But it didn't feel like it at the time.
I'm about two months after the hip thing, and about three weeks after crutches. Other than muscle atrophy from non-use and some continued pain as connective tissue and joints get used to their new and previous situations, things are going well.
However, the strength of the union between the hip replacement parts and the bones is still increasing, and won't max out for many months. I'll be on restriction from kiteboarding and cycling for at least another 30 days.
As previous posts have reported, we gather with friends and family at least twice a year on the Outer Banks of North Carolina for kiting. This makes the 30th year we've done so, though windsurfing was the thing until about 2008. This year we packed ten folks into a house with a great launch on the Pamlico Sound side, and enjoyed good winds for several days.
By the way, the one in the foreground doesn't kite - yet. However, she had a great time splashing around and writing her name in the sand with her stick.Otherwise, there's always stuff to fix. My brother brings his jet ski for rescues, and to take videos of folks kiting and to help with beginners. A replacement starter solenoid had to be installed,
and I had to wrestle a new kite bladder into place. (See previous post about leaky bladders.)On Wednesday, the wind blew a bit stronger, so everyone that could was jumping and back-rolling and zooming around, having a great time. One of them came in for a break at one point, asking if anyone on the shore wanted the kite. I happened to be in a wetsuit with a harness on, and it was such a beautiful day, and the wind was perfect, and I started in that direction.... and my younger but wiser brother, the recently-retired orthopedic surgeon stepped between me and the kite, clipped in and rode off.
I guess in today's terms that was an "intervention," and he was right, and like I said, I guess that I should thank him... I guess...
As you might already know, the Outer Banks consist of several long and very skinny islands, essentially glorified sandbars, along which NC Highway 12 runs. Coming back from church on Sunday in Kitty Hawk, traffic stopped for about an hour as the flaming results of a head-on crash were cleaned up.