Orienteering 11/12

I decided to run the red course instead of green, only because there was an ultra long blue course. I ended up doing pretty well:

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I’m still slightly rusty on my navigation, but it is coming back. I waisted about 5 minutes on the 1st control being too far up a wide re-entrant, and had to go back to a trail to attack number 9 again when I couldn’t find it the 1st time, but other than that, I was pretty close each time.

My knee definitely felt it the next day, but it wasn’t terrible. However, I had no time to ice it the day of the run or the day after.

Orienteering event

On 10/22 I ran an orienteering event for the 1st time in a while. I think I only made it out once last year due to knee surgery in September, when the season starts. I was definitely a little rusty with navigation, but not as bad as I thought I would be. And I was able to run much more of the course than I thought I could. I ended up 4th on the green course, which is the 2nd longest. (It is the same difficulty — expert level — as the red, just a little shorter.)

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The one part that got me the most was when I thought I was a little off, so I ran up a road about 50 meters to verify that a cemetery was there. Well, it was there on the map, but not in reality. So then I was really questioning where I was. I ran up another 150 or 200 meters to a road intersection, to finally be certain of where I was, and then had to run all the way back. That probably cost a good 7 or 8 minutes total.

I’ll be going back out on 11/12, and will probably run green again. Before surgery, I’d often be 1st or 2nd on the green course, so I hope to get back to that point.

iLike

I love music stats. Recently I had this post about iTunes stats. I also like music recommendations. I wrote about MOG and last.fm here, and Pandora here.

Last.fm is what I have been using the most, and my last.fm profile is here. It combines stats, with a recommendations / social networking aspect.

There is now a new one called iLike on the scene, and so far I really like it. One thing that was missing from last.fm is that it didn’t analyze your listening habbits prior to installing it, so it only showed stats going forward. iLike actually takes the time to analyze your entire library, looking at which artists you’ve played the most and which songs you’ve played the most. It doesn’t do an analysis of your ratings, like iTunes Registry, but that one is a bit of a pain as you have to upload your iTunes xml file manually, whereas iLike does everything once you install it, and continues to update your profile as long as you keep listening.

Here is a snapshot from my profile showing recently played songs, top artists, and top songs.

Here is a link to my iLike profile.

Another thing that iLike is missing is the “weekly top artists” that last.fm keeps, but last.fm only keeps the last weeks information. I’d love to be able to go back to any day, week, or month in time, to see what i was listening to way back when.

iLike also let’s you hook up with friends that use iTunes and iLike, and it let’s you listen to what they listen to. I don’t have any iLike friends yet, so I haven’t been able to use this feature. I just installed it a couple of days ago, but if you are reading this, and you use iTunes, give iLike a try and let me know, so we can hook up.

As far as the recommendations, it does a couple of things. First, it shows other users that have similar listening habits (even if you don’t know them) and what they listen to. Second, it shows songs you may like, and let’s you listen to them. Some of them are even free MP3 downloads, so that is pretty cool.

So far, it does seem to slow things down a bit in iTunes, but I haven’t really spent that much time figuring out if that is the case — it could be that I recently got iTunes 7.0.1 to actually work. But that is my only complaint.

More computer problems

I posted recently about some computer problems. Well, I’ve had some more the past few days, and at least one of them doesn’t seem to have much info on line, so I want to document it here.

  1. First, Kelly’s HD on her mac died while I was out of town. She had been complaining it was acting weird/slow, and then one time mail seemed to get stuck, so she killed it, and then shut down and tried to reboot. Nothing but a blue screen. I suggested just pulling the battery, thinking that would fix it. Our neighbor does mac support, so she called him, and that was his 1st thought too, but after looking at it, he discovered the HD was no longer bootable. He was able to recover all the data, though with the backup solution I have in place, I was not too worried about that. He put in a new bigger HD, and all seems to be well again.
  2. Second, and the one I want to document for anyone else that may have this problem… I saw on slickdeals a 400GB for $89 shipped, from fryes. I couldn’t pass it up, and as soon as it came, I installed it. I had a lot of issues with the drive on windows XP…. First, I tried to install it with disc manager, and did a full format, only to have that fail at the end. I then tried using SeaGate’s DiscWizard to install and format it, and that seemed to go fine, accept that once it was finished, XP still showed it as unformated.
    I worked on it for a while, called SeaGate, and they said it was likely bad, so return it to fryes. I did that, but had the exact same problems on the new one! I had recently installed Vista on a different partition on the main drive, so I thought I’d give that a shot, and it worked fine! Formatted easily and quickly, and was able to copy files to it. So now I knew something was wrong with my XP build, and I called SeaGate back. This time they were able to tell me how to fix it without a problem.

    Here are some of the errors I saw:

    • When formating from windows xp (disk manager), it just failed with “windows could not format the drive.” Not very useful.
    • When formating from a dos prompt in windows, I got “the second ntfs boot sector is unwriteable.”
    • When formating from DiscWizard, I got no errors, and it looked like it was successful, only XP could do nothing
    • When formatting with Partition Magic 8.0, I got a #514 error.
    • When I successfully formated it in Vista, and then tried to use it in XP, I got “The request could not be performed because of an I/O device error.”
  3. This time, Seagate asked if I had the “Intel Application Accelerator” installed, which I did. Version 2.2. I don’t know where this came from, or when it was installed. I have a shuttle SB51G, and maybe it is part of the driver install that came with the barebones system, or maybe it happened when I upgraded the intel built in video driver. He said that applicaiton is known to have problems with partitions larger than 137 GB, even though I had done everything to make XP handle drives bigger than that. In fact, my primary drive is 160GB, even though it has several partitions, noe of which is greater than 137GB. So I downloaded the latest version, 2.3, installed it, rebooted, and right away, XP was able to see the drive and use it with no problems.

A Grief Observed. C.S. Lewis.

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I’m continuing my way through the CS Lewis box set (Christian writings) that I got for Christmas. So far I have enjoyed The Great Divorce and The Screwtape Letters. I’d say Screwtape is the best of them all, but all of these books exhibit the geniues of CS Lewis.

In this book, originally published under a different name, Lewis gives us insight, over the some period of time.into his thoughts and feelings after his wife died from cancer. He goes from abondoning God, to returning to his faith, and it is a pretty remarkable journey. He always has so many insights that I would not otherwise think of if I did not read his books.

I have a ton of dog ears through this book, and will include some of the more interesting ones here:

  • From the Forward, written by Madeleine L’Engle:

    It is helpful indeed that Lewis, who has been such a such a successful apologist for Christianity, should have the courage to admit doubt about what he has so superbly proclaime. It gives us permission to admit our own doubts, or own angers and anguishes, and to know that they are a part of the soul’s growth.

  • I had yet to learn that all human relationships end in pain. It is the price that our imperfection has allowed Satan to extract from us for the privilege of love.

  • Only a real risk tests the reaility of faith. Apparently, the faith — I thought it faith — which enables me to pray for the other dead has seemed strong only because I have never really cared, not desparately, whether they exist or not. Yet I thought I did.

  • Unless…you can believe all that stuff about family reunions ‘on the further shore,’ … But that is all unscriptural… There’s not a word of it in the Bible. And it rings false. We know it couldn’t be like that. Reality never repeats. The exact same thing is never taken away and given back. How well the spirtualists bait their hooks!

  • And just something I saw with word selection… He wrote how something would “blossom or (fester).” It’s just one little example of how I think he has always had a way with words that I haven’t. Granted, 99% of my writing is technical, so such word choice is often not an option.
  • For a good wife contains so many persons in herself. What was H. not to me? She was my daughter and my mother, my pupil and my teacher, my subject and my sovereign; and always holding these in solution, my trusty comrage, my friend, my shipmate, fellow-soldier. My mistress; but at the same time all that any man friend (and I have had good ones) has ever been to me. Perhaps more.

  • I have discovered passionate grief does not link us with the dead but cuts us off from them.

  • And then on questioning God… I really liked this.

    When I lay these questions before God I get no answer. But a rather special sort of ‘no answer’. It is not the locked door. It is more like a silent, certainly not uncompassionate gaze. As though He shook his head not in refusal but waiving the question. Like, ‘Peace, child, you don’t understand.”

    Can a mortal ask questions which God finds unanswerable? Quite easily, I should think. All non-sense questions are unanswerable. How many hours are there in a mile. Is a yellow square round? Probably half the questions we ask — half our great theological and metaphysical problems, are like that [to God].

  • Somewhat lacking context, but should not be that hard to figure out…

    His love and His knowledge are not distinct from one another, nor from Him. We could almsot say He sees because he loves, and therefore loves although He sees.

  • The book ends with “Poi si torno all’ eterna fontana.” After searching around a bit, I found this is from Dante, and means “then she turned back to the Eternal Fountain. And I found this explaination, at this link.

    They are spoken of Beatrice, when, in one of the final cantos of the Paradiso, she finally and forever turns away from the poet, whom she has guided to heaven, toward the glory of God. It is Lewis’ literary way of confessing his faith in the fact that there, in the presence of God, his wife, whose departure in death has been such a desolation to him, is now lost in the rapture of God.

  • And finally:

    “The terrible thing is that a perfectly good God is in this matter hardly less formidable than a Cosmic Sadist. The more we believe that God hurts only to heal, the less we can believe that there is any use in begging for tenderness. A cruel man might be bribed – might grow tired of his vile sport – might have a temporary fit of mercy, as alcoholics have fits of sobriety. But suppose that what you are up against is a surgeon whose intentions are wholly good. The kinder and more conscientious he is, the more inexorably he will go on cutting. If he yielded to your entreaties, if he stopped before the operation was complete, all the pain up to that point would have been useless. But is it credible that such extremities of torture should be necessary for us? Well, take your choice. The tortures occur. If they are unnecessary, then there is no God or a bad one. If there is a good God, then these tortures are necessary. For no even moderately good Being could possibly inflict or permit them if they weren’t. Either way, we’re for it.”

  • To conclude, another highly recommended CS Lewis book!

Odalisque

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I feel a little silly after reading almost 100 pages of this book before realizing my mistake. Much of that time, the text felt familiar. I finally got up to check the 1st book in this series, or I guess I should call it the 1st volume, and sure enough, Odalisque is the 3rd book in the 1st volume. The cover of Odalisque that I got says “The Baroque Cycle #3,” and I assumed the 3rd volume.

Granted, I read Quicksilver, the 1st volume, 18 months ago. But still! I guess it was a good review, but now I’ve ordered the 3rd volume, the system of the world, so I can continue in this saga.

The Confusion. Neal Stephenson.

Volume Two of the Baroque Cycle

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This is the 2nd book in the loooonnnnng series… After having taken a pause of a year or so after reading the 1st one, I have to admit that it took 100 or 150 pages to get back into it. Maybe that part of the book was just slow, but after that, the story got really interesting — though still long. 🙂

Anyway, I won’t write much of a review until I finish the 3rd one, but I will put a couple of quotes:

  1. This is actually a quote from Milton’s Paradise Lost that Stephenson includes at the beginning of one of the chapters:

    The mind is its own place, and in it self
    Can make a Heav’n of Hell, a Hell of Heav’n.

  2. If an idea is terrible enough, the mind is unwilling to swallow it in one go, but regurgitates and chews it like cud many times before it goes down for good.

  3. Here is another quote that Stephanson uses at the beginning of a chapter, this one from Leibniz:

    God has chose the world that is hte most perfect, that is to sya, the one that is at the same time the simplest in hypotheses adn the richest in phenomena.

Casting Crowns – While you Were Sleeping

Casting Crowns is a great band. I love their two albums. I had listened to their second album, LifeSong, many times. Or maybe I should say I “heard” it many times. And then one day while driving home late at night, I really listened to this song. It really hits me for some reason.

Here’s an iTunes Music Store (iTMS) link.

CASTING CROWNS LYRICS

“While You Were Sleeping”

Oh little town of Bethlehem
Looks like another silent night
Above your deep and dreamless sleep
A giant star lights up the sky
And while you’re lying in the dark
There shines an everlasting light
For the King has left His throne
And is sleeping in a manger tonight

Oh Bethlehem, what you have missed while you were sleeping
For God became a man
And stepped into your world today
Oh Bethlehem, you will go down in history
As a city with no room for its King
While you were sleeping
While you were sleeping

Oh little town of Jerusalem
Looks like another silent night
The Father gave His only Son
The Way, the Truth, the Life had came
But there was no room for Him in the world He came to save

Jerusalem, what you have missed while you were sleeping
The Savior of the world is dying on your cross today
Jerusalem, you will go down in history
As a city with no room for its King
While you were sleeping
While you were sleeping

United States of America
Looks like another silent night
As we’re sung to sleep by philosophies
That save the trees and kill the children
And while we’re lying in the dark
There’s a shout heard ‘cross the eastern sky
For the Bridegroom has returned
And has carried His bride away in the night

America, what will we miss while we are sleeping
Will Jesus come again
And leave us slumbering where we lay
America, will we go down in history
As a nation with no room for its King
Will we be sleeping
Will we be sleeping

9-1-1 Adventure Race

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In hindsight, maybe picking an 8 hour adventure race as my 1st race in over 2 years was not the best decision. And doing it solo at that (my 1st solo attempt in an AR)!

Two+ years of knee problems is a long time, and I really miss the sport. This race is put on by my own Triangle Adventure Racing Team, and Brian was the director, so I had asked him about the format before I decided to join up. When he said it was a long bike, followed by a rogaine (score-o) style run/trek, I figured that would be good for me. My knee is handling biking pretty well, but running still seems to bother it. So I thought, after the bike, if my knee is sore, I’ll just walk a few o-controls and call it a day.

Kelly actually was shooting a horse show in Western NC, but thankfully Aunt Jenny and Uncle Loci were kind enough to watch Riley and Reece for me starting Saturday night all the way until Sunday evening.

The race start was at 6 a.m., with registration from 4:30 – 5:30, and a pre-race meeting at 5:30. That meant getting up at 3:30 a.m. for me — time for a hot shower, a cup (or two!) of coffee, and a pop-tart. Then the 45 minute drive over to Umstead State Park. I had not fully packed my gear yet — just gotten out everything that I would need — since I didn’t know the exact format. So after I registered, I got enough info to know how to pack for the 1st leg, and then went to the meeting.

The race started with a prologue, in which each team sent out a runner to go get the maps. Since I was racing solo, that mean I had to do the running. It was 2.3 miles according to Ernie, who had gone out to clock it on his bike. That’s about the limit of my running recently, so I figured that might make the rest of the day interesting. I ran all the way to the maps at my current very slow pace of about 10 min/mile. On the way back, I took the time to walk and review the maps for the bike, since it was “choose your route” style.

When I got back to the start area, I just grabbed my bike and my pack, and start riding. Most other teams had just run all the way back, and chose their routes in the TA. But my strategy was to not pushing my knee too hard by not running all the way back, and I was pretty much heading out at the same time as everyone anyway. I first went and grabbed CP 6, off Turkey Creek Trail in Umstead, and then headed on to CP 8 in Shenk Forrest.

From there, it seemed most teams head back into Umstead to continue getting controls there. I thought I could take some roads out of the park, come up on CP 9 which was in a neighborhood, and then hit CP 7 on the Cary greenway, before heading into Lake CrabTree Park, then the swim, then the Rocky Road bike trails, and then back to Umstead. I saw one other soloist leaving Shenk heading the same way, and then came across a team of 3 out on the roads, so it seemed like not many were tackling the course in this manner.

I think it would have been a good strategy, other than CP 9 turned out to be difficult to find. I spent maybe 30 minutes in the general area, then decided to go on to CP 7. But when I got to the greenway, I looked at the maps one more time, and thought I could find CP 9 tackling it from this direction. Another 30 minutes later, I finally gave up on CP9. The bike course was scored such that 18 of 18 was worth 50 points, 17 of 18 was worth 25 points, and 16 of 18 was required. I had already wasted an hour and was just spending time I could have on the o-course gaining more points.

So, on to CP 7, and then to Lake Crab Tree. I picked up C4 and then C3, and headed to the swim. Here’s a picture of me riding into the swim area:

bike

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The water was pretty choppy on the way out, and it took me 9 minutes to get to the buoy, where we had to remember 3 numbers and write them down when we got back to dry land. But it only took 6 minutes back in, for a total time of just under 17 minutes. I think that was probably one of the fastest swims, but the race officials weren’t timing this portion, so who knows. Next time I’ll wear fins! 🙂

Here a couple of pictures from the swim:

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And here’s a picture of me after the swim — probably the last time I was smiling!

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After that, it was off to get C1 and C2 on the Lake Crabtree trails, which were both easy, and then off to Rocky Road. The Rocky road map scale was 1 inch to 100 meters, which took a few minutes to get used to. I went into Rocky Road directly across from the fence to the Greenway, and it would have been better to hang a left and go up the road a bit, and then right into Rocky Road. Where I went in was very overgrown!

Anyway, I got R3 pretty quickly, and then went on to get R4, which was a walk, and then crawl, across a down tree about 10 feet above the creek, and a run east along the far bank. Once I got R4, the creek there was shallow enough to walk across and go back to my bike. I then set off for R5, which gave me some trouble. Here, the scale seemed much bigger than the map showed. It didn’t help that I got a flat while looking for it, as that kind of threw me off. I eventually went off to get R2, which was easy, and then tackled R5 from that angle, and then it was not so hard to find.

At this point, it was a slow easy climb up an old fire road to get R1 and then back to Umstead to get the last few controls there. But by this point, I was really starting to feel my knee, and my legs were dead tired. I had been out for almost 6 hours, whereas my longest training rides were typically just 45 minutes, other than the one mountain bike race I had done which was about 90 minutes.

R1 was easy, but the ride back to Umstead seemed much longer than normal. I was running low on water so I stopped to fill up, jumped back on the bike and road for 5 minutes before I realized I was not going where I had planned. So I turned around, back to the water fountain, and then back to where I wanted to go. I went to pick up CP3 at a 3-way road intersection, but it was no where to be found. None of the controls had been hidden, and this was very obviously the right location, so I just assumed it had been removed. Tried to call in to the RD but had the wrong number, so I just left. But later it was confirmed that CP3 had been removed. :-/

It was here when I realized CP4 was not in Umstead, but back on the far side of Lake Crabtree! I had made the mistake of not looking that closely for all the controls, and CP4 was kind of beyond the others, but really not far from Crabtree. At this point I was not going to ride back the 5 or so miles to get it! So it was off to CP1 at the far north entrance, in the campground, which was easy (other than being tired!). Then off to get CP2, and then make the ride back to the transition area. Since I had 16 of 18 bike controls, I had a big fat 0 for a score, with not much time left.

By the time I got to the TA it was about 13:35 and I was assuming I would just call it a day and not do any orienteering. But Brian and Jeff eventually talked me into getting at least one. So I ran out and got the closest control, about 500 meters away, worth a whopping 11 points. I later heard that if I had not grabbed at least one O control, I would have been a DNF! And it actually felt good to do a little running after such a long time on the bike.

All in all it was a really good race. The bike was longer than the race director expected, but some of that was most racers decided to go out and try for all bike controls and the 50 points that would give. In hindsight, I should have gone in to the TA after the prologue to look at the O control point values, which ranged from 10 – 50 points. I probably would have given up a lot sooner on CP9 if I knew I could have made up more points on the trek. Most teams did look at the trek points while their runner was out on the prologue, but I had opted not to do that to save a little time. But I definitely should have.

The results have not been posted, but the top soloist and overall winner had over 500 points, to my big 11. But most of the teams that placed in their respective divisions had between 100 – 200 points. I’m definitely a lot slower than I was 2 years ago! But serious lack of training due to knee problems will do that I guess.

While it was not a great result for me place wise, I think my knee handled everything fairly well, and my real goal for the race was to have fun and see how my knee reacted. So in that sense, it was a good race.