ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot set for Thanksgiving Day

ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot set for Thanksgiving Day

Pam LeBlanc nears the finish of the 2019 ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo[/caption]

Turkeys, prepare to trot!

This year’s Thundercloud Subs Turkey Trot goes live again, with both a virtual and an in-person race on Thursday, Nov. 25. Specific details and safety protocols approved by Austin Public Health will be announced as the date gets closer. Register and find more information at thundercloud.com.

Participants can choose from a 5-mile timed or non-timed run, a 1-mile walk or a Kids K. The Stepping Stone School Kids K begins at 8:45 a.m., followed by the timed 5-mile at 9:30 a.m., the untimed run at 9:35 a.m., and the 1-mile walk/run at 9:50 a.m. Registration ranges from $12 for the Kids K to $32 for the timed 5-mile run. Prices increase after Nov. 14. Registrants get either a long-sleeved T-shirt or a $10 gift card to ThunderCloud Subs, a Trot headband and wristbands, or a bandana.

I run the race every year. Last year, that meant trotting around the Allandale neighborhood with my husband and two friends for the virtual event.

virtual Turkey Trot Andrew Lochbaum, Pam Finney, Pam LeBlanc and Chris LeBlanc at the start of their 2020 virtual Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc self timer photo[/caption]

Organizers say because the 2020 Trot went so well, they’ll keep a virtual component this year and beyond. Virtual participants can run or walk wherever they want on Thanksgiving Day.

Turkey Trot benefits Caritas of Austin

All proceeds of the event go to Caritas of Austin, which has received $4.4 million dollars from the Trot since it began in 1991.

“Caritas of Austin needs our support more than ever, to continue helping thousands of people to get off the streets, realize their full potential, and contribute to our community,” says Mike Haggerty, co-owner of ThunderCloud and executive director of the Trot.

Caritas broke ground on its first ever residential center this year, Espero Rutland, which will have 171 studio apartments and supportive services.

Turkey Trot A turkey leads off the start of the 2019 ThunderCloud Subs Turkey Trot. Chris LeBlanc photo[/caption]

Socially distanced packet pickup will be offered on multiple dates at First Texas Honda, or packets can be shipped for an extra charge. The dealership will also donate a new Honda Accord for the Trot raffle ($25 per ticket or five tickets for $100. Tickets can be purchased online or at packet pickup between now and Thanksgiving Day.

 

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Deep Eddy closing for cleaning and maintenance

Deep Eddy closing for cleaning and maintenance

Deep Eddy Pool will close April 11 through May 2. Photo courtesy city of Austin

Deep Eddy Pool will close April 11 through May 2 for its annual spring cleaning.

The closure will last a week longer than normal so crews can fix cracks in the pool shell and address some unexpected problems due to the recent winter storm.

Barton Springs Pool, 2201 Barton Springs Road, will remain open while Deep Eddy, 401 Deep Eddy Avenue, is closed. Barton Springs hours are 5 a.m. until 8 a.m. for swim at your own risk; guarded swim hours are 8 a.m. until 10 p.m. Tuesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

Check AustinTexas.gov/Pools for the hours of operation for all city pools.

For more information, call Austin Parks and Recreation Department’s Aquatic Administration and Training Center at 512-974-9330.

 

 

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Want to run nekkid? Race the Bare Buns 5K on April 10

Want to run nekkid? Race the Bare Buns 5K on April 10

 

In 2017, I ran the Bare Buns 5K race in McDade. It was breezy. Leilani Perry photo

In 2017, during my self-proclaimed Year of Adventure, I peeled off my clothes one fine spring morning and ran a naked 5K race.

It felt weird at first, lining up with about 130 other runners, most of whom were wearing nothing but running shoes. But once the starting horn blew and I started scampering over pine needles and zipping through a hay field, I shed my inhibition and it felt pretty much like any other race – just a tad breezier. (You can read about my experience here.)

The year I ran the field was about three-fourths male. And women are allowed to wear whatever clothing they want – from sports bras to pasties. I chose to go naked, save my shoes, socks and a straw cowboy hat.

In the end, the lack of clothing made me run faster. I ran so fast, in fact, that my hat blew off and I finished first among the female contestants. It was a slow field, trust me.

Start of the Bare Buns 5K in McDade in 2017. Pam LeBlanc photo 

On April 10, Star Ranch will host its 24th annual Bare Buns 5K Fun Run. The race serves as a qualifier for the American Association for Nude Recreation’s 5K running series.

The event starts at 1 p.m. at the nudist ranch, located 10 miles east of Elgin in McDade.

Registration is $35 for adults or $15 for children. You must register in advance; no race day sign ups are allowed. To register, call 512-273-2257.

Can’t make the April run? Mark Oct. 9 on the calendar. That’s the date for this year’s fall companion run, the Chilly Cheeks 5K.

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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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