Run, sip a marg and celebrate the trail June 6 at Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Run, sip a marg and celebrate the trail June 6 at Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

 

That’s me, with an unknown runner, at last year’s Maudie’s Margarita Run and Party.

Because I believe there is no better way to celebrate the Butler Hike and Bike Trail around Lady Bird Lake than by running a 5K race and downing a margarita, I present to you the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run.

I love this event, scheduled this year for 8 p.m. June 6 at the Seaholm Power Plant, 800 West Cesar Chavez Street. It’s the biggest fund-raiser of the year for The Trail Foundation, the non-profit organization that protects and enhances our beloved and much-used 10-mile urban path. The trail – the one you probably train on regularly, if you’re an Austin runner – logs more than 2.6 million visits each year. I love running the loop because I always bump into people I know.

The city’s running community shows up in force for the always sweaty run, then settles down for live music and Tex-Mex under the stars.

Tickets are $50 and are available here.

 

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Bike commuters, grab free breakfast this Friday!

Bike commuters, grab free breakfast this Friday!

Pam LeBlanc spent nearly 15 years riding her bike to work. Now she works from home, but still bikes around Austin. Photo by Brian Fitzsimmons

My commute’s gotten shorter since I left the Austin American-Statesman last fall to go freelance, but I still spend a lot of time pedaling around Austin on my bicycle.

May is National Bike Month, and this Friday cyclists can score free breakfast as part of Bike to Work Day.

The ninth annual event, sponsored by Bike Austin, Austin’s largest bicycling advocacy and education organization, will feature live music, free food and drinks at nearly 50 fueling stations around the city, and an after party at Cheer Up Charlies. It’s part of a nationwide effort to promote cycling as an environmentally and physically healthy habit. Last year, more than 3,000 people in Austin – including me! – participated in the event.

“Our goal is not only to get more people safely on the road on May 17, but to raise awareness about active transportation options as an everyday reality for Austinites,” said Chris Riley, president of Bike Austin.

The fueling stations will be open from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m., and include places like Cosmic Coffee + Beer Garden, the Paramount Theatre, the YETI Flagship, Wheatsville Co-op and Houndstooth Coffee. This year, the Ghisallo Cycling Initiative will also host leader-led bike trains along three main bike commuter.

Along with fueling stations, there will be live musical acts throughout the city to encourage morning commuters, as well as festivities and tacos at City Hall.Bike to Work Day will culminate with a Bike After Work Party from 5-8 p.m. atCheer Up Charlies, 900 Red River Street.

For more information about Bike to Work Day, along with a list of fueling stations, go tohttps://bikeaustin.org/b2wd/.

 

 

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For the best pan dulce in Central Texas, head to this gas station in Johnson City

For the best pan dulce in Central Texas, head to this gas station in Johnson City

A bakery is tucked inside the Dixie Quick Stop in Johnson City. Pam LeBlanc photo

The Dixie Quick Stop in Johnson City looks like an ordinary gas station, but I don’t go there solely to fuel up my car.

I go there for the pan dulce.

I discovered it a few years ago, on my way to Big Bend. I noticed the tiny sign that reads “Bakery Inside” on one of the poles supporting the awning over the pump area. Of course I beelined right inside, where three huge racks of pink, yellow and chocolate-colored baked goods caught my eye.

It may look humble, but it tastes great. Pam LeBlanc photo

I used the available tongs to pick out cinnamon cookies the size of Carmex tubs, long pie crust twisty things, big sugar cookies and golden empanadas. The selection also includes cake slabs, bunuelos and big puffy sweet buns.

They’re also pretty cheap, as in 11 large pieces for about $7 when I stopped by yesterday on my way back from the Devils River. I watched a cook behind the cashier counter mix up an industrial-sized tub of cookie dough, place colorful spoonfuls of it on a huge cookie sheet, then pop it in the oven. At a gas station!

Go for the gas, stay for the pan dulce. Pam LeBlanc photo

It’s a special treat now, a way to soften the sadness of returning home after another incredible West Texas adventure.

The station, one of the Valero chain, is located at 500 U.S. Highway 281 in Johnson City.

Colorful and fresh pan dulce from the Dixie Quick Stop. Pam LeBlanc photo

Go there. Now.

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Flipped boat, ejected paddlers, rushing water: A ‘yard sale’ on the river

Flipped boat, ejected paddlers, rushing water: A ‘yard sale’ on the river

All smiles at Cummings Dam, before the boat flipped. That’s Heather Harrison and Pam LeBlanc in back, and master of selfies Sheila Reiter in front.

I experienced my first full-blown “yard sale” yesterday on the river.

Frankly, I’m glad I got that out of the way. After flipping our boats and losing everything that wasn’t tethered inside it, I can move on to worrying about other things – like how my shoulders will feel after paddling for three days straight, what I’ll do when I breath in a lungful of freshly-hatched mayflies, what will happen to my skin when its wet for 70 hours straight, and other horrors of the Texas Water Safari.

I’m one third of Team “That’s What She Said,” three women who have registered for what’s been dubbed “The World’s Toughest Canoe Race.” Sheila Reiter, Heather Harrison and I will paddle 260 miles, from San Marcos to Seadrift, in mid-June.

Yesterday, during a training run, the river reminded us who’s boss.

As the least experienced member of the team (I’m new to paddling, Sheila and Heather both have several safaris under their PFDs), I sit in the middle of our canoe. Heather drives, and Sheila fine tunes and calls out obstacles. We all paddle like hell.

Last year, while covering the Safari for the Austin American-Statesman, I spent a few hours at a place called Cottonseed Rapids, where I sat on a boulder and watched boats speed through a curvy, rock and cypress-studded stretch of river. It all looked so simple from that vantage point.

Things look different from the river, and from my perspective, they were quite, um, violent.

One minute I was in my seat, listening to Heather confidently call out some typical instructions. A second later, that instruction turned into a series of mild cuss words as our boat rapidly approached a cut log and a big hunk of what looked like cement or rock.

The boat tipped like a drunken debutante trying her first curtsy. The boat reared up on its side. Sheila, in front of me, clung to her spot like she had Velcro on her butt, but I was ejected almost immediately. (Let the record show I held on to my paddle, per instruction.) The other two joined me for a refreshing swim, and after getting sucked several hundred feet down the river, we managed to right the canoe.

Moments like this remind me of getting a root canal (not that I’ve ever had one.) They go on forever. Someone probably could have driven to Austin, cooked dinner and returned in the time it took us to drag our half-submerged craft to the river’s edge, flip on the bilge pumps and use my pee cup to scoop out our canoe, which apparently holds something like 6 million gallons of water.

A few speedy race canoes zoomed past.

“Nothing to see here!” I hollered out at one point.

“But if you do find a water bottle and a baseball cap downstream, that might be ours,” Sheila added.

We all laughed. Sort of.

The river presented us with this embroidered cap.

In the end, I got my bottle back and Sheila got her cap back, Heather kept her cool and we found another hat buried in the muck at the bottom of the river. I yanked it out of the slurry – dark green, with an owl embroidered on its front, just like the real one we’d seen a few days earlier, at the night race.
I think owls are now my official spirit animal.

Onward…

The preliminary race is next weekend, and it determines how boats will be seeded at the actual Texas Water Safari.

I hope we got all our boat flipping out of the way.

 

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I’m test driving some Austin-born ROKA sports sunglasses

I’m test driving some Austin-born ROKA sports sunglasses

Austin-based ROKA makes sports sunglasses that don’t look like sports sunglasses. Pam LeBlanc photo

I love getting familiar with Austin born and bred products, and for the last two weeks I’ve been testing sunglasses made by ROKA.

Two former swimmers from Stanford University, who later moved to Austin, started by building a better triathlon wetsuit, added other triathlon gear, and in 2016 expanded into sunglasses, too.

Two things: One, most ROKA sunglasses don’t look like sports sunglasses, which one company official aptly described to me as “a spaceship wrapped around your face.” A few models keep that sleek, wraparound look, but ROKA is probably best known for its performance aviators.

They may look like regular aviators, but they’re lighter and sweat proof. Pam LeBlanc photo

I nabbed a fleet of eyewear to test. One pair looks a lot like the Maui Jims I already own – sort of Wayfarerish and blocky. Another pair looks a lot like the Nike running glasses I’ve been wearing for paddling, a more spaceship style. My favorites, though, are the roundish, hornrimmed Oslo model, which look like street glasses but act like sports glasses.

They’re all lightweight, with soft arms that don’t over squeeze your temples even after five hours of paddling. Even sweat can’t make them slide down your nose.

Sigh, ROKA also makes these ugly shades that look like a spaceship landed on your face. Pam LeBlanc photo

ROKA sells its gear online, but has opened a pop-up shop this spring at 408 W. Second Street. (They even sell an Austin collection and a Barton collection.)

Want to go for a run with the folks from ROKA?

Every Wednesday through May, representatives from ROKA, The Trail Foundation, FitJoy and Waterloo host a free weekly run.

Meet at 6:30 p.m. for the run, followed by snacks and drinks afterward at the store. For every sunglass purchase made, ROKA will donate $10 to The Trail Foundation. Sign up at ROKA.com/atx

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Celebrate National Parks Week with happy hour this Wednesday

Celebrate National Parks Week with happy hour this Wednesday

 

Jacqueline Vidal and Kimery Duda take in the morning view at Big Bend National Park. Pam LeBlanc photo

Let’s toast our national parks.

To celebrate National Parks Week, the Big Bend Conservancy, the National Parks Conservation, Friends of the LBJ National Historical Park and the Waco Mammoth Foundation are teaming up for a happy hour celebration.

The event starts at 6 p.m. Wednesday at TLC, at 1100 South Lamar Boulevard. Enjoy drink and appetizer specials with other park lovers. Will Dupuy and the Wilderness will perform starting at 6:30 p.m., and at 7:15 you can learn more about how you can support your favorite national parks.

RSVP at https://celebratenationalparkweek.splashthat.com/.

 

 

 

About Pam

I’m Pam LeBlanc. Follow my blog to keep up with the best in outdoor travel and adventure. Thanks for visiting my site.

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