Tuesday, 25 November 2014

The Gaynor-Takahashi Turf Appreciation Society - an appeal


An appeal specifically aimed at our regular punster west of the Shannon.
This Saturday will see the running of the Japan Cup, one of Japan's (and indeed the world's) most prestigious flat races. Not to mention one of the wealthiest in terms of prize money - the lucky fleet footed horse will run away with 1.8 million Euros (which, according to last week's property supplement in the Irish Times, will just about get you a three-bedroom family home in some of the odd numbered postal districts west of the Phoenix Park). It is an invitational only event and brings together the best horses of the flat season from all over the world which, according to the the organizers, enables "local racehorses to have the opportunity to compete against horses of an international calibre and to promote goodwill within the racing community worldwide". It is held on the last Sunday of November each year which means, yes almanac fans, this coming Sunday.
And why am I telling you this?
Trading Leather.
To those aficionados of all things equestrian this needs no explanation. To the rest of you have a look on YouTube at the 2013 Irish Derby.
Now I'm pretty sure Jim Bolger isn't taking the horse all the way to Japan just to "promote goodwill with the racing community" or any of that shite. But I need this verified, and verified by those with their noses in the stables over in Coolcullen (figuratively speaking, though with Clare people you'd never know...)
So Mr. Keane, your expertise please. Could this be another Blackstairmountain or should we use the money instead to buy Cian a half decent birthday present?

I am of course loathe to mention of any this to Sanae for fear of what I may unleash...


Sunday, 9 November 2014

And we're back ... again!



I am, I will have to admit, a tad tentative about writing this. I'm not sure where October went - it wasn't for a lack of topics. In fact the opposite; there was so much going on that I figuratively threw my hands up and kind of hoped the blog would write itself.
It didn't, but it took me nearly two months to figure that out.
What spurred this 'comeback' was an anxious phone call from a Japanese friend last Friday wondering if everything was alright. My contract at the university finishes at the end of next March and he was concerned that I might have already departed for foreign shores given my continuing online silence.
Not yet, but as the dark days of winter descend, I may well give the idea some serious thought. And Sanae will no doubt tell me to 'seriously cop on' reminding of my fatherly and husbandly responsibilities, and enough already with the whiny, introspective shite. She'll probably add something about the snow needing to be cleared from in front of the house.
So, we're back and we will have to go back as I have a lot to catch up on. I'll take it in reverse chronological order, beginning with last weekend. (This weekend mainly involved surfing and applying a couple of gallons of wood preservative to the wooden siding on the exterior of the house.)
It was unseasonably mild and misty last Sunday so Cian and myself decided to go for a walk. Well, I wanted to go for a walk and Cian just wanted to get out of the house in case Mammy made him do any more Japanese homework.
First off we stopped at the spring at the end of the road where we found a rather large and lethargic cuttlefish. I think the old boy was preparing to shuffle off to the great aquarium in the sky. Cian had found a baby cuttlefish here the week previously which was duly added to our pet collection (currently: one goldfish, three cuttlefish, and eight loaches. Over the summer this was augmented by some seasonal and very noise crickets and a stag beetle).
After that we headed up into the hills behind our house. We initially planned to follow the gravel road up but Cian considered that too tame so instead we struck off into the mist shrouded forest. Where we unexpectedly came across a deer.


As we stood there for a couple of moments staring uncertainly at each other it brought back memories of the film 'The Deer Hunter'. Micheal Cimino's masterpiece (though Pauline Kael denounced it as 'fascist') came out in 1978 but didn't intrude on my consciousness until the summer of 1982. In June of that year RTE planned to show live the WBC World Heavyweight Championship boxing match Larry Holmes and Gerry Cooney (father of George and one of the original Guildford Four). The fight was taking place in Las Vegas which, with the time difference, meant that the fight would be screening at 4:00am. Back then Irish people weren't minded to stay up all night watching tv, because, basically, they couldn't: programming usually stopped some time around midnight and off to bed you were expected to go. But what with the local interest RTE decided to break new ground with this and transmit live. To try and keep the Irish nation awake, they decided to show the Deer Hunter prior to the fight, the first time it was to be screened on broadcast tv. And in the build up they screened lots of promo clips of soldiers, and explosions, and deer, and men hanging off helicopters, and more deer, and all of it seemingly taking place in a jungle in Africa as to me, at 11, that was where all the jungles were. And to the 11 year old me, it looked utterly, feckin, awesome!
But as I was only 11 there wasn't any feckin way I was going to get to see it either. As it turned out not many people did. On the night in question, about an hour into the film, the transmitter up on top of Three Rock Mountain shorted, blacking out screens across the nation. Which meant a generation of Irish people grew up thinking that Russian roulette was a communist card game.
(Actually they didn't as RTE re-screened the film the following night). Anyway all this kind of meandered through my mind as I observed the deer before he bolted into the trees and disappeared. The rest of the walk was pretty uneventful, so I'll end the post here.

 

Sunday, 21 September 2014

Our day off

Last Monday Cian stumbled out of bed at the usual time of 6:15 and wandered into the kitchen to find it empty.
On a Monday morning.
So downstairs he went to Mammy and Daddy's bedroom to find out just what the good feck was going on. We, hoping for a lie in to some utterly mad time like seven o'clock, blearily told him today was a public holiday and he didn't have to go to school this morning. Or get up early for that matter.
Later on at breakfast time Cian wanted to know why today, Monday, was a holiday. Sanae whispered an explanation to him in Japanese. It was a bit strange. There were nods in my direction and the word 'Daddy' was repeated a couple of times, but I didn't pay too much attention as I was washing the dishes and trying to catch the pre-eleven o'clock sports news on RTE Radio 1.
After breakfast it got even stranger. Cian brought his cup and plates over to be washed and said "Thank you Daddy for making my breakfast", something he never, ever does. Similarly Sanae was quite deferential to me, politely agreeing to my suggestions on how to spend the day off. And this is something she never, ever does either.
It wasn't until I noticed what the public holiday was for that I realized what was actually going on.
It was "Respect for the Aged Day".
I spend the rest of the day kicking their cheeky fecking arses.

Saturday, 13 September 2014

We're back!

What stimulated me into finally breaking my silence wasn't the guilt I felt about failing to reflect on our trip home this summer, or last week's surprisingly enjoyable visit to the Pacific Northwest, but rather the lead story on last night's NHK news.
It was about old people. Really old people. Specifically those over a 100. Do you know how many there are in Japan?
A hundred?
A thousand?
Ten thousand?
Try 58,820.
Yep, there are more centenarians alive here than the entire population of Waterford city (and yes, at times, you would be hard pressed to tell then apart). Females account for 87% of the total which means Sanae is probably going to remarry after I shuffle off this mortal coil at 78 (the average life expectancy for an Irish male, though you could knock off a couple years for the induced stress from having to participate in Cian's school's PTA - the subject of another day's post).
Apparently this total is increasing by three to four thousand people a year which very much makes Japan a country for old men and women. Put it this way its probably the only country in the world where my father could come and visit and be referred to as a 'young fella'.
Back in August I volunteered at the Iron Man Triathalon held around Lake Toya. I was at the finish line translating for the foreign competitors ("Arrrrggghh, can't...move...too...much...pain....aarrrggg"). The third last competitor over the finishing line, after competing a 3.8km swim, 180km bike ride, and a 42.km marathon in 16 hours 52 minutes (just three minutes inside the cut-off time) was Toshio Shiomoto from Miyage. He's 73 years old.
No excuses folks.

Wednesday, 23 July 2014

The Niseko Classic


The Niseko Classic, or 'Le Tour de Niseko' as us aficionados of all things two wheels refer to it, was held last Sunday week. It was the first time the event was held and about 200 hundred of us pedaled up to the start on a bright, warm morning. Or rather starts as there was a 140km course and a 70km course. I had toyed with the idea of doing the longer run but after a 40km practice ride up to Forest Kozan and back my arse said definitely 'no'. And it wasn't too keen on the 70km course either.
The longest I had previously ridden was 50kms last year in the Cavan kayak-run-ride competition. My training this year had consisted of two there-and-back rides to Forest Kozan, one in June, the other earlier this month. With Cian's help I figured out that came to 80km and after Cian and myself had mentally wrestled with the double figures subtraction we finally concluded that that was 10km more than the race distance.
No problem then.
So last Sunday I woke up at 4:20, ate a power breakfast and motored off to Rankoshi where the 70km race was due to start. It was to finish at Hirafu in a sort of loop-and-a-bit course, which turned out to be a bit problematic. According to Google maps it would take me 2 hours to get there so I left just after five to ensure I was there in plenty of time for registration.
Google maps is a lying sack of shit.
I was there by 6:30. The only thing earlier than me was the dawn. Eventually the organizers and other competitors arrived and we got ourselves set for our 8:30 start. Prior to this the officials gave a run down of the race details and safety guidelines none of which I paid any attention to as it was all in Japanese. Plus, I was too busy eying up my fellow racers.
They all had shaved legs.
By comparison I looked like a wooly mammoth stuffed in to a pair of too tight bicycle shorts. But a manly mammoth, happy with his hairy hetrosexuality.
We assembled on a sloped slip road just off the main road. There were cameras, an incessantly chattering man with a microphone, and some local people gathered to see a little bit of history. The starter raised his pistol, BANG! and we were off!
Or rather everybody else was off. I, on the other hand, fell off my bike.
No, seriously, I did. Right at the start, I fell of my bike. It was the feckin clip-in pedals; I couldn't get my shoes slotted in properly, couldn't gain enough speed to get up the slip road, so instead I toppled over sideways and down the ditch. Meanwhile the man with the mike was going "Good jaysus would ye ever look at the hairy legged foreigner! What an arse, ladies and gentlemen, what an arse".
I finally managed to get back up on my bike and get some going-forward going, but left my dignity behind me in the ditch.  The main group, or le peloton, were already half a kilometre ahead and disappearing around a bend in the road. I, still at kilometer zero, put the hammer down and sped up and around the bend only to find that everyone had disappeared. It was like all the riders had been instantaneously whisked away to heaven in cycling's equivalent of the rapture while the hairy legged non-believer was left to sweat it out on the empty roads between Rankoshi and Iwanai. Spooky.
I continued pedaling and after a while some stragglers/fellow sinners began to appear in the distance. First up was the fat guy in sandals and beach shorts on a 1970's Peugeot racer who looked like he'd tagged along in the hope that we were all going to the beach.
And swooooshhh, I put the hurt on him.
Next up was a guy wearing the complete Team Cannondale kit. As I caught up with him he gestured towards his arse and said "一生に?" ("Together?"). This was my first road bike race, ever, so I wasn't not too sure what to make of this. I hadn't seen such a gesture since those glittering evenings in the Imperial Hotel in downtown Sydney, where as an only recently lapsed Irish Catholic fresh off the plane, I was introduced to a whole other pink world I hitherto never realized had existed. I can definitively say that the impression Oxford Street and its environs made were 'indelible'.
I pointed towards my legs, the intended message being "Hairy you see. Comfortable with my hetrosexuality". But he gestured towards his arse again.
And then I got it. He wanted to draft, work in turns leading into the wind which was, it had to be said, blowing pretty stiffly in off the Sea of Japan.
I'd never drafted before so I wasn't too sure what it involved in terms of technique, speed, timing, pretty much everything. So I tucked myself in behind his rear wheel, counted to ten, pedaled like a mad bastard to get in front of him and continued to pedal like a mad bastard, until he cut in front of me again. We continued like this for a few kilometres until we were both absolutely knackered. I was subsequently talking to a biking friend of mine who explained that drafting is about pacing. You do it to conserve energy whilst still maintaining a fast pace. It is not, apparently, about cycling like a 'mad bastard' or 'bâtard fou' as we say on le Tour.
We eventually split. I didn't realize it at the time. It was only after I had counted to fifty and wondered why the lazy fecker wasn't taking his turn in front that I turned around to see Team Cannondale wasn't there any more. On and on I wended my solo way along side the Shiribetsu river. I was pedaling into the sun by that stage and combined with the wind I could feel by skin begin to crispen. The cool waters of the river looked very inviting.
Back in to Rankoshi, past the man with the mike; "Look its the hairy legged foreigner! He's still on his bike! Unbelievable!". And then into the hills.
I liked the hills. We spent a fair amount of time climbing them, a good 15km or so on an average 7% slope. And this was where the legendary Gaynor engine, honed on the playing fields of St. Finians GAA pitch all those years ago (and yes, I did cover every blade of grass), asserted itself. Going uphill was when I put the hurt in and hauled myself from somewhere in the low 90's to a top 80 finish.
Yes!
Plus when I finally reached the crest and plummeted downwards I managed to go faster than I ever had on a bike before, surpassing the speed record I achieved last year on the hill outside of Lubbinlee during the Cavan race (an event I highly recommend by the way. The sponge cake you get at the end...). There were times on the descent when I swear I could hear the first rumblings of the sonic barrier. I was like Chuck Yeager on a bike.
And then my arse started to get sore and no combination of saddle shifting, short tugging, or pedal standing could get it to stop being sore. And I still had 20kms to go.
And on I went dear reader in an increasingly solipsistic world of posterior pain which, no, wasn't reminiscent of those heady nights on Oxford Street in Sydney. I may have been a lapsed catholic getting off the plane but I was, by God, still a hairy-legged hetrosexual!
I rode on past the nice policeman who wished me good luck in English and all the cars waiting patiently for us riders struggling by while the traffic is temporarily halted on our behalf. That last 20km seemed a lot longer and tougher than the first 50.
The final hill up to Hirafu hoved into view, I put in a last frenzied burst of pedaling and passed some diminutive female rider with whom I had my own private race over the last 5km or so as we yo-yoed back and forth in front and behind each other. Yes! I am the man. The hetrosexual man. Albeit with an arse like a homosexual (though I really wouldn't know).
It took me 2 hours 57 minutes to complete the race at an average speed of 23kph. The winner, by contrast, came in 2 hours 11 minutes and averaged 31kph. Now, I don't mean to be a bad (73rd placed) loser but I think you'll agree that a time and average speed like that demands a blood test. Or at the very least a sniff of his water bottles.
After the race we had to wait on the bus back to Rankoshi. This took nearly as long as the cycle as we had to sit through all the announcements, speeches, awards (in all 17 categories!) and the cupla focail from each of the award winners. And no after race massage facilities. Even Cavan has those.
But yes, as my mid-life crisis gathers pace, I will no doubt be back for more. But before that there is a little something called 'Gaelforce West' in three weeks time.

Monday, 14 July 2014

Sports Punditry

Well, well, who was the prescient sports pundit calling the Wexford-Clare replay all the way from Japan. I reckon Davy Fitz won't be attending the Enniscorthy Strawberry festival this year. As for Wexford, I think a semi-final is within their grasp. You read it here first.

George O'Connor, clearly thrilled to have dethroned the reigning All-Ireland hurling champions.

Thursday, 10 July 2014

Last weekend

Was a good weekend. The weather gods smiled benignly upon us and we got over to Lake Toya for our first barbecue of the year.
And nobody got immolated!
Though we burnt and chomped our way through a fair bit of Tokachi pork.
Which we then followed with some locally made whipped ice cream (or 'soft cream' as they term it here).
For Daddy all this was fuel for the ride on the bike there and back, all those calories long gone by the time I finally rolled home. For Sanae and Cian it was, ahem, fat which had firmly adhered to various arses by the time they drove home.




In 神様`s country

It was the Emperor's birthday yesterday (he turned a sprightly 65 - Banzai!), so us common people were given a holiday to celebrate his ...