A long walk to a sore heel

UPDATE, April 4, 2021: The injury took a long time to improve and then, after mostly disappearing, came suddenly back worse than before in December. My doctor identified it as plantar fasciitis. As of this update, the foot is much improved, but still not 100%. This is what you call a long term injury.

Today the weather was warm and sunny (after an initial forecast of mostly cloudy) and I couldn’t just sit inside while it was summer all over the place outside.

So, I went for a walk around Burnaby Lake, wearing my running stuff in case I started feeling extra zesty (more on this in a bit).

I felt pretty good heading out and indeed, my walking pace was a bit better than in recent months. That continued as I hit the 5K mark midway around the lake, still brimming with energy and feeling fine. I even started running off and on along the Southshore Trail.

The resurfacing of the Cottonwood Trail is coming along nicely and the notion that it will take until September to complete seems silly, as they are probably more than half done already (and were diligently working away when I walked through this afternoon). It will be spiffy for running when complete as this trail section has about a hundred billion exposed tree roots waiting for me and my feet.

There were more people out than perhaps expected, but it is summer and it was very nice out, with a breeze providing just enough cooling to keep it from feeling hot (it’s not really hot, but weather the last few weeks has been a little cooler than seasonal, so even 24C feels a bit toasty when you’re out in the sun).

I finished the loop just before 3 p.m. and as I exited the lake trail and crossed over to the river trail and the return home, I was still peppy. The peppiness finally began to fade around the 16 km mark, when my right hip began to feel a bit tweaked. It wasn’t bad and didn’t really slow me down. In fact, after a few minutes it worked itself and I continued to steam along. But then my left heel started to hurt. Weird.

It continued to hurt the remaining two km or so on the remainder of the walk and as I type this at 10:23 p.m., it is still sore. The right heel is fine.

I have no explanation for this, just guesses and crackpot theories:

  • The few minutes the right hip hurt, I overcompensated in favoring my left side, making my apparently brittle left heel very sore
  • The orthotic in my left shoe is sufficiently worn in the heel that it reached a breaking point where it started hurting instead of helping
  • aliens
  • previously unknown injury suddenly surfacing (aliens?)
  • karma, somehow (also the name of my next album)

It may be fine or better(ish) by morning, but it’s a sore note for what was otherwise a fine afternoon out. I was even delighted by unexpected wildlife, watching a crane hunt food and a turtle laying out on a log enjoying the sun.

Here’s a few photos before the hobbling started.

Just starting out, I thought this field of what is really just weeds looked interesting, but it didn’t turn out quite as I had expected. This field had previously been kept cut and served as a small park area. I’m not sure why it was decided to let it grow wild.

The classic shot of the lake from the bridge at Deer Lake Brook. I managed to tilt the view slightly, but was too lazy to fix it. Just pretend the earth was rotating too fast for me to compensate.

From the point just before the Cottonwood Trail, looking west.

The heron snatching a snack:

Close-up of heron from the shot above.

You know it’s vacation when the fire department arrives

My annual summer vacation began yesterday (technically it begins tomorrow, but I prefer a holistic view of vacation, which is a fancy way of saying I count every day off as part of the vacation, including weekends I would normally be off anyway). Yesterday I cleaned the toilets, went grocery shopping and did a workout on the treadmill. It didn’t feel very vacation-y.

Today I did the dishes, vacuumed the condo, and did a few other chores. This also did not feel very vacation-y. Finally, the evening arrived and with it, quiet time on the computer, where I could relax and read all about the horrible things happening everywhere.

It was then that the fire alarm in the building went off. I didn’t have to read about horrible things at all, I was now living it.

The condo has two alarms inside–one in each bedroom. This means when I am at the computer, one of the alarms is about a meter from my head.

They are very loud.

We silenced both with the “please don’t permanently damage my hearing” buttons and headed out. The hallways alarms are, if anything, even louder. One is right outside our suite door. Jeff went to investigate the source of the alarm, which is not something I would personally do myself, but different strokes and all that. I went outside to gather (while physically distancing, of course) with my neighbors while the firefighters investigated.

The alarms continued to screech, as they do.

The first of three trucks to arrive. The others did not put their lights on, alas.

Jeff ascertained that the alarm was pulled by a suite on the second floor, way down the other end of the building, safely past the fire doors. It looks like what happened was:

  • someone attempted to cook something on the stove
  • this attempt was unsuccessful, resulting in things getting burnt
  • the odor of this cooking cock-up was sufficient to get into the hallway
  • someone panicked (?) over the smell of smoke and pulled the alarm

After about 20 minutes or so, they took one of those industrial fans in, apparently to blow the offending smoke out of the suite and into the night. One of the firefighters advised us to maintain distance as we filed back in. Everyone pretty much ignored this. Pandemic fatigue. Which will probably extend the pandemic.

Speaking of night, at least it was clear and mild out. This would have been worse–and more ironic–in the rain.

Anyway, that wraps up the second day of my vacation. I have a short list for Day 3:

  • No chores
  • Nore fires or false alarms
  • Brownies

Treadmill workout: No rest

I was thinking about maybe going for a run today, but then it started to rain and my enthusiasm for the idea washed away. But I started feeling guilty about not exercising, even though it is the first day of my vacation.

The result is below, another treadmill workout. Stats are pretty close to the previous workout. The 30 minutes seems to go by quicker now and as a special bonus today I came up with an idea for a short Super Spud comic while on the treadmill.

Stats (BPM was down, despite pace being a bit better. As the kids say, sweet):

Speed: 6.5 km/h
Incline: 10

Pace: 9:19/km (9:22 km/h)
Time: 30:03 (30:03)
Distance: 3.22 km (3.20 km)
Calories burned: 293 (318)
BPM: 140 (146)

Treadmill workout: End of the week

The end of the week and I was a bit slower on the treadmill after a week of doing stuff like working out on treadmills.

Nothing extraordinary in the stats, so here they are:

Speed: 6.5 km/h
Incline: 10

Pace: 9:22/km (9:19 km/h)
Time: 30:03 (30:05)
Distance: 3.20 km (3.22 km)
Calories burned: 318 (326)
BPM: 146 (146)

Bad design: The iPhone camera shutter sound

I accidentally turned off live photos on my iPhone 8 the other day when fiddling around with some settings in the camera app. I discovered I had done this when I took a picture while on an early evening stroll tonight and heard that horrible fake shutter sound go off after snapping a photo of a flower.

I checked the photo in the Photos app, and sure enough, it looked like live photos was turned off. For those not familiar, live photos basically starts recording a short video snippet just before, during and after taking a photo. These snippets can be treated like animated GIFs, or you can grab a still from the stream if your main/actual photo didn’t turn out the way you liked. I actually used this once for a selfie where the main photo had my eyebrows up and the frame just before had them down–and looked better.

But the main perk in having live photos is it kills the phony shutter sound that otherwise plays when you take a picture.

Now, I get why Apple added the sound. Back in the early days of iOS Apple design traded heavily on skeuomorphism, and this is the audio equivalent of that. What happens when you click to take a picture with a camera? You hear the shutter activate! Ergo, simulating this sound will reassure the user that the phone captured the photo and remind them that their expensive slab of glass is also a camera.

Except the sound is so meticulously loud and overdone it feels like the phone is mocking me. Every time I snap a photo it feels like the phone is announcing to everyone within hearing distance, “Hey! Taking a photo here! Did you hear that? You know what it is? Photo-taking! Yep, right here. Hope we’re not disturbing you! Photo in progress, lol!” I don’t really have a need to discreetly take photos–I’m not a private detective chasing down philanderers–but I don’t have any need or desire to draw attention to taking a simple picture, either. It’s obnoxious and unnecessary.

Currently there are two workarounds:

  • mute the audio on the phone
  • enable live photos

If you don’t care about any audio on your phone, the first workaround works. If you like live photos, the second workaround is fine.

But there shouldn’t be any need for workarounds. The shutter sound shouldn’t exist at all.

But I’m willing to compromise. Apple could offer an option in the Camera app settings: Enable shutter sound Y/N.

Anything else is bad design.

Treadmill workout: Steady Freddie

I went to bed way later than normal last night (bad) and felt a bit tired most of the day, so I was uncertain how the workout would go at noon.

While it rained steadily outside (summer is not looking like a scorcher at this point), I did my 30 minutes on the treadmill and turned in a surprisingly balanced effort. Each km was within a few seconds of the other and I ended up feeling fine (and less sweaty than the last few days).

The stats are only slightly different than yesterday. BPM is trending back down along with my speed, perfectly logical and all that.

Speed: 6.5 km/h
Incline: 10

Pace: 9:19/km (9:16 km/h)
Time: 30:05 (30:05)
Distance: 3.22 km (3.24 km)
Calories burned: 326 (342)
BPM: 146 (149)

Treadmill run: Not so fast

Today’s workout was fine. I did not replicate my blistering pace of yesterday, but it was still solid all around. It seems the secret is to listen to Jonathan Coulton while exercising.

Thank you, Jonathan.

Here are the stats:

Speed: 6.5 km/h
Incline: 10

Pace: 9:16/km (9:01 km/h)
Time: 30:05 (30:03)
Distance: 3.24 km (3.33 km)
Calories burned: 342 (343)
BPM: 149 (151)

Treadmill workout: Strangely fast

I don’t really have an explanation for this, but today’s treadmill workout was strangely speedy. Here are the splits:

1 km: 8:40/km
2 km: 9:20/km
3 km: 8:57/km

Yes, two of the three km were below nine minutes. Why, I can’t say. Two other notable aspects: my distance covered spiked up to 3.33 km and my BPM edged up a bit more, too. Both of these are unsurprising given the extra speed. The BPM is getting close to running territory, so I’ll keep an eye on it–but it definitely felt like a good, hard workout today, so for now I’m not overly concerned. Recovery was the same as usual.

The stats:

Speed: 6.5 km/h
Incline: 10

Pace: 9:01/km (9:22 km/h)
Time: 30:03 (30:03)
Distance: 3.33 km (3.20 km)
Calories burned: 343 (347)
BPM: 151 (148)

Treadmill workout: Title

Yeah, the thing with working out on a treadmill is it gets harder and harder to jazz up what happened.

Today I listed to Jonathan Coulton and felt peppy. One item of note is the increased BPM, but looking at the chart, I can see that it was steadily increasing toward the end, coinciding with my increased effort, so I don’t think it’s a concern.

Stats:

Speed: 6.5 km/h
Incline: 10

Pace: 9:22/km (9:21 km/h)
Time: 30:03 (30:03)
Distance: 3.20 km (3.21 km)
Calories burned: 347 (311)
BPM: 148 (140)

Toodling around Colony Farm Regional Park

Nic and I went to Colony Farm Regional Park looking for birbs and getting steps.

We accomplished both. Since I am using an iPhone 8 for my photos and its zoom capabilities can be summed up as “lol” I have no pics of birds to share.

But I do have a snail.

Here are some of the things I deemed worthy of taking pictures of.

Coquitlam River
Coquitlam River, looking south, with one of the spans of the Port Mann Bridge visible.
Spiky pink balls
Invasive but pretty tansy. These things grow in copious quantities along one of the trails.
The promised snail, happily sliming it up.
Man taking photo of man taking photo. Nic is wearing typically bright male plumage.
Marshland with technology lurking in the background.
Flowers of undetermined origin (I’ll edit this later when I’m not feeling lazy).
More tansies