Year: 2012
The Art of Writing Letters
I profess no great skill in the art of letter writing. I’m speaking here not of business letters but personal letters to friends and relatives. My mother had this down cold. As a child and a teen I would watch her sit every evening and while the rest of world was watching television she was writing letters – likely one per evening – to friends and relatives across the world.
Her letters were a joy to receive – they were full of news of her life. Mom moved to Denmark and lived there for 20 years. In that time I felt that I knew personally her friends and new family. Over time I learned who was related to who(or whom) and had a pretty good estimate as to how far everyone lived from one another. Likes and dislikes etc. Her letters were long and newsy.
Through Facebook and Twitter I feel like I have become a voyeur. So, lacking paper, pen and stamps I’ve moved one step back and have started working my rusty letter writing skills into emails. “We went here” “We went there” “We visited Aunt Hannah” “We had to fix a flat tire”.
The thing with getting a real letter or newsy email, you know that the person who wrote it did so because they minimally like you or more likely cherish you as a friend. It is such a great feeling to send or receive a great newsy letter (or in my case, email).
So, pick someone and start telling them as an individual the boring and not so boring parts of your life. Personally, I would love to get a letter from any of my kids with a photo and some news of how they sat around all day Sunday with Bob, Jim, Andrea and Andy watching the football game without any nachos because Andy thought Andrea was going to pick them up.
One thing me mum said regarding this was “NEVER wait for the other person to communicate”. Always start and if they don’t reply, send another one. One day they will write or call or something. Know that they love getting your emails. I know this as I used to send newsy mail blasts about family stuff and after 5-6 years one of my friends that I had pretty much never heard from told me in an email that it was one of the highlights of his year getting my news.
So, try it. Write a letter(or an email) of some length to a friend or relative and see what happens.
Drumheller – Heartwood Inn and Spa
Earlier this week the weather was pretty nice and we had a few extra days off. I had not been to Drumheller and wanted to see it in some decent weather and hopefully before the mosquitoes set in. I don’t really like mosquitoes. Besides I like hiking when it is a bit cooler and we wanted to check out some of the canyons in the area.
Our stay at the Inn was marvelous. The owners, Zeke and Patrice were both friendly and helpful. I travel some and wanted something that was not just another hotel room and this certainly fit the bill. The room we had was very comfortable and quiet. Big beautiful jacuzzi tub with a huge frosted window. Allowed us to glimpse the night sky.
You can see more and contact them here: Heartwood Inn and Spa
If you are going in the summer or on busy weekends book early – I can see no way that this gem of a place is not booked solid through the summer season.
We didn’t have time to do everything and as the weather was good were more interested in hiking than inside pursuits such as the museum. We drove up to Horse Thief Canyon. Great hike – was really windy that first day – it seemed the wind found us no matter what side of the ‘hill’ we were on. Wednesday on the way back we stopped at Horseshoe Canyon. About 10-15 miles outside of Drumheller on the way back to Calgary. The hike there down into the canyon took us out of the wind and with the sun it was plenty warm enough. In the summer I’m sure it can get bloody hot down there – I would advise bringing lots of water. The initial bit of climbing into and out of is a little steep but once you are down inside it is pretty easy walking.
Swimming – glide or no glide
I wish I had an underwater camera and someone to wield it. About a year ago I started studying the Total Immersion style of swimming and adapted much of it to my stroke. More recently I started reading Swim Smooth’s newsletter and studying their philosophy of how to swim freestyle. I’m 60 years old so I’m more interested in going long at a good steady pace. I do some sprints but although I did a 32 second 50 meters recently it puts too much pressure on my old shoulders so I think, in future, I’ll stay away from those short races. I warm up with 800 meters – at about 13 minutes which puts me in the top 5 or 10 for my age group depending on the year. I glide. Just a little bit. But that is where I would love to be videoed. I have kind of developed my own stroke that moves me along pretty quickly. (Probably closer to Total Immersion than Swim Smooth)
That said this is a pretty good article on the amount one should glide: http://www.feelforthewater.com/2012/03/overgliding-inefficiency-and.html
The Total Immersion style is pretty heavily promoted for Tri-athletes and I think works for us ‘older’ guys. But I would advise studying both and seeing what works for you.
Calgary’s Dowtown Skate Park
Last Saturday it was amazingly warm (+10C or more) so I took a walk around the Shaw Milennium Skatepark in Calgary. I haven’t seen that many skate parks but from what I have seen this is pretty impressive. Even with quite a bit of snow and ice still around there were at least a couple of hundred ‘kids’ using the park. Bikes, skateboards and one or two with rollerblades. Looks to me like 99% a male activity. There were some serious athletes there. You know those people that make something pretty spectacular look easy. The park is set up with areas of “Beginner”, “Intermediate” and “Advanced” so there is something for everyone.