There were 8 tornadoes reported in the Denver area yesterday afternoon and evening, not just 5; and there was a lot of wind and hail damage in the metropolitan area. We had rain and hail fall in Boulder multiple times during the evening and over night. It started a little after 5 p.m. and lasted until about 3 this morning - thunder, lightning, wind, rain, and hail. Luckily, the hail I saw here was the size of, and smaller than, green peas, so it didn't do too much damage. - In some areas of Denver, between the wind and the hail, some of the soft sidings of buildings looked as though they'd been subjected to gunfire. - I had to close my patio window and door, because the wind was blowing from the east, and the hail was hitting the concrete patio pad, and then ricocheting up to the door and window. It was an interesting experience.
There was a slight to-do after the Preakness was won by California Chrome, before he shipped up to Elmont, New York for the Belmont Stakes. Having won the first two races of the Triple Crown, Art Sherman, the trainer made a comment about racing in the NYRA area. - Humans have been wearing "Breathe Right" nasal strips for many years now. They keep your nasal passages open, so you aren't deprived of oxygen while sleeping or exercising. Human athletes have been wearing nasal strips almost since the day they were introduced... - The New York Racing Association did not approve of the use of nasal strips on racing thoroughbreds when they were first introduced, saying that there had not been enough study to decide whether the nasal strips were an assistance "offering unfair advantage" to the wearer or not. Up until Monday, NYRA had declared nasal strips illegal in racing in their state. California Chrome wears a nasal strip. He has used a nasal strip in his last six races, and has been undefeated in all of those races. He has also been ridden in each of those six races by Victor Espinoza. Any horse, at any race track in the US can (now, with the NYRA's ruling) wear a nasal strip. Some trainers like them, some don't. In a Sports Illustrated article, a writer stated that since the NYRA has allowed nasal strips, "all of thoroughbred racing suffers from the decision." He never wrote why, or how, thoroughbred racing suffers from the decision; nasal strips were allowed at all US tracks except in the state of New York prior to the ruling. Is he stating that New York racing is better than any other states? Yes, Art Sherman did hint that one of the horse's owners wouldn't be happy if they couldn't use the nasal strip. But I don't think that would have actually stopped California Chrome's connections from trying to be the first Triple Crown winner since 1978 (Florida-bred Affirmed). Another way to look at the nasal strip "controversy" is to realize that while the nasal strip may help hold the upper nostril passages stay wide open, all the air the horse breathes must then pass through the 'bottle neck' of the horse's trachea, leading to the lungs... I do not believe that a nasal strip gives a horse an unusual advantage.
We are heading for Memorial Day Weekend here in Boulder (and, yes, everywhere else in the United States)... In Boulder that means it is time for the Boulder Creek Festival and the running of the Bolder Boulder 10K road race. Information about the Boulder Creek Festival may be found at: http://www.bceproductions.com/boulder-creek-festival/ Festivities begin at 6 p.m. on Friday night, 24 May, with a free concert at the Central Park band shell, and will continue until after dark on Monday, 26 May. On Monday, the Boulder street system, and a lot of the mass transit system, will be shut down for the 10K Bolder Boulder for the morning and part of the early afternoon - beware! A map of the race course may be found at: http://media.bolderboulder.com/BBCourseMap.pdf
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