"Work Makes Free"


"Arbeit Macht Frei" reads the icononic gate leading into the prisoner yard of Dachau concentration camp. Dachau, a small town located only 20ks outside of Munich, was the location of the first Nazi camp. Designed as a work and prisoner camp, it opened in 1933 during the early years of the Third Reich. It was most notable for being the destination for tens of thousands of Jews, gypsies and other outcasts. Upon their arrival they were often either set to work or transported to other camps like Auschwitz or Bergen-Belsen. Dachau housed hundreds of SS officers, similarly, and was a central location for Nazi experimentation on the effects of altitude, drugs, poisons, etc. In the 1940s the Nazis built a crematorium at Dachau, but there is no evidence it was ever put to use. By the time of the camp's liberation on April 28, 1945, over 60,000 political prisoners and Jews had died from overwork, starvation and disease in Dachau.

**Note. I took this picture with Dave's finicky Lomo and it developed exactly like you see here.

Jews' shoes


This is an amazing memorial to a group of Hungarian Jews who were shot and thrown into the Danube in January, 1945, just months before the Allied recovery of Budapest. An artist cast their shoes in bronze, and they sit to this day along the banks of the river below Parliament.

The Great Graffiti Chicken


This beauty is in a tunnel leading down to the Danube from the royal residence on the Buda side of the river. The castle is on a tall hill, much like in Prague, and looks down on the Danube. I'm not sure if the Hungarian government commissioned this chicken or not, but if so, that's fairly progressive, non?

Beautiful Buda...pest.


The beautiful Parliament building in Budapest. A lucky shot on a sunny day.

Yank's adventures in Europe part duh

so. here's the thing. so far i've been really good about staying out of trouble on my journey. that's not to say there haven't been some close calls. i mean, gotta say -- when your mom tells you not to follow strangers out at night down dodgy streets without phoning a friend she means it... but aussies are harmless, right? suffice it to say that adventure ended with the single most amazing pizza and beer i've ever had. ever. but that's really because it took us an hour to find it and by that point i would have eaten anything.

even pepperoni.

but don't worry, i'm not making it a point to follow dodgy commonwealthers around... i promise never to take any canadian advice while in europe.

so that was a taste of update part 1, but part 2 gets better. so i've stayed out of trouble, and i've even mostly avoided embarassing myself and my country with stupid questions and obnoxiously loud flet american accents. when i arrived in prague it was raining. hard. i did NOT bring the right gear. people were looking at my kinda funny with my flip flops and shorts on so i figured it was worth the 10kc to have a change in the bathroom. weatherproof, check. headed out to find my hostel (naturally was too cheap and stubborn to ask for directions so just followed the general flow of traffic until i was so soaked i couln't bear the suspense any longer. found it through the entrance way of a chinese shop -- whoda thunk?) after this i figured "hey, i'm already soaked, why not take a walking tour of prague?" which i duly did. managed to hike up to the castle (sarah, there are lots of trees. which one is the one i'm supposed to see for you?) where my film ran out immediately. probably for the best, it's too pretty to try and capture with a camera (even a fabulous lomo, thanks d). as i'm getting a bit tired of the rain and wind, and well aware that the castle is about to shut for the night, i ran into this tiny old lady berating a couple of obviously confused czech police. see, she only speaks spanish and they only speak czech so.. trouble. but no need to fear, the yank speaks spanish well enough to know when she's needed so i got from the lady that she'd been lost by her tour group and didn't know where she was staying or where they were and wadda wadda ruh roh. so, this is about 6pm. the police (actually the castle guard) are not psyched to try and help so i volunteer some assistance. sweet. except for by 7pm we have neither found her group nor anyone else who is remotely close to spanish and she's crying so i'm on the verge of tears because really???! what do you do? so finally i took her to a police station where there was a guy who seemed to know what to do and she wouldn't let me leave her until finally he convinced her he was capable of finding her group. i just hope that ended well because it was not a fun adventure. in the rain. and the cold. and you're a lost little old lady? jeeeeez.

Yank's adventures in Europe part 1

I admit that when I first booked my trip to Europe I had an incredibly romanticized idea of backpacking and staying at “hostels”. I was aware of the potential to be not at all ready to start my trip. You’d think after three years of traveling back and forth to the States and South Africa I’d have some clue as to get around unknown territories, but no – I was pretty clueless. I still am.

When I arrived at the Munich airport I pretended as well as I could like I knew what I was doing. In reality, it was at this point that I realized exactly how unprepared I was to do the traveling I’d hoped to do. No city map, no rail map, only an address for my hostel and a general idea of how to get from the airport to the metro. So I just sat for a minute in the departure terminal pretending to be reorganizing my bag (when really I was to befuddled to attempt any course of action). Of course, as I am a particularly proud American, I wanted to avoid at all costs actually asking for directions. Unfortunately after several attempts at using an automated machine to buy a subway pass I gave in and went to the information services – where the rest of the outlanders were lined up looking helpless and confused. The lady looked a bit concerned to be selling me an all-access pass to the Munchen underground – I’d been traveling for a while, by then, and not looking my most responsible – but she did, and off I went into the great unknown: the U Bahn.

Thank the Germans for being organized and put together. Everywhere you looked on the underground was another subway map and points of reference. The problem is, of course, that subway maps are in no ways accurate representations of streets or buildings or even directions. That just meant that by the time I’d left the metro station I circumnavigated that particular city block about 2 times before finally getting my bearings. Finger to the wind.

In the end, of course, I found my hostel, had a shower, change of clothes, breakfast, etc. Did I mention my flight got in at 6am? No one should have to scavenge in a new city that early in the morning.

Munich in a word: sterile. It’s been over 60 years since Munich was practically destroyed by Allied bombing in World War II and yet the Munchkins have held onto as much of their cultural heritage as possible – by rebuilding every single destroyed structure in perfect replicas of what they once looked like. So much of Munich is rebuilt, in fact, that my tour guide made us guess what four structures (not buildings, structures) had withstood the test of time. None of us could. The Germans are awfully good at making new things look old – if they’re so inclined.

Other notable aspects of Munich? Yes, they wear lederhosen; yes they serve pretzels in beergartens; and yes, they were the birthplace of the Nazi movement. Like Disneyland, really, with grumpy nationalists. Possibly the coolest part of Munich – besides the huge BMW museum – were the 1 euro Sunday entries to all national museums. I saw every famous Dutch and Flemish artist ever for 1 euro. I also saw Van Gogh’s sunflowers in person – for one euro. Not a bad way to spend R20. I also managed to eat pizza and watch soccer (a tradition I carried to every city I visited on this journey).

knysna wellness week -- reverse reverse!

Now that I've got marathon number one under the belt, it's time to brag about it properly.
Below you'll find the race profile for the 2009 Pick 'n Pay Cape Times Knysna Forest Marathon, or 2PNPCTKFM, for short.

    Race Route & Profile 2008

  • Plan View of Both Courses

    Click for bigger image

  • Profile of the 21 km route 2008



  • Profile of the 42 Km full marathon 2008

Notice, if you will, that when you compare the plan view of both courses that there is some overlap towards the end. That overlap, you'll notice, corresponds to the steep descent at the tail of the half (Exhibit B) and the tiny blip at the end of the full (Exhibit C). Musta been an ad man that put those scales together.

the great American upset

It's not often the US finds itself on the losing side of anyone's predictions (karma encounters notwithstanding). But, uh, yeah, we beat Spain last night, much to my and many others' surprise (yes, Colin, with the exception of you, who of course were sure the US would eek out a victory.)

Though I am surprised about the American win, I have to say it's likely we'll only be seeing more of the same in the years to come. It's not only because the US hate being bad at things (which we do, sport not the least) but it's also because we are veritably a nation of athletes.

This guy agrees.

Unlike many countries which have national sports for which they are renowned (and often limited to -- say Pakistani cricket or Italian soccer), the US has gradually moved out of the realm of exclusive American sport to colonizing other countries' (sport). The secret? Crosstraining. What I've noticed about South Africa is that much like social and economic segregation persists into the 21st century, there is not a lot of sporting crossover in high school and varsity-aged players. Unlike the three-sport athletes I grew up with, by the time many young players arrive in high school, they've already made their choice (or it's been made for them). What this means is that unlike in the States, where one has a wide pool of athletic and versatile players, in other countries this might not be the case. The result is that if we want to get good at soccer, we can, and we will, and we'll make it speedy, because not only is the infrastructure in place we've got a country of up and comers waiting to be tapped.

I mean, if the US is willing to elbow its way into India's niche professional cricket market (see http://www.aplcric.com/ for some premium details) then why shouldn't we put our national stubborness to the test and win at another imperial sport? We've outsourced enough rugby players to pin us to the map, so with a little more cash thrown at the problem (it's rumored the new APL will be making use of Yankee training sites upon start-up) we might reclaim our imperial history.* We certainly can't let the stinky Euros have all the fun.



*Fact: the first recorded international cricket match was played between the United States and Canada in 1844. Canada won, so we promptly outlawed the sport.

three hundred and fifty something...

For a blog that claims to be a countdown to the FIFA World Cup, I'm not doing a great job at pinning down the details.

By means of a leadup to tonight's showdown between defending European Champions Spain "La Roja" and defending ... USA, I'll first mention another less- known sporting event happening in the Cape Peninsula this week: the O'Neill Cold Water Classic surf extravaganza, tackling the sheltered shores of Kalk Bay today. My friend and I drove down the beachfront road to St. James Municipality to see what all the fuss was about.

To preface this contest: as of Monday severe weather warnings had been flooding the airwaves and net as the Cape battens down for a baddie this week. Apparently no storm surge huge swell warnings could deter the crazies determined to battle for victory off the rocky coast in False Bay. So with high expectations of coastal flooding and gale-force winds, I was surprised to find mildly enlarged swells and moderate waves at the contest spot.

If you've never witnessed a surfing event before, let this be a warning to you: they're not as exciting as they seem in the movies. My friend and I joined a huge group of 20 something messy-haired hoodie-sweatshirt wearing naffs huddled along the railroad tracks at the coast. Not to stereotype, but these guys, if they were old enough, did not show any signs of being employed and if not, didn't appear to be in school. They just fell out of the Muizenberg woodwork to watch the world's best attack the surf (and attempt not to be attacked by the huge masses of kelp popping up along the beach). We joined them to eagerly watch four indistinguishable specs of red in the water pop through and along waves, occasionally taking them in what was admittedly impressive form. But underwhelming, generally, and to a layman's perspective this silly cold sport reckons at most a 6 out of 10.

But to get back to the real sport and purportedly the real reason for this blog: today, the US of A face off against an inarguably better, more experience, and more technically trained team, hoping to repeat what was an impressive victory over beleaguered Egypt only three days ago. I agree with my friend Colin who predicted, "We're going to get smashed."

I reminded him we've got better chances against Spain than Bafana have against Brazil. Rio, here we come!

the Mary saga

Monday/Tuesday, June 22/23, 2009: The Mary saga continues. If you don’t know what the Mary saga is, then you’ve never owned a Volkswagen Citi Golf before. Old-school. Mary is my red 1994 Golf, so named because her predecessor was a white Golf named Mary (also Virgin Mary) and my Bloody Mary follows in that tradition. I purchased her from Laubscher, a friend I’ve come to forgive for selling her to me, even after spending the car’s value on repairs and rebuilding the engine. (It seems over the past year some wires were crossed, the result being that water was leaking into the fuel tank, fuel into the oil, and oil straight through the car onto the ground.) Anyway, after many weeks and many rands worth of repairs, I’ve got an old Citi Golf with a patchwork (but running) engine. Yet yesterday I walked outside to find that not only would my car not start, it didn’t have anything else for me besides clicking. It clicked. That was all. After checking doubly that I wasn’t being a silly blonde and doing something obviously wrong, I came to the conclusion that whatever was causing the car to click was not of my doing. Jump starting failed, push starting worked, but there’s really only so many situations in which you can strategically plan around push starting your car every time you need to. Damn. Anyway, I called up my old friend Jesse of Stewart’s Cars (named, he says, for the famous American Jesse Owen – apparently his father was quite progressive) who invited me for tea and biscuits first thing in the morning while he sorted out my car.

When I arrived in Diep River this morning there was puzzlement written all over Jesse’s face. Now this guy has a habit of making me very nervous whenever I approach him with a problem as he has the habit of joking about serious situations to the point that I can rarely decide what’s serious and what’s farce. Well today, he poked and prodded and looked inside while I stood aside with my tea and biscuits. Suddently, a revelation – “Has anyone been poking around in here?” he asks. “No,” I respond, “not that I know of.” Suspicion is written all over his face.

“Come here,” he yells. (He always makes me look at his operations, like a surgeon determined to gross out all and sundry witnesses to his miracle work. “This here plug was undone. Now, I reckon someone has tried to disable the sparks in order to hijack your car.”*

The truth won out! Someone’s violated my poor Mary!

Luckily the problem was nothing a little super glue and duct tape wouldn’t put right, so off I sail into the sunset to face another rainy Cape Town winter day.

* Jesse doesn’t speak with a Southern accent in real life but it makes me feel more at ease to attribute one to him in writing.

to Bloem we go!

Thursday, June 18, 2009: Confederation Cup update! I’ve scoped the best places to catch midday football in Cape Town, and depending on how awkward you feel about drinking by yourself (gulp), there are various PG establishments that serve hot chocolate and peanut butter sandwiches (Deano’s, Dean Street, they don’t think it’s weird if you show up two days in a row!) Apparently it’s considered poor form to be a lone sports fan, especially an American one, well, a blonde female at least, and I get a few stares. Hmm. Not concerned. In football news a phenomenal game played between Brazil and Egypt, Brazil pulling it out 4-3 at the end with a last minute penalty for handballing in the box. (Anyone who played with us during our summer soccer tournament in 2006 will remember a similar incident in our game against the dodgy Europeans who smoked at half time and wore colored shirts and designer shoes to play.) Later that night New Zealand played Iraq and nobody cared. That night the US loses a cracker against Italy, looks like the Cup might be out of our hands, and the much anticipated (and joked about) Iraq – US final may never come to pass.

Tickets still not available to Saturday’s South Africa v. Spain final round match in Bloemfontein. Anxiety sets in.

Friday, June 19, 2009: Bingo! Have managed to corner a guy who knows a guy who has Hyundai comp tickets to tomorrow’s match. Headed to town to meet him at the top of a parking garage and exchange. (Sounds much dodgier than it actually was.) In fact the garage was the location of a commercial shoot for Hyundai, so I got a first-hand glimpse at the behind the scenes action. Well, all I really put together was that there’s a guy in charge of making puddles, and he has to do it just so, and the car has to drive really fast over the puddle just so, making sure not to get water or dirt on the visible underbelly, and this has to happen 8 consecutive (and identical times) before someone in the audience who looks important with an earpiece and a cell phone cries out, “We got it!” Right. Anyway, long story short, tickets are in hand and they’re pretty.

Now we just have to sort out tickets for the four others who are planning to carpool with us. Deadline is 4pm.

It’s 4:30pm and no tickets are available. Grumpiness sets in.

It’s 5:30pm and no tickets are available. Time to drink.

Drinking. It’s 11pm, time for bed. WAIT! A text… tickets are up, bought, we’re off on a 1000 kilometer trip to Bloem for the game tomorrow. Leaving in T-minus 5 hours…

Saturday, June 20, 2009: Pipe dreams do come true! It’s 1004 kilometers (approx. 600 miles) to Bloemfontein, in the Free State. We set off in my friend Gavin’s bakkie that seats two in the front, two in the back, and however many people you want in the double cab. We realize this trip is going to be an epic journey and set up a makeshift bedroom in the back.

The game plan is simple: leave Cape Town in order to make the 10 hour trip in time to watch the first game in the Springboks/Lions test at 3 – this tour only comes around once every 12 years so we reckon it’s important to make it. Then potter around Bloem, get into the spirit of things (if you know what I mean) and head to the stadium early enough to avoid the manic rush. Well we all know the best laid plans are the first to go, and sure enough, after three leisurely Wimpy stops we realize there’s no chance of us making it all the way to Bloem for the rugby. New plan. Find a dorpie on the way that looks like they have a bar and a TV (hopefully in the same place).

That dorpie is Trompsburg. 80 kilometers south of Bloem this tiny town a kilometer off the highway looks like nothing has changed for 50 years. After passing one hotel boasting a “ladies bar” and a liquor store with benches but no TV we stumble across the “Manor House,” a tiny hotel and eatery with not one, but two TV’s and a well-stocked liquor cabinet. Score!

The best part about Trompsburg? They, like many of the small towns up the N1 to Bloem and eventually Joburg, announce their presence by writing the name of their town on the nearest hill in block lettering formed by white rocks. “Springfontein.” “Trompsburg.” “Richmond, est. 1843, www.richmond.co.za.”

One happy American:

Petrol to Bloem, per person: R300

Wimpy and Spur burger prices, average, per person: R50

Cost of tickets: R200

Beers: R15

20 hours in the car with people that are luckily still your friends, watching Fernando Torres play football in real life, real time, a chance to hear 36,000 people singing an old freedom song simultaneously, and making the most of living in the 2010 host nation: R565

AND despite the 2-0 loss to Spain Bafana has claimed a spot in the semis, thanks to a 1-1 draw between formidable opponents Iraq and New Zealand.

Sunday, June 21, 2009: Sunday started at 12am Saturday and ended, well, never. Apparently no one sleeps in Bloem, they just party hardy through the night, drinking their way through pub after pub without regard for the morning (or the 10 hour drive facing them on the way back.) Again, that bed in the back of Gav’s bakkie comes in very handy.

I’ll spare you the details of the very long, very hungover, very grumpy return trip to say that we made it back in time for the second half of both the US/Egypt and Brazil/Italy games, two unexpected smackdowns that left favorites Italy and Egypt out of the semis. There had to be some money lost on those games.


Confederation Cup begins!



Sunday, June 14, 2009: Round one of the Confederation Cup. Bafana opens the game against Iraq. A 0-0 draw, altogether messy play and a disappointing start to the World Cup prelude. FIFA president Joseph Blatter gives a rousing “thank you, Africa” speech before he craps on the local organizers for failing to fill the stadium for the opener. That night Spain crushes New Zealand 5-0. Looks like Group A is rising to no challenge. Jacob Zuma speaks about something (well, presumably he intended his speech to have meaning, but with JZ one can never really get the point).

Meanwhile, back at the ranch, we have a lovely lunch prepared for us at De Grendel wine farm in the Paarl winelands. Holiday’s the best!

Monday, June 15, 2009: Five of our Santos girls have been selected to train with Banyana Banyana for the SA national squad. I realize my appointed arch-nemesis is on the list and has been training with the Bananas for two years already. Gulp.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009: Further research into our Banyana squad reveals this dark history:http://outsports.com/jocktalkblog/2009/02/10/feb-11th-trial-set-for-accused-murderers-of-lesbian-soccer-player/

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eudy_Simelane

Wednesday, June 19, 2009: I’m on holiday with nothing to do! You’ll notice this blog is nothing to do with marathon training, which is not to say that’s an unimportant component of my life right now so instead of talking about soccer I’m going to talk about this very Capetonian habit of running up mountains. Now, in America, where people are fat and lazy, mountains are things to be looked at more than scaled. Not so here – here they don’t hike, they don’t climb, they run. Well you can take the girl out of America, but you can’t take America out of the girl. After many grumblings I figure pain now is, well, equally bad to pain later, but what the hell, it’s not as if I have anything else to do. Run up, run down, run up again, picture attached.


365 days and counting...


It's officially one year to the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa. That means it's time to get my ass in gear and actually write. This is one week in one post.

Thursday, June 11, 2009: 365 days until the FIFA World Cup, officially the biggest sporting event ever to reach South Africa’s shores and thefirst time any nation in Africa has had the opportunity to host. This blog will track the social, political and economic changes and controversies surrounding the preparation for and the lead-up to 2010.


Today in the streets of Cape Town cannons and fireworks and speeches by both Mayor Helen Zille and President Jacob Zuma kick off the one year countdown to the Cup. Green Point Stadium,

Cape Town’s definitive nod to the FIFA coordinators and the biggest construction happening in town, gleams in the background, its glass roofing nearing completion, its undulant silhouette jarring with the square outline of Table Mountain.


Friday, June 12, 2009: Almost time for Confederation Cup kick-off. The big games start on Sunday, and last minute online ticket sales heat up. Here’s hoping FIFA doesn’t screw the pooch on ticket sales. We’ve got big plans to head to Bloem or Pretoria for the South Africa/Spain or Brazil/Italy matches, respectively. Group A (South Africa, Spain, New Zealand, and Iraq) is looking conspicuously weaker than B (USA, Brazil, Italy, Egypt). The organizers probably felt obligated to give the host nation at least a modicum of a chance of making the semis. Go Bafana!

http://www.sport24.co.za/Content/Soccer/ConfedCup/585/462d81e4fd534dacb2e42e7c85743cef//Confederations_Cup_fixtures

Saturday, June 13, 2009: My soccer club, FC Santos, is invited to participate in a 365 celebratory indoor tournament at the old Good Hope Center (formerly the Civic Center) in downtown Cape Town. Each of the 8 clubs invited to join is to bring 8 players who will be mixed, matched and distributed onto 8 teams, each representing one of the 8 invited nations of the Confederation Cup. I played for Spain with my captain and a couple of girls from my team. We tried stacking only for the organizers to foil our plot and reorganize the teams. I watched Helen Zille play keeper in the 4 v. 4 Province v. City women’s indoor game. She’s not bad but sheeeez, does she keep a tight ship!

First Tracks

Our annual ski trip always followed the most hectic time of the year – exam season. Come mid-January, campus would be a-riot with frantic, sleep-deprived students, recently reminded that although they pretended otherwise, grades in college DO count for something and course averages could be made or broken on the back of one exam. Generally the more conscientious students – to be distinguished ultimately from the mass of anxious, uncaring or utterly perplexed among us – would have wisely used “reading period” to its euphemistic purpose. Others would count on hoarded (or enhanced) adrenaline rushes or what they believed to be innate intelligence to see them safely across turbulent waters.

Libraries were home to the wretched, bored, and socially-deprived alike, and the cold was braved at every hour by Cantabrigians seeking academic inspiration or another change of scene. From the moment exams began the most salient emotions in the air were the relief of those already through the gauntlet and the jealousy of those who waited in purgatory, wishing time truly would take its toll swiftly and painlessly. As the two-week session dragged on students found more and more creative methods of sabotaging themselves and their futures in reaction to the stress and high drama of testing. Parties, late night pizza runs, fast food binges and an exponential increase in local caffeine intake combined to create a uniquely humorous but ultimately tragic scene.

But as with all things exams too came and went, passing with barely an echo of reminder save the collective exhaustion of overworked graduate students, co-eds and tenure-seeking lecturers alike. In the post-exam anticlimax one could feel the relief, subtle and underwhelming, that follows catharsis of this nature, and all returned to the normalcy of chores and the restrictions of the weather and the relative desperation that takes boredom for granted.

So in an attempt to postpone the ennui of scholasticism a small (but ever growing) group of my friends would set off on an epic adventure to an exotic destination: Vermont.

Last Call

Our journey would begin in the Quad, as five or ten highly organized undergraduates would coordinate food, housing and transport for the cluelessly useless remainder of us. We’d set off on a Friday morning, bags of fleece-lined apparel in tow, scarves, gloves and hats piled on to save room for beer and other necessary provisions in the belly of our busses and vans. About two hours outside of Boston we stopped at perhaps the most important marker along the way – the New Hampshire Beverage King. Apparently the staunch Puritanism that dictated so much of Massachusetts’ founding was stopped dead in its tracks at the border of this freedom-loving state where you’re more likely to get prosecuted for hunting without a license than driving without one. While a select few would cart our pooled money to the King, we who had entrusted them with the all-important task of buying booze for the week would bee-line for Wendy’s for our first ski trip meal. Few could predict that after only a week even the most health-conscious of us would be trading salads for chili bowls, but at this state the illusion of propriety and purpose hovered our lighter selections.

After filling our bellies and that of our cars we’d set out for our final destination – Smuggler’s Notch. As we approached this appropriately named nek in the mountain, a couple of things happened which combined to produce tension bubbling on turmoil: one, we proceeded to stop at sundry liquor stores along the way with recipes for cocktails and sisaters in hand; two, the amount of snow on the ground accumulated and the rapidly growing darkness slowed our movement, such that the combination of possession with intent and frustration from achieving that intent immediately meant that by the time we arrived at our cabins we were more than ready to party.

Inevitably supper on the first night was of the liquid persuasion, and without fail the raging release of fifty newly-arrived friends with nothing of the horizon but more of the same meant that no one got off easy. And the hardcore among us (and here I include myself) also understood that we could party anywhere, but that the reason we left Cambridge wasn’t the booze but the slopes...

… and the chili bowls. From that point forward, day in and day out as the week progressed, the pattern continued. 8am on the slopes. 11:30 break for lunch, where we’d either take the financial hit and buy big or play the part of the struggling student and subsist off of “complimentary” Saltines and packets of ketchup. Either way, by 1pm we were back on the slopes, only stopping to head home by 4. On a good day, we’d get upwards of fifteen runs in – a number that dwindled as the ratio of sleep and booze consumption crept in the latter direction. Suffice it to say that by the end of the week no eye was un-blurred, no liver unscathed, no brain un-pummeled by fun and friendship. No mad idea went untested, no drinking game un-played, no toes unbitten by frost and snow.

No Punking Out

The final day was inevitably the hardest. What once fit neatly into an overnight back naturally would not resume its previous status and was not to be contained once more. Snow-stained boots and ever-damp leggings were crammed next to items reeking of sweat and liquor and substances unknown. Perhaps the most unconventional item of housekeeping was the disposal of the cans – thousands of them. Some were crushed, some hidden, some left wounded in the field of battle. Calculations were put on hold in the face of the sheer enormity of beer we drank. Mad thoughts of recouping all deposits on future beers consumed in the year to come, thereby financing ski trips of tomorrow, filled our eyes with visions of heaping containers of Genny Light and PBR.

‘Twas never to be. But we did manage to fund a return trip to Wendy’s where, as I previously mentioned, stomachs stripped of their lining and consciences of their food-driven guilt hit the dollar menu for all it was worth. And then off we rode into the early gray sunset to face yet another semester of toil and tripe, with nothing but the fond memories of smooth slopes and good company – and the hope of more to come – to sustain us.