Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Damn! Cold & Rough Oceanside Pier Water Today












I have to fix my camera's date; these photos were taken today, the 26th, by yours truly.

My saying at the bottom of my posts is applicable today: "The first time you quit is the last time you try."  Well today in the early afternoon, there was not one swingin' di** in the water.  It was cold, colder than the 56-58 reading by surfline.com. I give it a testicle & weenie shrinking 54 degrees.  And rough and angry, just like myself as a teenager.  I could not get out past the surf.  The surf was 3 foot pounding waves one after another without much of an interval between them at all to catch one's breath.
I lasted an embarrassing 6 minutes from the time I was waist high and swimming out until the time I turned around, headed toward the beach, and was able to stand again.
I didn't have any air today, and my mind was weak; well, it's always weak, but today it was weaker than usual.  The current was pulling me to the south-about 100 yards in those 6 minutes.
The ocean doesn't look bad at all in these photos, and indeed in real life watching them from the sand. However, they were bigger and nastier than they appear; you just have to be IN it to appreciate what Mother Nature is throwin' out there.  Nevertheless, I tried, and that counts enough for me today.


"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Oceanside Water Temp Today 54-56 Degrees





The water today was 54-56 degrees but felt on the low side of that range. It made my face hurt for about ten minutes, which is a good indicator for me. It was cold.  About 100 yards before I finished my swim on the south side of the pier the water the water warmed up, which was nice.  My hands were frozen and it was hard to keep my fingers closed.  We had a beautiful, clear sky with a lovely shining sun.  However, the ocean was agitated.  The whole swim was in a two-foot chop.  It wasn't really clean, but ok.  Visibility about 3 feet.  Only ten surfers or so in the area.
My swim was 30 minutes at a very low tide.  Afterward I found several good seashells for the collection.  For a $2.00 parking fee, it was well worth it.  Good pier swim.


"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Pain Builds Character, someone said; I got more character with today's swim.













It's almost embarrassing to say it, but I have not been in the ocean since my last pier swim on February 6th.  Now I have excuses: old age, bad back, and pinched neck nerves where my neck is fused. But as they say, "Excuses are like asshol**; everybody's got one."
Air temp was 62 degrees and the water was 54 degrees, but possibly a skosh colder. My face hurt, my head hurt, as they froze when I was in during my first ten minutes.  I just use a swim suit and a swimmer's cap/goggles, so I relish in the full chilly experience. The swim was 34 minutes around the pier.  The water was nice, small waves, visibility about 4 feet. Sunny skies with scattered clouds overhead.  No sea life encountered.
I am glad that I got my nerve back to do the swim; it's important for me to continue to fight the good fight against age and injury.  Just participating is a victory for me.
A good swim and I feel some increased determination to get in again soon.


"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Feb 20, Wed. Dirty, ROUGH Ocean. No Swim

I drove to the Pier to try a swim but had forgotten that we had that big rain in the middle of the night. The Wednesday weather outside was beautiful, sunny and 58 degrees.
Well, the ocean was wild.  It was extremely nasty and rough. No way that I could swim the pier in that water.  The runoff from the streets had made the water very dirty; it would have made you sick.  Only one surfer in the pier area.  It will take a few days to clean out.


"The first time you quit is the last time you try."

Sunday, February 17, 2013

My Back After Pain Injections


It has been five months since I last had epidural nerve blocks in my back.  It takes forever to get approved and scheduled.  As of this morning the shots in the top right band-aid injection spot didn't do jack for killing pain.  The other 3 spots seem ok.
I haven't seen my back but I don't like the looks of what I see.  Love handles, flabby fat storage, overall unpleasant.  And this is at 230 pounds, lighter than I've been at my peak. I'm 5'10".
I can work on this weight thing, I suppose, but truth tell I really don't give a rat's a**.
So the anesthesiologist starts the needle away from the spine and moves toward the spine; that's why the band-aids seem so far away from the spine.
They do this under a fluoroscope (fancy live x-ray machine) to watch the location of the needles.  Then they shoot some stuff in.  I don't even ask what they shoot in; they could shoot cement in and I'd go with it.
The procedure is to numb the branch nerves in multiple areas. In 1 month I return and they stick a needle in and heat up some tiny nerves to kill them for a while.  They grow back, I hear.
Crap! Crap! Crap!
I may get in the water soon--or not.  The self-pity party is raging within my soul.
I wear jockey shorts, as you see; I endorse them for their snug fit, overall comfort, and durability.  You can purchase them on-line now also.
These band-aids are supposed to be at L 3-4 and L 4-5.  Does anyone have any experience with this? Feedback appreciated.


"The first time you quit is the last time you try."