Skip to main content

What It's All About

Nominally this blog is about logging workouts and motivating each other to get in shape for the big K.
In keeping with the workout log theme I should mention that I walked to and from the gym for basketball yesterday (planning to do that again tomorrow)and played wallyball last night -- doubling up during vacation week.
In practice, a scan of entries will reveal, the blog is about anything to do with working out, anything to do with Katahdin, Baxter or the K Krew, the Celtics, the NBA and soon March Madness, also probably anything about beer drinking (especially if it is funny).

Comments

Pete said…
Workout logging, basketball, beer, Katahdin.....seems like you've covered all bases.
Jeff said…
I can't even cover old slow basketball players anymore, good thing the bases don't move.
Jeff said…
The bases this blog doesn't cover are in my two other blogs: Jasmine Six-string is about music, and the book report is a reading list with reviews.
Pete said…
Nice! How about Rest-O-Bar reviews?
Jeff said…
You should do the rest-o-bar reviews; you have much more knowledge of them than I do.
Related note: today's Phoenix has a review of two west end joints: Hot Suppa! and Ohno Cafe. Online the Bollard has a nice batch of sports bar reviews (I want to check out Asylum some Sunday afternoon; during football season they had free wings and nachos).

Popular posts from this blog

Racial Injustice: The Case of Walter Lett Inspired Harper Lee

Chronology: The case of Walter Lett influenced Harper Lee in writing To Kill a Mockingbird. Here are the events of the case, and its connection to Harper Lee. The case began in November 1933.  "On Thursday, November 9, 1933, the Monroeville Journal reported that Noami Lowery told authorities that Walter Lett had raped her the previous Thursday.” ( "Lee, Harper: 1926 - 2016").  Just as in To Kill a Mockingbird , the accusation alone was enough for most citizens to assume guilt.  Writing for Time magazine, Daniel Levy asserts,   “Such an accusation was a death sentence for an African American man. ‘Rape was the central drama of the white psyche,’ says Diane McWhorter, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning Carry Me Home: Birmingham, Alabama: The Climactic Battle of the Civil Rights Revolution.”   Lett was captured on Saturday and jailed in another town out of fear he’d be lynched. The legal system operated quickly. “On March 16, 1934, Lett was arraigned ...

Reflections from the Last Few Days

I’ve concentrated these posts on the travel & walking, shortchanging some other cultural observations, like food, drink, etc. As we are now headed back to Lisbon, those things may get more attention. Events elsewhere have colored our experience here. This next part is personal. Some reader may find it interesting, or in the future we may appreciate the reminder of these things. Jan & Bruce have been particularly concerned about the impact of Hurricane Helene the last few days. A couple weeks before we left & just before his 96th birthday, my dad began hospice care. We went to see him on his birthday. It was not at all clear that he was any closer to death. On our first day here we were shocked to learn that a beloved friend since college died due to consequences of cancer. Our thoughts the first two days were on Terry, her family, and our mutual friends. She was active, adventurous, loving, fun, and until last spring, healthy. She’s on the left in this photo. Thursday, Dad’...

Porto Covo to Villanova de Milfontes

First, to emphasize what a slog this was, I have to tell you that right now it is 9:20 PM and I am too tired to write this post. I’ll load up some pictures, all already on Facebook, then go to sleep. Whatever else I write will come tomorrow. This is the fishing harbor at Porto Covo, which we didn’t see until just as we were leaving town. In retrospect it’s clear the origins of all these villages are as fishing ports. They all have signs referring to pescador & that reminds me of my dad, though I think he used to call me the Italian pescatore. Two miles down the beach we found the cafe-resto at Forte da Ilha. The Apple map indicates it doesn’t open until 10:00, but we got cafe ant the counter around 9. I didn’t buy Pringles or a lobster. The Pringles dispenser reminded me of Sadie. The lobster has no claws, a very different critter from what we have in Maine. The fort dates back to 1588, built to guard against attacks by English pirates. Fortifications on the offshore island date to...