maintain and improve the popular 10-mile trail around Lady Bird Lake.

Registration is $30 per person. To sign up, go here. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/maudies-moonlight-margarita-run-benefitting-the-trail-foundation-tickets-142559847341

After you register, you’ll receive an email link to create a virtual bib that you can share on social media to encourage your friends to get involved.

Then it’s time to get moving. You can walk or run your 5K, using one of the recommended on-trail routes, or any other 5K course you choose. Submit your best time to the website by May 31.

On June 4, join the drive-through packet pickup party to get your commemorative T-shirt, margarita and nibbles from Maudie’s TexMex.

Runners participate in the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation

 

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If a Colorado ski trip still appeals after Austin’s wintry blast, read on…

If a Colorado ski trip still appeals after Austin’s wintry blast, read on…

Chris LeBlanc skis a run at Copper Mountain in February 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo

The Great Texas Snowpocalypse may have dampened your enthusiasm for a ski trip this season, but just in case, I’m here with an update from my contacts in Colorado.

Ski lifts are still whisking folks up the slopes and skiers are still schussing happily down them, albeit in smaller numbers this year, according to Chris Linsmayer, public affairs director of Colorado Ski Country USA, which represents 22 ski areas in Colorado.

“Largely the season is going well, but business is down due to Covid,” Linsmayer said. “Visitors are grateful to come out and experience some normalcy.”

The good news? Snow sports are, by their nature, less risky than other endeavors during a pandemic. “You’re outside and you have skis or a board on your feet, so it’s naturally socially distant,” Linsmayer said.

The bad news? Outbreaks have been reported at some area ski resorts. Those cases, including a rash of more than 100 reported among employees at Winter Park last week, have been traced to workers who live and socialize together. So far there have been no reports of employees transferring the virus to visitors.

If you do decide to make a trip, keep a few things in mind. Ski Country is still pushing it’s “Know before you go” message, encouraging visitors to check the Colorado Ski Country website at www.coloradoski.com or go to the individual website of the resort they plan to visit for Covid tips and advice.

Most resorts are requiring pre-purchase of lift tickets, and some require pre-purchase of parking.

Resorts are encouraging visitors to eat meals outdoors, on picnic tables or benches. This group enjoys a meal next to the parking lot at Arapaho Basin in February 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo

Dining restrictions vary by county, but some have increased occupancy rates at sit-down restaurants to 50 percent. (Others, like Telluride, are at 25 percent capacity.) Many resorts offer grab-and-go meals on the mountain, and some offer creative solutions, like gondola cars or yurts that serve as dining pods, or tents that allow breezes to flow through.

Under state regulations, masks must be worn – over your nose and mouth – in public spaces, including lift lines. And a single Buff or bandana won’t cut it. Either use a regular face mask or double down on those thin neck gaiters.

“Our state regulations allow you to take off masks while skiing, but you must put them on while in line,” Linsmayer said.

Here are a few more specific updates …

Patrick O’Sullivan skis a run at Arapaho Basin. Pam LeBlanc photo

Aspen Snowmass

Aspen-Snowmass, which incorporates four ski resorts (Aspen, Aspen Highlands, Snowmass and Buttermilk), has a sense of humor – they’re pushing a “Fine Dining on the Lift” theme, encouraging folks to pick up individually wrapped and easily transported food items like sandwiches and salads in containers that are easy to eat from. That way you can eat them outside, on benches, inside heated tents, or while the lift whisks you up the mountain for that next run.

“It’s kind of feeling like we’re a little bit back to normal,” said Xanthe Demas, communications manager at the area.

A new six-person lift is turning at Snowmass, and both Aspen and Snowmass have added snowmaking operations.

Copper Mountain

Copper Mountain, where I skied last February, just started offering six-person group lessons, instead of limiting them to privates. They’ve also added guided uphill tours and expanded uphill routes (a terrific workout best done at dawn!) to the menu, and during the month of February are donating $5 of every lift ticket purchased on Wednesday to a non-profit organization as part of the Play it Forward Wednesday movement, said communications manager Taylor Prather.

Monarch Mountain

I made it to Monarch Mountain last winter too, where marketing director Dan Bender says the resort is enjoying a winter storm cycle (probably more than Austin is enjoying its winter storm cycle.)

“Still, it has been a challenging year,” Bender said.

The mountain has added a food truck that peddle burritos at the base area, and another that serves grab-and-go food at mid-mountain. The trucks will be incorporated permanently, he said. Lodges are instituting social distancing guidelines.

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Arctic Cowboys test gear in snowy Austin before planned Northwest Passage paddle expedition

Arctic Cowboys test gear in snowy Austin before planned Northwest Passage paddle expedition

West Hansen and Jimmy Harvey paddle Lady Bird Lake on a rare snowy day in Austin, Texas. Pam LeBlanc photo

West Hansen wriggled into a dry suit Monday, squeezing his head and wrists through tight gaskets designed to keep out water, then snapped a neoprene spray skirt into place before climbing into his torpedo-shaped kayak.

Hansen, who is gearing up to lead a kayaking expedition across the Northwest Passage later this year, wanted to test out his cold weather equipment. That meant loading an 18-foot Epic sea kayak covered with half a foot of snow onto his vehicle and heading to Lady Bird Lake in downtown Austin, where he tugged on a knit hat and attached pogies – insulated mittens that look like oven mitts – to his double-blade paddle.

Everything went as planned, and Hansen and fellow Arctic Cowboy Jimmy Harvey logged a couple of hours of urban paddling on one of the coldest days in Austin history. Temperatures hovered in the 20s as the two slid their boats into the water near Austin High School, paddled up to Loop 1 (MoPac), blew down to Congress Avenue, then glided into Barton Creek, where steam rose off the water surface and snow clung to branches arched overhead.

Chances are, the temperatures they braved in Austin yesterday were colder than what they’ll face during their expedition, tentatively planned for summer 2021. High temperatures in Tuktoyaktuk, at the western edge of their 1,900-mile route, average about 61 in July. Temperatures in Pond Inlet, near the eastern edge of the route, are colder, about 52 degrees.

“Our faces were a little cold, but other than that it was nice and toasty,” Hansen said of yesterday’s shake out.

West Hansen pulls on the top of his dry suit. Pam LeBlanc photo

Jimmy Harvey prepares to paddle. The insulated mittens attached to his paddle are called “pogies.” Pam LeBlanc photo

There will be differences, though. The winds in the Arctic will probably be stronger, creating colder wind chills, and the wildlife more dangerous. The Cowboys will likely encounter polar bears, which can smell their prey a kilometer away and swim up to 6 mph, as they kayak across the passage. They could also face orcas, storms and cracking sea ice.

Hansen hasn’t determined yet which direction they’ll make the roughly two-month trip. That will depend on how quickly the ice breaks up as summer begins, and how soon the Canadian government allows access into Nunavut, populated by the native Inuit people. And that all depends on how well Covid vaccine rollout goes.

“We’re gearing up as if we’re going, communicating with the Canadian government, and reaching out to different scientific organizations that need testing done to link with them,” Hansen said. “We’re treating it as if we’re going, and hopefully in next few months things will change with Covid.”

West Hansen and Jimmy Harvey paddle Barton Creek in downtown Austin on Feb. 15, 2021. Pam LeBlanc photo

Hansen, who became the first person to paddle 4,200 miles from a newly discovered source of the Amazon River to the sea in 2012, doesn’t seem worried about the potential hazards. He endured colder conditions in Russia in 2014, when he and Jeff Wueste, the third member of the Arctic Cowboys team, paddled the entire Volga River. And river bandits, whitewater rapids and an injured shoulder didn’t stop his Amazon trip.

As for the nippy Austin run?
“It was nice,” he said. “And we saw a cross country skier.”

That skier was gliding along the Butler Trail around Lady Bird Lake as they pulled their boats out.

West Hansen and Jimmy Harvey launch their kayaks near Austin High School on Feb. 15, 2021. Pam LeBlanc photo

 

 

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A new trail race this April starts at the banks of the Devils River

A new trail race this April starts at the banks of the Devils River

Runners take to the gravel road that cuts through Devils River State Natural Area in West Texas. Beau Hester photo

Some of my favorite races have taken place on trails that cut through the desert scrub of West Texas, events during which I’ve also tripped and shredded my knees and stabbed my butt with cactus needles during a mid-race pee break.

Now there’s a new adventure to add the trail running calendar – the Devils River Run for Hope.

The first-time event, scheduled for Saturday, April 24, begins on the banks of the Devils River, then follows gravel roads through the Devils River State Natural Area and finishes at nearby McKenna Ranch. Runners can choose from a marathon or half-marathon distance, and should expect rugged, undulating desert terrain, with views of nearby hills and canyons.

“It’s intense,” says assistant race director Jessica Hester. “It’s going to take them gradually uphill the majority of the marathon.”

Race entry will be capped at 70 athletes, who must wear masks except while they are running. The start will be staged, with groups of nine heading out every 2 minutes. A post-race party will include a raffle and auction, live music, and barbecue.

The draw of this race, besides my love of the river and its surrounding terrain, is tied to the race organizers.

I met Beau Hester, superintendent of the Del Norte Unit of the Devils River State Natural Area, five years ago, during a visit to the remote park, located about 200 miles west of Austin between Rock Springs and Del Rio. He told me then that he and his wife Jessica had lost their 8-year-old daughter Brooke to cancer. This race benefits Brooke’s Blossoming Hope for Childhood Cancer Foundation, a non-profit organization they created in her memory.

The new race will start at the river and finish at McKenna Ranch. Pam LeBlanc photo

“We learned through her fight there was this niche that needed to be filled. We also learned how heavily underfunded pediatric cancer was,” Jessica Hester said. She described her daughter as bubbly and tenacious. “You wouldn’t know she had cancer except she had no hair.”

Brooke lost her hair seven times during her treatment, and helped make flower-adorned headbands for other children going through chemotherapy. Today the Del Rio-based foundation provides headwear for patients and raises money that goes to pediatric cancer research.

Dr. Giselle Sholler, a leading pediatric oncologist and researcher who treated Brooke, plans to fly to Texas from North Carolina to run in the race.

Packet pickup will start at 5:15 a.m. at McKenna Ranch. From there, runners will be shuttled to the race start on the banks of the Devils River at Devils River State Natural Area. (It’s a slightly less than 1-mile walk from the shuttle drop-off to the starting line.) The half marathon course will end at the midway point of the marathon course, and those runners will be shuttled the rest of the way to the McKenna Ranch.

Registration is $127 for the full marathon or $117 for the half. Entry fee for runners who raise $1,000 or more for the non-profit will be waived.

All proceeds will benefit Brooke’s Blossoming Hope for Childhood Cancer Foundation. Half will be used to create care packages containing headwear, capes, crowns and books for cancer patients; the rest will go to pediatric cancer research.

“We really want people to see the community of Del Rio and the beauty of Lower Pecos,” she said. “We know those are things our daughter would have enjoyed.”

For more information, visit www.DevilsRiverRun4Hope.com. For more information about the foundation go here.

 

 

 

 

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