Austin BCycle offers free passes during shelter in place order

Austin BCycle offers free passes during shelter in place order

 

Austin BCycle is offering free three-day passes during the shelter in place order. Photo courtesy Austin BCycle

Austin BCycle, that fleet of sturdy, bright red and white bikes with big metal baskets, will continue to roll through the city during the current shelter in place order.

The city of Austin has deemed the bike-share system essential, and is providing anyone who needs to take an essential trip with free three-day passes. Just sign up online and use the code ATX512.

Riding one takes some getting used to — they’re heavy, weighing in at 40 pounds, and feel a little wobbly at first. But most folks settle in after pedaling a block or two. (Read about my experience at https://www.statesman.com/article/20140106/NEWS/301069749. Both regular and electric-assist bicycles are available.

The bikes are available from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.

Austin BCycle has regular and electric assist bikes. Photo courtesy Austin BCycle

Staff are disinfecting bikes and stations before and after every interaction.

The system launched in Austin in December 2013. Currently, 75 BCycle stations operate around downtown Austin, everywhere from Barton Springs Pool to Auditorium Shores, South Congress, the Texas State Capitol and more.

Annual memberships cost $86.60, or you can swipe a credit card to pay-as-you-ride ($1 to unlock, then 23 cents per minute. Weekender, monthly or unlimited 60-minute trip passes are also available online.

Go to Austin.bcycle.com for details.

Austin BCycle has 75 stations in downtown Austin. Photo courtesy Austin BCycle

 

 

 

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Can’t swim in a pool? Try refried beans instead

Can’t swim in a pool? Try refried beans instead

 

Longhorn Aquatics swim coach Whitney Hedgepeth uses canned goods to get in a “swim” practice at home.

If you can’t swim in a pool, grab a pair of canned goods and pretend you’re swimming while you lie on a bench instead.

That from former Olympic medalist Whitney Hedgepeth, who has devised some clever but tortuous dryland sessions for members of the U.S. Masters Swimming team she coaches. The Austin program, like many around the country, is suspended during the pandemic.

Hedgepeth emails a new workout to the approximately 160 Longhorn Aquatics swimmers every Sunday evening.

“I just want everybody to stay active,” she says. “(It’s good for the body and the mind.”

Hedgepeth, who has coached the program since 2005 and was named U.S. Masters Swimming Coach of the Year in 2013, does the workouts herself six days a week. She bikes, rows, does yoga or rests on the seventh. She describes the workouts as harder than she expected, and says they induced some muscle soreness. She’s incorporated both her husband and her dog into some of the sessions, to keep everybody moving.

I’m one of thousands of Austin swimmers who’ve been forced out of the water by the coronavirus, and I can’t wait to try the workout. I’ve been biking, running and walking around my neighborhood, but for me, nothing compares to the all-body workout and mental therapy of a good swim. Unfortunately, that’s not an option right now.

Hedgepeth, who won silver medals in the 100-meter and 200-meter backstroke and a gold medal as part of a relay at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, used 15-ounce cans of refried beans, but any can will do. Prepare for a seriously muscle-quaking workout, she says – especially the flutter kicking while sitting on your hands. And keep your head down when you “swim,” to prevent back pain.

“Those cans got heavy,” Hedgepeth says.

Without further ado, here’s the workout:

 

Warm Up

1-1.5 mile run/walk

 

8 x 30 seconds on, 30 seconds rest

Freestyle with soup cans or any canned food

 

100 jump ropes or 50 jumping jacks

 

30-seconds to 1 minute wall sit

 

8 push ups

 

8 chair dips with arms

(Repeat above four exercises x 3)

 

8 x 30 seconds on, 30 seconds rest

Butterfly or breaststroke with soup cans

 

50 lunges (25 each leg)

 

30 seconds to 1 minute plank

 

8 shoulder taps on each side from pushup position 

 

30 seconds to 1 minute flutter kick (on bench, with hands under butt)

(Above four exercises x 3)

 

1-1.5-mile run/walk (faster than first time)

 

 

 

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The Trail Foundation: Please don’t use the Butler Hike and Bike Trail right now

The Trail Foundation: Please don’t use the Butler Hike and Bike Trail right now

The Trail Foundation is discouraging people from using the Butler Hike and Bike Trail right now. Pam LeBlanc photo

Technically, the Butler Hike and Bike Trail remains open, but please don’t go there.

That’s the message today from Heidi Anderson, the executive director of The Trail Foundation, the non-profit organization that works to maintain and protect the beloved loop around Lady Bird Lake.

The foundation sent out an email blast recommending that trail users exercise closer to home and “let the trail rest,” noting that it’s impossible to practice social distancing – a spacing of at least 6 feet between humans – on some sections of the trail.

I

Trail users have not been practicing proper social distancing recently, according to The Trail Foundation. Pam LeBlanc file photo

f you do decide to use the trail (and please don’t), the organization recommends warning others of your presence by calling out “on your left” when you pass people, and stepping aside when someone zooms by you. Before and after visiting the trail, wash your hands and use hand sanitizer.

Exercise stations along the trail are closed, and while restrooms and water fountains remain open for now, the public is discouraged from using them.

According to The Trail Foundation, trail usage has not decreased in the last two weeks, and too many users are not practicing social distancing.

Not sure how to maintain your fitness without Austin’s favorite running and walking trail? Go for a walk or run in your neighborhood. Tune into an online workout. (Camp Gladiator is live-streaming free fitness sessions, and Peleton is offering new users a free 90-day subscription to its app, no bike needed.) Go for a bike ride close to home, or get to work yanking weed and trimming overgrown plants in your garden.

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Spider Mountain Bike Park suspends operations during pandemic

Spider Mountain Bike Park suspends operations during pandemic

 

Spider Mountain is suspending operations starting this weekend. Pam LeBlanc photo

Spider Mountain Bike Park in Burnet is suspending operations starting this weekend.

Officials at the chairlift-served mountain bike park say they will continue to follow federal, state and county guidelines and assess a reopening date on a day-by-day basis.

“The COVID-19 crisis compels us to make difficult decisions for the well being not only of our guests and employees but also of Texans as a whole,” said managing partner James Coleman.
Check for update on the park’s website, spidermountain.com. Spider Mountain’s accompanying lodging, Thunderbird Resort, will continue its normal operations.

Read my story about Spider Mountain at https://www.austin360.com/entertainmentlife/20190228/how-chairlift-from-new-mexico-is-changing-things-for-central-texas-mountain-bikers.

The park is located 60 miles northwest of Austin.

A cyclist rides the lift to the top of Spider Mountain on Feb. 9, 2019. Pam LeBlanc photo

Trying to stay fit while practicing social distancing? Try fly fishing, gravel riding and more

Trying to stay fit while practicing social distancing? Try fly fishing, gravel riding and more

Chris Johnson, owner of Living Waters Fly Fishing in Round Rock, shown here, and Aaron Reed, author of “Fly Fishing Austin,” took me fly fishing this morning on Brushy Creek. Pam LeBlanc photo

​I know myself, and I know that if I don’t swim, bike, run, scuba dive, paddle, hike, plant a garden full of potatoes, rappel down a high-rise building, crawl through a cave or uproot trees at least once a day, things go south quickly.

Just ask my husband, who’s forced to reckon with the aftermath when I miss swim practice.

And now, along with fitness programs all over the city, my U.S. Masters Swim team at Western Hills Athletic Club has cancelled practices for the foreseeable future.

I can’t sit still, and I know I’m not alone. We’re all trying to practice social distancing while staying fit. Fortunately, here in Central Texas we’ve got lots of options.

Need some ideas? Check out these suggestions for ways to burn stress without mingling too closely with others:

Sheila Reiter and Chris LeBlanc pedal gravel roads south of Luling. Pam LeBlanc photo

  1. Ride a gravel bike in the country. I headed to Palmetto State Park between Gonzales and Luling on Saturday with my husband and one other friend. We paid our entrance fee, parked and struck out on a gorgeous 35-mile ride on low-traffic, dirt and gravel roads in the area. We passed a raucous donkey, spotted an early eruption of wildflowers, pedaled around fields of cattle and enjoyed a slower-paced tour of the gently rolling terrain. Not sure exactly where to ride? Check my article in Bluebonnet Electric Co-op’s magazine this month for route ideas. (https://www.bluebonnetelectric.coop/Community/News/articles/2020/Magazine-Stories/To-Grind-or-Not-To-Grind)
  2. Go fly fishing. This morning I joined Aaron Reed, author of “Fly Fishing Austin,” and Chris Johnson, owner of Living Waters Fly Fishing shop in Round Rock, for some casting on Brushy Creek at Champions Park. We tromped along the creek, waded in up to our knees, and cast and caught (well, they did; I just got some nibbles) a slew of sunfish. The land smelled like wild mint and onions, and the cold water swirling around my calves reminded me that nature is still there to recharge us. Bonus? Fly fishing relieves stress. The repetitive motion is meditative and soothing, and the green surroundings make me happy.
  3. I’ve taken to solo, early morning runs through my neighborhood. Some running groups are still holding practice, but advising members not to linger or socialize afterward. It’s not a bad time to remember the joy of running alone, too. Just make sure you tell someone where you’re going, when to expect you back, and wear brightly-colored clothing or lights if it’s dark.
  4. Get in the garden. Weeding, trimming and planting are great ways to squeeze in exercise, and it makes your yard look pretty, too. I planted potatoes, basil and tomatoes this week, and made headway tearing out weeds thriving in my yard. Hauling sacks of mulch, raking leaves and loading lawn detritus into trash cans is great functional exercise.
  5. Hiking’s another thing you can do solo or with a significant other. Use this time to discover some lesser-known parks, like the Doeskin Ranch Unit of the Balcones Canyonlands Preserve near Liberty Hill. State parks are still open, and offer amazing spaces to get outside and move – without brushing shoulders with tons of other people.
  6. Head to West Texas. Now sounds like a great time to do a multi-day bike trek through Big Bend Ranch State Park, where you can spend a day spinning through a lunar landscape populated by prickly cactus, tarantulas and javelinas.

West Hansen paddles the Colorado River. Pam LeBlanc photo

  1. Go paddling. Central Texas offers plenty of options for beginning to advanced canoeing and kayaking. For placid waters, head to the Colorado River south of Austin or a short stretch of the Blanco River inside Blanco State Park. For trickier terrain, paddle the San Marcos River. Other options? The Llano River near Castell or Lady Bird Lake right here in Austin. Read more in this article I wrote for the Austin American-Statesman. (www.statesman.com/NEWS/20170918/Dip-a-paddle-in-these-Central-Texas-rivers-and-lakes)

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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