Diamond Bear

Diamond Bear Brewery doesn’t have more than three or four employees, so when it’s time to bottle they call in their part-timers and put out an email asking for volunteers to help with the bottling line.  I’ve been on the email list for about a year, but they almost always bottle on weekday afternoons, which makes it hard for us to participate.

But this week they put out a call for volunteers for Friday evening, and Bryan and I snapped up the first two spots.  The bottling was rescheduled for Sunday afternoon at one, which was also fine. Continue reading “Diamond Bear”

Goodbye, Fencing

We took fencing lessons from the local club (Central Arkansas Fencing Club) for about a year.  It was neat to learn the basics of a sport not many people know about.  We looked cute in our fencing gear.  We had fun stabbing at each other.  But fencing was expensive, in terms of time and energy as well as cash for club dues.  There were some details about the structure of the club that we found really frustrating.  We weren’t learning a lot.  And after a year, we all agreed that it just wasn’t worth it.

This weekend, we got out the gear and washed it and will send a for-sale flyer to the club.

Update: We managed to sell all of our gear!  Thanks for your inquiries.

The Amazing Giant Cat Tree Palace Sniper Tower

We asked Nathan to borrow his Big Dummy cargo bike, and I swung by Pete’s on Thursday after work to pick it up since that’s where Nathan was storing it.  While doing so, I couldn’t help but notice that Pete’s neighbors across the street had put one of those enormously expensive cat trees on the curb next to their trash can.  Some of the carpet was worn through, but it seemed clean and bug-free so Pete and I shoved it into my Subaru.

I spent Saturday morning with a utility knife, ripping carpet and rope off the cat tree.  I vacuumed it and covered it with a just-in-case coat of flea spray.  Once Bryan discovered a similar cat tree for sale online for $400, he cheerfully supported my project.  We moved it inside and I spent some time over the weekend wrapping the now-naked legs with new manila rope.(four 50-foot packs of 1/4″ rope and three 50-foot packs of 3/8″ rope)

Hayduke thinks that, when the cats chase him around spitting and clawing for his eyeballs, that means they want to play.  Hopefully they’ll use their new Amazing Giant Cat Tree Palace Sniper Tower to climb up and away from the overenthusiastic puppy.

Katy Trip Day 8+9 (St. Louis)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

Bryan and I wake up this morning to find the note Mandy’s left on her bed: Super hungry, took a key, going to eat waffles. We join her downstairs and stuff ourselves with fruit and waffles and yogurt and more waffles, then go back to bed and doze until ten. We leave our bikes in a storage room at the hotel and checked out. After another Metrolink ride, a tour of the old Union Station, and a lunch of bad Chinese food, we walk to City Museum.

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This place is incredible. AMAZING. They’ve used salvaged junk from all over the city – architectural odds and ends and pipes and rollers and industrial doodads and musical instruments and tile and marbles.  There are beautiful undulating metallic walls made out of cafeteria pans.  There are concrete dragons and fish and tunnels and crawlways and metal mesh tubes that connect one story to another. You can disappear into the space inside a fish’s mouth and come out in a crawlway on top of a sort of cask and then find yourself under the floor of another level, next to a train, and then you’re coming out of a metal web on your head onto a floor made of tiles that look like the back of a turtle. I put three new holes in my shirt. Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 8+9 (St. Louis)”

Katy Trip Day 7 (Sedalia – St. Louis)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

After a tour of the Least Private Men’s Bathroom in the State, we all sleep well and get up in the morning right on time. The ride across town to the Amtrak station takes about twenty minutes.  The station here is unstaffed, so we just sit outside until the train arrives.

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The conductors and attendants help us lift our bikes onto the train and park them right at the end of our passenger car. We’d wondered if we’d be allowed to leave the panniers on the bikes, and sure enough, we were. The bikes are even in the same car we’re in, making it super easy to get to all our stuff. Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 7 (Sedalia – St. Louis)”

Katy Trip Day 6 (Boonville – Sedalia)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

Click here to see todays route map.

Those lights that were supposed to go off last night at eleven do go off…this morning at six. It wasn’t a great night of sleep, but we took what we could get. We packed up and rode to Casey’s General Store to answer questions from other customers while sitting on the curb eating our breakfasts – pastries, pickles, jerky, breakfast pizza. We bought food for the whole day in case we didn’t see another store, and we hit the trail.

20110813-Katy Trail-059 Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 6 (Boonville – Sedalia)”

Katy Trip Day 5 (Huntsdale – Boonville)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

Click here to see todays route map.

Why is everything always closed? When we planned this trip, we’d had imagined little towns every few miles with ice cream shops and burger places.  The guidebook seems to indicate that’s the case.  Apparently the guidebook author was bad at his job, and has never actually tried to eat food while riding the Katy.

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We have a snack before hitting the road this morning, riding along the river bluffs I remember from trips as a teenager to this part of the trail.  We’re expecting to have a good breakfast in Rocheport, at the much-loved Trailside Cafe.  We’ve been hearing about it all week.  It’s closed on Wednesdays. Annie’s doesn’t open until noon. We find the general store, which opens at eleven. I stick my head inside the cool, dark store at 10:15 and talk to the girl who’s baking. She grudgingly lets us in and we sit in the still-dark wooden store and order beef sandwiches and quiche, and when the owner shows up he makes our breakfast. Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 5 (Huntsdale – Boonville)”

Katy Trip Day 4 (Tebbetts – Huntsdale)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

Click here to see todays route map.

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We briefly rename this trip “Tour de Places that HAVE NO FOOD.” The old restaurant in Tebbetts is closed this morning. Hoping for breakfast in a few miles, we hit the trail. But Wainwright is only a sign in the road, there’s nothing more than wild mulberries at the trailhead in North Jefferson. Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 4 (Tebbetts – Huntsdale)”

Katy Trip Day 3 (Marthasville – Tebbetts)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

Click here to see todays route map.

Marthasville is quiet at night, but gets noisy very early. The trash man comes at about four am, and it isn’t long after that when farm trucks start powering up and down the highway and chains and doors start banging at the gas station across the way.

The ride to Peers is pleasant, but we’re feeling slow this morning. We eat breakfast sandwiches in the ratty room off the little store here, listening to the locals visit at the next table.  Their subject this morning is the flood: it’s bad in Iowa already, and the river here is already full – it’s forecast to start serious flooding as early as next week. The talk is that this flood could be as bad as it was in ‘93, and there are photos on the wall showing the store in different years, including in ‘93, when the water came up almost to the awning on the first floor doorway.

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While we eat, laundry dries on the lines strung between our bikes, just outside the door.  Kids get dropped off and then picked up – the store seems to be a sort of stop along the way for pretty much everyone in town.  No guns allowed. Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 3 (Marthasville – Tebbetts)”

Katy Trip Day 2 (St. Charles – Marthasville)

This is a multi-part trip report. If you haven’t already, you should start at the beginning. Remember that you can click on any of the photos to see larger versions of them.

Click here to see todays route map.

For a hundred reasons, today does not start as planned. We sleep later than we’d intended, and don’t leave the house until about eight.

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By nine, we’ve bought new allergy medicine for me, lots of snacks for the trail, and a bizarre breakfast.  Walgreens shopping excursion complete, we eat breakfast on the benches outside. Continue reading “Katy Trip Day 2 (St. Charles – Marthasville)”