Posted October 23rd, 2007 at 9:41 AM by Jeanie Rebb
The city of New Orleans is welcoming back, for its 44th year, a great New Orleans tradition: The New Orleans Mardi Gras Marathon which hits the streets Sunday, February 24, 2008.
“We have watched as the Mardi Gras Marathon has grown over the years,” said Mayor C. Ray Nagin. “As it has grown, the city has welcomed more and more visitors. That is important to us always, and especially in this time of recovery and rebuilding.”
When Councilmember Arnie Fielkow heard the race was being wooed by a nearby city, he reacted quickly and called the city council together. “There was no way we were going to lose this race after so many years,” said Councilman Fielkow. “The council agreed to work with the marathon and provide what was needed to keep the race here.”
The race will offer an exciting new course featuring the historic French Quarter, world-famous Bourbon Street, St. Charles Avenue, the beautiful Garden District and two of the finest urban parks in the country, Audubon Park and City Park. The marathon will start and finish on Sugar Bowl Drive at the Louisiana Superdome, where parking will be available inside. Start time for the marathon and half-marathon is 7:00am, with the 5K race beginning at 7:05am.
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Posted June 13th, 2007 at 4:15 PM by Warwick Ford
Warwick Ford is a guest contributor to The Final Sprint and author of “Fun on Foot in America’s Cities” and “Fun on Foot in New England,” the books that describe and map the best on-foot routes in U.S. cities. Check out FunOnFoot.com for more information and to purchase the book or maps.
Boston is a city of the young (the region is host to way more than its fair share of the nation’s top colleges) and the young at heart. This makes it a dream city for running, jogging, or walking. There is a massive foot-mobile population, so if you feel like a jog almost anywhere here you will rarely feel out of place.
However, wise choice of route always makes a run or jog more enjoyable and easier to embark upon and finish. For a training or recreational route to be motivating and enjoyable, the Fun on Foot model says it needs to have four attributes: Comfort from both the safety and underfoot perspective; Attractions to make it interesting; Convenience to city center and public transit; and a worthy Destination to help motivate you to finish the route.
In “Fun on Foot in New England” we applied this model to Greater Boston and came up with 13 excellent routes. Narrowing this down, here are the very best routes that are just too good for any outdoor exerciser to miss:
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