Hiking the Ted Araroa Trail – A Trail Runner’s Guide

  Submitted by: Jessica Pascoe   From: Jessicapascoe.com   Read more: Click here for full post  Overview: Check out my interview with Anna Ridewood, a Te Araroa alumni, who has graciously allowed me to share her story of hiking the length of New Zealand; her anecdotes, tips, tricks and create somewhat of a guide to the Te Araroa …

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Author: Matt

V Foundation Wine Celebration Raises $12 Million for Cancer Research

Big bids were at the center of the V Foundation Wine Celebration this past weekend. The 23rd annual event grabbed a spot as one of the top charity wine auctions in the country, raising $12 million for the V Foundation for Cancer Research. The V Foundation, started in 1993 by late North Carolina State University basketball coach and ESPN commentator Jim Valvano, has funded more than $260 million in grants for cancer researchers and therapies.

The live auction was held Aug. 7 in Oakville, Calif., and hosted by Duke University men’s basketball coach Mike “Coach K” Krzyzewski, ESPN anchor Sage Steele and ESPN analyst Jay Bilas. Campaign strategist and CNN commentator Paul Begala was a guest speaker. The auction raised $4.36 million in live bids, thanks to more than 450 guests battling for once-in-a-lifetime lots. Most of the 25 auction lots included wine and travel experiences combined with prized bottles.

“I have found that wine-only lots are not as likely to achieve the desired level of engagement,” Max Duley, V Foundation senior director of auction and community outreach, told Wine Spectator. “Our attendees are world travelers, founders of major companies, C-level executives from many branches of media and entertainment, and they all go to top-level events and auctions around the country.”

The top wine-related lots included a luxury getaway to Pebble Beach donated by the owners of Alpha Omega and Frank Family Vineyards, which included three magnums from their wineries and sold twice for a total of $400,000. “Taste of the Tuscan Sun” sold for $360,000 and included private trips to Napa, Florence, Chianti, Bolgheri and Umbria hosted by Marchesi Antinori and Antica Estate, along with a large selection of large-format and 750ml Antinori bottles.

The “40-Love of Wine & Tennis” lot sold for $180,000 and gave winners tickets to the semifinals and finals at Wimbledon 2022 with vintner Beth Nickel of Far Niente and Nickel & Nickel and a collection of magnums from both wineries. Another tennis-inspired lot offered four tickets to the semifinals and finals of the 2022 Australian Open in Melbourne, along with 11 bottles of Penfolds wine. The lot sold for $125,000.

The top lot of the night did not feature wine. “The Legend’s Last Legacy” featured seats near the Blue Devils bench when Duke hosts rival UNC for Coach K’s final home game at Cameron Indoor Stadium. That sold for $1 million.

“We craft the event every year to reflect our messaging, place-in-time, targeted type of cancers our doctors are focusing on, guests and hosts, along with a constant mission to keep the message, heart and soul of Jimmy Valvano at the center of the event,” Duley said.

Purpose in Paso

Farther south, Must! Charities made its wine auction debut in Paso Robles with their Purpose event, raising $1.3 million to address youth mentorship, poverty and hunger in the San Luis Obispo community.

The Aug. 7 live auction was held at Booker Vineyard, the Paso Robles winery founded by Eric Jensen, who is also a founding member of Must! Charities. The in-person auction hosted 180 guests and featured 16 lots, raising a combined $484,000 in live bids.

A collection of Napa magnums from Juan Mercado, proprietor of Realm, sold for $14,000 and included bottles from Staglin, Amici Cellars, Continuum Estate, Hourglass and more. Another top lot sold three times for a total of $98,000, and included a three-night adventure and private dinner in Paso Robles wine country with winemakers Justin Smith, Stephan Asseo and Jensen.

“This is our first year, and the professionals coordinating the event are seasoned event directors who have waited for Paso to be poised to kick off a high-level auction,” Becky Gray, executive director of Must! Charities, told Wine Spectator via email. “Collective giving and the power of people investing in social good give us the most satisfaction. We can move the needle faster with everyone working together.”


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The Play Museum Vagos: Meeting Santa in Summer

The Play museum in Vagos, PortugalThe Museu do Brincar in Vagos, which translates to the Play Museum in English, is a wonderful place to take kids if you are looking for something a bit different to do. It is a large museum filled with traditional toys as well as large spaces for little ones to play. We recently visited the …

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Author: Matt

8 pieces of advice I wish I’d listened to while I was pregnant

Pregnancy advice

About 38 weeks pregnant with Alfie. Better abs here than I have now.

When I was pregnant with my first babe I had pregnancy advice coming at me left, right and centre; all of it well-intentioned, some of it contradictory, and most of it going in one ear and out the other because #pregnancybrain followed by #sleepdeprivation. With some of the advice, my well-intentioned friends might as well have been speaking another language. Now that I have two babies, and the benefit of hindsight, I thought I’d put pen to paper in case it may be useful to someone else out there.

  1. 1. There is no ‘right’ cot/bassinet/pram/car seat/insert other high value baby goods here.

I am not an efficient person. My usual modus operandi is to over-research in a haphazard way, second-guess my decision, third-guess my decision and then return to my original decision, having achieved nothing that I couldn’t have achieved in 1/17th the time I actually spent. But beyond choosing something that meets safety standards there really isn’t a ‘right’ and a ‘wrong’ decision. And even if there was, your baby probably wouldn’t realise it.

 2. Use the time before baby is born to rest.

Oh lord, I really really REALLY wish I’d taken this pregnancy advice. Instead, I ran around like a woman who’d had her first taste of freedom from the 9-5 in about 15 years… catching up with friends, not resting, going for long walks, not resting, buying random baby things I’d never use, not resting etc. etc. etc. until labour. And let me tell you, I have not rested since.

3. Don’t stress about having the nursery set up before bub arrives.

I was hell-bent on having Alfie’s nursery perfectly set up in time for my baby shower, which was about two months before he was even due… talk about unnecessary pressure! And given we didn’t move him out of our room and into said nursery until he was around 10 weeks (when his strange grunting sleep noises finally got the better of us), there was about 4.5 months that the nursery was useful to exactly zero people. I learned from my mistakes with Charlie, whose cot was madly hammered together the day that we moved him into it.

4. Have an idea of how you’d like your baby’s birth to go, but be flexible and listen to the experts.

OK to be fair I did listen to this pregnancy advice. I’d had dreams of a drug-free birth, picturing myself relaxing in a warm bath as the contractions washed over me like waves on a beach… hahahaha good lord I was naive. At 36 weeks we found out that there were some issues with Alfie’s growth, and so we made a plan for induction right on term (assuming I didn’t go into labour naturally beforehand). If you aren’t aware, induction speeds up the process of labour so your body doesn’t have enough time to produce the oxytocin to help counteract the pain, and it comes on F A S T. These factors, among others that are too far above my pay grade to understand, mean that you’re more likely to need an epidural with an induced labour. And need I did. Was it the way I dreamt things would go? No. But did that matter, when I held a healthy (albiet scrawny) baby in my arms? Also no.

After the trauma of Alfie’s birth, I became quite anxious as Charlie’s due date drew nearer. Particularly as he was shaping up to be almost a kilo heavier than Alfie was. At around 38 weeks we made the decision to have an elective caesarean. It was an emotional decision for me, but the right one. My physical and mental recovery was tens of times better than it was with Alfie.

Pregnancy advice

About 37 weeks pregnant with Charlie, ft. my regrettable mum-bob.

5. Don’t get carried away with cutesie newborn clothes… onesies all the way for the first few months

Baby clothes are probably the sweetest little things on earth, and it’s possible that I went a little overboard on some of the less practical items. Sure, some people are all about dressing their tiny tot up for every outing they make, but it turns out that I am not one of those people. All my boys wore for the first few months of their lives were zip-up onesies and I cannot recommend this approach highly enough. Spending half your life re-adjusting your little one’s clothing is not a good time.

6. Don’t feel uncomfortable asking unvaccinated friends and family not to visit until after your babe has ben vaccinated

I don’t know why this is such an uncomfortable conversation, but even though I knew it was my family, and my choice, I never quite knew how to approach the conversation with friends and family. But if the COVID-19 pandemic has taught me anything, it’s that there are still a lot of people out there who don’t take risks seriously, and that means my family’s health is my responsibility and my decision (and I don’t need to feel weird about it!).

7. You may not feel like exercising again straight away

This piece of pregnancy advice was possibly the most shocking for me. I remember having a conversation with my Pilates teacher a few weeks before Alfie was due, and telling her quite confidently that I’d be back on deck before my six-week post-natal check. LOL. Nearly three years later and I’m still navigating a bumpy return to training.

and on that…

8. Be proud of your new body

You’ve just grown a human, carried him for nine months, then birthed him… that’s kind of a big deal. And whether you had an easy or difficult pregnancy, whether you gave birth vaginally or via a caesarean section, whether you developed stretch marks, have loose skin, pelvic floor issues, or whether you have all or none of the above, I’ll say it again… you grew, carried and birthed a baby!

I have spent most of my adult life priding myself on my strength and fitness and – on a more subconscious level – the aesthetic benefits of being strong and fit, so it was quite a humbling experience to realise that there were many things my body could no longer do particularly well. From the physical (like running) to the vanity-driven (like filling out the butt of a pair of jeans). But as I continue to work through these changes, as I will be doing for quite some time, I have a growing sense of pride of all the things my body CAN do. Like make a toddler feel safe in the middle of the night and nourish a baby with milk produced by my own body.

Phew. There you have it. If little of it makes sense to you yet, bookmark this page and come back to it a little further down the track. Motherhood is a riiiiiiiiiiiide and until you actually jump on, it’s hard to imagine what it’s going to be like.

ps. Obviously this is all based on my pregnancy and birth stories, so take it as sharing based on personal experiences only… because every mum is different, and so is every baby.

Is there any pregnancy advice you wish you’d taken? Share it in the comments below!

The post 8 pieces of advice I wish I’d listened to while I was pregnant appeared first on Lazy Girl Fitness.

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Author: LazyGirlFitness

Moderate Alcohol Consumption May Help Those with Cardiovascular Disease

Medical research has repeatedly found links between moderate alcohol consumption and a lower risk of cardiovascular disease, including heart attack, stroke and heart valve issues. But doctors have also long advised patients that are suffering from cardiovascular disease to refrain from drinking. Recent research suggests that moderate consumption of alcohol, including wine, could prove beneficial in reducing the risk of heart attack, stroke and heart failure in those with cardiovascular disease.

In the study, researchers at University College London, University of Cambridge and University of Sydney collected data from multiple resources, including the U.K. Biobank Study, a biomedical database holding detailed health information from over 500,000 participants in the U.K. They published their findings in the journal BMC Medicine.

“Understanding how alcohol consumption is related to cardiovascular morbidity is of great importance to [cardiovascular disease] patients,” the authors write. “This population is at high risk of recurring cardiovascular events, which can significantly compromise the patients’ quality of life.”

Researchers reviewed data of alcohol consumption levels in nearly 50,000 participants who had previously suffered heart attack, stroke or angina (severe chest pain). They then looked at subsequent cases of cardiovascular events over the next eight years. The results show that participants consuming up to 15 grams of alcohol a day (roughly one glass of wine), or a max of 105 grams a week, had the lowest chances of death and subsequent heart failure, attack or stroke. Among participants studied, those who consumed a moderate amount of alcohol were up to 50 percent less likely to experience a recurring cardiovascular event than those who did not drink at all.

The data did not distinguish between kinds of alcohol. And the authors note that they had limited data and long-term clinical trials to confirm their findings are needed. But they are hopeful that their research is a step in the right direction.

Their main takeaway, they write, is that patients do not have to stop drinking overall, but should be cautious of their intake. “Our findings suggest that people with cardiovascular disease may not need to stop drinking in order to prevent additional heart attacks, strokes or angina,” lead author Chengyi Ding said in a statement. “But that they may wish to consider lowering their weekly alcohol intake.”


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