Obviously a picture from a previous year with colder temperatures |
My neighbors and I in Fort Worth’s Berkeley neighborhood were virtually housebound this weekend with a double whammy of events which closed our streets. Saturday was sunny and beautiful, with temperatures in the high seventies or low eighties. I think half the families in Tarrant County decided it was a great day to visit the world-class Fort Worth Zoo, which is on the edge of our neighborhood. Traffic on my street, Park Place Avenue, was backed up for four blocks—we do have the world’s longest red light at the corner before the road descends to the zoo. And by afternoon, cars were parked for blocks along many of our streets. This routinely happens over Spring Break, especially at half-price day at the zoo, and the Fort Worth Police do a good job of planning their strategy and keeping traffic moving as best they can. But who expects zoo weather in late February? Another sign of climate change, and one we should all take seriously. The traffic is not just an annoyance for those of us in the neighborhood: it’s a real problem if emergency vehicles such as an ambulance or fire truck are needed. Christian wanted to go to the store and could go out by going the opposite direction from the zoo, but he was afraid he could never get back home.
I was proud of my neighbors though—several
posted on the neighborhood Buzz how good it was to see happy families enjoying
the zoo and the fine weather. Said one, “It’s a happy day in the neighborhood,”
with a hat tip to Mr. Rogers. There have been suggestions about a parking garage, which I don't think would fit the neighborhood ambiance at all, and a few other remedies, but the general mood is that we're happy to have the zoo and have people enjoy it. The only thing niggling in my mind is the off chance of the need of an emergency vehicle.
Today one of Fort Worth’s
major events hit our neighborhood: the Cowtown Marathon, which attracts almost
thirty thousand runners for the marathon and associated races—half marathon,
ultramarathon, 10K, children’s races. The regular marathon goes right through
Berkeley and then down one of our main access roads. The halfway point for the
full marathon is approximately in front of our house, so we get to watch the
runners go by. When I was in the main house, I used to sit on the porch and,
silently to myself, assess the style and form of each runner. Now, from the
cottage, I can only see them at a distance, if I peer down the driveway and
through the iron gate.
Back when the marathon began in 1978 my then-husband was one of the founders, and I was on the publicity committee. The group from what was then the Texas College of Osteopathic Medicine met in my living room for months, talking about health and fitness and planning the marathon. I laughed each Sunday, because after the meeting, another girl and I served them fantastically rich desserts—and that ate every bite. Come race day, I woke my four children, ranging from nine to three, at five in the morning, and we headed for the Stockyards District where the race then began and ended. And I abandoned the children so I could help with whatever needed to be done (I remember a TV station had a van on site, and I periodically updated them). I can’t believe now that I turned the children loose, but I did. They reported in when they were hungry, but otherwise they joined other “race orphans” and roamed the area. They uniformly recall it as one of the really fun times of their childhood. This went on for two or three years until my husband and I divorced. But like my children I have mostly fond memories of the marathon, so race day is always a bit nostalgic for me.
The night before that first
race, we were sitting in our home office when we heard it—and my husband said, “Sleet!
I didn’t want sleet!” Actually he didn’t say it that politely. Next morning the
streets were ice-covered. Unfortunately I don’t remember the temperature, but
today it is sunny and clear and 80 at one o’clock—far too hot for marathoners.
By now, as I write, all but the stragglers have made it to the finish line. It’s
five hours after the start. And the zoo traffic is less, but it will pick up
again when the zoo closes.
The weekend events are but
another reasons I’m glad to live in Berkeley.
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