Sunday, August 14, 2011
RAGBRAI XXXIX Photos
Sunday, July 31, 2011
RAGBRAI Wrap Up
RAGBRAI XXXIX has come to a close, and we are happy to be back in our home in Ames with no serious injuries and a lot of good memories. Among other things, we are especially happy about the following aspects of being home:
- Air conditioning
- Showers with reliable temperature adjustment
- Knowing that the location of the bathroom has not changed from the previous day when nature calls in the middle of the night
The Bike World charter was great again. The group of people who use their charter service come into Des Moines and Ames from all over the country, and they're generally an easy-going group of people who enjoy cycling through the Iowa rural areas and small towns, meeting people, and hanging out under the shade tent after a day's ride. There are any number of ways to do RAGBRAI (mainly varying by the amount of alcohol one consumes), but this group's method fits our style pretty well.
We'll likely do RAGBRAI again sometime in the future. Having done it two years in a row on hybrid bikes, the main change we'd like to make is switching to a tandem road bike. While we got it done with our current bikes, and improved the experience with upgrades, it was still difficult not to be jealous when we were pushing to hit 10 MPH going up a hill and getting passed by someone of similar physical stature going by on a road bike at 15. A tandem road bike could probably hit something upwards of 18. While RAGBRAI is most definitely not a race, moving faster would be nice in that we would have more time to spend in the various towns, especially the overnight towns, exploring the parks, restaurants, shopping, and other unique things each community had to offer. Getting through the hot afternoons faster would be great as well!
Most of all, it'd be nice to have more time to focus on the best part about RAGBRAI: meeting new people from all over the United States (and even other parts of the world). Most of our memories from this year's ride involve interactions we had with others, however brief, like the conversation we had with two women sitting across from us at a pancake breakfast in Ladora who were wearing plastic moldings of rear ends outside their bike shorts, who turned out to be on the same team as one of Amy's former coworkers. Or the debate while standing in line at the fresh limeade stand on a county highway outside Grinnell about how many hills were left, based on a sign indicating "only three hills to go!" that we had all ridden past earlier, and whether the rising ground we could see ahead of us was actually a hill, or just an "incline." Or the short conversation with the retired woman from Team Loon at the Casey's General Store in Boone who rides with the Team Loon tradition of a loon bird head sticking out the top of her helmet, but with a cowboy hat adorning it to show that she is from Texas, not Team Loon's home base of Minnesota. We had heard about her from the women with the rear end enhancements at the pancake breakfast, and as she told us herself, she's infamous. There was also the random encounter at another Casey's General Store (maybe we could get a sponsorship from Casey's!) with a gentleman and his son who sat across from us in a booth while we all took an air conditioned break that turned out to be from my hometown, and involved in the school music foundation there which held its first fundraiser event this past spring. I played trombone in the alumni jazz band at the event, and he was helped out in the trumpet section.
I came across a quote at some point early this past week, probably in the Des Moines Register, that sums it all up pretty well. It went something like this:
RAGBRAI isn't really about biking; it's about meeting people who happen to ride bikes.
Saturday, July 30, 2011
End of the Ride
We made it to the end of the ride in Davenport, and we even had enough time to spare for a bite to eat at Maid-Rite around the block from where the Bike World charter was loading.
Next up: snooze time on the bus ride home.
Smooth Start to Last Day
With our charter bus leaving Davenport at 2pm, and 65 miles to travel from Coralville, we knew a good start for today's ride was important. So far so good, as we have covered half the distance by 8:40am, exactly 3 hours after leaving camp. We decided to stop in Moscow and reward ourselves with smoothies from Smoothie Revolution.
Friday, July 29, 2011
The End Draws Near
We survived some nasty hills at the end of today's 77 mile ride, and now it's time for Bike World's end-of-week coordination meeting and root beer floats. One day to go...
Amy informed me that I am lucky because she "hasn't threatened to kill me yet this week."
Looks like we're doing better than last year!
Audio Adrenaline
I am happy to report that both of my speakers are in working order after one tried to abandon ship yesterday. As you can see it is now being forcibly restrained with the power of duct tape.
Amy requested music by The Avett Brothers, and after we were going out of Ladora I got a nice compliment from a passing rider: "best music I've heard all day!"
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Amy at the Creek
While riding down a very steep hill near the end of today's ride, I heard a thud, and looking back saw that one of the speakers I had rigged up on my trunk bag had fallen off. This would be bad enough under normal conditions, but it was worse due to the hazard my speaker created for bikers cruising down the hill at 30+ mph. I quickly pulled off, jogged back up he hill 20 yards, and carefully retrieved my speaker while trying to avoid becoming an even greater obstacle.
Once this mission was complete I proceeded down to the bottom of the hill and met up with Amy at this location on a bridge looking out over Rock Creek State Park.
Roadside Strudl
I really don't know if there is any food you can't find on RAGBRAI. This afternoon we stopped between hills for some Dutch pastries.
Great Gusto
We had some awesome pizza from Gusto Pizza at the 80/35 music festival in Des Moines a few weeks ago, and I couldn't pass up the opportunity when I saw them on today's ride.
Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Laundry
Since most RAGBRAI lodging is in the form of camping, one has to find creative ways to dry biking clothes after rinsing them down in the shower. Here is one method I spotted in our campground earlier today.
RAGBRAI Food Review
Just had the best meal on RAGBRAI so far (discounting our Hickory Park stop in Ames last night) thanks to Pronto, based out of Des Moines. Awesome burrito bowl with pulled pork. We'll definitely be looking for them tomorrow in Grinnell!
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Home for a Night
Knowing that tonight's overnight town, Boone, was just a short drive from Ames, we made arrangements with Amy's parents to get a ride from Boone to our home in Ames for some quality showering, bedding, air conditioning, and a visit to the greatest eatery known to man, which is, of course, Hickory Park.
Tomorrow we'll ride back onto the route south of Ames where it turns toward Slater.
Padding
Long-distance cyclists generally wear special shorts with extra padding to help ease the discomfort of sitting on a bicycle seat all day. These two ladies have added onto this strategy with some padding of their own!
Real Bikers
We saw this message on a marquee in one of the pass through towns today. Good to see that, for one week out of the year at least, we are considered "real bikers."
Off to a Great Start
We got up at 5am, left camp at 6am, and made it to Lanesboro, the second pass-through town, by 7:15am. With just over a quarter of the day's ride over, it's a great time to stop for pancakes!
Monday, July 25, 2011
Trying a Different Approach
After our experience yesterday on RAGBRAI, we decided that some drastic measures were in order for today, as the amount of total climb increases from 4,298 feet to 4,719 feet and the heat forecast was showing no signs of letting up. While Alfredo is zipping from town to town at warp speed on his classic early 90's era Trek road bike, we're still working with our hybrid bike technology, and most important of all we need to get the chain on Amy's bike fixed or replaced.
Since we knew today wouldn't be a good riding day for these various reasons, we planned ahead while hanging out with Team Daydrinker yesterday (they are true to their name, by the way) to work out a solution. Fortunately we live in a capitalistic society, and if there is a need (sagging for an entire day of RAGBRAI), someone will find a way to make money while providing a valuable service. A group by the name of Pork Belly Ventures operates a RAGBRAI charter service, and they also offer an all-day sag service from one overnight town to the next on a first-come first-served basis for 25 bucks. They take reservations the day before, and we were able to arrange for a ride all the way from Atlantic to Carroll.
At 6am this morning we made our way from the Bikeworld campsite 10 blocks down the street to Pork Belly Ventures and had a nice, quiet, AIR CONDITIONED ride to Carroll. Pictured below is Amy in front of the semi truck trailer that carried our bikes, waiting for it to be unloaded in Carroll.
We then made our way into town, stopped by to ask some locals setting up a snack stand where we could get indoor breakfast (I was tempted for a moment to answer affirmatively when they asked if we had biked all the way from Atlantic at 9am, but knew I wouldn't keep a straight face), and then went a few more blocks to HyVee based on their advice.
And so here I am, polishing off a tasty Hy Five breakfast platter. Hey, this RAGBRAI stuff ain't so bad when you don't have to ride your bike!
Soon we'll find one of the bike repair shops to get Amy's bike fixed up, then rest and reset for tomorrow, when we only have 1,787 feet of climb and hopefully slightly cooler temperatures on our way to Boone (and real showers and a bed at our house in Ames, thanks to Amy's parents for the lift the extra 10 miles).
Now, to try and figure out why I didn't go looking for a tandem road bike after last year's RAGBRAI...
Sunday, July 24, 2011
An Adventurous Start
Some might not use the word "adventurous" to describe our first day on RAGBRAI (Amy, for example), but I think it will be looked upon as a favorable adjective in 10 years or so.
We made it through the first 20 miles on our trusty hybrids, which we upgraded from last year with better pedals and grips, but it wasn't quite enough to deal with hills that were very hilly, heat that was very hot, and humidity that was like a frickin' sauna!
After taking a lunch break at Mr. Porkchop a few miles before the town of Carson, we attempted to get going again when the chain on Amy's bike got wedged in a place on the rear wheel where chains are not accustomed to finding themselves. In my effort to free it I managed to cause a link to break apart, and ended up dropping the chain on the ground, free of being shackled to the bicycle gear system.
At this point it was fairly clear that fate was sending us a message. We got a ride into Carson from the nice owners of the farm where Mr. Porkchop was set up, and then began looking around for a RAGBRAI team with a bus who might be willing to take a few hitchhikers on to Atlantic, the overnight town where our tents and luggage were waiting for us.
As we surveyed the options, I saw one team bus close by with a few guys outside preparing to do something involving a funnel and beer. Thinking this might not quite be our crowd, we turned around, saw a bright yellow bus exuding sunshiny happiness, and headed that way instead.
We were in luck, as Amber and her fellow Team Daydrinker crew had room. We chipped in some gas money and obliged when they told us to pull up some chairs and enjoy a few drinks in the shade. Things were looking up as we knew we had a ride to Atlantic and some nice people to take us there.
Little did we know we wouldn't exactly be taking a direct route, but it was all part of the adventure. After riding the team bus to Lewis to wait for some of their team members to get off the ride for the day, there were two that got stranded a few miles out due to mechanical problems. It took some time and driving on gravel roads, and an accidental detour to a historical Underground Railroad house, but we eventually found them, then made our way the last 10 miles to Atlantic.
Once we got into town, Amy and I kept an eye out for our campsite with the Bikeworld charter while Team Daydrinker was trying to find the host family residence where they would be camping out. As luck had it, they drove right up to our campsite during this process. We stopped, thanked them for their hospitality, removed the fairly large tree branch that had somehow become attached to the rear of the bus (tall buses with bike racks on top don't mix well with low hanging tree limbs), unloaded our bikes, and made our way to camp around 8:30pm.
After taking the best showers we have ever experienced at the local YMCA, we got in a late night meal at Burger King with Alfredo and then called it a night. Hopefully today was the most "adventurous" day we'll have this week.
Saturday, July 23, 2011
Sustenance
Alfredo looks right at home ordering a round of beers on his first RAGBRAI at the Keg Creek brewpub's grand opening in Glenwood. As another patron's shirt said, "Beer is Food."
RAGBRAI Tradition 263
As this is the beginning of our second RAGBRAI we can now start listing the many traditions we have established over the past 1.1 rides. First up: Saturday morning breakfast at McDonald's.
Thursday, June 16, 2011
Our Century
Friday, June 10, 2011
Made Right
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
Trestles and Trails
While we have been able to squeeze in some 15 mile rides after dinner every once in awhile, we have been feeling the pressure to get in some longer rides (a typical day on RAGBRAI is 60-80 miles). After eating a late breakfast we decided we had enough time to head out of Ames on South Dakota Ave and try out the new highway bike lanes completed this spring that go the entire nine miles south to Slater (a town made infamous in this post).
There is nothing quite like the feeling of riding smooth-tire bicycles on fresh asphalt (and by fresh I mean having been laid within the past year; asphalt laid earlier that same day would provide an entirely different and likely less enjoyable cycling experience). On the reasonably flat grade we felt as if we were gliding over the surface, propelled by the pollen spores bursting from the drainage ditch grass along the entire route. At various points Amy checked her speedometer and found that we were going 20+ MPH with our normal effort! This was a nice boost over our experience on RAGBRAI last year, when we could only get close to 20 MPH if we really pushed ourselves for short bursts on the flatter stretches. Apparently turning off the suspension in the front forks of our bikes really does make a difference--thanks to the fellow Bike World RAGBRAI charter member who gave us that tip last year after we returned. We're looking forward to putting it into action this year.
We reached Slater in what felt like no time at all, and as we turned onto the two-block long main street I was wondering if we'd have any luck finding a place to eat in the small town. Fortunately we saw some fellow cyclists who looked refreshed and ready to ride leaving the Take Down Bar & Grill. Clearly we had found the right spot for lunch.
We grabbed seats at the empty bar, ordered some sodas and burgers with fries, and watched NASCAR which happened to be on at that moment. Since racing isn't exactly my favorite spectator sport, I was elated when the bartender handed me the remote! I quickly found game seven of the NBA Playoffs game featuring the Oklahoma City Thunder vs. the Memphis Grizzlies, which we both found to be much more entertaining. Amy and I discussed the intricacies of the game, including how challenging and irritating it must be to play basketball with a big bushy beard like this guy.
Alas, our basketball watching was not for long, as an old timer named John soon came in, greeted the bartender by first name, then grabbed a seat near us and said, "I wonder if there's any NASCAR on... you ain't watching this are ya?"
Of course I didn't want to come across as the city slicker down from Ames who thinks he runs the place, so I obligingly bent the truth a little with my response.
"Nope."
The food was great, and as we ate our meal some more of the locals showed up, all of whom knew John. It was fun listening in on their conversations, including the story about a girl at the bar the previous night who had just moved there from Jacksonville, FL and though she would like it, but wasn't happy with the small town feel or the fact that, according to her, everyone who lived there was "creepy." I'm not sure how someone from Florida decides that Slater, IA would be a great relocation destination if they're not into the small-town thing, but perhaps she'll try relocating again a little further south to West Des Moines for the Jordan Creek Mall and more of a big city feel.
As for us, Slater and its Take Down Bar & Grill will definitely become a favorite bicycle destination of ours.
With our bellies full of energy-stoking calories, we headed out again, and jumped on the 25 mile long High Trestle Trail which forms a sort of boomerang shape with its tips pointing to the south and west, and the midsection "elbow" (that's a boomerang term, right?) pointing at Slater. Having heard a lot about the just-opened High Trestle Bridge, a 13-story tall, half-mile long pedestrian bridge over the Des Moines River, we were really interested in checking it out and riding over it.
Thirteen miles later, we came upon the bridge, and it did not disappoint! The following pictures don't do it justice, but they provide an idea of its awesomeness. For all those East or West Coasters who think Iowa is completely flat, I invite you to visit this bridge and gaze upon the impressive hills of the Des Moines River Valley. We may not have the Rockies or the Grand Canyon, but I would still pay money to see some crazy daredevil with a jetpack fly across this valley.
I cannot fathom how the concrete was poured for the path surface. The columns rising out of the river were already there from an older railroad bridge, but the surface was completely replaced, and apparently some brave concrete truck drivers had to back down the completed portion of the path to deliver the material needed to complete the next section. Wow.
The artistic touches on the bridge are interesting as well. The spiraling frame structures are intended to evoke the feeling of looking down a mine shaft, which were numerous in the area a few centuries ago and mined by immigrant Italians.
After continuing on a few more miles to the western endpoint of the trail at Woodward, we turned around and rode back, crossing the bridge again and stopping in nearby Madrid for a quick calorie boost with some ice cream at the Filling Station, which appropriately enough looks like (and probably once was) an old-timey filling station.
Finally we were ready for the thirteen mile trek back to Slater, followed by the last nine miles to Ames. Well, one of was ready at least. The other one (who may or may not be me, but if you could see me now let's just say I would be giving you my "shifty eyes") should probably have spent more time on the stationary bike at the rec center and less time perfecting their free-throw stroke over the past winter. More on that in a bit.
While the wind was relatively friendly to us during the first half of our journey, it seemed to have shifted when we turned around in Woodward, and from that point forward we would have constant headwind coming out the north east, which wasn't so great since our remaining directions of travel were east and north. After slogging through some grueling miles we finally arrived back at Slater, and found the oasis that is a Casey's General Store. Known for their gas, pizza, and sandwiches, we stopped in and consumed two out of those three (determining which two is left to the reader as a guessing game).
Amy's superior training regimen left her in pretty good shape, but I was feeling a bit run down from all the wind we rode through on the way back to Slater. After sitting on the curb for a while, soaking up some sun and consuming our dinner, I figured I was good to go for the last nine miles to the edge of Ames.
Turns out "good to go" was an overly optimistic opinion. "Ambivalent about lower limb amputation" would have been more apt after riding through a few miles on the highway bike lane with nothing but empty corn fields between us and the wind. My legs were becoming less and less functional with each passing farmhouse, and by the time we had inched back to Ames at an average speed of 8 MPH, I wasn't sure if I'd be able to walk down the stairs to my home office the next morning. We totaled 55 miles for the entire trip, which was a great accomplishment (last year we didn't get a 50+ mile ride in until July), but afterwards I realized I should have worked my distance up a bit more gradually and put in as much winter training as Amy.
Happily, I am writing this post a few days later, having stayed off the bike all of Monday and most of Tuesday, and at this point the consistency of my legs has improved from jelly to cookie dough. Hopefully another few days and they'll be back to a solid state.
As has happened more times than I'd like to admit in the past six months, I am once again learning the lesson that my doctor has explained quite well in layman's terms during my previous couple of visits.
"You aren't nineteen any more."
Monday, May 02, 2011
Eventful Weekend
Titletown
We got things started Friday night with our second attempt at watching the Iowa Energy, Des Moines' NBA Development (aka minor) League team win the D-League championship for the first time in its short four year history. Each round of the D-League playoffs consists of a best-of-three series, with the first game at the lower-ranked team's site, and the second and, if necessary, third games at the higher-ranked team's location. The Energy made it to the championship round and won the first game in Texas against the their opponent, the Rio Grande Valley Vipers!
The team has gained a decent following over the past few years partly thanks to former Iowa State Cyclone Curtis Stinson leading the team on the court, playing at a high level as the starting point guard. The level of excitement around the team took a huge leap when the buzz started in central Iowa that the team had a great shot at winning their first league championship in game two last Wednesday.
Most people figured, hey, if the team can win game one in front of a hostile crowd on the road, in Texas of all states, then winning at home in front of one of the best crowds in the league with the championship one victory away should be a walk in the park, right?
Unfortunately, that's probably what the players thought as well, and we (along with current ISU men's basketball coach and free-throw machine Fred Hoiberg!) sat among the D-League all-time record crowd of 14,000+ in Des Moines as the Energy let the game get out of hand in the third quarter, and the Vipers evened the series one game each.
That left the final and decisive game scheduled for last Friday. We had been planning to get in a long bike ride to kick our RAGBRAI preparations into high gear Friday after work, but then the cold and wind conspired against us, so we decided instead to make the trip back down to Des Moines for the game. While the tickets were quite reasonable at face value, we got a real deal from someone we met on the street walking to the game: two tickets for five bucks each, sitting in the sixth row near one end of the court.
Turns out that we were fortunate the weather canceled our biking plans, as we ended up witnessing a great game and, best of all, the celebration afterwards as the Energy hoisted the championship trophy. I have never before been doused in so much confetti!
Dang Good Pizza
Being in attendance for such a victory meant that we had to celebrate, so we headed to Court Avenue and partook in some of the best pizza known to central Iowa at Fong's Pizza. Here is a photo of one of the many delicious slices of crab rangoon pizza that we consumed.
Full disclosure: a loss in the game would have been an excuse to drown our sorrows in cheese and crust, so we were pretty much doing Fong's no matter what!
Hackstravaganza
Saturday was the annual Cyber Defense Competition, hosted by Iowa State University at Hilton Coliseum, and my second time participating fully as a member of the Red team. There were 25 teams from Iowa high schools across the state registered as Blue teams, tasked with protecting a mock computer network for a fake corporation while the Red team members try to hack in to read and write flags to protected locations on hard drives. The Blue teams lose points for each successful intrusion by the Red team, and the team with the most points wins honor and glory and some nifty prizes.
The highlight of the day for me was during the "fire drill" in the afternoon when the Blue teams were required to leave their work spaces, and the Red team members got to walk around for twenty minutes looking for unlocked terminals and useful information laying out in the open. I happened across a piece of paper where a team had written down all their administrator passwords and promptly snapped a photo with my smartphone.
Obama vs Osama
Of course the most significant event of the weekend was the announcement on live TV by the President Sunday evening that Osama bin Laden had been found and killed in Pakistan by a team of Navy Seals. While previous generations had Martin Luther King or JFK, 9/11 was the first event seared into our memories, and I remember walking across campus in Ames that morning on my way to a parallel programming class when I met Bethany from our dorm coming the opposite way between Music Hall and Carver Hall. As I was about to offer a friendly "Hello," she stopped me to mention some bizarre news about a plane crashing into the World Trade Center. It would be another few hours before I returned from class and learned that what seemed at first like a strange accident turned out to be anything but.
It is hard to believe that nearly a decade has passed since that day. While I don't believe the elimination of bin Laden has suddenly rid the world of terrorism, the event does provide a sort of cathartic satisfaction that also seemed to be felt everywhere from DC and NYC to the campuses of Penn State and Iowa State.
One can only imagine the thoughts going through the heads of the Executive branch in this incredible photo apparently taken at the White House as the events were going down in Pakistan. Hopefully the successes in fighting terrorism continue for this and future administrations.
Tuesday, April 19, 2011
Lofty Goals
As I continue my journey of recovering from an ankle sprained twice within two months (January and February), I have worked my way back onto the basketball court at the campus rec center. Rest assured, I am only shooting free throws and practicing my 180-degree turnaround fall-away jumper, and I am consistently turning down all requests to even out odd-numbered groups of Chinese graduate students who want to get a pickup game going.
Tonight I had to resist the extra special incentive for trying to get in a pickup game when I saw various members of the Iowa State men's basketball team taking on all challengers. While standing on the sideline I got this picture of Calvin Godfrey putting up a jumper while fellow freshmen Jordan Railey and a partially-obscured Melvin Ejim look on.
There is something oddly intriguing about wanting to get in a game like this just so I could someday tell my future children, "Hey, see that guy with the name Godfrey playing professional basketball on TV? He dunked on me once at the Rec! Awesome, right!?!?"
The sky's the limit, baby. The sky's the limit.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Biking on the Rebound
Monday, March 14, 2011
Happy Pi Day!
We prepped for our Pi Day extravaganza with a trip to the rec. I'm going to go ahead and pretend that my slice of pie had fewer calories than I burned in my hour on the exercise bike.
Although we enjoy celebrating Pi Day every year, we are really looking forward to 2015, when the date will represent the first five digits of pi (3.1415) rather than just the first three. Of course, none of this will matter if the world ends in 2012. We'd better live it up while we can.
Speaking of living it up, I had a revelation tonight: because pi's decimal representation never ends or repeats, theoretically any date could be represented in it. Woohoo! Pie every day!
As a special bonus, because we haven't posted in a month, I leave you with pi represented to 50 decimal places. You're welcome.
3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510
Monday, February 14, 2011
Happy Valentine's Day!
Our Valentine's Day dinner of choice this year was sushi at Fuji Japanese Steakhouse. We were among the first 100 couples to be seated for dinner tonight, so they gave us a rose!
Adam spent a few minutes artistically arranging the rose and a jar of soy sauce before he snapped this photo.
We rounded out the evening with some frozen custard from Culver's. Sushi and custard are a guaranteed recipe for a successful Valentine's Day!
Saturday, February 05, 2011
ARGH
- I love it when Hoiberg gets all up in the refs' faces
- One of the KSU guys tried to BITE one of our guys. What is up with that?!
I think we will have a post tomorrow that involves a cool picture or two. We shall see. In case you are going through picture withdrawal, you can check out our Missouri/New Orleans/Missouri album from our trip in January. Click on the pictures for commentary.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
Bad News/Good News
The good news: the women won at Hilton! (Maybe we should be going to their games instead?) Also, the RAGBRAI overnight towns were announced. It looks like a good year, but we'd better keep training! Three of the overnight towns are Carroll, Boone, and Altoona, which means we will be able to do some training on the actual route.
Thursday, January 27, 2011
Hangover in Hilton
Unfortunately, that's probably not going to happen after last night's pathetic attempt against Texas Tech. Our guys looked hungover and were never able to dig themselves out from an early deficit. Texas Tech was clearly the team who wanted to win the most. I've never seen Hoiberg as upset as he was during last night's game, and based on some of his post-game statements, I think the guys can look forward to some punishing practices this week!
There were a couple of bright spots last night, though:
- The student section chanting "Throw a chair!" at Texas Tech's coach, Pat Knight, son of the legendary basketball personality Bobby Knight
- This license plate, which we saw on our way out of the parking lot--Boone from Boone:
After a game like that, I'll take my amusement wherever I can get it!
EDITED TO ADD: If you're interested in seeing an extremely annoyed Fred Hoiberg, here's his post-game press conference.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Pick Me Up, Bring Me Down
Last weekend we made a trip to Des Moines to check out a couple of places we had been hearing about for awhile. Up first was a stop at the Mars Cafe in the Drake University neighborhood.
I have frequently seen Mars Cafe mentioned in various Des Moines publications and Twitter posts by Central Iowans I follow, and it seemed like a happening place. We popped in for a few afternoon hours and enjoyed a late lunch with caffeinated beverages of our choices (Amy: Diet Coke; Me: coffee) followed by recreational activities of our choices (Amy: reading a novel; Me: surfing the Internet). The sandwiches were great, and the cafe had a nice modern atmosphere. They also host various interesting events, such as the upcoming Pour-Over Poster Show featuring coffee-themed artwork accompanied by free beer from my favorite Ames-based brewpub, Olde Main. Perhaps we'll have to make a return visit!
After wrapping up at the cafe, we then passed a little time at Barnes & Noble before moving on to The Keg Stand, a bar in West Des Moines that we had heard about from promotions on local sports radio station KXNO as a host for Iowa State University game-watch events. Saturday night's main event was Iowa State's border-war showdown with the Missouri Tigers in men's basketball, and after a should-have-won-but-didn't game on the road at Oklahoma State earlier in the week, we were hoping that this game would be Iowa State's chance to erase bad memories of a couple of close road-losses this season with an away game win over a ranked team. And what better way to celebrate such a significant win than with a large group of fellow Cyclone fans in a bar?
We should have known it was not going to be a good night when we arrived and saw a large section of the bar roped off as reserved space for someone's 40th birthday party, and the congratulatory signs hanging on the wall were done up in Iowa Hawkeye black and gold. As it turned out, the Cyclones kept the game close for about the first ten minutes, until Missouri started playing more like a 14th ranked team at home and Iowa State started playing more like this year's Iowa team (ZING!). As the game went on it only got worse and ended up as a 33 point loss.
At least we were in a location well suited for sorrow-drowning. Even the bar stools are made out of beer kegs!
Despite the disappointing loss to end the night, it was still an enjoyable day exploring some new locations in the capital city just south of Ames. The Iowa State men have what are probably the easiest games of their remaining schedule this week, with Texas Tech in Ames tomorrow night, followed by a visit from Oklahoma on Saturday. Hopefully the team can bounce back and rebuild some confidence. We'll be there cheering them on!
Thursday, January 13, 2011
Heeeeeeere's Johnny (with a little Hilton Magic)
Any Iowa State basketball fan knows about Hilton Magic and knows that it started with a coach by the name of Johnny Orr who left Michigan in 1980 to lead the program at Iowa State University for the rest of that decade and part of the next. That was also the year I was born, so my knowledge of the original Hilton Magic, the thunderous shouting and clapping support from the fans that would cause the rafters to vibrate, the floor to shake, and opposing players to miss free throws, is based on second-hand stories from an earlier generation.