Just some wildflowers shot on my iPhone 12.

I changed things up today:
Admittedly, the new socks aren’t particularly noticeable. The new shorts are the latest iteration of the Nike Stride Dri-Fit running shorts I wear. They have changed again since I last bought a pair:
Other than these changes, they’re pretty much running shorts. The zipper feels much smoother and the fabric has that nice new fabric feel to it. Maybe they made me faster, because I shaved five seconds off my previous pace.
The big change, of course, was going out in the morning. It was cooler and I started out (and finished) much stronger than the previous run, with no stops along the way and no individual km over the six-minute mark.
A tendon on my right knee feel a little hinky to start, but it settled quickly and is not an issue now. I otherwise experienced no problems. For a brief time, I even felt kind of good!
My BPM was up to 155, but it maxed out at 160, so I’m not concerned. I definitely felt I was putting in more effort.
Mini poopmonsters are all over the place now, though they were not actually on the trail itself today, which is handy for avoiding getting chased/hissed at by an adult.
Also, the bears are apparently back:
Anyway, a nice way to round out the week.
Stats:
Run 922
Average pace: 5:51/km
Training status: Productive
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 10:26 a.m.
Distance: 5.02 km
Time: 29:24
Weather: Sun and high cloud
Temp: 14-15°C
Humidity: 56-54%
Wind: light
BPM: 155 (max. 160)
Weight: 172.4
Total distance to date: 6,445 km
Devices: Garmin Forerunner 255 Music, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: ASICS Trabuco Terra 2 (40/62/102)
Music: Electric Light Orchestra, Time
How, you may ask?
When you go into the inn in New Tristram, there’s no one there, yet it looks like it’s supposed to be occupied. Leah, who has been defeated as Nu-Diablo (spoiler) has her room still intact, as if she’ll pop in any minute.
I don’t know why, but this “take out the NPCs and leave everything else as if they were there” is something I find unsettling, like you’re visiting a memory of the place instead of the actual place.
And I say this while playing a necromancer with an army of skeletons.
Proof:
To be fair, my watch told me it was a rest day and who knows what would happen if I disobeyed it?
This was a hard run. Why? Probably because it was warmer, windier and I have felt weird and lazy all day.
After sleeping in, which is uncharacteristic of me, I saw it was showering a little and thought to maybe wait a bit before running. Then I debated running at all. Finally, I changed, started my warm-up stretches and my right ankle began to hurt like I’d been abusing it (I have not, to my knowledge). I sat back down and pondered. Eventually, I tried again, completed the stretches, and headed out, with vague plans. By this time it was mid-afternoon, a time I generally try to avoid running.
I initially thought I’d do a brisk 7-8 km walk, then changed that to walking to the end of the river trail and doing a 5K run from there, before eventually settling on going to the lake and running a short loop.
For reasons, I started exactly at the 10K marker:
My first km, which includes a prominent uphill section near the start, was a bit sluggish, but I pressed on and found myself pausing briefly, like I was running too fast or too hard. After 10–15 seconds, I resumed. I ended up doing this four times, though once was at the Nature House, in order to get a drink from the fountain, as the breeze was resulting in a bit of Dry Mouth Syndrome.
To my surprise, my second km came in under six minutes, as did each of the rest. That said, I was a second slower than the last run (rounding error) and despite BPM being a bit lower at 151, it felt like a lot more effort. I experienced some mild cramping, though I don’t think it affected my pace, just my will to actually keep running. But I did finish the 5K, so I’ll take it!
The start of the run also saw me carefully navigating through a large group of geese and goslings who were making a section of the trail their own. Nothing happened, though a few goslings scooted a bit and one adult goose bobbed its head in that threatening way at me.
In all, I’d like to say lesson learned, but I guess we’ll have to wait till Friday to find out!
Stats:
Run 921
Average pace: 5:56/km
Training status: Productive
Location: Burnaby Lake (CCW, short loop)
Start: 2:33 p.m.
Distance: 5.03 km
Time: 29:53
Weather: Sun and cloud mix
Temp: 18°C
Humidity: 63%
Wind: light to moderate
BPM: 151
Weight: 171.9
Total distance to date: 6,440 km
Devices: Garmin Forerunner 255 Music, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: ASICS Trabuco Terra 2 (35/49/84)
Music: R.E.M., Lifes Rich Pageant
Yes, getting a new camera finally prompted me to go through my photos and actually post some of them, specifically some of the better shots I got while out birding on May 3, 20251I know it looks weird to write “2025” when it’s only three days later, but it’s handy when looking back at posts months or years later.
I need to figure out focus on my Canon EPS R7, as a lot of shots were a bit blurry. I fixed a few of the ones in this gallery, but most are presented as-is, with minor work done on lighting.
No, I did not pee in any unauthorized manner during the run.
Rather, the title refers to my li’l SPI-Belt water bottle, which has a clip and clips to the belt. Although I’m not using an official SPI-Belt now, it works the same on my current belt. I filled the bottle up, after experiencing Dry Mouth Syndrome (DMS) on my last run and seeing humidity would be about the same on today’s run.
It turned out I never needed the water, because the real reason my mouth got so dry last time was not the humidity, but rather the wind. It was much calmer this morning (I also started about half an hour earlier), which solved the problem entirely.
After about two km, though, the bottle was consistently tugging down on the belt, which annoyed me enough to pause the run, remove the clip, put the clip in a pocket and just carry the bottle in a hand, switching periodically from one hand to the other for the rest of the run. It was a bit awkward, but much less so than the bottle dragging on the belt.
I will have to re-think my hydration needs for future runs.
Meanwhile, the run itself was fine. I achieved my main goal of coming in under six minutes, with a pace of 5:55/km. I did dip to 6:01/km for laps 3 and 4, but picked up the pace to finish and also had a good start at 5:46/km. No issues otherwise.
The trail was not quite as busy as the previous few runs, maybe due to the slightly earlier start. I did encounter a tractor that was mowing. The driver stopped and signalled for me to pass, which was a bit awkward, as the vehicle covered the entire width of the trail, forcing me into the ditch. Fortunately, this part of the ditch was grassy, not swampy. I also had to doge a guy weed whacking near one of the footbridges. That was easier, as he was the one off the trail.
Other than that, the weather was a nice mix of sun and cloud, never getting too hot or cool. I didn’t wear sunblock, but I sense I will need to start slapping it on soon to avoid burning.
Stats:
Run 920
Average pace: 5:55/km
Training status: Maintaining
Location: Burnaby Lake (CW)
Start: 10:34 a.m.
Distance: 5.03 km
Time: 29:40
Weather: Sun and some high cloud
Temp: 14-15°C
Humidity: 54-55%
Wind: light
BPM: 153
Weight: 172.1
Total distance to date: 6,435 km
Devices: Garmin Forerunner 255 Music, iPhone 12, AirPods (3rd generation)
Shoes: ASICS Trabuco Terra 2 (30/41/71)
Music: Scissor Sisters, Ta-Dah
I still don’t know what the box on the pole is. It was put up sometime last year. Maybe it’s for very thin birds.
This is in Lower Hume Park and the daisies will likely be gone the next time they mow the field, but it looks pretty right now.
This started as another quick “spooky dark figure” sketch, but I ended up being dissatisfied with nearly every aspect of it, so this is not a quick sketch, it’s about ten different quick sketches all layered on top of each other until I figured I was ready to move on, which I probably should have done about eight layers earlier.
Enjoy!
This was done on my iPad Pro with Procreate. The ground appears much darker on my computer monitors than it does on the iPad. I’m inclined to think the iPad version is closer to correct, so I’m not going to tinker with it again.
Probably.
Where: Rocky Point Park, Old Orchard Park, Inlet Park, Old Mill Site Park (Port Moody), Como Lake (Coquitlam), Tlahutum Regional Park (Coquitlam), Burnaby Lake (Burnaby)
Weather: Partly sunny, 14-15°C
Our first stop was the heron rookery near Rocky Point Park, where we were hoping to see baby dinosaurs, otherwise known as nesting young herons. Alas, it seems that, unlike last year when we arrived too late (June 21), this time we may have arrived too early, as all we saw were just adults and usually just their backs or butts. We will try to find the sweet spot in the middle.
We did get to see some more herons close-up, and some killdeer, plus we hadn’t been since last summer, so it was still a pleasant trip.
We next made a brief stop at Como Lake, where we saw our first baby geese. There were two groups, one small, one slightly larger. The parents were being very vigilant and weird.
This was also the first time I’d been using my new camera, a Canon EOS R7, and I was still getting used to it and also having 400 mm of reach on telephoto instead of 250. What I’m saying is a lot of my shots of the baby geese were fuzzy, but not because baby geese are fuzzy, I just had problems focusing on them. But so did Nic, and his camera isn’t new at all! Perhaps I am cursing him. Or he just forgot to change a setting on his camera. Or baby geese are now impossible to photograph because that’s just the random way nature works.
Having seen the babbies, we moved on to destination #3.
Destination #3 was Tlahutum, where, strangely, we saw another pair of cinnamon teals. After never seeing them before, I have now seen them two weeks in a row. Maybe it’s the same pair. Maybe they’re following me. Maybe we’re on the cusp of a cinnamon teal invasion. Or maybe it’s none of these things. We also saw some gadwalls, mallards, blackbirds and in the community gardens, tree swallows and white-crowned sparrows. There were others, like common yellowthroats, but they stayed out of view, all the better to taunt and torment Nic.
Our final stop, as it often is, was Piper Spit. It was a little crowded and we ended up having to wait for two long trains on our way out (one by foot, one by car), but we saw some bonkers goose drama involving three geese and a nest with eggs. The sandhill crane was there yet again, having apparently taken up semi-permanent residence. The relatively high water level meant no shorebirds, though, so boo on that.
This was also the first time all the winter migrants were gone. No coots, pintails or scaups. The coots, at least, may be back as soon as August.
I did get a smattering of fine shots, but problems with focus suggest I need to spend more time experimenting and getting used to the camera, which is fine and normal. Already, I can say the fit and feel is much nicer than the M50, and the reach of the new telephoto lens (which works without an adapter, yay) is almost too good, as I had to fairly regularly pull back on my shots (the lens can also be locked to certain focal lengths if I want to go that route, too).
Taken on a Canon EOS R7 with 18-150 mm kit lens and 100-400 mm telephoto.
Sparrows and sparrow-adjacent:
Waterfowl and shorebirds:
Common:
Raptors:
Non-birds:
The election was held on Monday, April 28, 2025.
UPDATE. May 5, 2025: A freshly-elected Alberta MP in a very safe Conservative riding has surrendered his seat so Poilievre can run. Barring some extreme karmic shenanigans, Pierre Verb-the-Noun should win and get back in Parliament.
Now we wait to see how Poilievre gets back into Parliament without a seat. Some newly-elected MP will need to resign “for the greater good” but I suspect the party will start developing fracture lines even if this happens. Remember, it’s the result of merging the Canadian Alliance (nee Reform) and the old Progressive Conservative parties. It’s no coincidence they dropped the “progressive” part, as the party has pushed much harder to the right thanks to the CA/Reform wing, which drive the merger. Poilievre is also taking the worst cues from the U.S. Republican Party, by constantly spouting lies, misstating and misrepresenting everything and being just an angry, unlikeable sod, and I think some in the party realize that and know the gains made in this election may have been in spite of their leader, not because of him (though with any “populist” leader, he will always have his base of cult-like loyalists).
Interesting times ahead.