Blue Lake Tri -- 1st race of the season.

10:04 AM Remy Maguire - Manifest the Best 0 Comments

What a team! Angela looks just a smidge nervous. Julie looks thrilled and I'm trying to figure out how I feel. Looks like the start to a great race day.
I didn't get a chance to scope out the swim course before race morning. I have a tendency to get lost despite all the signs, arrows, pointing people and fairly obvious mapping. My mind gets all caught up in moving fast that I can sometimes run off in funny directions. Luckily the swim course is marked by gigantic red floating bouys.
One of my smoother transitions. I hear Andrew's voice in my head, "Slow, steady, calm."
You can make or break a race taking off your wet suit and getting ready to ride. I've found that the best way to get my shoes on without freaking out or falling over is to just sit my butt down on the ground. 
The 5k run started wobbly as usual. A pain in my tummy held my attention for the first mile or so. Digging in to my bag of mental tricks I asked myself, "What hurts right now? Is it your legs? No? Then shut up and keep running." Next time I checked in with my body the cramps were gone. 

All smiles now! Wanna do it again, ladies? 

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Thursday Thoughts Ed. 78 - Summer in the city.

9:00 PM Remy Maguire - Manifest the Best 0 Comments

Look for these fresh fruits and veggies at your local grocery or famers market. As the seasons shift our bodies eating habits do to. We no longer crave the thick warm stew we loved all fall.  Now it's time for crisp salads and light, flavorful meals. My usual eggs and ham breakfast makes way for cups of fruit and sweet smoothies. Dinners are often perfectly grilled meats and fish on a bed of crispy veggies or summer salads. Read on about what's in now and what to do with it. I'd love to hear your favorite summer recipes. If you have a garden - what are you growing?? 

Apricots come into season towards the end of spring in the warmer areas where they grow.
Artichokes have a second crop in the fall, but the main harvest takes place in the spring when the largest thistles are available. Look for artichokes with tight, compact leaves and fresh-cut stem ends.
Arugula (a.k.a. rocket) is a cool-weather crop. Long days and warm weather make it bolt, or flower, and bring an unpleasantly bitter flavor to the leaves. Wild arugula is foraged in spring and again the fall. Cultivated arugula is grown year-round, thanks to coastal, temperate growing areas and winter greenhouses.
Asparagus is harvested from March through June, depending on your region. Note that thickness in no way indicates tenderness, which is related to how the plant is grown and how soon it is eaten after harvest rather than spear size.
Beets are in season in temperate climates fall through spring, and available from storage most of the year everywhere else. Fresh beets are often sold with their greens still attached.
Cardoons (how fun is that to say!?) taste a lot like artichokes; look for firm, heavy-feeling specimens.
Carrots are harvested year-round in temperate areas. True baby carrots - not the milled down versions of regular carrots sold as "baby carrots" at grocery stores, but the immature carrots farmers pull from fields to thin the rows - are available in spring and early summer.
Chard and other greens grow year-round in temperate areas, is best harvested in late summer or early fall in colder areas, and fall through spring in warmer regions. Like all cooking greens, chard turns bitter when the weather gets too hot.
Cherries are ready to harvest at the end of spring in warmer areas. Sweet cherries, including the popular Bing and Rainier varieties, are available from May to August. Sour cherries have a much shorter season, and can be found for a week or two, usually during the middle of June in warmer areas and as late as July and August in colder regions.
Fava beans are a Mediterranean favorite available in the U.S. from early spring through summer. These are one of my absolute faves! (I'll eat them raw - crazy, I know!)
Fennel has a natural season from fall through early spring in the warm-to-temperate climates where it grows prolifically.
Fiddleheads are available in early spring through early summer depending on the region; these young wild ferns are foraged. These remind me of childhood. It was so exciting to find the tiny, curly, plant out playing in the woods -- like a secret fairy treat. 
Garlic scapes/green garlic are both available in spring and early summer. Green garlic is immature garlic and looks like a slightly overgrown scallion. Garlic scapes are the curled flower stalks of hardnecked garlic varieties grown in colder climates.
Grapefruit from California, Texas, Florida, and Arizona comes into season in January and stays sweet and juicy into early summer.
Green onions/Scallions are cultivated year-round in temperate climates and come into harvest in the spring in warmer areas.
Greens of all sorts some into season in warmer regions.
Kiwis grow on vines and are harvested winter through spring in warmer and temperate areas. These are another summer fave. I always felt so fancy eating kiwis my mom would slice up on a plate. Beautiful little green suns. 
Kohlrabi is harvested in the fall in cooler areas, and through early spring in more temperate areas.
Kumquats come into season in late winter and are still available in very early spring.
Leeks more than about 1 1/2 inches wide tend to have tough inner cores. The top green leaves should look fresh - avoid leeks with wilted tops. I am obsessed with making leek chips!! Slice in 1/4 inch rounds, spread out on a baking sheet, spray with olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Like onion rings! Yum. Super good on top of grilled fish or steaks. 
Lemons are at their juicy best from winter into early summer.
Lettuce starts coming into season in cooler climates (it grows through the winter in temperate and warmer areas).
Mint starts thriving in the spring. Mojitos! Add some to your water pitcher and make your own spa water. Fresh!
Morels are foraged in the wild in the spring. Look for firm specimens at specialty markets and foragers' stalls at farmers markets. Do like my friend, Debbie and saute with a little olive oil and serve with pasta and fresh grated parm. 
Navel oranges hit the end of their season in the spring.
Nettles are sold at markets by foragers and farmers, but most people get theirs the old-fashioned way: foraging them themselves. If you're lucky they're growing as "weeds" in your garden.
New Potatoes are small, freshly harvested potatoes with paper-thin skins. They are delicious simply boiled and buttered or used in potato salad.
Parsley may seem to be season-less, but this cool-weather herb flourishes in the spring in warm and temperate climes. Make a tabuleh salad to serve with your lava beans! 
Pea greens are sold in big tumbled masses in spring and early summer. Look for bright vines with fresh, vibrant looking leaves. Avoid vines with brown or mushy ends or damaged leaves.
Peas (garden, snap, snow, etc.) come into season in the spring and continue in most areas well into summer.
Radishes are at their sweet, crunchy best in the spring.
Ramps are foraged in the spring and early summer and sometimes available at farmers markets and specialty stores.
Rhubarb is the first fruit of spring in many areas - look for heavy stalks with shiny skin.
Spinach season varies with your climate - year-round in temperate areas, summer and fall in cooler areas, fall through spring in warmers regions.
Spring onions are simply regular onions that farmers pull from the field to thin the rows in spring and early summer.
Strawberries are mostly grown in California or Florida, where the strawberry growing season runs from January through November. Peak season is April through June. Other areas of the country have shorter growing seasons that range from five-months to as short as a few weeks in the coldest areas. Freeze bags full for fresh smoothie makings all year round. 
Sweet Onions have slightly different seasons, but in general they are available in spring and summer.
Turnips have a sharp but bright and sweet flavor. Look for turnips that feel heavy for their size.

Happy Healthy Eating!

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