Thursday, September 26, 2013

Cabin Time

"Family is not an important thing. It's everything."
--Michael J. Fox

My family has been had quite a lot on our plate lately. With a breakup, a long distance relationship, new baby, smashed car, and an insane dog, needless to say we all needed to relax.

This past weekend Ben and I headed up to my mom's cabin which is only an hour or so from our house. We headed up on Friday after work, and met my mom there around 8 pm. We had a late dinner of Tim's Pizza (seriously you have to try this pizza), and then sat around the fire until way past our bed time, drinking way to much wine.

Saturday we woke up to sunny skies and beautiful weather. We had a relaxing day around the cabin and walked down to the river. We found a four leaf clover hoping that meant our luck was changing. Around 5pm when my little brother was due to arrive, my other brother and his girlfriend and my newborn niece and nephew surprised us! We had dinner, and then once again moved up to sit around the fire, chatting, until way too late.



Sunday Ben and I decided to spend the whole day at the cabin since it is only around an hour to get home. My sister also drove up for the day since she had to work on Saturday night. The weather was beautiful and we lounged around by the river and on the lawn, reading, napping, and chatting. We had a delicious pot roast dinner (a real treat since I have made a handful of roasts in my life) before heading home. Rudy had a great time exploring outside cabin, his energy is finally returning and he is getting pretty fed up with his darn cone. Oh well, 5 more days until his stitches come out!


Overall, it was a great weekend, a little spur of the moment but exactly what we all needed. I am so blessed to have the family that I have. We're hopefully planning another weekend in October so that we all can go, all 13 of us! including my step brother, step sister and step dad. There is something about the cabin that is just so relaxing.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Ironman Mont Tremblant 2014

Well on September 4, 2013, Ben and I logged in to Active.com to sign up for Ironman Chattanooga, right at 12:00 when registration opened, and guess what... neither of us got in. This race is the inaugeral Ironman in Chattanooga Tennesse and we were really excited for it, but I guess it wasn't meant to be. Luckily neither of us got in, the forums were all on fire about one friend/spouse getting in and the other one not.. That would have been brutal. So we quickly started thinking about other races. We didn't want to wait and try our luck with Florida or Arizona as those tended to sell out very quickly as well, and Ironman Lake Tahoe would be a pretty difficult race from what I'm hearing as it sits at a higher elevation than even Cochrane, and lots of climbing. We needed a later season race so that I can focus on studying, and not have the same struggle as this year when I was trying to do my heaviest studying and training blocks at the same time. I think they both probably suffered a little bit, however, I still managed somehow to pass the CFA and complete the Ironman. So we decided on Ironman Mont Tremblant. I have heard that this is an amazing race, and I have always wanted to head to Quebec since I went to french school in Junior High. Although it is 6 weeks earlier than Ironman Chattanooga, so I'll have to start training in April, at least my heaviest training will not be until June and July, after the exam.

So, on September 4th at 4 pm we signed up. Only to receive an email the next day from Ironman apologizing for the craziness of signing up for Ironman Chattanooga and offering preferred registration to Ironman Florida or Ironman Arizona. Oh well. By that point we had signed up, Ironman Mont Tremblant is our race for 2014, and we're excited!


The plan is that I'll start studying for my CFA level 2 in November (as i heard this is a whole new beast entirely and I want to have a dent in it so that I can take time off for Christmas, and our trip to Mexico for 2 weeks!), I'll start training for my Marathon in December, with 2 bikes a week, yoga once a week and 4 runs a week, then come April i'll start my Ironman training which as of right now will consist of rest mon, double workouts tues-thurs,recovery run fri, long bike sat, long run sun.

I have big goals for 2014, I think Ben and I are both Type A personalities as the next year is planned. We like to have something to work towards.

My 2014 Goals:
1) Pass CFA level 2
2) Calgary marathon Sub 4
3) Ironman Mont Tremblant Sub 14


PS an update on our poor dog Rudy. The infection cleared up, however, he was left alone for a couple hours on Saturday and Monday and he has managed to get his cone off no matter what we do. We even tied his cone to his collar, and then tied his collar to his harness, and he still managed to get everything off tearing his collar in half in the process. He needed another surgery to clean up the dead tissue, and get a clean incision to stitch up. He is now in Dog Daycare at a kennel for this week, and next week, the vet also put him on some mild sedation pills so that he will not go crazy to get his cone off. Here's to hoping in 2 weeks he's all healed up.

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

Rudy's unfortunate adventure.

If you don't own a dog, you probably won't understand. But, Rudy is our kid. Ben and I do not have nor are we planning on having kids. Rudy came into our life just over a year and a half ago and stole our heart. Every time he looks at you, all you can see in his eyes is absolute and unconditional love. His life revolves completely around us, waiting for us to come home, the pure joy and excitement that you're greeted with every time you come home (although sometimes overwhelming), and his walks/runs. He is my training partner on my long runs, my faithful companion on the cold winter mornings, laying faithfully beside me while I bike for hours on the trainer or study all day.

Although he is 55 pounds, he loves nothing better than to curl up on your lap and be carried on your hip. He is a trooper, and has fit right in with our family. He loves camping because we sleep on the floor with him, he's kept up on our 35 kilometer backpack trips and our 4 hour runs like a champ, and he turns 2 years old on Sunday.


Although he seems to take after me. The last year has not been without his share of bad luck. Back in April he was impaled at the dog park. He tends to jump/bounce through the bushes, and he jumped right on to a inch wide tree trunk which had been cut/broken. The stick went right into his belly, and he let out a loud yelp. Off to the vet het went, surgery, stitches, drainage tube later, turns out the stick went about 6 inches into him, luckily missing any major arteries and organs. The day after his surgery we stepped out for a bit and came home to Rudy with his cone off and his stitches removed. Off to the emergency vet at 11 pm in Downtown Calgary. They removed the broken piece of drainage tube that remained inside him, stitched him up and home we went. Luckily, he healed perfectly after that.



With a sigh of relief, hoping that would be all, a real nightmare began. About a month ago, for no reason whatsoever I decided to take Rudy with me to drop my nephew off. When we got home, I was a little stressed thinking about everything I was planning on doing that afternoon, and Ben was out helping my mom move. Rudy jumped out of the car, and with my hands full I hip bumped the car door closed only to her the most awful scream/whine sound come out of Rudy. I threw the stuff down, clawed at the door to open it, which had of course locked behind me. Frantically searching for my keys, Rudy decided to take matter into his own hands paws and pulled his tail out of the door, and then ran into the house bleeding profusely. It was only the very tip, maybe inch or so that was bleeding, but he was shaking. I went to try and stop the bleeding when I noticed a little piece of bone sticking out the end. So I wrapped it in paper towel so he wouldn't bleed all over the car, and got him back to the emergency vet since it was Sunday. They did surgery to remove the damaged piece of his tail, and he came home all drugged up. By Wednesday we had run out of pail killers and we came home to a very sore puppy, back to the emergency vet we went to get painkillers as our vet wouldn't see us so last minute before they closed. The following week, the day before he was supposed to get his stitches out, he once again decided to take matters into his own hands paws and ripped the stitches out him self. Thanks Rudy. The end of the bone popped out of the skin, as the vet hadn't left enough soft tissue between the end of tail and the incision, and it was infected despite the antibiotics, back to the emergency vet he went. They did another surgery, removing about 4-5 inches of his tail, they kept him over night and Ben got to go pick him up at 4 in the morning.


However, our dog is Houdini, and managed to remove his cone nearly every day while we were at work and get at his tail. Finally last Tuesday, my lovely sister went to check on him and he had gotten at his tail again, but it wasn't looking so good by this point, so she took him to the vet. The vet recommended that he get his tail docked since it had been a month up to this point, then they forwarded us a quote for $1600.00, over what the other 2 surgeries were combined. Now we knew that our vet was very expensive and we had been meaning to find a new vet but we just hadn't gotten around to it. Well that was the last straw, and we found the Cochrane Animal Clinic, who have been absolutely fantastic and were nearly half the price. They did the procedure on Thursday, but then on Monday I picked him up from the Springbank day care who had been keeping an eye on him while we were at work, and I knew something wasn't right. He didn't want to move much, and appeared to be in tremendous pain. I phoned to see if they had given him his pain medicine and they had. So I went up to change his bandage, and as soon as I saw his tail I knew it was bad. The very end had turned black, the rest was quite red and bleeding, and he nearly puked he was in so much pain. He wouldn't walk, and was shaking. I phoned the vet, and despite them closing in 20 minutes they brought him right in. As soon as the vet saw the wound, my heart sank. He now has a very serious, and aggresive infection, he had a very high fever and the end of his tail has turned necrotic. They gave him an injection of pain meds and antibiotic, sent us home with double his pain meds, and additional antibiotics with instructions to get his fever down, and the swelling out of the tail. So here we are, Ben and I are alternating days off as Rudy is too sick to be left alone or go to daycare. He has a schedule of drugs to take, his temperature has to be checked religiously, and we have to run his tail under ice cold water every hourish. He'll have a spurt of energy, followed by hours of not wanting to move. All we can do right now is keep him comfortable and wait. Luckily we had some vacation days left over from last week so we're using them up to be with him.

What we learned from all of this:

1) Shop around for vets. Seriously that may sound bad, and trust me the first vet certainly tried to give me a guilt trip about going elsewhere and the care he'd receive. But we have found the most amazing vet, and will probably never return to his old one.

2) Tail docking, while it's pretty controversial, I think there is merit. In fact while I was emphasizing how bad I felt as this all started with me not paying attention the vet talked about how many dogs this happens too.. maybe not to this extent, but how many get their tails caught in doors, and tail injuries are THE WORST!

3) It's hard to take time off of work for your dog, but sometimes it is necessary.

4) Post surgery, or if your dog needs monitoring see if you can find a day care that can make special arrangements to keep him quite and keep an eye on him. We used a kennel/daycare combined facility that worked well.

5) It's ok to ask for help. My mom took Rudy to the appointment to get his tail docked, and my sister would periodically check on him. It's ok to not be able to do it all.

So I'll leave you with Rudy, where he was happy on our 3 day backpacking trip, and a prayer for him.


Heavenly Father,
You created all things for your glory
And made us stewards of this creature.
Please restore Rudy
to health and strength (as he want's to get back to our adventures asap!)
Blessed are you, Lord God,
And holy is your name for ever and ever.
Amen.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Oh Jasper, you fool us every time....

I'm not sure what it is with Jasper, whether the locals like to mess with visitors or they just simply do not know the hikes, or Jasper is in some weird time warp. But it seems both times we've visited things have gone sideways. The last time we were in Jasper was 6 years ago, we were first dating and headed up for the September long weekend. We stopped in at a local cafe for breakfast one of the morning and asked the Barista of a good hike. She recommended Pyramid mountain, saying it was only a 2-4 hour hike. So we picked up some water and food and headed on our way. Now, keep in mind we are pretty fast hikers, this hike took us over 6 hours to do! And we even passed a guy riding up on a bike!



Well 6 years later we finally returned, and it tricked us again. This trip will be remembered as the time we accidentally ran 32 kms. Our weekend didn't start out as planned as our lovely Dog managed to choke his way out of his cone.. again.. and decided to rip the stitches out of his tail for the 3rd time. So we were off to the vet.. again.. Luckily this trip didn't entail (no pun intended) another surgery, they bandaged him up and set up an appointment for the next morning to make sure the wound was closing, otherwise they would have to make a clean cut and put in some more stitches. Frustrated, we postponed our trip by a day, and I spent the evening holding my beautiful week old niece at my mother's new house.

Saturday morning we packed up the car, took Rudy to the vet, and luckily he didn't need any stitches, phew! so we hit the road. Since we were a day late, and we didn't have any reservations we were just hoping to get a spot. The first 4 campsites were full, and one was hard side trailer only, so we kept driving until we hit Pocahontas right by Miette Hotsprings, about 50 kms east of Jasper. It's a first come first serve campsite, and even though it said that it was full we thought we'd take a drive through and we managed to snag a spot! WOO HOO! We went for a little walk to stretch our legs, cooked some pizza on our grill, had a few drinks and sat by the fire.


On Sunday morning we headed back in to Jasper. The plan was to do the Saturday night Lake loop which is labeled everywhere as a 24 km loop with 700 feet of elevation. We thought it would be the perfect trail run. So we set out, I remembered reading that the loop was called the Saturday night lake loop/20 mile loop. So when we found the trail head for the 20 mile loop we set out, Ben mentioned that he thought it was weird that the trail was called 20 mile loop and yet it would only be 24 kms, and I responded with "well, the internet said...." and since the internet is never ever wrong we ignored that early warning sign and continued on. It was a beautiful morning, and we passed a few beautiful lakes. We figured the run would take around 2 1/5 hours. So when we hit 2 hours and it felt like we were in the middle of the forest we realized something wasn't right. But at that point we had no choice, we were committed, our options were to keep going and hope the car would be just around the corner, or turn back and know that we had another 2 hours to go. So we kept going. Alas 3 hours and 52 minutes we were running down some switch backs and the car came into view. Phew! We're not sure if missed something and were supposed to turn somewhere, or if the map just totally lied to us. But it definitely was not 24 kilometers, rather 32 kilometers with quite a bit of climbing. I know that when we stopped at a sports store in town to figure out where this trail head was the lady working there pointed us in the clockwise direction, which according to online is the WRONG WAY, so maybe if we had gone the proper way we would have seen where we should have turned. Oh well, we got through it, we were together and it was a beautiful and challenging run.


Needless to say all 3 of us were very tired, thirsy, and hungry. Luckily all of our food was in the car so we had a feast, drank a gallon of water, picked up some beer and headed back to the campsite. We hung out for a bit before putting Rudy in the tent for a much needed nap and heading up to the Miette Hotsprings. These are probably our favorite hotsprings. It's far enough outside of Jasper that alot of people don't bother to go, or don't know that it's there. They have cold tubs and hot tubs. So we alternated between the 2, and it felt like bliss on our sore legs. After the hot springs we showered and headed in to town for some Sushi! It tasted amazing! We didn't get back to the campsite until after 9, and we were both exhausted so we just headed to bed.



Monday was very uneventful, we just packed up the tent, stopped at a cafe in Jasper for probably the most delicious breakfast wrap I've ever had (cafe mondo) and headed home. It was a fantastic weekend.