Cyclist finishes biking every street in Austin

Cyclist finishes biking every street in Austin

Aaron Chamberlain setting off to bike the Rosedale neighborhood earlier this year. Pam LeBlanc photo

Aaron Chamberlain, the cyclist on a quest to pedal his fixed-gear bicycle down every street in Austin, wrapped up his mission Tuesday night when he rolled down Bunche Road in East Austin.

It took Chamberlain a little more than a year to reach his goal. He started on Nov. 27, 2018, inspired by long-distance runner Rickey Gates, who ran every street in San Francisco. Chamberlain put his own spin on the #everysinglestreet project, methodically riding – not running – up and down streets before and after work. (Gates gave Chamberlain a shout out on Twitter to congratulate him on the accomplishment.)

“Now I’m wondering what I’m going to do every morning besides just commuting to work,” he said today, adding that he hopes to keep biking about 100 miles a week just to stay in shape.

In all, he pedaled 4,907 miles as he crisscrossed the city. “Granted, a good amount of these are streets that I could not avoid riding twice or multiple times,” he said in a social media post. “Also things like 1-mile long dead end streets.”

I met up with Chamberlain a few months ago while he zigzagged up and down streets in the Rosedale neighborhood, just to see what it was like. He consulted a map he’d printed out and highlighted as we began our ride. We found a wrench in the road. I watched him cut across a park. He wore regular clothes, instead of a fancy biking kit.

Chamberlain collected a few statistics along the way.

His shortest ride? Exactly 0.14 miles.

His longest ride? A whopping 52.62 miles.

Volkswagen vans counted along the way? Sixty-one.

Aaron Chamberlain biked nearly 5,000 miles on his quest to pedal every street in Austin. Pam LeBlanc photo

He also took a short video of his final ride, which he posted on Twitter. (Follow him at @elmuachuca). “OK, I’m done,” he said as he finished. “How about that. That was pretty easy, just one year and like 20 days … That was exciting. Now to get a beer I guess.”

He pedaled past fancy mansions and shabby homes. He saw an assortment of creatures, from possums and deer to skunks and fox. He averaged about 125 miles a week.

And no, he’s not completely crazy. He skipped highways, gated communities and private streets.

This map shows all the streets Chamberlain biked.

And yes, he’s scheming up a new challenge. He told me about it, but I’m sworn to secrecy. Stay tuned.

Read my original story about Chamberlain at https://www.austin360.com/news/20191025/he-wants-to-ride-his-bicycle-cyclist-is-on-quest-to-pedal-every-road-in-austin.

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Familiar Big Bend spot gets (postage) stamp of approval

Familiar Big Bend spot gets (postage) stamp of approval

 

This new Priority Mail stamp depicting Santa Elena Canyon at Big Bend National Park will be released in January 2020. Photo courtesy US Postal Service

One of my favorite places will appear on a postage stamp in 2020.

I’ve stood in the middle of the Rio Grande, taking in the exact same image of the high rock walls closing in on Santa Elena Canyon of Big Bend National Park that’s depicted in a new Priority Mail and Priority Mail Express Flat Rate shipping stamp unveiled this week.

U.S. Postal Service art director Greg Breeding designed the stamp and Dan Cosgrove did the artwork.

Another stamp depicting the Grand Island Ice Caves, on Lake Superior in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, was also unveiled. Both stamps will be released on Saturday Jan. 18, 2020 and available online at www.usps.com/shopor at your local post office.

 

 

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Dutch island of Bonaire serves up spectacular diving, plus a whole lot more

Dutch island of Bonaire serves up spectacular diving, plus a whole lot more

I dove with Dive Friends, which operates a shop out of the Marriott Bonaire Dive Resort near the airport. Chris LeBlanc photo

I made six dives during this week’s trip to Bonaire, spotting everything from a 6-foot nurse shark that darted out from a hidey hole in the coral to a trio of big, torpedo-shaped tarpon that used the beam of my light to hunt during a night dive.

But the best find of trip award? That went to the 6-inch longsnout seahorse that clung to a branch of soft coral off the tiny island of Klein Bonaire.

This long snout seahorse was clinging to coral on the ocean floor. Pam LeBlanc photo

We were lucky to see the 6-inch fish (yes, seahorses are fish). They’re hard to spot, and blend into their environment like magicians.

The longsnout is one of 47 species of seahorse, which range in size from a pine nut to a banana. Most mate for life, and although we tried to find our seahorse’s mate on the coral reef, we couldn’t. It was probably watching us search from a few feet away.

This trumpet fish was hiding in sea grass. Pam LeBlanc photo

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Other cool finds? A foot-long scorpion fish in shades of red and brown, that blended perfectly into the background. Three kinds of eels – a green moray, a sharptail eel with handsome yellow spots, and a black and white spotted moray. Several drumstick-shaped puffers, an ocean trigger, queen angels, parrot fish and spotted drums. We found a large lobster during a night dive, lots of lettuce sea slugs, which look like little bunches of ruffles, trunkfish, filefish and blue tangs, too.

This spotted moray was peeking out from a crevice in the coral. Chris LeBlanc photo

The reef, to me, looked healthy, with no signs of coral bleaching or die-offs. Every dive master we met asked us not to use sunscreen, which can damage the reef, and reminded us not to touch any of the coral or marine life. The island’s entire perimeter is a protected marine park, and we each paid $45 for a permit to dive there. Dive shops also organize underwater cleanups several times a year, and restaurants and businesses recycle paper, plastic and glass.

We saw lots of healthy coral and fish during this week’s dives in Bonaire. Pam LeBlanc photo

I stayed at the Marriot Bonaire Dive Resort, just next to the airport, which operates an on-site dive shop through Dive Friends. We did two day-time shore dives, and two different two-tank dives off a boat that took us to the small island of Klein Bonaire.

We snorkeled in the mangroves the last day. Pam LeBlanc photo

Besides diving, we spent some time touring the island with a guide, checking out the salt production facility on the island’s south side, looking at the old slave cabins (a reminder of a dark side of the island’s past). watching windsurfers and kiteboarders, visiting the Cadushy cactus liquor distillery in the center of the island, and admiring the native populations of donkeys (which were brought here to do heavy labor) and flamingos (native.) The last morning, before catching a flight back to Miami, we kayaked through the mangroves and snorkeled with thousands of “upside down jellyfish” with a guide from the Mangrove Information Center.

Pink flamingos are native to Bonaire. Pam LeBlanc photo

Look for my upcoming story in the Austin American-Statesman.

I stayed at the Marriott Bonaire Dive Resort. Pam LeBlanc photo

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Registration opened for Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Registration opened for Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Runners take off at the start of the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation

Registration is open for the 17th annual Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run, and if you’re one of the first 100 to register, you’ll get $10 off your entry fee.

The best part about this 5K race? A margarita and tiny tacos at the finish line party. Plus, you don’t have to get up early. The run takes place in the evening, and finishes with a party under the stars in front of the Seaholm Power Plant.

The run is scheduled for 8 p.m. Thursday, June 4. It begins and ends at the Seaholm Power Plant, 800 West Cesar Chavez Street, and the course takes runners alongside Lady Bird Lake. This year, everyone is encouraged to wear neon attire. Register at  thetrailfoundation.org.

Proceeds from the run benefit The Trail Foundation, which works to maintain and enhance the Butler Trail around Lady Bird Lake. 

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Ever stick your tongue on a frozen metal pole? I have …

Ever stick your tongue on a frozen metal pole? I have …

 

Pam LeBlanc enjoying time at her stepmom’s ranch near Roscoe, Texas, in December 2017. Chris LeBlanc photo

It’s cold outside (sort of), and time to tell that story I never tell because, well, it’s kind of embarrassing. I’ll tell it anyway, just this once.

Remember that playground scene in “Christmas Story,” the 1983 film about Ralphie and his need for a Red Ryder BB gun, where one kid “triple dog dares” another to touch a frozen flagpole with his tongue?

The kid does it, of course, pressing his fat red tongue to the pole, where it predictably sticks. Then the school bell rings, the crowd watching scatters faster than ice cream melts on a hot skillet, and the boy is left out there, still stuck to the pole until a teacher notices and sends the fire department in to make the rescue.

That happened to me. Only I was 54 years old, not 8.

My family had gathered at my stepmom’s ranch near Roscoe, an hour’s drive west of Abilene, to spend a few days hiking, reading and sitting in front of the chiminea drinking wine and telling stories. We love it up there in the winter, and spend our days rambling around kicking cactus and looking for fossils.

One night Mother Nature gifted us with a storm that coated the ranch and everything around it with a glittery white layer of snow and ice crystals. We headed out in the morning to explore. I brought along my camera to take pictures of my husband posing in front of giant bales of cotton and my sister hoisting frozen tumbleweeds over her head.

Chris LeBlanc poses in front of a bale of cotton near Roscoe, Texas, last winter.

As we drove down a two-lane dirt road, past a series of metal poles, I got the brilliant idea to find out if that scene from “Christmas Story” was realistic.

We pulled the car off the road. I jumped out. I ran to the frozen metal pole.

The kicker here is nobody – not my husband, not my sister, not even my brother-in-law, who’s usually pretty nice to me – bothered to stop me. Or maybe they figured I knew better (I did not) and wasn’t really going to stick my tongue on the pole.

But I did. I poked it out and carefully licked that pole, like I was taste testing popsicles.

And it stuck.

That’s not chewing gum, folks. That’s what was left behind when I stuck my tongue on a frozen metal pole near Roscoe, Texas. Do not try this at home. Pam LeBlanc photo

I knew I was in trouble almost instantaneously, as I tried to reel my tongue back in. It was like a layer of Velcro held me to it, though. I tried to pull back gently, but the taste buds that connected me to that cold metal just stretched painfully. I pulled harder. The taste buds didn’t hold up so well.

In the end, nobody called in the fire department, because I panicked and yanked my tongue off the pole, ripping a piece of it off in the process. My family members watched, flabbergasted. To this day I’m not sure if they were more shocked that I’d stuck my tongue on a frozen metal pole, or that my tongue actually stuck there.

My tongue bled from the BB-sized hole I’d left in it. Back at the ranch house, it stung so badly I couldn’t eat or drink wine for at least 12 hours. (Now there’s a real tragedy.)

That scene from the movie? Completely accurate. Tongues really do stick to frozen metal poles. And, it also turns out, if you rip a piece of your tongue off, that piece remains on the pole, like a side of beef in the freezer. I went back the next day and found it, just so I could take the above photograph.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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What do you do when a deer darts into your truck’s path?

What do you do when a deer darts into your truck’s path?

Chris LeBlanc uses duct tape to secure a headlight after he hit a deer while driving on a two-lane Texas highway before dawn. Pam LeBlanc photo

Everyone in Texas knows you’re supposed to look for deer when you’re driving on country roads, especially at dawn or dusk.

What no one ever explains, though, is what you’re supposed do if you see one, it spooks, and then heads directly into the path of your oncoming vehicle.

But I’ll tell you: Nothing. There’s nothing you can do when that happens, but hold on and wait for impact. And it’s horrible.

That happened to me early Sunday, as my husband and I rolled down Texas Highway 608, on our way from my stepmom’s ranch near Roscoe – Wind Farm Capitol of Texas – to Austin, where he had an early morning flight to catch and I had to pack for a research trip.

It was 5:30 a.m., and the darkness felt like a blanket outside. We both said out loud to each other, as all Texans do, “Watch out for deer.” All around us, red lights attached to the slowly spinning blades of skyscraper-sized wind turbines blinked on and off, like the glowing eyes of giants. Other than that, nothingness.

Again, we mentioned the deer. You never knew when one might spring out. I’ve slammed on the brakes and narrowly missed hitting one at least a dozen times. I stayed vigilant, looking for critters, as Chris drove.

He saw it first. The headlights of our silver F150 pickup truck just caught the outline of a large white-tail buck, standing near the side of the unspooling, two-lane road.

He cussed (Chris, that is.) I folded myself in half in the shotgun seat. I couldn’t watch. The deer was just standing there, but I had a bad feeling, and sure enough it charged right into the road in front of us.

The impact was terrible, a sound I’ve often imagined I’d hear; the animal slammed the truck so hard it ricocheted backward, somewhere into an inky field of grass.

We limped to a halt half a mile down the road. Something in the truck was grinding or brushing or rubbing. And the sun hadn’t started to rise, so we couldn’t see where the deer had gone. Even if we found it, we had no way to put it out of its misery.

And now, the same truck I’d trashed three weeks earlier, when another truck kicked up a baseball-sized rock and launched it into the roof of our truck, slicing it open like a cheap tin of green beans, was trashed again.

We squatted on the side of the road as Chris pried off pieces of plastic and metal to clear the wheel well so we could drive again. It took 20 minutes, and I felt terrible for the deer.

It was dead, I was sure. I’m not a hunter, but at least when a hunter shoots a white-tail the animal gets used for food.

We made it to the next town, duct-taped the headlight securely into place, noted the damage – smashed door, bumper, hood and headlamp, and headed again toward home.

I said a few words for the deer in my mind, and reminded myself to keep an eye out for its brethren.

But I’m still not sure what to do if another one aims for us.

About Pam

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