Sunday, April 21, 2013

Collegiate Nationals 2013 and stuffaluffagus

Last weekend was collegiate nats, and since it was so close--Tempe AZ--and my parents and brother were going to be there, I decided to fly down for the weekend and do a small race on Sunday just for fun.  It was the first time in my triathlon career not racing Nats which seems kinda sad, but I knew it was time to move on this year and I am glad I did.  So, in all honesty, I was perfectly content to just watch this year.

And holy smokes was it exciting! Here is the swim taking off in Tempe Town Lake:
I was cheering my head off for the CU guys.  It was exciting to watch them dominate but it was exceptionally impressive to watch Ben Kanute just have his way with the field after winning the draft legal race the day before. 

Here is Davide coming out of the water wearing my old Xterra wetsuit!  It got to experience one more nationals.  Davide went on to crush it for about 7th overall.
 Here is my boy Chris Braden aka Chris B Real coming through on the bike course:
And here is my Brother (actually my brother, who races for UVA) Augie after the finish.
AND in the girls race, new CU student and a friend of mine Michelle Mehnert ran away with the womens title by over a minute!  She was untouchable.  Also, CU ended up winning the overall team title for the 4th straight year.

Besides that my race was fun; not much to report after the excitement from Saturday.

While I was in Phoenix, my parents and I went and toured Frank Loyd Wright's winter home at Taliesin West.  It was a pretty cool house--very modern--I think it seems less impressive on the surface because it was built in a style that is popular today.  Whats amazing is that he did it 80 years ago essentially ushering in the current era of contemporary architecture. (We werent allowed to take pictures of the inside)


Great to see the family, watch my brother race, and my friends from CU dominate.  I flew home to boulder just in time for a massive snowstorm--about the 4th one this month.  We are due for more tomorrow too!  When will it end. (Roommate Ginna scraping off her car)
My car.  Buried.  I think the same day it was like 85 back home in Virginia.

Oh yeah it was a busy week too.  Among other adventures I got to see Band of Horses in concert at the Boulder Theater with Ginna.  Amazing concert. I had an incredible vantage point too.  Got some sweet pictures. It was a good cultural experience too--it always seems like all these weird people go to concerts.

I also just went to Provo last week for a catalysis conference at BYU (yes more traveling).  As expected lots of crappy food, but I did win first place for the student presenters and won $200!  I texted my brother that I was in Provo and that he would "dig it here" and the following conversation ensued.  Anyone know the movie reference??  This is why I love my brother!

This week is gonna be nutso.  I have my comprehensive exam on Thursday and then next Monday my environmental law final.  If I am still alive, maybe spring will get its act together and stop dropping snow all over the place. 

Rudy

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

A bike ride with my mom

My mom wasn's actually on this bike ride, but she could have been.  Last weekend was my first triathlon of the year and my first ever draft legal triathlon.  And basically it lived up to my expectations.

The race was Saturday so I packed up and headed out Thursday evening after school--as you can see here at the bus stop, there is still snow in Boulder.  (We are supposed to get more this weekend too)

I took this travel opportunity to finally get around to reading Boomerang by Michael Lewis.  My best friend Mike gave me this book for Christmas and I have been so busy reading law that I haven't had the time yet to read it! 


I spent the night at a crappy hotel to wait for our Off The Front Multisport team director and baller extraordinaire Stephen Wright to fly in Friday Morning.  He rented a pimped out minivan and we hit the road for Sarasota (which is about an hour south of Tampa).  Here is a picture of Tampa Bay!


The race itself was at a new sports park--Nathan Benderson Park.   No crocodiles, that I saw, thank god.  The format lived up to its annoying promises. I got pummeled on the first lap of the swim, lost my goggles and noticed Monday I had a black eye.  Everyone goes out really hard and I did too but I guess not hard enough.  I almost drowned like 4 times and had to stop to put my goggles back on.  The second lap I finally got some open water and bridged up to the back end of the first group coming out of the water with them and thinking I was in good shape....

Well yeah then I totally blew it when I ran into the back of some dude who decided to try at his first flying mount right in front of me, and fail.  Being at the back of the first group already, that incident was the race.  Within a lap of the 8 lap bike the first group had already put 25seconds on the 4 of us that missed the group.  It was sad to watch them ride away.  I tried to ride tempo but my groupmates weren't staying with me which was sad too--I felt like I was riding with my mom.  By T2 the second group had caught us and the first group had 2min on us.

Here I am on the run:


Overall, it was just kinda depressing to have lost so much time on the bike when it is usually the part of the race that I put time on people.  Such is life.  I ended up finishing 18th and learning that draft legal racing is all about timing and making the front pack on the bike.  Side note: I also learned more tri-related gossip than probably any other time in my life.  Who is sleeping with who, juicy stuff etc.

Here are my teammates Stephen (reading his iPhone like a 'hero') and Jess reading my blog (I documented because she is the first person besides my mom to read it).  It was super fun spending the weekend with these two and I hope this season to do more races with my teammates from OTFM.



I was able to get a direct flight in and out of Tampa on Frontier--extra good since bikes are free with the classic fare.  BUT, I also got to catch up on some Oscar winning movies.  Argo on the way there, Lincoln and Life of Pi on the way back (on my little dinky TV).  Probably one of the most productive aspects of the trip...


Anyway, it was good to break up the training and burn out my legs a bit.  I suppose I will have to do another draft legal race sometime... until then,

Rudy


Wednesday, March 13, 2013

My unwitting entrance to draft legal racing.


Thats right folks.  My first race of the year is this weekend!  Saturday at 12 noon in Sarasota FL--draft legal olympic distance.  At the least it should yield an interesting blog post for next week!

Side-note, my law class is crushing me so I am eating this right now.



With the start of the season I have been putting together a race schedule...well piecing a race schedule around the rest of my schedule.  This will be my second year as a pro and again I decided that it would be good to spend at least one more year focusing on the olympic distance in an attempt to get fast--especially at running.  Sometimes I wonder if it is possible to get as fast as the top guys, especially in running.  I mean my swimming has improved a TON this winter and my biking has never really been an issue but how do you get your body to run super fast?  I've always followed the precedent of the kenyans, run a lot, run fast, run fast a lot, and when you arent supposed to run, dont.  Of course I think they have a physiological advantage on me since my legs are as thick as their chests.  Who knows, each year I keep getting slightly faster which is encouraging but I still have a ways to go to compete with those top guys. 

As I mentioned, my first race this weekend in Sarasota Florida as a draft legal race.  I have never done a draft legal race (so that will be interesting) but for those of you unfamiliar, the format of this race is that you are allowed to draft on the bike portion.  Therefore the tactics of the race change dramatically since large groups typically come off the bike together.  Basically you can lose on the swim and the bike but you can only really win the race on the run.  These races almost always come down to who can run the fastest 10k at the end.  Sure I am a bit concerned about that, but honestly this being my first draft legal race I will probably do something totally dumb like drop by shoes or crash my bike.  So I figure I should just focus on finishing without any major screw ups.

This also kicks off the first travel of my jam packed year...I just added it all up and I will be traveling a LOT this year:

14 different cities for triathlons
3 different cities for chemical engineering conferences
2 more different cities for weddings

Thats 19 different cities in one year.  And that only takes me to the first week of November.  I assume I will be going somewhere for the holidays (or else my parents get sad) so that would be some more travel there on the end.  Yikes.  I am going to get cancer from all the gamma rays.

In other news, winter finally hit Boulder.  We have had snow like 2x a week recently.  About time we got some precipitation in this place.  Its real pretty actually.  And weird because I kind of like it.


Thats all for now.  

Rudy

Thursday, February 21, 2013

February. Is it over yet?


Hello peoples.  Two weeks since my last post.  Whew time flies.  I dont even have anything to write about, but I have to make an effort to write about something otherwise it will be 2 months.  

Winter finally started dropping some snow--its pretty cool to be swimming outside in a blizzard!  I should add that to the list of perks of swimming at FAC that I outlined in my last post.  Also, I have ridden my bike to school every single day since I have lived in colorado = 2.5 years.  Rain, snow, ice, nothing can stop me.  One time I rode through about 14 inches of snow!  This is a shot from this week on the way home.  No big deal really.  It gets a little slick.


I have kept the swimming up and recently have been collecting swim caps.  As I mentioned in the last post about swimming, the coaches include Dave Scott and Simon Lessing, and each of them run their own coaching business which they promote through swim caps.  Haha.  I was getting a lot of crap for my old cap which is orange and see through (sorry Joanna), so Simon gave me a cap to wear (Boulder Coaching).  Well, that cap was not kosher at Dave's practices, so he gave me one too.  Now I have to make sure I wear the right cap on the right day!


Oh yeah I dont think I wrote about this yet, but one of my roommates Ginna is in school for acupuncture and other Chinese medicine rituals.  She is like a witch doctor (Sorry Ginna, I am a chemical engineer, I cant handle non-science (though I certainly do believe in the placebo effect...)).  She works on Rob and Nate sometimes (my other roommates) but I dont let her touch me with any of them needles.  Why?  Here is a perfect example.  I come home from school one day and she is lighting her foot on fire.  Literally.  With some herb that smelled a lot like marijuana.  She is a runner (which is why I still love her (plus she is super nice)) but I think she was trying to remedy a case of plantar fasciitis? I dunno if it worked, but it blew my mind.



Besides that, I also failed to mention in my last post the awesome law classes I have been taking.  So, just to be clear, I am still doing a PhD in Chemical Engineering but have finished all the coursework required for that degree--more than a year ago--so now I just have an undefined amount of research in my future.  So, just for fun, I have been taking energy policy classes in other departments, and last fall, I took Energy Law in the Law School.  It was mind blowing.  Of all the different departments I have now taken classes (both in undergrad and now in grad school) including engineering (duh), the business school, environmental science, environmental policy and law, law is by far my favorite, probably because it is also the most erudite.

And, my professor has a PhD in science as well as a J.D. so I think he has a soft spot in his heart for scientists.  Anyway, he convinced me to take Environmental Law with him this spring.  I am such a sucker for learning; I signed up.  Law school is sooooo cool!

Maybe it is just because I have a flipping amazing professor, but I have learned more in these two classes than in anything else I have ever taken, I think.  Well, I probably learned a whole heck of a lot in graduate thermo but not much of that applies to everyday life...plus it is still kinda fuzzy what exactly we did learn...it was all abstract stuff like partial derivatives of thermodynamic properties which honestly make no real physical sense anyway even though pretentious enginerds pretend that they do; dont let them fool you.  (Rule of thumb: just because someone's area of expertise makes no sense to anyone does not mean they deserve deference.)  In contrast, law is just rational thought applied to everyday circumstances.  Its like, "Joe Schmoe is angry because his land is now covered in toxic chemicals from the chemical factory that got built next door."  Its like yeah I get it Joe, I would be mad too.  Figuring out the solution in terms of the law can be complicated (and funky) but the circumstances of the case are pretty easy to understand.  

Anyway, reading for the class is taking all my spare time, but I am also ramping up the piano playing as of late.  I recently learned Requiem for a Dream, the theme song from Peanuts, Moonlight Sonata, and Dawn (theme song from Pride and Prejudice haah).  I am working on Claire de Lune, but its pretty tough, not gonna lie.  I have a tendency (OCD/perfectionism/possibly both) where I cant stand learning the watered down version of piano music because I feel like I would be offending the original composer, but in the case of Claire de Lune, I really dont know how it is physically possible to even hit all those keys with only 2x hands.  Claude DeBussy must have had like 4 hands at least.  When it feels too daunting, I just look up and Mohammad Ali tells me that impossible is nothing (I have had that poster since high school).


Also, I am having some serious problems right now because my electric keyboard has only 76 keys (though it was only $50 on craigslist).  Naturally, all of these pieces I am learning pretty much require the full 88.  A real piano is kinda out of the question at this point, but one day I will have one... mark my words...

Rudy

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

My new Blue. Its black. And has red components.

As promised it has been less than 3 months since my last post.  Read it and weap momma.

One of the new advancements of this spring is that I have upgraded my bike.  Back in 2011 at Age Group Nationals, I had the fastest overall bike split and "won" a Blue Bike Frame.  After sending +/- a zillion emails to various employees of Blue, I never received a frame and so I entered 2012 basically giving up.  Then, I had the fastest bike split at Collegiate Nationals in April 2012 and "won" another Blue Bike frame.  So at this point, I emailed them and was like, look guys, if you just send me one full bike (not 2x frames) that would be cool.  I even contacted the CEO to try to light a fire under their buns.

So finally they said ok yeah they would send it in May...I wasnt fooled.  I tried to put it in the back of my mind for the summer and sure enough, after "warehouse problems" and "shipping problems" and large chunks of time without contact, I finally got a bike in November approximately 15 months after "winning" the first frame.  Better than never I guess! I still got a brand new bike although, looking back it was hardly free--for the time I spent contacting them and the value of the bike it worked out to about $3.50 per hour which I am pretty sure is less than minimum wage.

Anyway, when I "won" the 2x bikes they put you up on stage in front of everyone so every random person seemed to know I should be getting a new  bike and have been asking about it for like 15 months.  So here you go, here is the story.  I finally can say yes it came.  And here are some pictures.  They ended up sending me their limited edition Matte Black frame so it looks pretty cool, but it doesn't actually have red components like they said it would, surprise (it has SRAM force).  Still, they have won this battle, I concede, I am not sending it back to them.  By the time they got back to me there probably wouldn't be roads anymore.




And of course the old Cervelo P2 is now out gunned.  I got the Cervelo back in December 2008 and have ridden it all over the US, won a couple national championships on it, got 16th at Hy-Vee on it this year, taken it on century rides--not to mention all the quality trainer rides we have had together.  In deciding what to do with it, I was talking to my friend Drew Scott who said that his dad Dave still has his first bike that he raced Kona on back in 1980.  Its probably steel and has like 5 gears and some downtube shifters.  In short it is pretty much worthless to anyone except for the personal nostalgic value it holds for Dave.

I know I know its sad but, I decided that although that bike and I have had some great times together that it was time for it to move on and get on with living its life.  So, I sold it to a nice guy who promised to treat it well (I think he could tell it was meaningful to me).  I figured, (a) this guy could get good use out of it or (b) it could sit and collect dust for a couple years by which time the value and usefulness would inevitably decrease leaving me with a rusty dusty outdated unridden bike that would be viewed as 'junk' by anyone other than myself.  (Its probably good too since I still have like 5 bikes.)  Maybe I will even see it out there on the roads sometime!  Until then, it will be remembered:



Besides the bike news, my dad recently sent me a bar of dark chocolate.  Normally this would not be noteworthy, but in this case the bar in question weighed 5kg or about 11lbs.  It has like 125 servings, 30,000 calories (roughly) and enough caffeine to jump start Sonya Sotomayor's rate of speech from its dismal state of 40 words/min to the audiobook recommended level of 150 words/min (I'm speculating but the world can only hope).  I also ate too much last night and couldn't get to sleep until like 4am...


If you want one for yourself, good luck... the bar was imported from Belgium.  My hobiless dad (to the endless vexation of my mother) apparently has nothing to fill his time since there are no more soccer tournaments and little league baseball games, so he started going to this french bakery every morning at like 4am (since he apparently doesn't sleep either).  Now he and the baker are BFFs and this baker imports all of his chocolate from Belgium because it is of higher quality than is obtainable in the US.  He gave my parents a chunk of a bar at one point (which was sitting in our freezer at home) and over Christmas I pretty much demolished that stash.  Sensing that I like dark chocolate, my dad arranged to have a whole bar sent to me!  HAH!  11lbs...it will  probably last me like 3 weeks.

Side note, the bar is like 2 inches thick so you cant bite it and you cant break it.  Apparently my dad cut his with a band-saw in the garage (which I think is terribly wasteful), so I got a chisel and a hammer and have been shattering mine to get it into bite-able sizes. 

Thats all for now, hopefully my arteries wont clog up with saturated fat before my next post. (Each serving of the chocolate bar is 50% of daily value).

Rudy

Friday, January 25, 2013

Since my last race: a flock of seagulls and a ham sandwich

Hello blog readers.  My mom got on my case again saying that it is "pathetic" that I havent written anything since October 2, so I thought this would be a good opportunity to kick off 2013.

Since the Los Angeles Triathlon back in September I have mostly been focusing on school.  I was the TA for an undergrad chemical engineering class Material And Energy Balances to fulfill a teaching requirement for my PhD...basically, I taught approximately a zillion office hours and since it is a weed out class for chemical engineers, a large number of people failed...random nightmare scenarios ensued. 

I passed my yearly PhD evaluation and am on schedule to finish my PhD early (3.5 year range) which would be mildly inconvenient considering I have the perfect setup here in Boulder.  For example:

I joined the local Flatirons Athletic Club at the end of last season so I would have a place to swim this winter.  After last year's Collegiate season, I decided it was time to move on from the CU tri  team.  I had a pretty good season in 2012 as a first year pro and it seemed like the proper time to move on.  Plus, it has been phenomenal to get away from the required practices and meetings and events of the team.  For the first two years I lived in Colorado, the tri team was a great way to meet other CU students and train, but there were a growing number of reasons pushing me to move away as well.  This fall I joined the team as usual but now as I am writing this email, I realize I havent been to a single practice all year.  I didnt really mean to have a full exit from the collegiate scene but thats kinda how it has happened.  The crazy thing is that I could theoretically race Collegiate Nationals 4 more years if I wanted to!  (Already I have raced it 6x which seems rather absurd in itself).

Moving on from that is kinda weird.  I feel all grown up.  This will be the first year in the history of my triathlon career in which I havent had collegiate nationals in mid-April.  Usually, I am still freezing my buns off and counting down the weeks till the biggest race of the year.  This year I have the ability to really focus my year on the summer and not worry so much about early season racing.

Still, my first race is going to be mid-March at the Sarasota Pan Am Cup--an ITU draft legal style race. For those of you unfamiliar (like my mom), most of the races I do are non-drafting making it illegal to draft on the bike portion of the race.  In the ITU format, drafting on the bike is legal and the dynamics of the race are enormously different.  In these races, being a strong biker matters less and the race almost always comes down to the run since large packs form on the bike portion.

Anyway, for the time being I am continuing my swimming focus with 7-9 practices a week.  The last two years my swimming has been pitifully slow during the school year being forced to swim at the CU rec center with simply not enough swimming per week with the CU team.  Now, I am getting drowned by some freakin fast swimmers at FAC.  I must say, I have never had more fun swimming than right now.  I think swimming is the one discipline that most triathletes shy away from but I think there are some crucial aspects which can make it enjoyable:

1) Swimming outside: the pool I joined is outdoor year round!  Yeah.  In Boulder.  What.  There have been days with snow and 10 degrees and we are still outside swimming.  (running from the locker room to the pool can be quite harrowing).  Being Boulder, most days are at least sunny and I am surprisingly tan for January.  Maybe its the added Vitamin D, the ability to look at the sky, no longer having the oppressively claustrophobic state of stagnant chlorine radiating from the walls of the dimly lit CU REC center and sucking your life out of the pores of your skin, or the sheer human appeal of the novelty of no longer being in the aforementioned situation, but whatever it is, swimming at FAC is flippin amazing.

2) Swimming with awesome masters coaches like Jane Scott.  I dont know her too well really, but Jane is probably one of my favorite people.  Jane coaches practices at all of the major swimming groups in Boulder and I go to a couple of her practices every week where she has absolutely no sympathy for complaining and dispassionately reels off marginally impossible sets while deriding softies with a wry sense of humor.  "Why dont you try leaving 1/2 a second behind, I dont think you are drafting enough."  She probably wouldnt work too well anywhere else besides Boulder...

3) Swimming with fast people.  Really fast people.  Like certain pro triathletes.  Plus, to be honest, I have lived in Boulder for coming up on 3 years this summer and I am still awed by the people I work out with.  When I first got into triathlons in 2006, these people were just names on websites.  Now they know who I am.  Which seems insane most days. Well, basically all days.

Anyway, besides that its winter time so trainer season is in full swing.  Last year I set up the garage as a trainer studio and have a 32 inch TV a surround sound system and some motivational posters.  And of course, I took this picture while watching a James Bond movie (staple of the rudy diet (Goldeneye in this case))...



Currently, its great weather here in Boulder--its hit mid 50s every day this week!  But it was freezing cold a few weeks ago.  Here is a shot of the flatirons from outside my lab one day when it was like 12.


It still surprises me how cold it can get when it gets cold here.  Back home in Virginia we would get 'cold' days where it would get down to like 25.  Here it gets easily below zero.  These pictures are from a run on a day where the high was like 8 degrees.  I wore a balaclava to make it easier to breathe and the snow you see is from my breath freezing!  I even had icicles on my eyebrows which periodically would freeze shut.



Anyway, now that the season is approaching, I am starting to add in more biking and running workouts, plus as usual, there is more than enough work that needs to be done in lab.  Recently I made some palladium thin films (I am not even going to bother explaining why because its probably boring anyway).  But they looked kinda artsy and what can I say.  I am a nerd I guess so I took pictures hhaha.



Oh yeah I I cant believe it but my I got an iPhone over Christmas.  So now I can take pictures and document everything for the upcoming season!  Hope you all are ready for some super thrilling shots of the inside of an airplane.  The next post will be sooner than last....

Rudy


Tuesday, October 2, 2012

LA tri...its definitely not a nashville party


Ahh the last race of the year.  a) I cant believe it is here but b) yeah I guess it is time.

After getting back to Boulder at about midnight last Sunday after Galveston, I had Monday to Thursday to get as much schoolwork done as possible before leaving for LA on Friday.  My travel prowess has outstripped even my gains in triathlon--I unpacked my bike in LA in a record 6minutes!

So I hoped off the plane at LAX with a dream and a...well but I had accidentally packed my cardigan, oops.  Later, I had some awesome mexican food.  A massive burrito for like $6.  It was the most expensive thing on the menu!  I swear, california mexican food is so much better than anywhere else I have been.  "The land of fame, excess"?  There weren't any famous people at the restaurant and $6 is pretty cheap to be honest.

Blah blah blah, I worked out on Saturday morning and then my home stay and I drove into the city for the pro meeting--driving there, I looked to my left and saw the hollywood sign! (I swear its there to the left; is that smog?)


Sunday race time was 7:15.  I knew the water had been about 68-70 during the week and I was convinced that the refs would be sticklers and wouldn't let us use wetsuits.   Whoda thought, they did.  Charlie Crawford has a heart after all.   (Charlie BTW is USATs #1 ref dude; he takes pleasure in extensively quoting the rule book and obsessively enforcing the rules (which I think is a good thing actually (I also think he has lost weight recently; he was looking pretty fit))) --but I digress.  My first pro race I have been allowed to use my XTERRA Vendetta wetsuit.  Been waiting all year for that.

This was my first ocean swim and the waves were pretty intense--I think it was 5-6ft swells by Sunday morning making the wetsuits nice backup in case of a drowning scenario.  As soon as the race started, that scenario unfolded.  Sometimes at the start of races I just lack killer instinct.  Most races really; I am just not a mean person I guess and when people are whacking me on the head I usually just try to get out of their way rather than fight them.  The waves were crashing the heck out of us and I got in a group that was too slow for me so I dropped them and was left in no mans land the rest of the time.  

THEN coming in I got rocked by like 3 waves simultaneously.  The first one I felt coming and I was like "Ok, cool I am just gonna body surf this thing in no problem."  Wrong.  I ended up being face planted into the sand, half drowned, rinse, repeat x3.  It was like being in the "extra dirty" washing machine setting where it takes a break after draining and you gasp for air, glance anxiously and think its done so you can move your stuff to the dryer, but then the dang thing just keeps adding more water and vigorously swishing your clothes around.  When I finally got out, I was glad to be alive.  It was kinda funny actually how bad I got rocked, hopefully entertaining from the beach.

The bike was... meh.  I was just kinda plodding along but I guess it was ok.  I mean my time was decent.

Then the run, I just felt awesome.  I think after such a weird race otherwise, I was fresh and ready to go.  Just FYI if you havent done the LA tri, there is a massive hill that you have to do 2x.  I cant think of anything bigger I have ever done in a triathlon actually?  I will keep brainstorming but I dont think so.  Still, I was just cruising the whole time and had my fastest run ever in 32:48.

Who woulda thought, with that I accomplished my 2x goals of 2012; make Hy-Vee (I was the 30th pro of 30 to get in) and run sub-33 (did it in my last race of the year).  Somehow I always seem to make all these ridiculous goals even though I almost always consider them out of reach and usually write them off before they end up happening.  Again, thanks Athena, greek gods et al, I cant think of any other reason why they would happen.

Ok, so I forgot to take much video this weekend; I guess I am getting lazy, but this one basically covers everything else I did, saw, etc:


It was sad to pack up for the last time, but I am honestly psyched about racing next year.  One thing I worried about this year racing as a pro was that it would make triathlon more of a job than a fun pass time; more stress than enjoyment.  BUT, in fact this was the most fun I have ever had racing triathlons.  The travel, the Chobani tri team, free race entries, meeting new homestays, experiencing culture around the US, getting to know famous pro triathletes, and gaining support around the country.  I will surely be training hard this winter for an even better 2013.

Rudy