Motion Notion 2009 - Saturday night



Motion Notion 2009 - Saturday night

Originally uploaded by aendrew


It’s been such a long time since I’ve posted. There is so much to tell!

This was me last Saturday night, enjoying the last flickers of my LED hoop (not a glowstick, as subcaptioned) before the battery completely died. MoNo was a hooping dream. Great music wherever you were, and all sorts of space despite the crowds to rock out with the hoop. MoNo was my one year “hoop-iversary”, so to speak, and I celebrated my hip flexors right off.

If you’re a Canadian hooper, and you read this blog from time to time, I have an exciting surprise in store that WILL make you smile. Trust me. Check back soon!

do something good

As many of you know, I have a parent who is fighting a battle with ALS.  Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease, and those who live with the disease become progressively paralyzed due to degeneration of the upper and lower motor neurons in brain and spinal cord.  Most ALS patients die within 2-5 years of their diagnosis, unable to breathe or swallow.There is currently no cure or effective treatment for ALS. For every person diagnosed with ALS a person with ALS dies. There are currently 2500 to 3500 people estimated to be living with ALS in Canada right now.

Throughout my life, I have been asked to donate to many causes.  Yesterday I was asked to donate to prostate cancer research at my local grocery store, when it hit me that never before in my life have any of these causes hit as close to home as ALS has.   I believe that I have a responsibility to my loved ones to help spread the word about ALS and the need for research funding to develop viable treatments or even moreso, a cure.

The ALS Society of Canada contains a lot of comprehensive information on the disease, as well as a donation page for those who want to help.  If you are living in the US, the ALS Association also contains a great deal of valuable educational material, as well as a donation page.    I know there are so many causes out there, and they are all incredibly important in their own way, but this is something that means a lot to me.

first camping trip of the season

IMG_8064

Originally uploaded by snowzilla


Don’t be fooled by the sunshine. Other than one day of sun, there was rain, a touch of snow, and it was pretty cold most of the time. Thank goodness for RVs and campfires!

hoop love, eh?

Ever since I picked up a hoop, I’ve learned again and again how important it is in the hoop culture to “share the hoop love”.  It’s all catch-phrasy and stuff.  I think I’ve done my part - sharing hooping with people I worked with, sharing it with family, having a hooping birthday for my daughter, making eleventy billion new hoops and pretending I’m going to give them to people even though I’m secretly coveting them for myself.  Oops.  Ignore that last part.

But I have discovered that there are no limits to the kind of hoop love you can share with the world!   When the power went out last night at a crowded house party, and lasted for more than an hour, my LED hoop became enlisted as the bathroom light for those who could not wait for the lights to come back on, if you know what I mean.   The blue-green glow of the LED lights were like a beacon of hope in an otherwise very dark party.   Now, I should have been filled with joy at the opportunity to use my love of hooping to help others, but instead all I could think of was those statistics you read about how many people wash their hands when they use the bathroom and folks - I DO NOT LIKE THOSE ODDS.

I learned two things last night.  One, parties during blackouts are a blast.  Excellent socialization by candlelight!  Two, you never know when you are going to find yourself wishing that you carried a bottle of disinfectant spray in your purse, so that you can spray down your hula hoop before you take it home.

parenting under less than desirable circumstances

Being the coolest mom in the universe is hard work.  I’m not afraid to get down on the floor and play Super Princess Puppy Fun Time, or to pick pieces of play-dough out of every corner of the dining room after a two hour session of the Fuzzy Barber Shop Diaries.

But I don’t do worms.  No!  No worms. Somebody, who shall remain nameless and maybe even still married, thought that teaching our youngest this weekend that digging in the backyard for worms would be TOTALLY AWESOME. She talks to them, she pets them, she gives them names, and she gives them BATHS.  Because nobody likes a dirty worm, y’all.

worms

yay!

I hope your weekend was as good as mine.  First hoop jam of the year, and the weather was even better than I expected - and the turnout was fantastic.

still making hoops (canadian style 2.0)

A few months ago I wrote a post about my adventures in trying to find the correct ingredients for assembling a hoop, with the catch being that I live in Canada.  Sure, we have free health care, but our access to commonly used hoop-making items SUCKS.   Along the way, I know I’m not the only one who has had to improvise and experiment to find other materials or clever ways to obtain those materials to make my own hoops.  The original post is here, but I wanted to add a couple of tidbits of info, so I figured a new post would be the way to do that.

First of all, as suggested by another hooper back in the original post, superpex, or pex (the terms seem to be used interchangeably) is another great material and it seems to be readily available at your local hardware stores - Home Depot, Rona, and even Canadian Tire.  So that’s a huge bonus.  Pex is the stuff that is white on the outside and black on the inside.  It’s also very rigid in comparison to the black pvc tubing that most hoopers are used to, which has its perks and its downsides.  The biggest downside that took me a while to adjust to is the unforgiving nature of it.  If you whack yourself - well, it hurts.  The ouch factor definitely increases.  And when you’re a klutz like me (see previous post) that means a few more bruises and bumps.  On the other hand, it’s incredibly responsive.  The lack of flop factor makes it great for quick breaks and current changes.

The problem with pex is that there isn’t a connector that is readily available to fit inside the tubing.  You won’t be doing the old style heat and insert method with a pvc connector.  We finally worked out a way to assemble the pex hoops that seems to withstand heavy hooping - I’ve been using this one particular hoop for about six months now and it is showing no signs of wear or warping, so I feel confident in sharing it with others as a potential way to make your hoop.  When using the 3/4 pex, I use a 1/2 inch pvc connector, which you’ll notice is actually too small for the inner diameter of the pex tubing, and will slide in and out of there far too easily.  I give it a wrap with a piece of duct tape, to make it really difficult to get into the hoop (but more importantly, really difficult to get out!).   Once the connector is inserted, I ensure its stability by countersinking a screw into each side of the joint.  I drill the holes prior to putting the connector in, and once I’ve added the screws, they’re completely flush with the hoop itself.  Voila - you have a hoop.  Once you’ve taped your hoop, you’ll be hard pressed to find the original joint - which is a good thing!

The other thing I wanted to mention was procuring tape for your hoop.  Sure, Identitape is the mecca of hoop tape and I have ordered from them and I *am* happy with their products and customer service, but their shipping methods cost about as much as the tape itself, and that just won’t do.   I’ve been very happy with any of the orders I’ve made through an eBay seller named Paper Street Plastics.   Their selection is nowhere near as impressive as ID’s, but they do have glitter and holo and iridiscent tapes, and their turnaround time was nothing but impressive, and more importantly, I didn’t have to hand over my firstborn child and my liver to the UPS guy at the door.   This doesn’t solve the question of gaffer tape, however.   Through a few phone calls, we were able to find a local lighting/production company that doesn’t have a retail storefront, but does stock a huge variety of gaffer and spike tapes for use in stage productions.  Walking into their room full of tapes for the first time was AWESOME.  Ok, so it was just a big closet, but it was a big closet full of spike and gaffer in every color you could imagine.  So, depending on what city you’re in,  you should be able to track down somebody who sells this stuff.  It just might take a few phone calls and some patience, but again, it will save you on those wretched customs fees!

One of these days there might be a photo tutorial, but that would mean making more hoops, and I’m running out of space!

how I spent my hawaiian vacation

We’ve just gotten home from a two-week cruise with the whole famn damily, and I’m pretending that there isn’t a ginormous pile of laundry stretched from one end of the living room to the other.  I took a lot of pictures, of course, but I’ve been flipping through them, and I’m not super impressed so far.  I guess I should have put down the mai tai and used both hands.  Oops.  Lots to come, and yes, I hooped on the ship, but here’s a summary of most of our days, for those who don’t need details.

how I spent my hawaiian vacation

I’m the one on the far left. With the whiskers.

junior hoop practice

junior hoop practice
My hoop practice yesterday was interrupted by a junior hooper who just loves the camera.  If only I had the kind of perseverance that she does when it comes to dropping the hoop and picking it up time and time again.  She could have kept on going for hours!

happy freedom day!

double chocolate ale

Originally uploaded by snowzilla


Well, to me, anyways. Today is my last day of being gainfully employed as someone else’s minion. Tonight, I will be starting the celebrating with one of these. Because chocolate ale isn’t good enough. DOUBLE chocolate ale - that’s where it’s at!