Tomo

From Steve:

As some of you already know, our best friend and family member, Tomo, was put to rest on Tuesday, August 2, 2011. He had been inflicted with a nasal tumor, that became painful and last week forced him off dry food. Most problematic, his breathing generally was affected and the tumor made it impossible for him to sleep at night as he ultimately could no longer breathe through either nostril of his nose. It was a rapidly advancing cancer.

He was laid to rest at Nanny and Papa’s, his first home and a place he spent so many happy days. He was buried in the ‘back forty’, where he would always sneak off to, if you gave him the chance. Ava and Rebecca asked to participate in his burial and, with some hesitation, Heather and I agreed. Although very upset with the loss of their “brother”, they showed unbelievable grace and maturity in laying him to rest, and continue to do so. Heather and I are so proud of them. Eric, unfortunately only knew Tomo as the ever-present furry scavenger under his high chair. And while some may think of Eric as our first boy, he really is our second – Tomo was our first. Tomo was with me when I proposed to Heather and while it was clear that she jumped at the chance to be his mom, I am not entirely sure I was really part of the equation. I hope that she will still have me.

I know that Tomo will also be missed by his canine friends. I hate the fact that I no longer have to be careful when saying any word that ends with ‘out’, so as to avoid his disappointment that he would not be seeing his best pal ‘Scout’. Without fail, saying “Do you want to see Scout?” would instantly trigger the unmistakable reaction of excited trembling, focused look and tail fluttering anticipation. However, if Tomo was within earshot, which was always, and he happened to hear us say “did you buy any girl scout cookies?” or even “did you ever catch a trout?”, then instantly we would notice the reaction in him that made it only seem fair that a ‘play date’ soon follow.

He was buried with an old Frisbee and two tennis balls, and I am sure that is not enough as those will be worn to the core in no time, as he fetches pain-free in heaven. As many of you may know, his full name was ‘Tomochichi’, an Indian name meaning ‘the one who causes to fly up.’ He sure lived up to his name as his enthusiasm to fetch would almost demand that you assist him in that pursuit. Once started, the number of times that his endless ‘terminator’ drive would cause a tennis ball or Frisbee ‘to fly up’ was limited only by the stamina of the person throwing the ball or Frisbee… you would always quit before he would. We thank all of you who tried and surely failed to wear him out, but I am sure that the pleasure was all yours.

13 years ago, when he was just a 9 week- old puppy, I hit the lottery when Tomo picked me to be his dad. Tomo always made it look like I knew what I was doing as a dog owner, but it was all him. He could be trained to do anything in what seemed like moments. If I were a professional dog trainer, the jig would surely be up now. However, he did have a few “flaws.” There was zero chance for the girls ever to get a kitty or a small dog… can we say “lunch” …. or at least AWOL felines… Sorry Nanny. And the same nose that would seek out and find tennis balls unknowingly buried in friend’s closets, behind walls and encapsulated in lead, never learned that three inches behind a skunk’s rear end was a bad place to be.

On his last day, he still had his enthusiasm to chase his ball, and through his arthritis and a shoulder tumor that had returned, we were able to enjoy more than a few fetches. And he still had that inquisitive look and fluttering tail in his search for “chippies” (chipmunks) around the wood pile…. but it was his time. Heather and I were with him as he left us, and with him having such a good day it made it all the harder for us to let him go. But we know that it was better for him to be that way, as he was happy and “with us” until the end.

My vet told me, and I wholeheartedly agree, that we enter a contract with our pets when we get them. They will love us unconditionally, and in the end, we must be there with them and end their suffering in the most humane way possible. Needless to say, he made our part of the deal all the harder to bear. Tomo lived a long and happy life, and we were beyond fortunate for every day that we had with him….all I can say is that we will truly miss him.

Where in the world is Carmin SanDiego?

Kayla headed off to Moshi, Tanzania (near the base of Kilimanjaro) on Friday night and arrived at 7:45pm Saturday (12:45pm eastern time). Tanzania is 7 hours ahead of us (1 hour ahead of Europe).

Some Text message hightlights:
Sat 7:49pm: “just landed in africa!”
Sat 8:08pm: “There are so many stars out”
Tue 8:41pm: “Today we went to the school and taught English (I’m teaching a 2nd grade class for the next two weeks ) then we did manual labor stuff. Just about to go to bed”

I’ll add further updates as comments below as they come in.

Photo in 1st days:

from one of the returning students in the 2 week program:

Taken Wednesday August 10th at 8:30 in morning (Must be at school):


Priors take home 3 medals at USATF Region 1 Junior Olympic Championships

The Prior family traveled to RPI in Troy, NY via Woobury and Ithaca to compete in the Region 1 USATF Junior Olympics (photos, results). There are 16 regions around the country with the top 5 in each event qualifying to advance to the national championships in Kansas at the end of the month. Jared picked up a silver in the long jump and the bronze in the 100m while Kayla took the bronze in the triple jump. This meet brought together competitors from NY, CT, MA, RI, NH, VT, and ME. Jared will be in camp and Kayla packing for Tanzania so we’ll need to pass on the nationals this year.

Jared jumped 17’3.5″ off his right foot in the LJ (a “wrong” foot PR) and ran 12.60 FAT in the 100m, improving on his 12.77 in the NE meet and the semis. Kayla tripled jumped 30’6″, which was not bad considering her training the past 3 week consisted of lying in bed watching ugly betty on netflix. Jared got in two jumps before the 100m while Kayla checked him in (a foul and a right foot 17′.5″) and passed his third followed by 3 jumps in the finals, with his 17’3.5″ coming on his last jump.

Jared jumps to 11th in 2011 US Track and Field Youth National Championship

Jared jumped 16′ .25″ to place 11th in the 2011 USATF Youth Nationals in Myrtle Beach, SC.

Jared and Dad got up at 3:45am Saturday morning after 3 hours of sleep to head to Myrtle Beach for the USATF Youth Nationals at Doug Shaw stadium. The Long Jump was at 8am Sunday (photos, results, Meet Coverage Link, Meet Home Page).

This was only the 5th time Jared has competed in long jump on a real runway and he had to sort out his steps on his own without a coach. He got in three legal jumps, but they were about a foot behind the take-off line. He missed the finals and podium by just 4″. A PR would have moved him down to 5th, but he improved from his seeding before the meet of ~13th. The other more experienced jumpers in the field were quite talented and had similar take-off problems.

It was quite an experience to compete against some of the best jumpers from across the country and to see how top end professional track meets are run. Our goal was to use this as preparation for future meets. The long jump had eight uniformed officials running the event, including someone manning a wind speed guage for each jump to allow for official records to be set.

We had a lot of fun in our two days in Myrtle Beach with trips to the beach, go-carts, water park, and several movies. The weather was a sweltering 90F.

Athletes march out of check in area to the field:

Warm ups:

One of the top 3 jumpers:

1st Jump (see photo sequence)

2nd jump:

[flashvideo bufferlength=10 width=800 height=450 file=http://video.priorfamily.org/sports/jrp/2011/20110703-MVI_7828_MP4%20360p%20(16×9).mp4 /]

I didn’t watch the viewfinder for 2nd jump video abover and didn’t take pictures of third jump. You can’t give athletes feedback on their take-off mark based on video/photos so I needed to be careful not to get him DQ-ed.

Kayla’s teammate Carla Forbes had been at the stadium earlier in the week winning the triple jump at the world youth championship trials and making the US world team. We saw the results posted as we arrived in the stadium on Saturday.

2011 New England Junior Olympic Track & Field Championships

The Prior family took home four medals (a gold and three bronze) from the 2011 New England Junior Olympic Track Championships held at Fitchburg State University on 6/18 (photos, results, meet info). This is only the 2nd time they have competed together in same meet.

Kayla started the day by jumping to 3rd in both the long and triple jumps to pick up two bronze medals and two berths to the region 1 meet. This was the final track meet that Kayla’s infected tonsils will be coming along for the ride.

In the afternoon, Jared advanced to the 100m finals, winning his trials heat in the 2nd fastest time overall (12.76 FAT) and then matched it in the final (12.77 FAT) for 3rd place. Kayla was on the infield before the race teaching him how to start from a crouch position.

After baking on the sunny infield for a couple of hours waiting for the 100m trials and finals and completing those two races, Jared headed to the Long Jump pit to face a field of 16 jumpers. He struggling with his steps a bit in warm ups, but lead off with a safe 5.19m (17’1/4″) jump with plenty of room behind the board. After two strong looking fouls, he finished off with a 5.02m (16’5 1/2″) jump. His opening jump outdistanced the field by over 7 inches to earn him the title of 2011 New England Junior Olympic Long Jump Champion (footnote: Maine and Connecticut have separate meets but he out distanced those winners as well) in the 1997-1998 Youth division. This mark would have also won the Massachusetts Middle School Championship last week (only Brown middle school, based on winning the all-city meet, represented Newton at that meet).

The top six places from this meet advance to the “Northeast” Region 1 championship , (entries) at RPI in Troy, New York on July 9th (Jared) and 10th (Kayla). Kayla and Jared advance in all their 4 events. Region 1 combines NY, CT, RI, MA, VT, ME, NH, and NY. The top 5 from each of the 16 regions advance to the National Championship at Wichata State University in Wichita, Kansas.

Jared’s long jump PR from his middle school season (17’5″, 5.31m) is close enough to the 5.33m guideline to qualify him for the Youth Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Myrtle Beach (info, entries) so Dad and Jared will do an overnight trip down there to compete on July 3rd. His PR would place 10th last year as would Kayla’s LJ PR (but she will be recuperating that week).

Newton Lions wrap up spring season with 1-2 overtime loss to Lexington in MITOC playoffs

Jared’s town Bay Area Youth soccer (BAYS) travel team was Newton 2nd team for 7th-8th graders (team photos, Jared photo sequences). They finished the regular season with a 8-0-2 record to win their six team division last week. This enabled them to compete with other eight other division 2 winners for the chance to represent the 180 or so boston area youth soccer teams in the state-wide Massachusetts Tournament of Champions.

They faced Lexington’s #1 team last night in the first round of the playoffs. The Lexington team was from a higher division and also had a 8-0-2 record. After going down 0-1 they came back with a 1-1 equalizer and the game finished regulation in a 1-1 tie. That put the game into two 10 minute overtime periods. They team played well but Lexington had an explosive striker who scored the go ahead goal for them. This was the most exciting soccer game I’ve seen since Jared started playing. Jared played the entire 90 minutes as a midfielder despite the team having 5 subs.

It was a disappointing loss, but the team played very well against an excellent opponent. The fall season (with Jared on injured reserve) saw his team with only a 2-6-2 record, so they have come a long way. Between basketball and soccer, Jared was blessed to play with two undefeated regular season Newton teams this year.

Below is photo number 47,370 taken in year since Dad got his camera for Father’s day one year ago. An average of 130/day! Not a bad photo considering it was taken right after the loss….

Jared triple runner-up at Newton All-City Championships

Jared concluded his first middle school track season taking home three 2nd place ribbons for the long jump (16’8″), 100m (12.2 PR), and 4x100m relay (52.58?) in the Newton All-City meet (photos). The meet brought together the 6th-8th graders from the four middle schools in the city. In the 4x100m Jared achored them team from being just slightly ahead of 4th into a strong 2nd.

preparing for 1st long jump:

Getting some pointers:

Taking off on 16’8″ jump (a bit left on the board):

100m start:

Getting hand-off for 4x100m relay anchor leg:

Kayla jumps to 5th in Eastern Mass Division 1 State Championships

It is always nice when the Boston Globe writes the sports.priorfamily.org entry:

The girls’ competition was much tighter, with a great showing in the field events proving the difference for Newton North, which finished with 93 1/2 points, 8 more than Andover.

The Tigers earned 24 points in the long jump on strong performances by Carla Forbes (first, 17 feet 5 3/4 inches), Kayla Wong (second, 16-9 1/2), and Kayla Prior (fifth, 16- 1/4). They added 18 points in the discus as Ellen Goldberg (114-1) and Tatiana Froehlich (112-3) went 1-2.

“Getting the big points in the long jump and discus gives us a big shot in the arm,’’ said coach Joe Tranchita. “Execution was the key and that really was the focus. We weren’t looking at points, we weren’t looking at matchups.’’

Kayla completed her 2011 track season with a 16′ 1/4″ long jump for 5th place and 4 points in the Division 1 championships on Saturday in Andover. Together the Newton North long jumpers placed 1st, 2nd, 5th, and 7th, to contribute 24 points to Newton’s 93.5 to 87.5 win over Andover and the other 32 scoring schools in the meet (photos, results, Boston Globe article, Boston Herald article, Newton Track Blog, Newton Tab article, Newton tab photos) .

As the Boston Globe notes above, the long jump was one of the 1st events completed and having the Newton jumpers exceed their already high expectations based on incoming seeds by 3 points set the meet’s momentum in Newton’s favor. The 31 other largest eastern Mass schools could only field 2 athletes to beat her. This was Kayla’s first trip to a state meet medal podium. Her 4 points ranked her as Newton’s 7th highest point scorer for the day and enabled Newton to enter the final 4x400m relay with a tie for the win locked up. She also ran the 100m for 17th in 13.48a.

From the Boston Globe today:

Photo from Andrea Keklak’s (800m record setter) dad. I work with her mom.

Day Middle School defeats Bigelow – Jared wins 3 events

Jared won the long jump (16′), the 100m (12.3), and anchored the 4x100m relay to a win to help Day defeat Bigelow middle school Friday (photos) at the Newton North track. Kayla officiated the girls long jump on one runway while Jared jumped on the other (see photos below). He finishes up his middle school season Friday at the all-city meet.

Jared competes on a real track

Jared had his first track meet on a track rather than a grassy field in the rain at the Newton South track today against Brown and Oak Hill Middle schools. He long jumped a 17′ 5″ personal best for 2nd and ran the 100m in a PR 12.24 (12.48c) for 2nd. His 4x100m team took 2nd as well. According to Athletic.net (which doesn’t have Masssachusetts schools listed), the long jump mark would rank him 225th out of 11,000 middle schoolers listed on the site (top 2%) and (if grade entries are correct) 25th among 7th graders.