Today we’d like to introduce you to Maria A. Jiménez-Tierney. Below you’ll find edited excerpts of our interview with Maria.... Click here to read more.
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Today we’d like to introduce you to Maria A. Jiménez-Tierney. Below you’ll find edited excerpts of our interview with Maria.... Click here to read more.
Satoko and her family have returned to Japan for the month of July to visit her family in Kyoto. We all miss her very much. Here are some highlights of her trip.
It's a great time of year to take advantage of the many cultural happenings throughout the city. The annual Block Party on the Colorado Bridge is coming up this weekend as is the Arts Crawl in South Pasadena.
This is the latest event taking place downtown a Flea Market and Independent Food Stall Marketplace. I have two friends with daughters doing their start ups here.
Chef Casey Felton and her partner Armen Piskoulian own and run " Banh Oui " Both are classically trained and have cooked at some of the top restaurants in the LA area, including Providence, Red Medicine and The Tasting Kitchen. Apparently they were over run with orders last Sunday for hours on end.
This quote from an attendee : " They initiated a new dish - Vietnamese chicken wings with a killer spicy sweet sauce. It was sooo good. That dish, along with their pork-belly banh mi sandwich, essentially grabbed all the orders coming in. The place was a big hit. "
Hayley Dox is doing vintage. Her company is : Big Daddy's Antiques".
I tried to make it last Sunday but ended up losing my flip-flops. Somehow I could 't see myself barefoot on the streets of downtown LA in ninety five degree weather. YUK!
Next Sunday I will be first in line !!
I will report my findings....
Heat-related deaths and illness are preventable yet annually many people succumb to extreme heat. Extreme heat caused 7,415 heat-related deaths in the United States from 1999 to 2010. Extreme heat kills more people than hurricanes, floods, tornadoes and lightning combined, according to the National Weather Service. In 2001, 300 deaths were caused by excessive heat exposure.
People suffer heat-related illness when their bodies are unable to compensate and properly cool themselves. The body normally cools itself by sweating. But under some conditions, sweating just isn't enough. In such cases, a person's body temperature rises rapidly. Very high body temperatures may damage the brain or other vital organs.
Several factors affect the body's ability to cool itself during extremely hot weather. When the humidity is high, sweat will not evaporate as quickly, preventing the body from releasing heat quickly. Other conditions related to risk include age, obesity, fever, dehydration, heart disease, mental illness, poor circulation, sunburn, and prescription drug and alcohol use.
Because heat-related deaths are preventable, people need to be aware of who is at greatest risk and what actions can be taken to prevent a heat-related illness or death. The elderly, the very young, and people with mental illness and chronic diseases are at highest risk. However, even young and healthy individuals can succumb to heat if they participate in strenuous physical activities during hot weather. Air-conditioning is the number one protective factor against heat-related illness and death. If a home is not air-conditioned, people can reduce their risk for heat-related illness by spending time in public facilities that are air-conditioned.
Summertime activity, whether on the playing field or the construction site, must be balanced with measures that aid the body's cooling mechanisms and prevent heat-related illness. This pamphlet tells how you can prevent, recognize, and cope with heat-related health problems.
Conditions of extreme heat are defined as summertime temperatures that are substantially hotter and/or more humid than average for location at that time of year. Humid or muggy conditions, which add to the discomfort of high temperatures, occur when a "dome" of high atmospheric pressure traps hazy, damp air near the ground. Extremely dry and hot conditions can provoke dust storms and low visibility. Droughts occur when a long period passes without substantial rainfall. A heat wave combined with a drought is a very dangerous situation.
To protect your health when temperatures are extremely high, remember to keep cool and use common sense. The following tips are important:
During hot weather you will need to increase your fluid intake, regardless of your activity level. Don't wait until you're thirsty to drink. During heavy exercise in a hot environment, drink two to four glasses (16-32 ounces) of cool fluids each hour.
Warning: If your doctor generally limits the amount of fluid you drink or has you on water pills, ask how much you should drink while the weather is hot.
Don't drink liquids that contain alcohol, or large amounts of sugar—these actually cause you to lose more body fluid. Also avoid very cold drinks, because they can cause stomach cramps.
This information provided by NCEH's Health Studies Branch.
It's that great time of year when we all get to enjoy free music throughout the city. No matter what your genre is you can find it somewhere. This weekend my favorite radio station KCRW will begin its "Summer Nights" at One Colorado. So if you're looking for something to do this weekend, grab your chair.
This is a very typical example of a Semi-Private Class. Saturday morning a few weeks ago Lise Geller and Susan D'Antuano worked together on the Wunda Chair . Veronica Estrada takes a rest in between some " Killer Abs " !
What a great way for kids to understand the judicial system. Utilizing Harry Potter a story kids are all too familiar with is presented in a real courtroom. Kids in this school play all the roles. Read on...
I was asked today where a photo was taken with my kids this past weekend. It was at Millard Falls in Altadena up the Chaney Trail. We've taken our kids there since they were toddlers because it is close to town and very easy for them to do on their own. It was closed for a long time so this was our first visit back in a while. I highly recommend it for any families wanting to introduce hiking to their young kids. It's shady along the trail which hugs the stream up to the falls. Kids especially love to take their time by the water looking for frogs and salamanders or any other critters. We saw so many beautiful blue birds, not sure exactly what type, but they caught our attention because they were up on the hill digging for food which created a falling debris over our heads. What a better way to learn about nature than by watching it and learning to respect it.
My kids have come to enjoy hikes, they have a few friends who join them. They mostly love them when near streams. They get angry at me often for pushing them further than maybe I should have. But at the end of the day my son said to me at Millard Falls this past weekend, given a choice he would choose the mountains over the ocean. A boy after my heart....
Let's try this again !
Read moreI came across this older article with a few suggestions for high protein breakfasts. I personally have the oatmeal listed here a few days a week ( when I am being good ). Since I often don't have a break in my schedule until close to noon this usually fills me up nicely and holds me over until lunchtime.
Let me know what you think.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/10/high-protein-breakfasts_n_3732490.html
CPR CERTIFICATION CLASS
Pilates of Pasadena is hosting a CPR course for all ages! Saturday June 4th @ Noon - $50.00
RSVP: info@pilatesofpasadena.com
http://www.code3life.com
Pilates of Pasadena
990 South Arroyo Parkway unit 2 Pasadena, CA 91105 www.pilatesofpasadena.com
(626) 765-6500
990 S. Arroyo Parkway Blvd. Pasadena, California 91105
My friend Jeanne is teaching a Pilates mat class The next 5 Sundays in North Hollywood. Well worth the drive and early morning wake-up. I will set my clock :)
This is my conclusion to previous blogs regarding strengthening of the feet.
Pilates is typically performed bare footed. In an hour’s workout, 50% percent of the time the feet are active and in contact with equipment. In the "footwork" portion of a Pilates workout, the feet are in constant motion as they work utilizing resistance from the body and facilitated by springs that are part of the apparatus. These exercises are performed in either plantar flexion or dorsiflexion positions. Simply put, the feet are either up on their toes or in a flexed position. In these varied positions, all of the muscles throughout the feet are being strengthened and stretched.
At Pilates of Pasadena we also incorporate additional exercise props such as Thera-Band, along with a wide variety of balance equipment, to our Pilates repertoire.
Whether you are working on strengthening your feet or on balance. Pilates will do it!
Maria
You run to boost your heart rate, lift to build strength, and stretch to stay flexible. But chances are you're ignoring some of the most important muscles in your body: those in your feet and ankles.
If you're like most people, your feet have probably grown weak and inflexible — underused, confined in shoes, and idle the majority of the day under a desk — and they're not providing the support the rest of your body needs. Something has to compensate to pick up that slack, a burden that usually falls on the back, hips, knees, and shoulders. "I get all these patients who say, 'I have chronically tight IT bands' or 'I've always had this low back pain,' " says Chris Delehanty, director of Physiofitness, a physical therapy clinic in New York City. "You look at how they stand, and the light comes on: weak feet." This, Delehanty says, is the real source of many chronic injuries and pain.
Yet go to the gym, and the one body part you don't see people targeting is their feet. "The majority of us — even some of the most elite athletes I've trained — have little-girl feet," says Jay Dicharry, director of REP Biomechanics, in Bend, Oregon, the physical therapy lab of the U.S. Ski Team and other pro athletes. Among the problems Dicharry regularly encounters: stiff ankles, tight Achilles tendons, toes that won't spread and bend, and immobility in the small, stabilizing foot muscles — all of these issues get in the way of reaching peak performance. "We've finally absorbed the message that to do any sport well you need a strong core," says Dicharry. "But a strong core is useless without a strong foundation."
How much work do your feet need? Dicharry suggests this test: While barefoot, try to push your big toe down as you lift the other four toes off the floor. If you can't, that's a clear sign that the muscles in your feet are not as strong as they could be, and your ligaments and tendons are tight. This inhibits the ability to plant the toes and push off — a basic action that affects the height of your jumps, the speed of your sprints, and how quickly you can make a lateral cut. Delehanty, meanwhile, uses this test to assess ankle mobility: Put your bare feet together and try to squat; your butt should hit your ankles. If it doesn't, your ankles are tight. "If your ankles move well, you move well," Delehanty explains.
You'd be surprised at how many people flunk those tests. "We plant our feet more than 10,000 times a day to sit, stand, and walk; make that 15,000 to 20,000 times if you exercise," says Rock Positano, director of the nonsurgical foot and ankle center at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. "And each time our foot presses into the ground, it absorbs some 300 pounds of force." The wear and tear adds up. If that tension was in any other part of our bodies, we'd hit the foam roller, stretch, or try massage. "But when was the last time you did any recovery work for your feet?" asks Jill Miller, a movement specialist and the author of the mobility guide The Roll Model.
Check in with our blog tomorrow for my conclusion to this weeks information on the importance of strengthening your feet and how integral this is in every Pilates session.
Maria Jiménez-Tierney
More on feet:
The results could help in building robotic body parts that will closely imitate human movement, and might lead to a new generation of advanced prosthetics.
Many studies concerning human balance have emphasized the legs and upper body while ignoring the feet, he said.
Hooshang Hamami, professor of electrical and computer engineering at Ohio State University built a complex computational model of the human foot to look at the role of the feet and toes in determining the body’s movement and balance.
“My hope is that my work will inspire construction of robotic models of various body parts that can move similarly to the human body. If you can make a robot or computer model kick a soccer ball like a soccer player, we will have a better understanding of how various parts of the body work during movement. Then, perhaps, you can build an artificial spinal cord that could help the handicapped,” Hemami said. “Attaching a robotic spinal cord to the outside of someone who is handicapped could help muscle development.”
Feet can take a beating if you participate in sports. And just like any other structure in the body, dysfunction in our feet can lead to serious issues, including knee pain or lower back aches.
Your feet need training and conditioning just like the rest of your body.
The muscle groups of your two feet make up 25 percent of the body's muscles. If you ignore the strength and function of the muscles in your feet, it is like eliminating upper-body exercises from your routine.
Exercises that innervate the intrinsic foot muscles and restore the length of lower leg muscles are extremely important. Foot strength directly influences proper foot mechanics, gait patterns, ankle stabilization, and whole-body balance.
Suzanna McGee is a Ms. Natural Olympia bodybuilding champion and athletic trainer with a focus on sport conditioning and injury prevention
Themed “Reflections-A Centennial Celebration” the event will feature Flower Arranging, Horticulture,Photography,Botanical Arts and Needle Arts
From STAFF REPORTS
Friday, April 1, 2016
On April 23rd and 24th, the Pasadena Public Library will be transformed into a botanical paradise. “Reflections – A Centennial Celebration”, a Garden Club of America Flower Show presented by the Pasadena Garden Club will be open to the public, free of charge during the library hours of 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Saturday and 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. on Sunday.
A grand opening ribbon cutting ceremony will take place on Saturday, April 23rd at 8:45 a.m. to honor the Pasadena Garden Club’s centennial year and the club’s involvement in the Pasadena community for 100 years.
Philanthropist Arthur C. Noble, a Star-News headline announced: “Prominent people form organization to aid beautification of the city.” Now 100 years later, members say, the Pasadena Garden Club maintains that core mission, continues its early influence on preserving the Arroyo Seco; and works to restore, improve and protect the quality of the environment, through programs and actions in the fields of environment, conservation, civic improvements and education.
Myron Hunt one of the club’s founding members was the architect for the Pasadena Public Library and the architect for the Casita del Arroyo, a community meeting house, with a water demonstration garden and butterfly sanctuary, which has been the major community project for the Pasadena Garden Club since it was conceived, designed and built as a public works project during the Great Depression. The building was a joint project between the Pasadena Garden Club and the City of Pasadena. Its walls include boulders from the Arroyo, and its original roof shakes cuttings from fallen trees in the upper canyon. Virtually all the lumber came from the bicycle track built inside the Rose Bowl for the 1932 Olympics.
The purpose of this Garden Club of America flower show staged within the Library is to set standards of artistic and horticultural excellence. Judges from all over the United States will offer their evaluation of the individual entries.
Viewers will be inspired by floral designs including period style botanical hats, miniature arrangements, and traditional and modern interpretive designs.
A horticulture division will feature Pasadena landmark gardens created to miniature scale; display containers of native plants; succulents in a salvaged container; window boxes displaying culinary herbs as an ode to Julia Child; and cut roses from the gardens of garden club members. Judges will look at 35 ‘Heuchera Maxima’ challenge plants to decide what makes one stand out as the blue ribbon winner?
Another division ‘Pasadena in Focus’ is a photography exhibit of creative views of the city as seen through the lenses of talented photographers. In Botanical Arts entries of necklaces and crowns made only of botanical dried material are transformed into adornment worthy of the city’s celebrated Rose Queen and Princesses.
Needlework canvases in this division take La Casita del Arroyo as their theme.
And last but not to be missed the POP Conservation Garden Exhibit will present how to make your local garden a haven for bee, bird and butterfly pollinators.
A visit to the library to see this show will be a morning or afternoon well spent.
For more information, contact Robin Stever at (626) 695-2846 or email robinstever@yahoo.com.
For more information about Pasadena Garden Club, visit pasadenagardenclub.com.
990 S. Arroyo Parkway Blvd., Pasadena, California 91105 | (626) 765-6500