one last bike story

(For now, anyway.)

I forgot to mention that last Wednesday I saw another Townie rider out and about — for the first time ever! I was riding over to Radio Shack from the van and came rolling up behind a silver townie with a “girl” frame. The other cyclist & I chatted for a few moments: she just bought hers in February and had only that day started using it for commuting. Then I got to Radio Shack and she rolled on through the intersection towards Fred Meyer.

It’s just nice to see someone else out on the same bike that has been so good to me.

links for 2006-04-21

digression

Or, the bicycle story continued:
The Christmas that I got my childhood bike is the one where I stopped believing in Santa.? Something about a bicycle not fitting down a chimney.

Which is what helped me reconstruct my personal timeline, because we moved into the house with the chimney in early ’82, so there was only one Christmas with Dad in that house, when I was 8, Edith was six, and Elizabeth was two.

For years I’ve been under the general impression that the bike, and my loss of faith in Santa, came when I was seven.? Memory is a funny thing.

links for 2006-04-20

bike girl

“Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer despair for the future of the human race.” — Attributed to H.G. Wells, heard at a city park bike maintenance class.

The class was so-so. Mainly, I’d’ve liked to have seen more hands-on practice, and the explanation of bike anatomy was goofy and discursive. But I did learn a few things, and the instructor fussed with my front derailleur so that I can shift smoothly into 1st. Yay! Alas, tomorrow it’s supposed to rain.

While I was riding downtown, I was thinking through my childhood history with bicycles, and I finally figured out the timeline of 1982/83, when we moved into the Alameda house, when I got my bike, and when Dad died. And I realized that I got my only childhood bike for Christmas 1982, when I was 8 years old, and that Dad died six weeks later.

Only six weeks, in the winter. (Such as it is in LA…that wasn’t the El Nino year of my childhood, either.) I’ve always had this aura of self-doubt and self-deprecation around my childhood failure to learn to ride a bike. I associated it in my mind with my experiences with special ed gym, which started that year: my awkwardness, bad balance, and so on.

But, wow: six weeks.

I vaguely remember one or two of the weekend sessions, with Dad teaching me, and me flailing going down the driveway, bailing onto the lawn. And then when he died everything went pretty much to hell in a handbasket, the rest of us plunged into a twilit fog of grief.

I have this very crisp memory from maybe the fall or summer of 1982, when I was doing a lot of roller skating, but I was nervous about hills. Our house was on the side of a hill, and so the front walk was at a downward slope. Edith and I would take turns skating up to the top of the walk and then down again, but come down very slowly, using a metal stick (for turning off the water main) as a sort of staff.

One afternoon, or early evening it must have been, Dad walked home from the bus stop after work while Edith and I were engaged in this particular activity. It was my turn, and I was at the top of the walkway, poised to come down. He came up behind me, swiped the pole out of my hand, and gave me a push.

It seemed like a shove at the time, but was probably more of a nudge. I went rolling down the hill, and caught myself on the front steps. I remember being angry, frightened, and exhilarated. But after that, it was really no big deal to skate down the walk on my own, unaided.

In looking back on that time, I can think of that child who needed more than six weeks to learn how to ride a bike more clearly, and the father who I’m sure would’ve like to have given me the way to get there. I feel that fog lifting, 23 years later.

links for 2006-04-19

links for 2006-04-18

rescuing kayaks

Yesterday afternoon C went up to Tacoma to go kayaking with an old friend…and the weather turned a little crazy, as it is want to do in April in the Puget Sound.? Also, C hasn’t done much kayaking in a long time, so he wasn’t feeling too daring.

So they bailed out on the beach at Point Defiance, dragged the kayaks up a sandy cliff, and then walked to the friend’s truck.

Which was all the way across the park, out across Ruston, and down off of Ruston Way.? (Several miles, for the out-of-state folk.)

He came home wet, tired, cold, and with gnarly blisters on both big toes.? His clothes were full of sand, too.? (Remember, all this was after he & I planted trees in the rain!)? I tossed him in the shower and checked the tide tables, to see when it might be possible for them to walk down to get the kayaks. The next low tide was at 1:30 am, and C managed to persuade his friend that it probably wasn’t a great idea to try then.? “But I have headlamps!”? Yeah.

Next low tide after that was 1:30 this afternoon, which sounded a little less crazy, and worked into N’s family plans for Easter.? I haven’t been to Point Defiance in ages, so it sounded fun to me, too.

Digression…Point Defiance is a hundred-year-old park, a triangle-shaped wedge at the north tip of Tacoma.? It has a zoo, rose garden, pagoda, etc., but the most notable feature is the multi-acre forest with the “Five Mile Drive” winding through it.? I spent many hours of my time in Tacoma out at Point Defiance.

We drove down to the beach about an hour and a half before low tide and walked out until C spotted the place where they had landed the night before.? He scrambled up the sand cliff, while I took photos, and after a bit of panic, found the kayaks.

At which point N and his young son showed up with a paddle.? The guys shoved the kayaks down onto the beach, the three of us grownups carried them down to the water, C clipped them together, and N pushed off, paddling one while towing the other.

C, N jr., and I walked alongside, chatting and picking up tiny white stones.? (An old habit of mine.) I took lots of pictures, some of which are on flickr.? For a while N jr. rode in the following kayak and C & I walked. And the weather was amazing.? Big fluffly clouds in a luminous sky, a light cool wind; at the very end, we had a brief rainstorm…but it was still bright and sunny.? All in all, a lovely outing…and C plans on going to the UPS pool with N to practice kayaking maneuvers tomorrow evening!