NOV-A-2

 

NOVEMBER 1 EVENTS BEGIN WITH THE

“WURST FIVE MILE RUN” IN NEW BRUNSFEL TEXAS

 AT THE OUTSET OF THE WURST FESTIVAL,

AND PROCEEDS TO THE TEXAS AIR SHOW

AT RANDOLPH AIR FORCE BASE BEFORE A QUIET TIME IN PLAYING WITH TWO LITTLE MEN NAMED GEELHOED

 

November 1, 2003

 

            It was a big day for little boys, and also for their parents of whichever generation!

 

            Michael and I left to go to one of Texas’ many small towns of German extraction.  The statue in the middle of Landa Park in New Brunfels shows German immigrants coming in at 1854 as pioneers—just around civil war era—and settling the area. They especially like the New Brunfels area since it had two rivers, both spring fed from the underground limestone that has the aquifers as well as the limestone caves nearby.  The spring fed water that comes up clear from runoff somewhere originating in the Hill Country with which I first became acquainted when Michael and Judy and Max—then a puppy—and I climbed up and around the hills on a very hot day.  New Brunfels has protected this bubbling spring of clear water that gives rise to the shortest river in Texas—the Comal—which flows only four miles before emptying into the Guadeloupe.  These two rivers make for a cool clean oasis in the middle of the area, and Landa Park is an ideal spot, with a little narrow gauge railroad that runs around it for kids and park benches where Michael would take his lunch when the single PT at the New Brunfels Health South facility had broken her ankle, and Michael would come up every other day to treat patients.  I liked what I saw of this park and its environs today—some of it on the run as I passed through it quickly.

 

THE NEW BRUNFELS RUNNING CLUB’S

“WURST FIVE MILE RACE”

AN OPENING SALVO IN THE “WURST FESTIVAL”

 

            Michael and Judy had run this five mile race before—although they got here once to find that it had already been run since it was the day that the “fall back” time change had occurred and the newspaper notice as to the starting time was wrong.  This time we had a limited time to get our packet pickup in registering for the race, and we barely had time to get parked, fill out the release and to join the queue when the horn sounded.  Michael and I had talked about the size of the race and his objectives which were to clear 40 minutes.  He had done it once under ideal circumstances in 36 minutes, but the last time was something like 42 minutes.  I said I was not at all sure that I would be able to run at all, since the little micro tears and injuries of a hard fought marathon behind and ahead—all within a week on either side—meant that I would have to concentrate on damage limitation.  If this were my only race this month, I would try to get out to the 36 minute point myself, but the last time I ran a “shorter” race after a “longer” one was the Boston Marathon after the Bull Run Run the same week, and I hurt starting up and only later did I get going in the course of the race.  So, I said to Michael, just cut loose and go if you are feeling good, and I will follow along at what ever rate I can to not do serious damage.

 

            We started out in heavy traffic taking about a mile to really get free of being boxed in—that was probably good, since I did not open up right away.  Still, our first mile mark was at 7:20 minutes and the next one was fifteen minutes.  I had slipped behind Michael after the opening and kept him in sight until mile three when I hear 23:40, and I thought “This is going too fast for me,” and I dropped off the pace by about a minute.  There were several small slopes and a couple of straight-aways and in them I felt a superficial burning in my quads.  It also began to get hot with the early cloud cover being burned off.  I settled back until the four mile point and then I decided I would make up for some of the time.  I ran over the bridges and up the hill beyond the Comal River and kicked in to see Michael at the finish line and shot a picture of him and gave him a high five in passing to the chutes.  I had the tag torn off the bib and then went to the favorite part of the race—two kegs dispensing an unlimited supply of draft beer, and just beyond that, a young girl passing out brats.

 

            “Lose the calories and not the taste” must be the theme of the brat makers, since they are good big brats wrapped in a very thin taco, so it is probably not on the American Heart Associations’ recommended list.  So, if the unlimited brats and beer are not enough, all the products of the Bakeries are put out, including the fancy “Tres Leches” desserts and muffins and cakes.  We sat near an Ompah Band that was largely ignored while the people congregated around the beer kegs.  A few people still wore Halloween costumes, including one man in a very wet pin-striped suit carrying a briefcase.  I saw the river and was drawn to it where anhinga dived for fish in the clear water, and I spotted beautiful wood duck drakes gathering with the Muskovy ducks and other waterfowl to try to get handouts from the leftovers of the abundant bakery supplies.

 

            Michael went to check the results of the race, and found that they were posted without his name but with mine up there.  Michael had a good run and came in at just over 36 minutes and I had come in at just over 41—which put him at sixth in his age group and put me fifth in mine on the postings they had hung next to the beer kegs.

 

            We stopped at a rest area to change into a dry set of clothes and drove to the all day free air show along with 110,000 other spectators to get filtered through a security screen (No backpacks or ice chests, for example, and the same wands used at airports) and loaded on a bus.  The bus took us out to the tarmac runways of the sprawling Randolph Air Base, where there were huge aircraft standing in an array they called their “static display” and beyond it, vintage aircraft and overhead the high performance aircraft doing aerobatics.

 

THE RANDOLPH AIR BASE AIR SHOW

 

            This is the air force’s chance to do PR in a big way, for the taxpayers in a state that depends heavily on the air force payroll.  I counted up five air bases around San Antonio and one of them was downsized recently with a hue and cry from the population dependent on these bases for incomes and taxes and votes.  Judy and her grandmother and the twins had come in the van and they had not only taken the bus over, but also had a special golf cart which brought Judy’s grandmother to the shade under the wing of a vintage world war II warplane, in the row that included the B-29 and B-17 and a number of others restored as commemorative air force. 

 

            The twins took off and toddled along the tarmac dwarfed under the wings of a NATO AWACS plane and the huge C-5A and the C-17 Globemaster heavy lifters.  There were Lockheed airlifters and the tankers of the Randolph air base.  Beyond that were the attack aircraft and fighters like the F-14 Tomcat of the navy and its tail hook for carrier operations and arrest.  There were all the planes that have made a lot of sorties in recent combat, and an aerial display of the maneuverability of the F-111 Stealth fighter bombers and then the aerial hijinks of the F-16’s with their swooping rolls and tight turns.  Most impressive were a couple of biplanes owned by the air force that turned on their air show smoke to do spiral rolls, vertical stalls and the maple leaf falls out of stalls to swoop into Kimmel Rolls and to thrill the spectators with straight down plunges pulling out under enormous stresses and many G’s. 

 

            Jordan had a name for some of them—he called them “the loud plane” and there were no shortage of these.  The high performance jets would be over us and gone before their sound track would follow them like a speedboat’s wake.  The engine noise alone could be used as a weapon of intimidation, and with all the hijinks going on, there was little doubt as to their capability and reliability. 

 

            As the twins sat in the shade of the vintage warbird’s wing, I took their picture as the C-17 Globemaster—a bumble bee kind of plane, far too big to ever take off, did just that and made tight turns and maneuvers as if mimicking the high performance fighters.  There were two later performances which would come after the kids were worn out, so we might miss them—we got half of one of them, the Tora Tora Tora show.   Here high performance planes with Japanese Zero markings make lots of swooping orchestrated turns over a firewall they emerge from in a reenactment of the bombing of Pearl Harbor—hardly a great triumph of US aerial warfare.  The Zero I know well was one I had dived on in the Truk Lagoon, and I could virtually pick it up, with about the weight and capacity of a riding lawn mower, but these were much bigger and more competent aircraft that had the same markings but were considerably higher tech than the Zero.  I got a few photos of them in the air, in the smoke that they made from all their orchestrated bomb-like equivalents.  We did not stay for the highlight of the show, which, as always, is the precision flying of the Blue Angels flight team.

 

            We did not see the whole show, nor did the added feature of the one Air Show I had witnessed at Dulles airport occur in which a Thunderbird had malfunctioned and the pilot ejected-and floated in his parachute through the fireball of his own aircraft as it was crashing.  The next feature on the same program was the Formula One racers around pylons on the ground, and two clipped wings with a second fatality in the same program.  But, I saw on the news tonight that the Japanese had an air show today as well with a disaster, since a large air transport clipped the tower and burst on the ground within close range of the spectators.  There must be a point beyond the loosening of further taxpayers’ pursestrings in the eyewitnessing of all these high price toys on display.  I thought to my recent leaving from Bagdogra Airport and the Mig-23 fighters that were lading with a drag chute and tailhook on that airbase and how sensitive the military police were at that site lest I see anything I might photograph as an intelligence maneuver.  Well, here, on display, along with all our own vintage fighter aircraft is yonder same Mig-23 aircraft—maybe I could send them a picture or two of this intelligence!

 

AND, NOW, FOR THE BIG NEWS OF THE DAY:

MICHIGAN 27: MICHIGAN STATE 20

 

            Smell the roses!

Return to November Index

Return to Journal Index