Thursday, June 23, 2011

While The Parents Are Away, The Kids Will Play

While we were gallivanting all over the great state of Wisconsin, Kari and Bryce were living it up at Grand-mo and Grand-po's house.

 Bubbles, of course!

 A note about this sequence of pictures above.  Grand-mo takes the kiddos down to Lake Ellyn to feed the fish (feeding the ducks is a no-no) and in Glen Ellyn only fresh bread will do!  Bryce liked the bread, too, so much so, that he refused to relinquish any of his slices to the ducks fish.

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Dress Up Days

Kari and Bryce's school have a variety of days during the month where they are encouraged to dress up to a particular theme.
Red, White and Blue for Flag Day
Wear a tie for Father's Day
  
 Yellow for the first day of summer
 No theme, just lookin' cute

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Father's Day

Well, Father's Day number 4 is officially in the books and as I get older (and obviously the little runts that have actually made this an official day for me) the "holiday" gathers much more meaning.

Kari inadvertently gave me an early Father's Day gift on Friday upon arriving home from school. It was a rubber hammer. Little does she know that is more suited to her mother's needs than me, but the thought was still what counts.

We got home this afternoon from a brief Witherspoon family reunion. It was great to spend time with all of the little (some not so little anymore) girls and Bryce. But the best part was getting home and just spending some time with Kari.

We made chocolate chip cookies (with sprinkles, of course) for our dessert. Gran and Beep Beep ventured to West Lafayette to join us for the Father's Day dinner. Kari still has her moments, but when she is calmed down and focused, it's truly a blessing to get to spend time with her.

She wanted to crack the eggs and measure the flour. She wanted to dump in the chocolate chips and taste the dough asap. But she never got too worked up and took her time measuring things with great precision.

Saturday Kari finished a shower and asked Grandmo Haugstad "Do I look familiar to you?". "Yes, you do," grandmo said giggling. "OK, I just got out of the shower and wanted to see if I still look familiar..."

It has made me chuckle, too, having heard that and many of the other crazy things that come out of her mouth. But the older Kari and Bryce get, the more familiar I'm becoming with what a great day Father's Day really is. So, to all of you Fathers out there including Beep Beep - thanks for all you do, have done and will continue to do.

And thanks to Kari and Bryce for giving me the chance to be their Daddy.

KK

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Hardware

Quoting my favorite high school track coach, Mr. Orlow,  "I'm bringing home the hard-ware!"
 Yeah, that's right- it's a bottle opener too.  Nothing better than functional hardware.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Sunday, June 12, 2011

30 hours

Wisconsin is one of my favorite states... but for the first time ever, I can say I'm glad to be out of it.

Don't get me wrong, I still love the friendly people, good beer and fun times. But having helped participate in the Ragnar Race from Madison to Chicago with Holly and her running crew... yeah, I've seen more of Wisconsin than I ever needed to.

This is a growing event (first time Ragnar has managed it from Madison to Chicago) filled with teams of insane people. These "people", otherwise known as running robots, literally ran from Madison through all kinds of po-dunk Wisconsin towns down to the Milwaukee suburbs (through the middle of the night) and eventually ended up at Montrose Beach on the North side of Chicago.

It was a race that could be done with 6 or more people. But if you went with more than 6, you lost the "Ultra" status that our group of robots so desperately seeked. So, Holly, Tom, Matt, Taryn, Natalie and Scooter (some Purdue grad from Madison who likes to run and knows one of Matt's neighbors) hopped in a 12-passenger rental van driven by yours truly and navigated by Matt's better half - Amy.
After attending the mandatory safety meeting

Our six pack - appropriately named Blister in the Sole - not only finished the race, but beat the original estimated time by a longshot. They finished the 197 mile trek through woods, on trails, in neighborhoods and sidewalks in 30 (THIRTY) hours. It was very impressive.
At the start
Each robot took a leg that was anywhere as short as 2.5 miles up to as much as nearly 10. This took place on 6 different occasions. The race began Friday morning at 830 CST and ended just before 230. While round 6 took an adventurous turn, the first 5 rounds went relatively smoothly.


It really is difficult to put into words what this experience is like, but I can tell you it was amazing. It took incredible amounts of will, energy, mental toughness and most of all, physical fortitude. All six of the robots exemplified these characteristics to a T.
Run, Forrest, run!
Both Natalie and Holly gave all they had and ultimately the Ragnar knocked them down after round 5. Natalie (not Tom's wife) isn't even a distance runner, but she is ultra competitive and stubborn as hell, so she was a perfect fit. In round 2, though, she started to have some foot pain. This continued and ultimately started to transcend into hip pain by round 4.

Despite an incredibly gutsy effort she finally said enough's enough following round 5 when the paid ended up with a popping noise in her knee. So, send your good thoughts her way this week.

Closer to home, Mrs. Keckler gave a similar gutsy performance. A die-hard runner at heart, even this race was more than Holly expected. But the runner in her literally had her on a high through 4 rounds. Then came the dreaded round 5. Mind you, Natalie's final leg came while handing off the team bracelet to Holly in Racine, somewhere around 4 a.m.

Knowing that Natalie just limped to the van Holly was determined to make it through this grueling stretch. But as I waited in the damp, cool, misty morning air for her to make the exchange station at stop 5, I started to think something might be wrong.

It was taking her longer than anticipated. Once I saw her turn the corner, I was anticipating the standard end of leg kneeling position. But this time, she did it with a wheezing sound and obvious pain.

Once up she still wasn't breathing right but did motion to her knee that was in pain. Could it be back-to-back legs have taken out 33 percent of team BITS?? Indeed it was her I.T. band, or at least that was the diagnosis of Matt and another runner nearby. Regardless, the pain intensified and ultimately knocked her out, too.

At this point, there were 10 legs remaining and only 4 runners. And honestly, this is where I think I became most impressed. The quartet of able robots combined brains and figured out how many miles were left to run. They then divided up Natalie and Holly's remaining miles amongst them.

Believe me, if you think it's tough to drive a van on no sleep for 26 hours, imagine trying to divvy up another 14 miles that you weren't supposed to run! Physical and emotional exhaustion set in on everyone in the van. However, the group carried through with its goal of finishing the race as an ultra team.

Not only did they cross the finish line together faster than any of them anticipated, they literally accomplished a goal they wildly agreed to months ago. While I merely served as the group's Hoke Colburn, it was an incredible experience. I wasn't just proud of Holly and what she did to accomplish this, but the group as a whole was awesome.

There was no bickering, just lots of laughter. There was no quitting, just smart, rationale decisions by two injured participants. There was simply no stopping, particularly when you've spent 20-plus hours in Wisconsin...
Even Aunt Edna was at the race!


Congrats to Holly and her friends for an experience they (and I) will remember for the rest of their lives.

Kevin

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Finished!

Tom ran the last leg and we joined him the last 25 yards to cross the finish line as a team at 2:27 PM, roughly 30 hours since we started! Yay!
HWK out after barely finishing 5th leg with knee strain. Rest of team filling in. All are tired and sore. Looking forward to seeing the finish line. Currently in Zion, IL.

Friday, June 10, 2011

Light misting rain. Everyone in good spirits and feeling well but starting to feel exhausted from multiple legs. About 1/2 finished, nearing 100 miles complete
Finally entered civilization in Waukshau. All running short, strong legs this round.
Uncle Mark provided words of wisdom for the team: "If it's humanly possible, then this human can do it." Will need this as we're running tonight.
Couldn't be more thankful for cool weather today. Next exchange: Hellenville.
Order of runners : 1Natalie, 2 Holly, 3 Scott, 4 Matt, 5 Taryn, 6 Tom. Matt had a good leg.
In Cottage Grove, leg 4. Matt is running now 7 miles.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Almost to madison

Were still in the van and just passed two Ragnar vans. We know were getting close. 8:30 am, here we come. Natalie is runner# 1and I'm runner#2. My first leg is 4.5 miles. 8 miles to the hotel.
Test message from Holly's phone.

On the road to Madison

Saturday, June 4, 2011

22 Months

Hard to believe Bryce is only weeks away from turning two. He is really developing a personality, and recently, starting developing a sense of humor.