Banish ‘panda eyes’ with Snake and Pig goggles

Banish ‘panda eyes’ with Snake and Pig goggles

I’ve been testing a new pair of Snake and Pig goggles during swim practice at Western Hills Athletic Club. Photo by Chris Kemp

If you happen to spot me at the grocery store or coffee shop after swim practice, you might wonder if I’m morphing into a panda bear.

That’s because wearing swim goggles that suck onto your face like a vacuum cleaner for an hour causes dark rings to form around your eye sockets. (I think it’s your body, seeking revenge.)

It’s just a fact of life for swimmers, and I never gave it much thought until the other day, when a pair of Snake and Pig swim goggles arrived at Pam LeBlanc Adventure headquarters.

A Taiwanese engineer named Michael Menq (he’s the Snake, in Chinese calendar terms) and a Venezuelan communications expert named Melissa Gonzalez (she’s the Pig, in the same calendar) teamed up in 2016 to develop a pair of goggles that wouldn’t cause “panda eyes.”Their goggles feature double-walled gaskets that are softer than the gaskets on most goggles. They also come with three interchangeable nose pieces, to ensure a custom fit.

The Snake and Pig goggles, above, are beefier than the Speedo Vanquishers I’ve long worn, below. Pam LeBlanc photo

I’ve always worn Speedo Vanquisher goggles, which cost $21.99 at www.swimoutlet.com, and been fine with them. I like them because they’re low profile and fit my face without leaking. But I decided to test the Snake and Pigs, mainly because I like that they’re Austin born and bred and I dig the name. Plus, my husband wears them and loves them, as do several friends.

I’ve been using them for the past week. Thoughts so far? No panda eyes. No leaking. Comfortable, once I changed out the nose piece to a smaller size (easy!).

But the first two days I wore the Snake and Pig goggles, they kept fogging. I contacted a marketing representative, who suggested I dip the goggles in pool water just before practice and use my finger to smear around the built-in defog coating. I tried that, and it worked perfectly. No more fog.

I’m not sold just yet, though. I’m getting used to the slightly larger profile of these goggles. The straps are thicker and the goggles themselves are beefier, and the feeling is a little like wearing a pair of thick plastic-frame glasses when you’re used to more streamlined wire rims.

Plus, at $35 a pop for the Basilisk model I’m trying, they’re more expensive than what I’ve always used.

Still, I love supporting local products, and we’ve got a lot here in Austin, from Gossamer Gear to Howler Brothers to Yeti and Kammok.

Four local shops carry Snake and Pig goggles – Austin Tricyclist, Swim Freak and Tom’s Dive & Swim, all in Austin, and Blur Cycleworks in Round Rock. You can also buy them online at http://snakeandpig.com.They’re available in clear or several different colors of tinted lenses, which work well in bright sun.

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‘Everest’ makes a chilling – and oddly down-to-earth – opera

‘Everest’ makes a chilling – and oddly down-to-earth – opera

Andrew Bidlack, left, plays mountain guide Rob Hall, and Craig Ver, below, plays Doug Hansen in ‘Everest.” Photo by Erich Schlegel

If you’ve never heard the word “y’all” sung in an opera, or seen an opera starring performers wearing insulated jackets and oxygen masks, you haven’t seen “Everest.”

I caught the Sunday matinee of the one-act opera, which chronicles the 1996 disaster on Mount Everest that claimed eight lives, at the Long Center for the Performing Arts.

The show focuses on three men – Rob Hall (Andrew Bidlack), the guide who led the expedition; Doug Hansen (Craig Verm), one of the climbers who died there; and Beck Weathers, the Houston man who survived the catastrophe. It premiered in Dallas in 2015, features a score by Joby Talbot and libretto (sung in English) written by Gene Scheer.

I love opera, but in a down-to-earth way. I can’t get enough of the pageantry of it, the intricacies of the music and the dramatic story lines. “Everest” – with its love story, doomed and flawed characters, and unique costumes – fills all those pockets in an oddly perfect way.

Kevin Burdette plays Texan Beck Weathers in the Austin Lyric Opera’s production of ‘Everest.” Photo by Erich Schlegel

You might remember the story from Jon Krakauer’s book, “Into Thin Air.” A team of climbers led by Rob Hall aims to summit Mount Everest. Weathers, the Texan who had paid $65,000 to make the trip, suffers vision issues and is left to wait on the side of the trail while Hall and Hansen go on. But Hansen falls ill, and Hall is left to try to save him.

In the operatic version, we get a main character with a Texas accent (“mah” instead of “my”) who hallucinates that he’s at a family barbecue, and dreams he’s seeing his daughter. We get ghosts of people who have died trying to summit the peak. And we get the back story of a man who has suffered profound depression.

The opera premiered in Dallas in 2015, and has since been shown in Chicago and Calgary, among other places.

It’s different, it’s short, and it’ll leave you shivering, but not from the cold.

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Taking the New Year’s plunge at Barton Springs Pool

Taking the New Year’s plunge at Barton Springs Pool

Jumping into Barton Springs on New Year’s Day is an Austin tradition. Chris LeBlanc photo

​I leapt into 2020 at Barton Springs Pool today, along with several hundred others who realized that a Polar Plunge into Barton Springs Pool barely merits a cup of hot chocolate.

The water temperature at the spring-fed pool in downtown Austin hovers around 70 degrees year-round (that despite a rumor that it’s always 68 degrees.) And 70 degrees actually feels quite comfortable when the air temperature is in the upper 50s.

That’s the thing about swimming at Barton Springs in the winter. There’s less of a difference between the air and water temperature, so it’s not that shocking when you get in. The cold comes later, when you get out and stand on the edge of the pool, dripping wet.

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My husband and I managed just fine, though, and so did plenty of others who ventured down for the party.

A couple of outdoor heaters were set up just outside the gates, so air-cooled swimmers could thaw out before heading home.

I spotted a man in a dinosaur suit, a woman in a shark costume, a guy wearing a weird red, white and blue onesie and others out to help Austin maintain its reputation for weirdness.

And that spring water helped baptize the new year for me.

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My favorite (holiday) swim practice of the year …

My favorite (holiday) swim practice of the year …

Merry Christmas from the women of Western Hills Athletic Club masters swim team! Kristin Turner photo

I swim a lot – four or five times most weeks, unless I’m traveling. But Sunday’s practice – the annual Twelve Days of Christmas workout – topped my list of the year’s best workouts.

Here’s why:

  1. Air temperatures were cool and the humidity was low, and the pool steamed like a big vat of soup when we hopped in. Swimming in the winter is the best: It’s dark when we get in the water, but it feels like we’re diving under a warm blanket.
  2. Coach Kristin Turner brought a pair of dice, and we passed around the dice. Each roll corresponded to a different swim set she’d written on the board. 
  3. We cranked up holiday music on deck, so between sets we got to hear a few bars of old favorites like “Rudolph,” “I’m Dreaming of a White Christmas,” and “Frosty the Snowman.”
  4. Someone in the next lane over brought a collection of tiny mermaid statuettes and arranged them on the dive blocks to motivate us through the hard parts.
  5. We got to swim for an entire hour and a half.
  6. Kristin Turner led Sunday’s swim practice. Pam LeBlanc photo

    We covered nearly 3 miles.
  7. I wore my red, green and cream-striped stocking cap to the pool.
  8. I donned a red, white and green-striped swim cap for the actual swim. Plus a red bikini, always a festive outfit this time of year.
  9. Everyone started the sets together. (Sometimes the slow lanes and the fast lanes are on different intervals, and we get split up.)
  10. I appreciate my swim family. I’ve been swimming with some of them, including Kristin, for 20 years. We’ve seen each other through birth and deaths and graduations and job changes and every different note that pours out of the song of life.
  11.  

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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. 

About Pam

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