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  • © All photographs and illustrations are the property of the blog owner of She Knits by the Seashore unless otherwise held.

GYGIG ride & Quilt Blocks

Thank you so much for your anniversary wishes! We had a happy dinner out last Tuesday night, with a visit to the beach. Unfortunately, we left the camera at home.

Chris was unable to blog from the road for the Get Your Guts in Gear ride last weekend, but you can read about his experiences here. Everyone had a fantastic time, despite the horribly hot weather in New York, and the primitive camping conditions. Chris met his rider's fee of $1900 in the week before the ride, so a big thank you again to everyone that supported him and us! The final total raised for the New York ride hasn't been tabulated yet, but I do believe $200,000 was mentioned as a guesstimate. 

The Seattle ride is the first weekend of August, and the Texas ride is the third weekend in October. So if you live near those areas and you or a loved one deal with Crohn's Disease or ulcerative colitis, I hope you'll consider joining as a crew member or rider. It's a lot of fun and the people are terrific.

One of the organizations that benefits from the Get Your Guts in Gear ride is the IBD Quilt Project. They collect squares that honor patients who battle the disease. The squares are assembled into quilts sent all over the world, similar to the AIDS quilts. I wanted to make Chris a square, but because I don't sew, I wasn't sure how to go about it. And then I received an email from Yarnfloozy, asking if she could make a square for Chris and Charlie. I just cannot tell you in words how touched I was for her to ask. I didn't think the IBD Quilt folks would accept a square for a cat, but sure enough, when she asked them, they said yes!! With Dotty's permission, I want to share her photos of the quilt squares with you:

Chris' block












 



Chris' square

Charlie's block













 


Charlie's square

Dotty, thank you so much for your kindness and beautiful squares!! It will be an honor for us to be a part of the finished quilt.

Last week, there was a question for the secret pal swap about our favorite summer drink. Mine must be iced tea, the unsweetened kind, that I usually make from a mix. I love raspberry iced tea too. What is your favorite summer drink?

Knitting on the shrug progresses. Seaming on the cardigan does not. How are your summer projects going, knitting and otherwise??

Get Your Guts in Gear Winners Announced!

Tonight Random.org chose the winners for two last skeins of Charlie's yarn, and the $21 gift certificate to an LYS of the winner's choice. They are:

#12 -- Bridget  -- skein of Charlie's Yarn

#3 --  Nancy -- skein of Charlie's Yarn

#7-- Robin -- $21 gift certificate

Congratulations!!

Chris and I can't thank you all enough for your support, especially in these times of economic hardship. His current total raised is $1668, and with some local donations not yet counted, he should reach the rider's fee of $1900-2000 by June 6, the first day of the ride.

If you didn't win a skein of Charlie's Yarn, but would like to purchase one, please see Yvonne at Lavendersheep. She will accept orders for the next 24 hours or so before she dyes a last batch. I want to post a big thank you to Yvonne for creating the Charlie's Yarn for us and donating a portion of the sales to GYGIG. It was and is amazing to see the idea for a special yarn come to life before my very eyes.  I am looking forward to knitting a Cat's Paw scarf out of my skeins, and will wear it proudly. Yvonne, thank you!!!

The weekend of June 6-8, Chris is going to try to blog those 210 miles and 3 days from his Blackberry, and I'll post the day's ride reports here too. Until then, we thank you again for your donations and encouragement, and hope you have a wonderful weekend!!!

Chris & charlie 002
















The loves of my life, Chris and Charlie, March 2007

Charlie's Yarn -- second prize giveaway

On Sunday, our Random Number generator picked #4, Chris of Stumbling Over Chaos. Congratulations! The yarn will be on its way to you in the next day or two.

I notified Chris over the weekend, but I apologize for the delay with this post. Husband Chris has been working very late hours the last week or two, and has the access to the online donor list that we use for the drawings. He was away more than home this weekend. Our final prizes, two more skeins of Charlie's yarn, plus a gift certificate for $21 to a yarn shop of the winner's choice, will be given out on Memorial Day weekend. Chris' crazy work hours will be done by then, so I promise we'll post those winners on time.

I'm still knitting on Caroline, and did a bunch of yard and house chores over the weekend, none of it worthy of photographs. The Noni flower was re-felted and looks like it's shrunk from the 12" to 9" -- still maybe too big, but I'll know better once the bag comes back and I can see the proportions. Thank you again for all your advice!

GYGIG drawing postponed

Just a quick note to tell you that the drawing for the skein of Charlie's Yarn will be postponed until sometime tomorrow! Have a great weekend, whatever your plans.

Charlie's Yarn -- first prize giveaway

The random number generator chose number 6, Karen from Mostly Self Taught Knitter, as our first winner of a skein of Charlie's Yarn. Congratulations, and thank you again for your donation to Get Your Guts in Gear!!

Our current total as of this Tuesday is $205. Chris has sent out letters to family, co-workers, and non-blog friends, but I wanted to point out that they are not eligible for our prize drawing -- only our knitting blog friends. Our next drawing for a skein of the Charlie's yarn will be the last weekend in April.  Our final drawing of two skeins of the yarn, plus a gift certificate for $21 to the winner's choice of yarn shops, for three lucky winners will be on Memorial Day weekend. If you would like to participate, please click on the GYGIG button in the left column for more details or to make a donation.

Tim "Where is Yvonne's address on this thing? Must ask her how come she didn't make any Timmy yarn?!"

If you would like to purchase some Charlie's yarn, please visit Yvonne at Lavender Sheep. She is donating 50% of the purchase of the yarn to GYGIG as well. I bought two skeins, and am planning a Cat's Paw scarf from some patterns I found on Ravelry. There are two different patterns here and here; I'm trying to decide which one to use, and then I can get right to it.

Sock knitters might be interested in the cat's paw socks, (designed in memory of another kitty) or the cat face socks, also free on Ravelry. I believe the gauge needs to be adjusted on one or two of these patterns as they call for a heavier weight, but a switch in needle size should make them just fine for the Charlie's Yarn.

So what are your plans for the weekend? Chris has another race tomorrow morning, and then I hope to get a little shopping and a lot of knitting done this weekend. The Noni bag is almost completed and ready for felting. It will be so nice to finally have that off the needles. And then there are the Anne Perry novels that have me in their grip. I'm not going to get much sleep until Thomas Pitt takes Sir Charles Voisey down for good. Two books down, two to go. I'm off to Seven Dials now...

Getting Our Guts in Gear, Again

Last year, Chris, blog photographer, husband, and bike racer, participated in Get Your Guts in Gear, a 210 miles/3 days bicycle ride to raise awareness and funds for patients with Crohn's Disease and Colitis. Charlie, our cat, who also had IBD, was our Spokescat. He knew firsthand about the discomfort, tests, and treatments of the disease along with his Person. They were the same, for both human and cat.

Chris_charlie_002a

Charlie passed away from IBD-related lymphoma last fall. (Let me stress that this can happen in cats, but not in people, though humans with IBD may be more susceptible to colon cancer). It is now time for GYGIG 2.0, and the ride is even more personal to us. Though GYGIG raises awareness and funds for research and treatment for humans, and hopefully one day a cure, what doctors learn helps veterinarians too.

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To honor Charlie, and help raise funds for Chris' ride, I asked for the help of a talented knitter, dyer, and fellow Crohn's patient -- Yvonne of Lavender Sheep. She took out her dye pots, worked some magic, and created Charlie's yarn, a limited edition sockweight yarn.

Charlies_yarn_005

Tim: "Do you think it looks like him?" Rosie: "I think it looks like meeeeee!"

Here is a closeup of the yarn, but my photo is more brown than in real life:

Charlies_yarn_006

For every donation to GYGIG we receive between now and Memorial Day (May 26), we'll enter donors into a prize drawing for some of Charlie's yarn. We'll give away one skein of yarn each during the last weekends of March and April. On Memorial Day, I'll choose three winners and give away two skeins of yarn and a gift certificate to a yarn shop for $21.

If you would like to purchase Charlie's yarn as well (and see a more accurate photo of the colors), please visit Yvonne at Lavender Sheep. She'll be donating 50% of the sale of each skein to GYGIG as well. The yarn is 100 grams, 460 yards, for size US 1-3 needles, just right for socks. Two to three skeins will make a scarf, which is what I plan to do.

If you would like to read about last year's 210 mile, 3 day ride, please click here, here, and here. You can use the button at the top left column to read Chris' story on the donation page. Thank you in advance for your support.

Charlies_yarn_007 Rosie with one of my skeins

"I still think it looks like me..."

Chalking, Tandem Riding, and Graduation

Day 3

Gygig_097 Coasting before the final hills

Julia's first call of the day sends us to the beginning of a rail trail in Albany; a backwards sign has sent a few riders under the highway bridge and left them in utter confusion. We hurriedly re-do the arrow so it faces the correct direction, add an orange "Wrong Way Turn Around" sign on the opposite street for good measure, and press forward to Saratoga Springs, the last town of the ride. What's unique about Saratoga Springs is that it's the only town on the route that won't allow temporary signage on the telephone poles. We're limited to chalk arrows in the roads, and though the route marker has already been through, the chalk seems to wear away quickly as the cars pass over it. We need to make sure it's still visible.

Gygig_050 Julia, sign in hand, and me, squinting at the camera at 6 am

On our way, we pass for me what is The Story that is representative of the spirit of this ride. I can't tell it in person without getting choked up and becoming, as Chris calls me, "a leaky dame." We pass a tandem bike with a woman riding in front, sweating buckets as she pushes up one of the steepest hills of the ride, and a young boy (10? 12?), pushing equally hard behind her. I yell softly out the car window, "You're almost there! Keep going!" and she lifts up her head and smiles at us. So does the boy. I am told later that day that at one point she thought she wouldn't make it, and said to him, "I need you to give me everything you've got!" He pedaled that little bit harder, and finally, they were up the hill, and even finished the ride with the early group of riders.

Gygig_125 Best Friends, riding the victory lap

Here is their story, as I understand it: this boy, and another one at camp his age, are the best of friends. This boy has had Crohn's disease since he was very young, and struggles with being well and keeping up with the other kids his age. One side effect from prednisone is early onset osteoporosis, though because he is young, his bones should recover. He also had some liver problems from one of his medications. His best friend's mom, who is the front rider of the tandem, is a triathlete. She heard about the GYGIG ride and talked to the boy and his mom about it, and offered to ride with him [The boys take turns riding in back, and switch off at lunch time]. "I thought she was out of her mind!," the boy's mom told me at the lunch stop earlier that day where she was crewing, smiling happily at the memory. But the friend's mom persisted, and the boys trained about 500 miles together, between their own bikes, the stationary trainer, and the tandem bike. Their school got behind them and helped with donations and an awareness program, and students were sent orange rubber bracelets from the ride director. Seeing this woman furiously pedal someone else's child up a hill, to give him hope and encouragement, is the absolute most awesome selfless thing I have ever seen. There are just no words.

Gygig_105 The Mighty Seven (J and Chris missed the jersey memo)

Julia and I arrive at Skidmore College for the closing ceremonies. Riders trickle in, the clapping and yelling louder as each one comes down the path. We are all in "holding," an area set aside for riders and crew to visit with each other one last time before we join the real world, and families on the other side of the building. When E, the very last rider comes through, applause is thunderous.

Gygig_110 Our friends F and C, collapsing in the holding area

We are all given white "I Got Guts" victory T-shirts. Riders line up with their bikes for the final procession. Crew gather on both sides of the path, and, with the two boys on the tandem leading, the riders come around the building to waiting families and friends. At the tail end are our injured, but just as victorious, riders, walking their bikes. Speeches are given by leaders of some of the beneficiary organizations, who use the funds raised by the riders to reach out to other patients that need help. Each of these leaders shares their own battle with Crohn's Disease or Colitis, and their future plans for their organizations. One displays the most recent IBD Quilt -- patients and loved ones make squares, and the quilts travel the world and are displayed to raise awareness of the diseases. She encourages the riders and her families to make their own squares to be added.

Gygig_124_2 Lining up for...

Gygig_126...the victory lap

Gygig_132 Judy Pacitti, Ride Director and Leader Extraordinaire

Img_0981 One of the IBD Quilts

Finally, the speeches are over, the barbecue begins...and so does the rainstorm. After a dry weekend (other than an overnight shower at the first camp), everyone scrambles to give hasty hugs and exchange emails and phone numbers, then rushes their bikes to their cars or traveling cases before they get soaked. It is my last drive of the day, this time to personally escort my own tired yet exuberant rider home. Even though my dinner was McDonald's, I can't think of a better way to have spent our anniversary.

Gygig_133 Twelve years to the day, and I couldn't be more proud of him! :)

Chris, Charlie [so many riders who saw our SpokesCat badges were amazed to discover pets have IBD too!] and I want to say a big Thank You once again to everyone who supported us with a word of encouragement and/or a donation for this ride. We would not have been able to participate without your help. I hope from the stories I've shared with you that you have a new awareness of people with IBD, the obstacles they are overcoming, and the difference you have helped to make on the road to a cure. We are most grateful for each of you.

Coydogs, Quarter-Showers, and Schmores

Day 2

Gygig_008 A rider crosses the Newburgh-Beacon bridge

Julia and I are up early, and leave breakfast before the first riders arrive. (I make do with fruit and cereal, and have to get out of there before the eggs start cooking!). But we are not out for long before C, a 70ish year old man and winner of the Great Comebacks award, catches up with us on the road. I am in awe as I watch him climb up a steep hill. He has been living with an ostomy for over 20 years, and is in better shape than everyone I know, save the racers at Chris' races who are not even half his age. And did I mention that he also runs marathons?

Gygig_024 Riders at a rest stop (C not pictured, of course)

Riders are supposed to check in at each stop, so we know if they run into mechanical issues or get lost. When we don't hear from C for a bit, Julia calls his wife, who is woman-ing a support van. She cheerfully tells us he "didn't need" to stop at rest stops 1&2, but has called in to her and will arrive at lunch shortly.

Img_0952 Madge

Speaking of lunch, the crew has outdone themselves with their 50s lunch room theme. Gary has become "Madge," complete with pointy cat eye glasses, hair net, and support hose. The other rest stops and support vans also have themes that elicit smiles from the tired riders, like a Hawaiian Luau and a biker bar.

After lunch, more portable facility issues for Julia -- the company has neglected to retrieve them from a rail trail site/rest stop where opening ceremonies for the trail are to occur the next day. She is playing phone tag when this fox-like creature appears along the roadside, pointy ears and a long ratty tail. We look at him, NYC native and Suburban Girl, wondering what he is and if he poses any danger to our riders. Is he rabid? Will he attack anyone on a bike? She calls the local police, and we are told it is probably a coy-dog, a cross between a coyote and a wild dog. (No it's not -- when looking for a photo for this, I've discovered it's probably a jackal).He's probably harmless, but they'll send out a cruiser. We call all the support vans to warn them to be on the lookout for this thing just in case.

In addition to the deer and the coydog, we've encountered a zillion squirrels and rabbits, a turtle or two, and groundhogs. It's a regular Wild Kingdom out here. Unfortunately that also means a lot of roadkill that the riders must navigate.

Gygig_036 The gear truck

Julia and I arrive mid-afternoon at camp #2, this one a more lively setting with RVs parked everywhere, and lots of kids swimming in a (green) lake. As we round the turn, one of our riders is standing outside the shower "shed", shivering in a towel. I pull up and she informs us that she has put her quarter in but no water is coming out. (Quarter? I will have to PAY for a TIMED shower???!!!). We circle back to the opening of the camp and Julia talks to the woman at the front counter. We drive back, and as our rider is now getting into the back seat of my car to be driven to the other showers across camp, a cranky woman yells out of the door that she's got the water running and our rider should hurry before she runs out of time. She does hurry back to the shower. That finishes off this camp for me. It seems inhuman that after people ride nearly 80 miles up steep hills in the sun that all they can look forward to is a COLD, timed shower (we supply the quarters, apparently, but STILL). Later, the same rider slips me the phone number of the local Best Western where she and her co-workers are staying that night. I give Chris the "I've been getting up at 3:30am for two days in a row, with no decent tea to speak of, and it's my anniversary weekend and you are not making me take cold timed showers and sleeping in a tent on wet ground" look. A smart man, or rather a worn-out one after his own 80 miles, he gets in the car and I drive us off to register at the only other hotel in the area with available rooms I can find, the Red Carpet Inn. It's no luxury hotel, but the alternative is too brutal to contemplate.

Gygig_001 We rough it...

Gygig_040 Chow time!

We circle back to the camp for dinner and conversation, and then Judy our ride director sends me on a grocery store run for fruit, soda, and the graham cracker/marshmallow/chocolate combo that we know as smores. Someone has built a bonfire and people gather round, a little sad that tomorrow is already the last day of the ride. They are excited to see the treats, one or two risking the chocolate (many IBD patients are lactose-intolerant). Tom, a tall Belgian rider ("I come from Belgium, the land of Eddy Merckx and Tom Boonen!") is instructed by a friend how to toast the marshmallow properly over the fire. "I am going to be a schmore expert!" he declares. We all crack up laughing, enjoying the easy company. 

Gygig_045 Schmores

There is an instant bond as people share their stories of medications, surgeries, and side effects because of Crohn's Disease and Ulcerative Colitis. But it's a sharing with triumph rather than self-pity.  Some of the riders were diagnosed at 2 or 10 years old, others in their 30s and 40s. They have suffered constant abdominal soreness, and some had to learn to enjoy food again, post-surgery, after years of eating=pain. School was a problem, and one couldn't attend college because at that age he was in and out of the bathroom all the time. If you saw these people today, as I did, pedaling their bikes up monster hills and then sailing triumphantly down the other side, you would never guess in a million years what they've been through. Chris was in and out of the hospital in 2003 with lots of pain, and had one surgery that December to remove some extra intestinal scar tissue. With new medication, he's been in remission and has had a relatively normal life since that time. Some patients can only hope to be that healthy, and none of them know when their intestines (if they still have them) are going to flare up again. They savor this time with each other, knowing that everyone at camp understands and accepts them, and the ride is a victory for all.

Gygig_113 Tom the Belgian Schmore Expert, Matt, and Bambi (Jonathan)

Next: Day 3: Chalking, Riding Tandem, and Graduation

It's More than a Ride

Chris and I returned home late Sunday night from our journey up the Hudson River (NY) valley. The tag line for Get Your Guts in Gear couldn't be more true -- it's more than a ride. It really is an adventure!

Img_0907_2

On Thursday night, we gathered at a hotel in NYC for orientation with our friends, all riders, in the photo above.  They were given information about the next day's route, and as a crew member, I was given my assignment: driving Julia, the assistant ride director, along the route to check for signs and obstructions. We would leave ahead of the riders each day and provide warning of potential problems or fix missing signage. In addition, we would run errands and assist riders along the road as needed.

Day 1-- Friday

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Looking remarkably awake at 5 am, Chris and I arrive at the pier. Note SpokesCat badge on Chris (mine is on my nametag, out of picture). Julia and I leave before the opening ceremonies, driving through NYC. Scary stuff for this suburban girl, but thankfully there was little traffic at 6:00 am. The riders will cross the George Washington Bridge and then head through New Jersey for a bit, before coming back to NY. Photo of Chris below, on the bridge.

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Julia and I pick up lunch for the approximately 150 of us, and deliver it to the lunch rest stop. Here is where things get interesting. On the way out, we are flagged down by a rider with a flat tire. We call for the mechanic to come, and wait until he receives assistance. We travel further, and are then flagged down by one of our support vans -- a rider was hit by a deer! Thankfully he is upright, sitting with his brother on the guardrail as we pass by. Later on we find out that after a trip to the hospital, he has no broken bones, but a sore shoulder in a sling, an injured wrist, and a few stitches by his eye. Terrible road rash. He now becomes part of the crew, and is affectionately nicknamed Bambi for the rest of the ride.

As I drive along that afternoon, Julia fields one call after another, mostly regarding missing portable facilities at the night's campsite. We take turns hopping out of the car to add or change out signage put up by the route marker folks so the riders don't get lost. We only occasionally see riders, because we are far ahead. It is a relief when we finally arrive at the camp: I am tired and hot, and worried about Chris and our friends after the deer episode. I help to check in the first few riders as they arrive, and admire the precision with which the camp crew unloads the gear trucks and sets up the tents and the kitchen. Then I sneak a peek at the shed-like ladies' room, complete with cobwebs, and lose my nerve to camp. As soon as Chris arrives, I beg for a hotel room. I find out that some of the riders, many affiliated with a company which manufactures medication for IBD patients, have already made reservations at the local Marriott, and feel slightly less guilty. Especially when Judy the ride director announces at dinner that rain showers and possible hail are expected overnight. The other riders, cheerful after a shower and a hot meal, seem remarkably undisturbed by this development, happy to have the first 70 miles behind them.

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Home Sweet Home (before the storm)

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Bike Parking

Stay tuned for Day 2 -- Coydogs, Quarter-Showers, and Schmores...

Final GYGIG Prize Winners Announced!!

Baby_sweater_gygig_004a

Spokescat Charlie and I are happy to announce the FINAL GYGIG Prize Winners who will receive either a $30 gift certificate to the yarn or bike shop of their choosing or hand-dyed lace yarn from Live2Knit.

<drumroll please>

<random number generator generating . . .>

And our winners are . . .

Rebecca of Archiknist and Julie of Noolie Knits !

CONGRATULATIONS!!!!

We'll be contacting our winners by email shortly so they can get their prizes.

I'm really glad I got to help out Charlie on this, our last prize drawing for our GYGIG fundraiser.  It gives me another opportunity to let you all know how much I appreciate your support of my ride for GYGIG.  All of you, whether you've been able to donate or not, have been so encouraging throughout this whole process.  This is the first fundraiser I've ever participated in and you have all helped make it such a wonderful experience - and I haven't even done the ride yet!

So a VERY BIG THANK YOU!!  You started supporting us right from the beginning way back in February, and are continuing right up to the day I start pedaling from Manhattan to Saratoga Springs - two weeks from this morning(!!). We can't wait to share our photos and stories with you.