Kevin Janiak
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Male, 43,
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- from Galashiels
- I am Single
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- Member since: December 2007
- Last active: 2 days ago
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- anything which isn't Neil Diamond or John Denver
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- Any Die Hard, Shawshank, Mean Machine
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- Celtic, Miami Dolphins, baseball any
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Blistering speed
Well, the fact I’m almost able to type this, would seem to suggest that I made it through the walk.
I did, but it was a closely-run thing. Up until yesterday, the furthest I have walked is 11 miles, from Galashiels to Lauder on the Southern Upland Way. The walk yesterday took in TWO other stretches of the way – from St Mary’s Loch to Traquair and then onto the Three Brethren. From there, it was a supposedly easy jaunt to Selkirk – in all, it was supposed to be 20 miles, but I’ve got a sneaky feeling they slipped a few extra miles in there when nobody was looking.
For my sins, I am part of the Borders Barmy Army (the BBA), a group which, for some reason, does every charity venture in kilts. I have to say that walking in the kilt was a very pleasant experience. William Wallace and his cronies were not that daft, after all… This time, it was for Cancer Research.
Most of the first bit went really well – the exception being the climb into Craig Douglas Forest, which brought out calls for ropes, harnesses and Sherpa guides. None of these were available so I gritted my teeth and my toes and got into a rhythm. I thought I was doing really well and was almost sprinting up the path, when an elderly fella strode on past me as if I were a rock. There was not a bead of sweat on his brow, while the stuff was pouring from every inch of my body.
I did eventually get to the top and it was all nearly worth it. The vista opened up with welcoming arms and a photo was in order.
From there, it was a lovely wee walk into Traquair. Four of our group – the BBA – thought they had found a shortcut to Traquair House, where they thought the checkpoint was, and added an extra couple of miles to their journey. When they arrived, I almost didn’t have the heart to laugh at them.
After the best cup of soup in the world – I must call Guinness – we (or most of us, as the first bit was enough for some, including Paul, who said that his blister was down to the flesh!) headed up to the Minch Moor. This particular part of the journey was incredibly difficult. My muscles had seized up a bit during the stop at Traquair and I was feeling it now. The path itself was so steep it made the bit through Craig Douglas forest like a walk in the garden.
Once at the top, though, it really was worth it again. Even Walkerburn looked like a postcard paradise when viewed from above. Soon, the Three Brethren were in view. They looked like they were twenty miles away. Up hill and down dale we hiked, and, for the first time, I began to wonder why people found this in any way enjoyable. My feet were itching, and by the time the three cairns were within smelling distance, the blisters had become fully formed.
I was really beginning to dislike Clovenfords, which stayed in the same place, no matter how far I walked. I also stay just along the road from Cloven, so there was that feeling of being so close to home and yet so far away. There was some feeling of relief as we reached the Brethren as it formed the end of our sojourn up the Southern Upland Way and, at last, Clovenfords was at last out of sight.
By this time, we were a band of four, and the mad half-hour after the Brethren was a laugh, but it soon turned into a shouting match. Lee, who kept tripping over pebbles, always wondered where the hell Selkirk was. Andy kept checking his GPS tracker and not telling us the truth. Steve was, in between laughing at the rest of us and naming Lee ‘Trippy’ was chatting to the sheep. For my part, the blisters had married and bred, and were having a christening party in my socks. Every step was becoming a nightmare and I fell behind the other three, urging them not to wait.
That last stretch is quite easily the worst bit of the walk. The path is rocky, with loose stones and cracked boulders. The party in my shoes was really bouncing by now. Maybe the blisters were playing rock music. Ha. Ha.
I crawled on both feet to the end of the road,0 Comments 41 weeks
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Another holiday blog
Yeehaa! Got another clout on Sunday. That makes three in total – in more than five months of shooting arrows.
If you think that’s pretty rubbish, I would probably go along with that. Although, the thing is – as I have said before – the size of my belly button, 120yds away from me and there’s no sights on a longbow, so it’s either:
a) become a robot
b) remember the tens of thousands of things different parts of your body should be doing at any moment during the aim, draw and release phases
c) buy a fantabulous bow that will actually take you to 180yds along with the rest of the men
d) sculpt your arrows and fletchings so that they are the epitome of aerodynamicism. (Is that a word? If it isn’t it should be)
e) Use a club bow, shoot from 120yds with the women, juniors and other happy twangers who have not yet got a bow of their own, shut your eyes and pray for the best
Up till now, I have gone for option e). Only because I don’t at this moment in time have the finances available to get a bow. That will change soon, though, I hope.
Connor – forever known now as Frozo for reasons only known to the rest of the happy twangers – also got his third clout on Sunday, before I did. Imagine his delight when I got one five minutes later to draw level once more. He was so happy, steam came out of his ears. It is a joy to see your son enjoy himself at a sport you enjoy doing yourself.
If I get another clout before he does, I think I’ll liken us to Kenny and Paul Dalgleish. The father being the master of all things while the son, although remarkably competent in every way, can’t quite come to terms with the fact that he’ll never be as good as the old man. That oughta please him. More steam could be emitted aurally.
Yes, I’m still arching. Only I’ll miss one of the club’s competitions this Sunday, as I’m doing a sponsored 23-mile walk for Cancer Research. Although I do call it sponsored euthanasia rather than a walk. I’m hoping for a pretty dreary day until the end, where I hope for sun. So I can enjoy a beer or seventeen outside. I’ll even break all tradition and put up another blog on Monday, three days after the last. I’m almost becoming prolific. I promise, that if I ever do, I will see a doctor right away.
Wish me luck, I might just need it…
0 Comments 41 weeks
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So much for resolutions!
Well, it had to happen. Two months down the line from when I said I would write more, I find I almost stopped.
So, what been going on?
I'm still playing the badminton fairly regularly and I think I might be getting a bit better at it, too. Connor has been playing too, and, until last week, was enjoying it. We were playing my mate and his laddie at doubles. Conzo was at the front of the court and I was covering the back. My mate sent over a lob and Connor took a swing at it and missed it by about three feet. For some reason, he turned round to try to hit it a second time.
He was about to regret being such a committed player. At that point, I was already swinging my racquet ... I caught him with a healthy-sounding clunk over his left eye.
After he picked himself up - I was too busy laughing to help - he did look a bit dazed. I put up three fingers in the age-old fashion and asked him to count them.
He said "Friday".
It was tough to know whether he was kidding or not, but for the record, it was Wednesday.
Anyway, the worst he got was a bit of a black eye, which he showed off with pride the next day.
But my racquet got the worst of it. It hasn't hit a straight shuttlecock since.
Meanwhile, we've had a busy couple of months with the paper. Dunno why, cos it usually is quite a quiet couple of months.
And the weather has not helped there, either. Can anyone else remember a year in which we have had so many call-offs for frozen or otherwise unplayable pitches? I know we have had worse snow before and that we are pretty crappy at getting our act together whenever it gets cold these days, but I can't remember such a long, protracted period of rubbish weather.
Billy Connolly once said that there is no such thing as bad weather, it's just the wrong clothes. Try telling that to our groundsmen!
Some rugby and football clubs are having a go at their respective leagues to blame them for the fixture chaos. As far as I can see, they are just doing the best they can in a pretty awful situation. All they are doing by arranging midweek games and reorganising matches at a moment's notice is just making sure we are not finishing off this season at the same time as starting the next.
I watched Selkirk High School's girls' side play Stornoway last week in the Scottish Senior Shield. I don't know what I was expecting, but I was pretty impressed by the standard. I think they'll go far. Watch this space ...0 Comments 49 weeks
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6/27/09
Leah Godfrey
Hi Kevin,
Apologies for the complete absence of any letters - sometime soon, I promise!
How's tricks? -
5/6/09
Leah Godfrey
......the heroine of the piece stands and looks pointedly at her letterbox, from which nothing but bills and junk mail has spilled forth over the last few days.....
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Vince Summers5/3/09Yep just like your kicks but a fraction higher!
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4/28/09
Leah Godfrey
Hey Hey! How was the walk? 23 miles is a long walk - 5 hours? I'm good thanks, hard at work, blah-di-blah, nothing exciting. I do believe its your turn to write!
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3/28/09
Yvonne Wright
Hey Kevin,
Hope your doin ok,
Just wanted to pop by and say thank you for your help getting our acknowledgement in the paper for mum. It was and will be very much appreciated for a long time to come.
hope to see u soon
love Yvonne. xxxx -
11/11/08
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Leona Greenan11/10/08Of course we will.
Many thanks Kevin.
Connor stole the show at the recpetion last weekend. He was up dancing and no word of a lie the full room of guests were standing up watching him and clapping for him. He was great a real star.
Hope you're well x -
Yvonne Wright11/9/08Hey Kev, hope ur doin ok. Just wanted to wish u a Happy Birthday. Take care. Yvonne.xx
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9/10/08
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Vince Summers9/1/08Kevin
Still waiting to see you at the Taekwondo class!!
Vince -
Lettie Pringle8/6/08Well heeellllo Mr Janiak and how are you doing? Yes I have sucumbed to the family life....2.4 kids and all that!
Still reporting? -
Leah Godfrey7/24/08Riiiiiiiiiiight.
Glad to hear all is now well in the in the bathroom department!! - 7/23/08 via Mobile
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7/17/08 via Mobile
Isabel Wilkinson
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Hail Hail
Kevin Janiak 0 Replies