Thursday, September 27, 2007

Possible geocache placement near McKees Rocks


Last night, for the full moon hash house harriers run, we ran a pretty good trail and noticed that there were no geocaches in the area, except for Italian Job, which was basically on the edge of a small parking lot. Saw some good shiggy from a distance, gotta go and scout. Maybe the hilltop area...

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Billygoat Orienteering

Goat Orientering

The Northeast Ohio Orienteering Club had their billygoat event last week. On the long goat run, there were 27 controls, for a length of slightly over 11 km. The course setter's instructions allowed participants to skip two controls. Almost everyone skipped 10, and almost all skipped 5 (one person skipped 4). At firsts glance at the map, I would have skipped 4 too, but apparently those that skipped 5 instead were right.

Too bad this event was on the same day as the Hartwood Acres meet.



Many thanks to Bob Magneto Boltz for sharing the map.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Orienteering at Hartwood Acres

On National Orienteering Day, Sept 16, the Western Pennsylvania Orienteering Club hosted a meet at Hartwood Acres county park. It was the first time this location was used for this purpose.

The courses available were White, Yellow, and Score. In addition, for the very very young, a String-O course was also available.

By pure coincidence, the Road Runner running club was having its monthly run event at the same location just 90 minutes before. After their event, they had a picnic BBQ, and donated alot of left-over pastries and cookies to our event, that were eventually voraciously devoured by our participants as they returned and ended their orienteering courses.

There were many first-timers: some cub scouts from the Shadyside/Point Breeze area. Some from Hampton Township, who saw the flier in their community center. One from Squirrel Hill, who saw the flier at the SqHill library. One art gallery owner that saw the event in a arts event website. There was a geocaching family that lived nearby. There was a family that saw it on the North Hills news. There were three runners with the harriers. Unfortunately, none of the Roots Race adventure race participants came to this event, who got word of the event from a flier handed around at the Pittsburgh Urban Rogaine a month earlier.

For the score course,

I chose to pretty much follow a clock-wise pattern. I decided to designate #2 and #1 to be my last controls. I quickly went to #3, then to #5 with no problems. Having runned in this park before, I was familiar with the trails, and went to #8 by using some trails I already knew. From #8 to #6, I crossed the road and bushwacked in the woods to easily spot #6. Then gained the top of the hill to find #9. I already knew from the reports of the other participants that #10 was MIA, but I decided to go for it and went on a steep downhill to find it. Found the pile of manure, but not the control. [Note: I did a mistake in not going to #7... will explain later]. Went to #14 without a problem. From here chose to go to #13 by going straight north and getting on the paved road to the highest (saddle) point. [Note: should have gone to 15 and then to 13]. From 13, it was a highway of trail that lead me to the vicinity of 17. Now, I faced a dilemma: should I go to 15, or to 19 ? I was really pissed off, because now 15 was in the center, and I wanted to look for 19, 20, 18. And 15 was really out of my route. Chose to go to 19, using trails I already knew, then to 20 by cutting through clearings and corpse of trees with some thorny bushes (was glad I was wearing long pants). The control location of 20 was pretty neat, didn't know that ruin was there. Then, cutting through more creeks and thorny bushes, got myself into another clearing were I spotted another participant. Reached the corner of the clearing running up-slope, into the woods, trail and paved road intersection, and the control quickly spotted. Continued on trail to reach the Mansion parking lot, and found the ruin where 16 was (neat location - didn't know it was there...). Now, I could finally bag #15.. what a dogleg for me, went to it, and then ran back to get on the main trail leading to #12. A big loss of time was finding #12: there were three parallel trails, and somehow I mistakenly went right on the first one thinking I was on the second one. Eventually I got terribly suspicious that I was on the wrong trail, gained the hill, found the other trail, ran back on that, and then found the third trail (and that is when I realized I had been wrong all along...) BTW: looking now at the map, I see that the catching feature was the pipleline clearing going East-West, so there was no need to go back north on trail... I could have just continued going south until getting catched by the pipeline, and then could have gotten my next bearing from there... From 12 to 11, just ran down hill on the pipeline, and really tested my new Salomon SA 3D XCR. After finding 11, realized what a mistake I did in not getting 7 earlier. If I had already gotten 7, then from 11 to 4 it was an easy trail in the clearing, and then downhill in the woods. But now I had to gain the top of the hill using the pipeline clearing, and then barrell downhill towards 4, a waste of energy... estimated loss of time, 4 minutes. From 7 to 4, followed the pipeline clearing, then found the trail intersection, recognized the re-entrant, and followed it downhill to the creek intersection. From there, gained uphill to the trail above, and followed the clearing to 2, and then straight run across the concert area grass to 1, and then finish.

In summary, could have done better strategy, but physically was fit and ran most of the time. The Salomon SA 3D XCR proved to be great and well suited for the terrain.

Estimated distance covered in 78 minutes: about 8.8 km. A better choice would have been 8.4 km.

Notable: near control 9, there is a small black cross on the map. It's a pet cemetery of two horses. There is another similar cemetery just next to the fenced garden near the mansion.

Friday, September 14, 2007

The Ides of March 2007 Toga Run

The annual toga run of the Rome Hash House Harriers

pictures

The Rome HHH website

Always on sunday closest to March 15, starts at noon in Circus Maximus, we followed flour to S. Giovanni e Paolo, Villa Celimontana, in front of the Ospedale Militare del Celio, Colosseum, Via dei Fori Imperiali, Colonna Traiana, Fontana di Trevi, Pantheon, Piazza Navona, Teatro dei Satiri, Piazza Farnese, Via dei Giubbonari, Via del Portico d'Ottavia, Teatro di Marcello, and back to Circus Maximus.

Ides of March 2007
The run begins...



"It's a great time to die", announced the sound when viewing the Rome Hash House Harriers's website . Of the three days of their signature year event, The Ides of March, we were going to go only for the sunday Toga run. They ran out of togas, that were purchaseable separately for 15 euros, so I went to the Porta Portese flea market that morning, and haggled a gipsy woman to sell me five white sheets for seven euros. The run would start congregating at Circo Massimo at around 12:30 PM. By coincidence, hash start was located just a mile from my mom's apartment. So, no need to drive a car, bus, subway, train. I simply walked 15 minutes, with my five white sheets under my arm. Pretty convenient. Walking past the American Embassy to the Holy See and its permanent "gippone" of Carabinieri guarding it, went over the rim overlooking the entire length of the circus, and then saw them, a crowd of white sheets. There is already a large group that came from the Bella Napoli hash. Having hashed in Rome a few times before on a once-a-year occasion whenever I visited mom, I did recognize a few of the folks. CIQ has even a laurel crown. Funny, they're still here. That's good. There is beer and food, and even a colomba, the cake usually eaten during Easter. A few folks showed up without a white garment. Went around handing out sheets to those in need. People are busy wrapping themselves in toga, quick, where are my instructions? Cold Member of Pittsburgh purchases an unclaimed toga with the the ROME HHH insigna and dresses up wife Just Eva, that now looks like a real sacerdotessa del Tempio di Vesta (but for such a privilege, one must be a virgin, otherwise penalty is death buried walled alive). And you know what, this is Just Eva's first hash, so *SHE IS* a virgin, aka "new boot". Perfectly appropriate. A couple is bringing along the youngest hasher I've seen on a hash.



Soon, a call is made to circle up. After chalk talk by the GM and the hare, the crowd starts running. At the major road intersection, a few of us dart across the four-lane road, then followed by a sea of white sheets. Traffic is at full stop, amazed. True trail leads up the road atop the hill in direction of San Giovanni e Paolo, and Villa Celimontana.



After passing in front of the church of SS. Giovanni e Paolo, we entered Villa Celimontana via its side entrance. The villa is a favorite for wedding photos, and in one past hash I remember (Cum In Quarts was hare), we posed with the newly wed for a picture. But this time there were none. One spot of perfect green lawn that the locals call "praticello all'Inglese", nomenclature that indicates the reputation of those Britons on their lawn care, is a favorite of young parents that bring their infant child. And nearby is the dusty and over-rated playground, but apparently it is the place to meet foreign-tongued parents somehow associated with the nearby F.A.O. Here we see the first egyptian obelisk of the trail. After exiting from the front entrance to the villa, and swinging by S. Stefano Rotondo, we headed towards the Colosseum. Wish I had time to visit S. Stefano: it has 34 frescos of martyrs, saints tortured in all sorts of methods, cooked in oil, skinned alive, burned, hanged, cut in pieces. It is really noirish and gruelsome, and researching on it, somewhat surprised that its church is on high demand for weddings (" will you take this man as your husband? if you are unfaithful, see that guy on the fresco? She will kill you just like that !!")



Ran in front of the Ospedale Militare del Celio. The planimetry in the satellite view is so military in its disciplined and regular pattern, so spartan. This is where all the military-enabled men go through anytime something is wrong with their physique.



We ran next to a residential enclare bounded by the Parco di Colle Oppio to the north, the Villas on the west the Ospedale Miliare del Celio so the south, and the convents and churches to the east. This neighborhood is also known as il Celio. It has a school, restaurants, alimentari food stores, and a local population that recognizes each other. On the north edge, the famous church S. Clemente is located, with its three archeological layers, roman, paleo-christian, current. Then, we finally approach the Colosseum.



Anfiteatro Flavio, I tell Cold Member, of the Pittsburgh hash. And explain him that "anfi" means "two", so this roman invention is actually one of putting together, face-to-face, two greek theathers. He replies, "like amphibian", "two lives". The area is dotted with tourists, and the first toga-hashers to arrive zigzag through them and settle on a large open space. Men dressed as centurions charge 5 euros to pose in picture with them. Tourists click their cameras on us, and we yell back "5 euros !" More pix for the tourists.. We then run in front of the Arch and into Via dei Fori Imperiali, jumping from stone to stone on the ancient roman road.



On sunday's, vehicular traffic is not allowed on the Via dei Fori Imperiali. A long and wide road that connects the Colosseum with Piazza Venezia, it was paved during Mussolini's times for his triumphal military parades. There is now slow attempts in removing parts of it for archeological digs under it. The sunday stroll is now a pedestrian destination for tourists.



We pass the entrance to the Roman Forum. On the left, the Capitolum Hill with its trapezoidal-shaped square designed by Michelangelo. On the right, the beginning of Traian's Forum. We stop at a statue of Augustus, and pose for pictures. More tourists stop and take pictures.



On the left, the typewriter-looking monstruosity of white travertine stone. Staying on the right, rimming Traian's Forum, we run by the Column of Traian, whose 400 meter long marble relief spiral tape around it depicts Traian's war in Tracia (now Romania). In the satellite image, its shadow is cast northward.




Through some streets, and taking a dump on the way, we then run in front of Santi Apostoli.





Streets are getting narrow again, scooters and cars are jamming into narrower and narrower cracks.



... and after a turn, there it was, Fontana di Trevi with its Anita Eckberg and Marcello Mastroianni. The place was jammed with tourists, but we squeezed through, and posed for pictures. Then, in a side street, our beerstop in a pub, where the walkers eventually joined us. Beer and more beer, then off again, borrowing postcards from the tourist shops. After the stop, trail took us in front of the Colonna Antonina.



Running through winding streets, finally it opened up in front of the Pantheon, and we circled up and, under the direction of the Song Master, did a song break, with hundreds of tourists surrounding us and watching. So far, on trail we found two roman-era marble columns. Now, its time we see our second egypian obelisk.



Trail took us right by the Senate. One of the carabinieri in the guardpost took a picture of us with his cellphone. Then, on a road between the Senate and Piazza Navona, and did our second song break , this time Father Abraham, not far from the egyptian obelisk, and more tourists circling our circle.



We then took off, left Piazza Navona, headed towards S. Andrea della Valle, and the roads behind it.



Trail took us in a circling street, with a building facade that was curving, the Teatro dei Satiri. There, on the location of Julius Caesar's murder, we murdered our GM, ketchup and sword at hand. Then, through the passageway into Piazza del Biscione, zipped by Campo de' Fiori and into Via dei Giubbonari.



Most stored were closed on Via dei Giubbonari, so not much crowd here. We crossed Via Arenula and ran into the Ghetto.



Ran close by the Synagoge, then in front of Giggetto restaurant, and its tourists chewing on the carciofo alla giudea, and in front of Portico D'Ottavia, scrambled into the archeological area of Teatro di Marcello, and into the backside of the Capitolum Hill.



Then, into back streets of a mixed government and residential neighborhood, remembered that the neo-nazi Concutelli was arrested in the late '70s in Via dei Foraggi, his nazi salute on the front page of every paper the next day. He was hiding in an apartment linked to gangster Vallanzasca, who was captured three days later.



One of those buildings we ran in front is where the election board resides, its mainframe computers, and where citizens that don't have a "Scheda Elettorale" can get their document that enables them to vote in elections. Nearby, the church of S. Maria in Cosmedin with its early Byzantine mosaics, and tourist-driven Bocca Della Verita'.



On the last stretch of the On-In, remembered that some thirty years earlier, in this very stretch, ran two loops around the Circus Maximus as part of an inter-regional school cross-country event. Felt funny being back on the same location, here I am, running again, shrouded in a white bed sheet that I haggled from a gipsy for one Euro earlier that morning in nearby Porta Portese. The rest of the pack arrives, get changed, eat the pasta e fagioli with its spicy zest (nice touch of piccante). Hey, what a Pittsburgh hash shirt doing here ? Bunch of accusations: helmets on trail, laurel crowns on trail, birthdays, one virgin on trail. Then, slowly, the Bella Napoli folks started branching off, catching their scheduled trains and rides, and the group tricked off. And the day of sunshine slowly shadowed in darkness. One obelisk that I remember from years past, but it is no longer there, it used to be right next to the FAO (Food and Agriculture Organizaton). It has been shipped back to Ethiopia.

Monday, September 10, 2007

My Review of Men's XA Pro 3D XCR Trail-Running Shoes

Originally submitted at Buzzillions.com

Light, fast, and ready to race, the XA Pro 3D features a waterproof and highly breathable Gore-Tex® XCR membrane for harsh, wet terrain.


design compromise

By sherpes from pittsburgh, pa on 9/10/2007

 

4out of 5

Sizing: Feels true to size

Width: Feels true to width

Pros: Comfortable, Good Traction

Best Uses: Muddy Conditions, All Weather Conditions, Mixed Terrain

Describe Yourself: Active & Fit

A few hours after I got this shoe, there was a strong thunderstorm coming in, and said to myself, what better way to test how waterproof the shoe is, and how it would fare in muddy trails in the park nearby. My eventual use for this shoe is to use them in Orienteering, an outdoor activity which involves alot of trail running and bushwacking in the woods. At first feel, I thought the back heel sole was too big and awkward, but actually after running on pavement for a mile, it turns out it was great and felt almost identical to a road running shoe. On trail and in the slippery and muddy slopes in the woods, the front sole had great traction, and "feel" for the ground. The hard tip provided great protection against logs and rocks. My disappointment was that after hitting several poodles, three minutes later I could feel water sloshing inside. Not sure if it got in from the stiches on the sole lining, or whether it came from the ankle as water dripped from the rain in (maybe tight gaiters would be of help). The high heel that was great for running on flats, but also gave a bit of unbalance on tight turns on trail running, almost triggering a twisting of ankle, so adjusted my run and agressiveness to beware of that slight unbalance. The shoe is very light, and it felt great, with a nice fit all-around the foot. Every foot is different, and every shoe has a "style" or "feel" that may differ to foot to foot. It so happens that this shoe felt good on my foot, but I've heard others that were wearing them that it felt "tight". For rugged terrain, the gore-tex surface might not survive more than a couple of long races with abrasive contact. But if you are running instead of stomping, this is a great shoe. Somewhat on the expensive side, but if you tried them in a store, know your size, and happen to see them on sale, it is a definite buy.

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