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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Registration is open for this year’s (virtual) Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Registration is open for this year’s (virtual) Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run

Pam LeBlanc stands with an unidentified participant in the 2018 Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run. This year’s run will once again be virtual. Chris LeBlanc photo

Time to lace up your racing shoes, ladies and gentlemen.

Registration is open for the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run, which once again will take place virtually this year.

Participants in the 5K can run anytime between now and May 31. A drive-through party where runners can pick up their commemorative T-shirts, plus nibbles and margaritas from Maudie’s TexMex, will take place on June 4.

This year marks the 18th year for the race, which benefits The Trail Foundation, a non-profit organization that works to maintain and improve the popular 10-mile trail around Lady Bird Lake.

Registration is $30 per person. To sign up, go here. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/maudies-moonlight-margarita-run-benefitting-the-trail-foundation-tickets-142559847341

After you register, you’ll receive an email link to create a virtual bib that you can share on social media to encourage your friends to get involved.

Then it’s time to get moving. You can walk or run your 5K, using one of the recommended on-trail routes, or any other 5K course you choose. Submit your best time to the website by May 31.

On June 4, join the drive-through packet pickup party to get your commemorative T-shirt, margarita and nibbles from Maudie’s TexMex.

Runners participate in the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation

 

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This company makes women’s cycling gear designed to fit all body types

This company makes women’s cycling gear designed to fit all body types

Tonik sent me this jersey to test drive. I like the back pockets – and the way it’s not gathered at the bottom. Chris LeBlanc photo

I’ve got a problem with most of those stretchy, made-for-bike-racing jerseys.
They’re mostly too tight, for one. Also, I hate the way they gather at the bottom, then ride up my belly as I pedal.
That’s why half the time when I head out on my bike I end up wearing just a regular, loose-fitting tech-fabric shirt. It’s not ideal. No pockets, for one. And I look a little rodeo clownish, with big padded shorts on the bottom and a flappy shirt over that. Ug.
Last week, a California-based company called Tonik, which makes performance cycling clothes for women, sent me some goods to try. I slid a black jersey with horizontal, candy-colored stripes out of the package, along with a pair of bright-colored wrap-around skirts.
The material felt slightly thicker than most of my jerseys – making it a little hot for summer riding in Texas. But I loved the three roomy pouch pockets and single zip pocket on the shirt’s back. I also liked the cut – no gathered bottom, and a little longer than most.
Tonik was founded in 2014 by two women who were looking for cute but well-made short-sleeved jerseys to wear for a 100-mile bike ride. They couldn’t find one they deemed both comfortable and flattering, so they set out to make their own, with the mission of fitting all body types. The result is a jersey actually designed for a woman’s shape, with a broader chest, a longer back and fabric that drapes in a flattering way.
“There are lots of jerseys out there made for skinny Italian men,” says Kristina Vetter, who bought the California-based company two years ago.

The jersey has three pouch pockets and one zip pocket in the back. Chris LeBlanc photo


The line has expanded to include tanks, long-sleeved jerseys, cycling dresses, jackets, and wrap-around skirts, which can be worn over cycling shorts or worn as a swimsuit coverup.
“Our customers are a lot of recreational riders and they like to get off their bike and put something on around their bike shorts to grab a coffee,” Vetter says. “It has the wrap design so it doesn’t interfere with pedaling, and it’s also small enough that you can stick it in your jersey pocket.”
I’ve been using my skirts over my swimsuit when I head to team practice, and when I get on the boat for a morning of waterskiing. I wish it had a little more Velcro, so I could adjust the waistband a little more, but it’s useful and cute paired with my bikini.
“We’re really all about fit,” Vetter says, noting that the clothing fits up to size 20. “And we make you look great at every size. A number of our customers were women wearing their husband’s biking jerseys. It looked awful and it felt ugly. We’re all about giving people things they can wear to make them feel fantastic.”
Now, if someone could just do something about those padded bike shorts…
The jerseys sell for $99; the wrap skirts are $65. For more information go to www.tonikcycling.com.

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Cap10K picks Marathon Kids as 2021 race beneficiary

Cap10K picks Marathon Kids as 2021 race beneficiary

The Capitol 10,000 is a rite of spring in Austin, Texas. Photo by Chris LeBlanc


The Statesman Capitol 10,000 – which always ranks high on my must-run list, but was cancelled in 2019 due to a storm and in 2020 due to a pandemic – has announced Marathon Kids as the beneficiary of its 2021 race.
The 2021 event, presented by Baylor Scott & White Health, is set for Sunday, April 11.
One dollar from every registration will go to Marathon Kids, a non-profit organization that helps students run and walk up to four cumulative marathons during the course of the school year. Race participants can also choose to make an additional donation when they register, which the Statesman will match up to $10,000.

The Cap 10K is one of my favorite races of the year. Chris LeBlanc photo


Registration is now open at Cap10K.com. Registration is $35 for adults and $20 for ages 10 and under.
“Since the first Cap10 back in 1978, this race has been about bringing the Austin community together in the name of good health, and Austin’s kids are the heart and the future of our city,” Jeff Simecek, the Cap10K race director, said in a press release. “I’m happy that our race and the Austin running community will support Marathon Kids in their mission to get kids active and set them on the path toward a lifetime of good health.”
Marathon Kids marks its 25th anniversary this year. The program is provided for free in all Austin public schools, as well as hundreds of other schools around the country.
“Helping kids develop a love of running that will serve them their whole lives has always been our mission,” says Marathon Kids CEO Cami Hawkins. “Now, with so much uncertainty in schools and life in general due to COVID-19, it’s more important than ever for kids to move their bodies and reap the benefits of exercise for their physical and mental health”
The organization recently unveiled a new digital lap-tracking app and reporting program called Marathon Kids Connect. Teachers, coaches, parents, and volunteers can use the platform and app to connect, get involved, and support their student runners in making progress, hitting milestones, and celebrating achievements.
To kick off its 25th anniversary season in Austin, Marathon Kids is inviting the community to join a 25,000-mile virtual relay. Throughout September, participants will run or walk, adding their miles to the collective goal of running a distance equivalent to the circumference of the earth.
To register, go to marathonkids.org/weruntheworld.

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