Shamrock’n 5K

I volunteered this morning for SABA at the Bike Valet for the annual Shamrock’n 5K. The half-marathon is tomorrow. The start/finish was at Raley Field.DSC00447
7:30 am start time, cold and windy, and I didn’t dress warmly enough.DSC00452
We only parked 12 bikes.DSC00455
The start:DSC00449
15 minutes later, the first runner turned the final corner for the finish line. At this point I was thinking I wouldn’t be cold that much longer, but it took the slowest in the field well over an hour to complete the 5K. DSC00456Then there was a half hour break before the kid’s race around the block began.DSC00459
After helping to dismantle the bike parking apparatus, I got in my car and turned on the heated seat! Ahhhh.

St Ignatius Talent Show

Holly, Thais and Carson, Leah, and Rita (talking with a friend).
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Leo’s (Holly’s son) Kindergarten class sang about taking a bath.DSC00410.jpgDSC00415.jpg
Sophia’s class sang about bugs – yes, God loves bugs too, no matter how annoying they might be sometimes.DSC00420.jpgDSC00429.jpg
Lauren (Leah’s daughter, at far left) and friends performed a dance.DSC00438.jpg
At the end of the 2-hour performance, awards were given for Pi Day – the student at each grade level who memorized the longest string of numbers for pi 3.14— A second grader memorized 107 digits after the decimal point. The school winner was a fourth grader with 114 digits. What! Each grade level winner got a pie, of course!
Meanwhile, at home, Carter kept watch – the pink gun made him feel fierce.DSC00444.jpgDSC00445.jpg

Neighborhood bike rides

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I was hired by 50 Corridor TMA, along with a few other LCIs, to lead small groups of students on bike rides in their Folsom neighborhood as a culmination to 10 hours of bicycle-driving instruction.
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In this program, students provided their own bicycles.
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Three days of work, but mostly fun. Great kids. You could see skills and confidence grow daily.
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Goodbye Honda Civic

And hello Subaru Outback! I had a feeling everything would work out on the test drive when the salesperson, Rion Spears, asked me if I knew where Orchard School was in Rio Linda, and then if I knew principal Paula Roach. Rion taught school at Orchard for a few years, but he kept getting laid off in the spring and rehired at the last minute in August. So he became a car salesperson.DSC00334
When I gave him the name of a friend for the application, he whipped out his phone to show me a name in his contacts – his mother’s name is Phyllis Thompson. Working with car salesmen has not been a good experience for me in the past, but Rion was excellent to work with. And so was the rest of the Maita sales team.

I have to give Justin a big thank-you for helping me. He is definitely Ed’s grandson. After our first visit, as soon as he got home, he downloaded a car-buying app, consulted a few other online resources, and started filling out post-it notes with information. He compared invoices with actual selling prices from surrounding dealerships to figure out what the average discount was.
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I went in the second time by myself but with a definite range and clear instructions to walk out if my max price could not be met. And that’s what I had to do. About a half-hour later, I got a phone call from the sales manager,
“Can you pay just $100 more than your max offer?”
I don’t know. I’ll have to call my son and get permission.
“But at $100 less, you don’t need to get permission?”
No.
“Alright then, you can have it for your price.” Fist pump and a big smile!