Bike to Work Day

Today was bike to work day and I did so. 54.4 miles round trip with 3:33 on the bike. 2200 ft climbing elevation (give or take). And I did it carrying my computer, change of clothes, wallet, phone, etc which was an extra 13lbs. Woo! That is one major bicycling goal completed. I believe that I decided the others were to do the 90 mile route at the next LiveStrong Challenge and to do the MS150 from Houston to Austin next spring.

Unrelated, Portal 2 was awesome fun and the Turret Opera / Cara Mia at the end was great and these folks did a totally sweet version of it.

Not so good

I am having a hard time on the ol’ bicycle. Saturday Zach and I rode 360 and about all I can say for that is that I ended up back where I started. There was a completely awful head wind all the way back home (15-25mph with gusts to 35. woo.) but I couldn’t make it up the hill to 2244 on the way out even with the tailwind. On top of that, though I didn’t know it at the time, the velcro strap from my under-seat bag was busy chewing through my nice cycling shorts from the company. A fact I didn’t notice until I was getting ready to leave for an after work ride with Kate today and she pointed it out. The ride was nice but on the way home we had just crossed a little neighborhood street in Clarksville and my left calf decided that was enough and stopped working. Just cramped right up into an awful little ball of hate. Also, Kate dropped her bike chain-ring first onto her leg helping me with mine after I had to pull over.

I’m just going to camp out here at work and wait for some stuff to go quiet for the evening so I can fix something. Then it’s back home for dinner and sleeps. Life goes on. So that’s enough bitching for now. The 360 ride is really pretty. Once you get past 2244 there’s a beautiful view of central Austin off to the East. It’s also nice and straight with only a couple of dangerous bits so I will probably try to do it again soon. I need to build endurance for the ride to work in May so being able to do that thing would be a good step. Bill and I went and rode on Sunday morning and that was fun. There were a lot of people out and it was chilly but not very windy and we came down Far West which was new for me. Then, this afternoon Kate and I rode from work up to the Shoal Creek loop and rode a few laps with some people from her club. I hadn’t ridden with a group before and it feels insane because everyone is so close together. We rode back through the neighborhoods West of Lamar and there are some beautiful houses back in there. Of course, the internet tells me that one of them is worth 8.9 million dollars so I don’t need to worry about living there but it doesn’t hurt to ride by.

So, bicycling hard, etc. but for as much as it makes me feel like I can’t do anything right it’s still fun. I guess I’ll keep it up. Also, I’m going to take some scissors and a lighter to the end of the velcro straps. They’re too long and I will not have them eat the other pair of shorts I just got today in the mail.

Keys

Has anyone seen my keys? I couldn’t find them in my bags and my family went back to the hotel and searched the room and couldn’t find them. I’m through security and waiting for my flight and am trusting to hope that they we just really well hidden in my suitcase.

The park was fun yesterday. The landscaping at Animal Kingdom is really well done. It feels much less manufactured than the other parks. The Safari ride was nice. They have rhinos and elephants and lots of other neat animals. I tool a whole bunch of pictures but they are on the computer and I’m on the phone so that will all have to wait until I get home.

Which depends on finding my keys.

STS-133:TNG – The Final Frontier

Last I said anything we were sitting on the bus waiting to go to the causeway. Our lunatic showed up with several additions in tow. However, the 36 hour bender was taking it’s toll and she was tolerable. The drive out was nice. We got the pro-forma warning about how launches are risky and we could be pelted by debris and toxic fire from the sky if things went pear-shaped. Then we got out there, drove past the grandstand with the countdown clock, parked, got out and staked our little claim.

At the causeway you’re about six miles from the Shuttle. It looks tiny off in the distance but it was clear enough that we could make out features unaided. The binoculars I bought for the last trip turned out to be really nice to use. They have a little more eye relief than I would normally want but that works really well when you just mash them up against your sunglasses. There was a lot of milling about and chatter and general, good-natured disorder. A lot of families some of them with really young kids. Really though, there were just a whole lot of people there all around. I don’t know what the final count was but it was high. I know that our tour guide said that there were 96 buses going and if each holds 50 passengers that’s almost 5000 just in our area and that doesn’t include VIPs, family, staff, etc.

I walked down to the countdown clock and Wes took my picture with it. There are a few built-in holds in the countdown at various times. We got there in the middle of the hold at -00:20:00 and waited until it started ticking again. The problem that they were dealing with during this hold was that one of the heat tiles had been partially pulled away from the crew hatch when the access arm was pulled away from the orbiter. They ended up pushing it back and then smearing the super-high temperature equivalent of JB Weld on it. There is a much longer hold at -00:09:00 during which the Flight Director asks the ‘go / no-go’ question from each of the various departments. He got down to the Range Safety Officer and that guy’s computer wasn’t working right so he was ‘no-go’. They decided to go ahead and let the countdown continue and hold again at -00:05:00 to give them time to fix the computer problem. They ended up eating into most of the launch window time during that hold and got the final ‘go’ about two seconds before they would have had to scrub the launch. So, with that going the Shuttle crosses into internal power and computer control and then off it goes.

It makes a big cloud when it all ignites and you can’t really even see it until it clears the tower. I managed to get one decent picture as it was going up. There are a few others but they’re so-so and honestly I was watching through the binoculars most of the time. It only takes about two minutes to get so far away you can’t really see it except for that the top of the column of exhaust is a little bit bright. It was just visible through the binoculars when the SRBs detached and after that the light from the main engines was too faint to follow it anymore.

So that’s it. A very workman like description of the last launch of Discovery. I can’t really articulate how it felt to be there. It was genuinely moving. I’m glad I came and I know I will probably not ever see anything like it again. It’s really a transcendent kind of experience. You’re watching this thing go up and it’s bright and then loud and somehow seems to be moving very slowly, like it shouldn’t be hanging in the sky like that but it’s also over so quickly. And you stand there and see it and know what’s going on but still can’t help but feel all this, I don’t know. Pride? Not just in the program or this country but what we can do as a people. It seems like more than that though. Exultant.

STS-133:TNG – BUS

Sitting on the bus waiting to drive out to the causeway. Farther along than we’ve been. We’re still waiting on a few stragglers including our favorite party girl. We saw her after she met up with her friends and she had a beer in each hand. The party apparently doesn’t stop until the cops come in.

Exciting times. Maybe we’ll see a launch today.

STS-133:TNG – Fueling

They have started filling the external fuel tank and so far everything seems to be going to plan. It takes three hours to fill the tank. Mercifully, our drunken companion found someone on the bus to latch onto so we will likely not see her again until we reboard the bus post-security checks to actually drive out to the causeway. Eileen and Mom are spending some quality time in the Kennedy Space Center gift shop. It’s 08:07 here and we’re scheduled to be back on the bus for the trip out at 11:30. The launch is scheduled for 16:50.

STS-133:TNG – Drunk and insane

So we’re up at the crack of before dawn to meet the bus. Since dad decided not to return my sister found someone from facebook to buy his ticket. This person decided that drinking is a good substitute for sleep and has been yelling “Team Discovery! We’re makin’ history! Wooooo!” and similar for about 15 minutes now. I’m hoping that I don’t have to sit too close to her on the bus so I can try to get a little more sleep.

This also serves as further proof that Facebook is the Devil. I guess I need to face the music and rejoin the family + 1. :|