Recent Blog Posts

Step Ashore and Race for Team Oceana

The 2009 Nautica Malibu Triathlon is just one month away and Oceana still has available spots for our race team for the Olympic distance race (1.5K swim, 40K bike, 10K run) on September 12 and the Classic distance race (.5mi swim, 18mi bike, 4mi run) on September 13.

OCYC Commodore Kristen Berry was the first OCYC member to race for Team Oceana last month in New York, but you can join his distinguished company by signing up to race for Oceana before Monday, August 17. »

I'll be racing this year, but last year I attended as a spectator and was excited to see all the celebs that did the Pacific swim, the Pacific Coast Highway bike ride and the run down the pavement and blacktop along Zuma Beach. Jennifer Lopez, Matthew McConaughey, William H. Macy, Felicity Huffman and Cindy Crawford were just some of the famous faces to grace the beach in 2008 and I know many will be there in 2009 too.

Oceana, OCYC Commodore Shine at Nautica NYC Triathlon

Swim. Bike. Run. Those were the only three actions on the minds of thousands of participants in Sunday’s Nautica New York City Triathlon. Thanks to a generous invitation from Nautica - an Oceana corporate sponsor – Kevin Connor and I arrived in the Big Apple on Thursday for three days of information sharing with these tremendous athletes (and their entourages!)

Regardless of whether we met someone from Western Australia or the Upper West Side, there was a definite connection between the triathletes and the well being of our blue planet. Scuba divers, recreational fisherman and surfers were among the crowd, and they all enjoyed relating their experiences from the Hudson River to Lake Placid to Kailua Bay. With the help of an energetic and passionate volunteer corps, we generated hundreds of new Wavemakers for Oceana’s eNewsletter and spread the word about protecting the oceans to hundreds more.

A Golden Endeavor

Bojangles departing from Choshi Marina in Japan. (Credit: Hirose Ichiro via http://www.goldengateendeavour.com/)

I’m sure that many of you have visited or crossed the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, CA at some point in your life. Maybe even sailed near it. But imagine rowing to it. From Japan. But that is what Chris Martin and Mick Dawson are attempting to do in their Golden Gate Endeavour: be the first to row across the North Pacific Ocean without assistance. The two incredibly experienced rowers set off on May 8 and are currently 70 days and just over 2300 miles into the trip.

Chris and Mick departed from Choshi in Japan with everything necessary for the journey, including all food and supplies, a water desalinator, and solar panels to power the communication and video systems. They also specifically designed and constructed their boat, christened “Bojangles,” for this trip. Twenty-three feet long and six feet wide, it is the most advanced ocean rowing vessel ever built. Which is a good thing, considering what they are facing.

Training Update - Thick as a brick

Training update!

Today I did my second brick workout.  According to the training website this should have occurred about week 16 of training.  Let's just for the sake of conversation say that I have not been training for 16 weeks.  Anyway - did it.  Loved it.  Felt pretty good.

Today was a ride/run brick. 

Oh yeah, Wait... "What the heck is a brick?" 

Well besides what I feel like, it is a workout that consists of doing two of the three disciplines back to back in the same workout.  So today I rode (1 hour about 18 miles) and then ran 40 minutes (don't ask... it wasn't fast).

I get by with a little help from my friends

Hey there!  Happy Summer.  I hope this note finds you tan, happy and well.  Have you been boating much?  I hope so.

I have been a bad commodore lately.  Not enough blogging and too much working.  Well I have found a good reason to switch that up for a bit - and with luck forever.

On July 26th I am competing, for Oceana and the OCYC, in the New York City Triathlon.   Never one to let an opportunity slide by, I am raising some funds for ocean conservation via this event. 

Oceana has helped me to set up a really slick website so that kind, giving, ocean loving folks like you can make a tax deductible charitable donation to the cause.  The funds I raise go directly to help protect species, improve fish stocks, reduce pollution, and fight bad guys.

Here is the link to my Oceana Fundraising Page. 

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