πŸš΄β€β™‚οΈ Great crew for a ride up both sides of Achterbahn

Strava map of a 51.6 km virtual ride

Finished reading: System Collapse by Martha Wells is another fun book in a great seriesπŸ“š

Finished reading: The Martian Chronicles by Ray Bradbury is rather strange. Some really lovely, poetic passages about the tranquility and beauty of Mars, coupled with buffoonish characters from Earth. I totally get this could be intentional, though it is jarring πŸ“š

Finished reading: The Gulag Archipelago [Volume 1] by Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn is a remarkable book. I’ve never really comprehended the Stalin-era purges. Solzhenitsyn’s dark humour and extensive narrative details really helped make them feel horrifyingly real πŸ“š

πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ Found some company on today’s run

Two swans floating close together in a lake with a yellowish sunrise behind them

πŸŠβ€β™‚οΈπŸš΄β€β™‚οΈπŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ Fitness in 2023

I kept busy in 2023 with triathlon training. As a reference point for next year, here’s a comparison of 2023 with 2022.

My running was surprisingly consistent. Although the totals are almost identical, I do think that my structured workouts were much better in 2023. Each run had a purpose and all were part of a bigger plan.

Cumulative running totals for 2023 (1,663 km) and 2022 (1,603 km)

There was a trade off for cycling between indoors and outdoors. In 2023, I couldn’t quite get aligned with most of the outdoor group rides. So, there was a lot more indoor riding on Zwift. I’d like to switch this around in 2024.

Cumulative outdoor cycling totals for 2023 (628 km) and 2022 (1,301 km) Cumulative indoor cycling totals for 2023 (3,017 km) and 2022 (1,702 km)

I’m surprised by my relatively low swimming distances in 2023. This is my strongest of the three. So, I tend to take it for granted. I should bump this up in 2024.

Cumulative swimming totals for 2023 (85 km) and 2022 (104 km)

New books for the new year πŸ“š

Stack of books: Midlife, Make it So, The Future of Us, The Rise and Reign of Mammals, My Effin’ Life

πŸ₯Ά Shortest and coldest swim of the year

Group of people standing in front of a lake. All bundled up and getting ready for a swim

Year in books for 2023

I read some great books in 2023.

My favourite fiction book was The Mountain in the Sea by Ray Nayler. Non-fiction was Enemy of All Mankind by Steven Johnson.

Lords of Uncreation Against the Grain All Souls Lost The Tombs of Atuan Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow American Moonshot The Alloy of Law Eyes of the Void Termination Shock The Rationalist's Guide to the Galaxy The Mountain in the Sea Earthseed The Goblin Emperor Hands of Time Blue Mars The Dragon Reborn Shards of Earth Shaman A Deadly Education The Anomaly The Great Hunt Dust The Slow Regard of Silent Things The Hero of Ages Shape The Wise Man's Fear An Emergency in Ottawa Fugitive Telemetry Enemy of All Mankind The Scout Mindset A Beginner's Guide to the End The Extended Mind The Last Druid The Name of the Wind The Calculating Stars Project Hail Mary The Biggest Ideas in the Universe Elder Race Perhaps the Stars Life Is Hard Mistborn: Secret History

Finished reading: Lords of Uncreation by Adrian Tchaikovsky is a good end to a fun series. I enjoyed the world building and premise of the trilogy which doesn’t get too serious πŸ“š

Finished reading: Against the Grain by James C. Scott is a really interesting exploration of the links between agriculture and state building. Definitely changed my mind about early state formation πŸ“š

We had a fun family night out to see the Candlelight Tribute to Taylor Swift at Longboat Hall. Interesting to hear the music reinterpreted by these talented musicians

A string quartet up on stage holding their instruments while surrounded by candles

The new Apple Watch integration with Training Peaks is really nice. Like my Garmin friends, I can finally just roll out of bed and do what my watch tell me to without having to manually create workouts πŸŠπŸš΄β€β™‚οΈπŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ

DayOne has integrated Journaling Suggestions already. A nice addition and now there’s no compelling reason to use the new Apple Journal app. I liked the promised simplicity of the new app, only to find it too simple. My journal is extended memory, so I rely on search, which isn’t in the new app.

Lucy tried the gecko food. Didn’t work well with her system, but she has no regrets

Chewed up package of gecko food in the foreground and a guilty looking black lab in the background

πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ Forgot to turn off the workout before getting back in the car. Got some impressive running paces! πŸ˜€

Screenshot from the Fitness app showing 1:17/km and 1:29/km paces

Nice addition to HealthFit: a visual summary of training load to see if you’re optimizing stress and recovery

Screenshot shows a coloured bar from blue to green to orange to red that indicates training balance

🏊 πŸš΄β€β™‚οΈ πŸƒβ€β™‚οΈ Alright, signed up for the Ironman 70.3 in Muskoka. I enjoyed the race last year and look forward to a repeat

Even more defaults

As a follow up to my Duel of the Defaults post, I’ve made a few changes. These are all based on further adopting app defaults to simplify things.

  • πŸ“° RSS: I’ve swapped out Feedbin for iCloud as the backend for NetNewsWire. Although I really like the Feedbin service, my primary use of it is to access my feeds via a web browser at work. In an attempt to limit my feed reading to just once in the morning and once in the evening, switching to iCloud means that only my personal iPhone has access.
  • πŸ‘“ Read It Later: Switching to Safari’s Reading List for this. The feature is well integrated into the system and more than sufficient for my needs.
  • 🎧 Podcasts: After some back and forth and back again, over to Apple Podcasts.

These choices are largely motivated by an attempt to limit the number of inputs and potential for distractions. That said, these default apps are still powerful and effective.