Again there were a lot of people at the lake for a working day. Most were middle-aged and beyond, so I'm guessing that many were laid off from the Great Republican Recession. Three miles. [Photo was taken last Monday at 7:30pm behind the Santa Clara Water Department building on Almaden Expressway. I go there late in the evening when the sun is low, though 7:30 was still a bit too early for the best light. Those are Canadian Geese in the sky. Click to enlarge.]
Friday, July 31, 2009
View from Santa Clara Water District building
Again there were a lot of people at the lake for a working day. Most were middle-aged and beyond, so I'm guessing that many were laid off from the Great Republican Recession. Three miles. [Photo was taken last Monday at 7:30pm behind the Santa Clara Water Department building on Almaden Expressway. I go there late in the evening when the sun is low, though 7:30 was still a bit too early for the best light. Those are Canadian Geese in the sky. Click to enlarge.]
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
Beach bathing at Almaden Lake
Kids bathing on Almaden Lake beach today at around noon. Taken from the east side of the lake with my 6MP Canon S3 Powershot camera with 12x zoom. In the foreground is one of the four SolarBees floating in the water today. It was another lazy three mile jog. [Photo was taken at around noon. Notice how lackluster the light is directly overhead. Click photo to enlarge.]
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Monday, July 27, 2009
Mt Umunhum summit could open soon to bikes
The site, contaminated with asbestos and lead paint from its days as a cold war early warning radar station between 1958-1980, remains closed to the public. Its landmark radar building ("the cube") on top would probably be removed during the cleanup, along with some of the other 88 buildings. The mission of the site was to scan the skies for Soviet bombers. The next step is for the Senate to take up the bill in September. If it passes, future bike rides up the 3486' peak are all but certain. I've biked up to the second gate, which is as far up as you can legally go today. (Google Earth reports the second gate to be at 2864' elevation, 37-09-13.58N latitude and 121-53-31.36W longitude. At those coordinates you can see the white paint on the road that warns bikers not to pass that point.) The photo was taken from the pond behind the Santa Clara Water Department building adjacent to Almaden Lake. Click on the photo to see other antenna that lease space from the owner of adjacent land, Scott McQueen. Rep. Mike Honda, D-Campbell, gets a lot of credit for making progress on this issue. (Today was a rest day.) Source articles:
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Cool six
[Photo: Snow goose Chen caerulescens
]
Six miles today, from home to the second red bridge at Camden, and back. I noticed 4 SolarBees in the water today. Temp was about 65F.
From yesterday's post, a bowl of oatmeal one hour before worked well. Turns out oatmeal is the perfect breakfast food because it has the right amount of carbs and protein.
Six miles today, from home to the second red bridge at Camden, and back. I noticed 4 SolarBees in the water today. Temp was about 65F.
From yesterday's post, a bowl of oatmeal one hour before worked well. Turns out oatmeal is the perfect breakfast food because it has the right amount of carbs and protein.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Eat to fuel exercise
[Photo: California Gull Larus californicus]

Being late in the day, I was concerned about having enough juice in me to sustain a good workout. So I ate two tangerines 30-minutes beforehand, thinking that it would give me a "sugar boost." It did seem to help, but was it really enough fuel, and was it the right kind?
Well, according to Leslie Bonci, sports nutritionist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, it wasn't. Ideally, you should have a fist-sized amount of food about one hour before exercise. It should be a carbohydrate snack, with protein, in the range of 150-200 calories. Something like a granola bar, or half a peanut butter sandwich, will do. Trail mix will do, too. You should also drink about 20-oz of liquid an hour beforehand. And if you're workout will last more than an hour, you also need to eat while exercising at a rate of 30-60 grams per hour.
For a quick recovery, eat again within 15-minutes of finishing. The same snack will do. The longer you wait to eat, the longer recovery will take.
This information will be useful for my next 6-mile run, maybe tomorrow.
Source article: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/02/eating-to-fuel-exercise/?em
Being late in the day, I was concerned about having enough juice in me to sustain a good workout. So I ate two tangerines 30-minutes beforehand, thinking that it would give me a "sugar boost." It did seem to help, but was it really enough fuel, and was it the right kind?
Well, according to Leslie Bonci, sports nutritionist at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, it wasn't. Ideally, you should have a fist-sized amount of food about one hour before exercise. It should be a carbohydrate snack, with protein, in the range of 150-200 calories. Something like a granola bar, or half a peanut butter sandwich, will do. Trail mix will do, too. You should also drink about 20-oz of liquid an hour beforehand. And if you're workout will last more than an hour, you also need to eat while exercising at a rate of 30-60 grams per hour.
For a quick recovery, eat again within 15-minutes of finishing. The same snack will do. The longer you wait to eat, the longer recovery will take.
This information will be useful for my next 6-mile run, maybe tomorrow.
Source article: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/02/eating-to-fuel-exercise/?em
How to become a natural resource steward
Friday, July 24, 2009
Garlic Festival 2009, Gilroy, California, USA
Today was a rest day, so we went to the Garlic Festival in Gilroy.
(1) Though it was sunny and comfortable, if you did overheat, the Rain Room will cool you down.
(2) Cooking, courtesy of the FDNY.
(3) This handsome couple snagged some free garlic ice cream at the booth. Yummie. The festival's link appears below.
[Click on photos to enlarge.] http://www.mercurynews.com/lifestyle/ci_12893988?nclick_check=1.
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Thursday, July 23, 2009
Three miler
It was around 75F at 5:00PM today. There were six fishermen on the north end of the lake--two under the Coleman bridge. Lots of people on bikes, but only one other jogger, and he looked older than me. The bod was draggin' today, so tomorrow might be a stroll with the camera.
[Picture: The distant building is Almaden Lake Village apartments (1045 Coleman Rd, San Jose). Their going rate for a 1016' 2-bedroom/2-bath ranges from $1700-$1750/month today. Foxchase Apartments (1070 Foxchase Dr., San Jose) has lower rates, better parking, and they were totally remodeled this year. And Foxchase is more convenient to shopping and highways 85 and 87--a big time saver.]
Wednesday, July 22, 2009
Treadmill Day
After a lazy nap today I was raring to do thirty minutes on the treadmill. No run because it takes longer and we had to go out. Two-degree incline and speed 11.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Three miler
It was already cool at 5:35PM, so I did a pass at the lake. That handful of raisins I ate 30-minutes before helped a lot, so it was a pretty strong run.
Speaking of raisins, here's a good article on eating to fuel exercise: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/02/eating-to-fuel-exercise/?em
.
Speaking of raisins, here's a good article on eating to fuel exercise: http://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/07/02/eating-to-fuel-exercise/?em
.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Shady Foxchase
It was another hot afternoon, so I plannned to use the gym again today. But someone left the doors wide open with the AC off, so it was hot in there, too. Miffed, I decided to jog up and down Foxchase Drive, and I'm glad I did: it turned out to be a nice variety day, and a visual treat to boot.
Foxchase Drive is shaded by about 20 big oak trees on either side of the street. The sidewalks are therefore mostly shaded, with only a narrow strip of sun shining down the middle. This was wisely planned, I'm sure, when the apartments were built in the mid '70's. The original thought was probably to keep the tenants cool in the summer. If so, it worked. The trees, numerous and mature now, provide more shade than most any other street I know. And with the cool breeze today, it felt cooler running outside in the breeze than inside with the AC.
The shaded sidewalks, doppled with sunlight and set against the bright green grass, offered some eye candy. Simple pleasures are still the best.
Foxchase Drive is shaded by about 20 big oak trees on either side of the street. The sidewalks are therefore mostly shaded, with only a narrow strip of sun shining down the middle. This was wisely planned, I'm sure, when the apartments were built in the mid '70's. The original thought was probably to keep the tenants cool in the summer. If so, it worked. The trees, numerous and mature now, provide more shade than most any other street I know. And with the cool breeze today, it felt cooler running outside in the breeze than inside with the AC.
The shaded sidewalks, doppled with sunlight and set against the bright green grass, offered some eye candy. Simple pleasures are still the best.
Sunday, July 19, 2009
Almaden Snow Geese
Friday, July 17, 2009
Another treadmill day
Wednesday, July 15, 2009
Monday, July 13, 2009
SolarBees and methylmercury
For years I jogged past Almaden Lake and biked past Guadaulpe and Almaden reservoirs, curious each time what those alien-looking contraptions were floating in the water. Half-consciously, I imagined they measured the water's temperature or chemical composition. Those "antenna," I imagined, were powered by the photovoltaic panels and transmitted the data back to a park computer.
Wrong! They're SolarBees: solar-powered water-circulation machines that prevent the harmful buildup of methylmercury in stagnant water at the bottom of the lake. The solar panels convert sunlight to electricity to power the circulation motors.
Almaden Lake is contaminated with quicksilver (mercury) originating from the New Almaden mines located 10 miles to the south, in an area now known as Almaden Quicksilver Park. The mines were open from 1847-1976. From the start of the California Gold Rush (1848-1855), mercury was used to extract gold and silver from mines in the Sierra Nevada mountains.
Mercury was used in gold mining because it dissolves gold from rock to form an amalgam of gold and mercury. The gold can then be extracted from the amalgam by heating, which causes the mercury to vaporize. The airborne mercury then condenses and falls to the ground, contaminating the land and water. At Quicksilver, mercury got into our local environment through the mercury mining process itself, not from the gold extraction process.
At Almaden Lake, elemental mercury (Hg) from the mines settles at the bottom of the lake. There, it is converted to methylmercury (CH3Hg) by the metabolic processes of naturally occurring anerobic (oxygen-hating) bacteria that live in the sediments. The methylized version of mercury gets into our food chain by being absorbed by aquatic plant life, which is then eaten by fish. The fish, of course, are eaten by birds and humans. Methylmercury is the most toxic form of mercury, and it is especially harmful to embryos. "Do not eat the fish" signs are plentiful around Almaden Lake and at the Almaden and Guadalupe Reservoirs.
SolarBees interrupt the mercury methylization process by circulating oxygen-rich water from the surface down to the oxygen-depleted regions below. The aerated (oxygenated) water inhibits the metabolic processes of anerobic bacteria that produces the methymercury. I've jogged past Almaden Lake for 13 years and I've also seen a noticable improvement in water clarity in the past few years since the SolarBees were installed. SolarBees are also in the Guadalupe and Almaden Reservoirs. Next time I'm there I'm going to check out the clarity of water there.
SolarBee: http://www.solarbee.com/
Almaden Quicksilver Park: http://www.geocities.com/almadenqs/
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Saturday, July 11, 2009
Saturday morning run
Lots of people enjoying nature today. Most people walk, but hey--at least they're out there.
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Sunday, July 5, 2009
Church in Almaden Lake Park
A church group was using the ampitheater at this morning's s 3-miler. I took a picture with my cell while passing on way out and that drew more than a few funny looks. I guess that was impolite, but I didn't realize they were church-goers until I stopped and listened in on the way back.
Saturday, July 4, 2009
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