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5 ways to keep busy in Tucson this weekend

  • Apr 16, 2015
  • Apr 16, 2015 Updated Apr 25, 2015
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Take to the streets for Cyclovia, stuff yourself on local fare, Zumba till you drop and more.

Streets open to people, close to cars at Cyclovia

We’re usually told not to play in the streets.

But Living Streets Alliance is encouraging it — at least on Sunday — during its spring Cyclovia event, where 4ƒ miles of streets, from downtown to South Tucson, will be open to people by closing them to cars.

“Tucson is famous for Fourth Avenue,” said Kylie Walzak, program coordinator for Living Streets Alliance. “But this route goes along and explores South Fourth Avenue, which is an under-recognized extension of Fourth Ave. and yet has many local businesses and restaurants.”

Families and individuals can join the route at any location and can walk, bike, jog, skate or roll in the streets from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Walzak recommends families park south of 22nd Street where there are no restrictions on parking in neighborhoods.

“Parking is restricted in the neighborhoods in the north,” Walzak said. “Think twice about parking in Armory Park or Barrio Viejo. They are patrolled on Sundays. Don’t park in areas that require parking permits.”

Cyclovia isn’t just about biking, walking and jogging.

More than 20 featured activity partners have signed on, which means fun stuff and free goodies for you and the family at various activity hubs along the route.

Fun activities include a mini-mutant bikes obstacle course at BICASPalooza, a Clif Kid rock climbing wall, bike decorating stations, a misting station and a photo booth.

Free goodies include snacks at the Garden Kitchen, bread samples from Beyond Bread and bike safety kits from Allstate, among others.

Be sure to pick up a scavenger hunt card at one of the five information booths or any of the activity hubs when you get there. When you stop at an activity hub, ask for a sticker. If you get five stickers in a row, you’ll be entered to win a free bike.

Cyclovia events have grown in popularity since they started six years ago.

Walzak says about 30,000 people are expected to attend Sunday’s event.

Concerts, cows and cotton candy: Yep, Pima County Fair is on

Pima County Fair opens its 2015 run Thursday and for the next 10 days, expect to hear this from your little ones:

“Can we go to the fair?”

This would be a perfect opportunity to get them to say please as in, “Can we go to the fair please?”

See how that works?

The Pima County Fair runs through April 26 and in addition to all the fun kids can have — from cotton candy to carnival rides and a Disney Channel star in concert — there’s plenty to please adults: the Mach 1, G Force, Speed and the Mega Drop are places to start before you take the ultimate plunge on Insanity.

After those nail-biting carnival rides, you may want to hit the Montejo Sunset Cantina Bar and Grill for a cold one — or two — or grab a beer from a vendor at the Budweiser Main Stage on the backside of the fairgrounds and catch a concert.

For the next 10 days, some of the biggest names in rap, rock, country and classic rock will put on some of Tucson’s hottest concerts of the year on the sprawling stage. Concert admission is free with paid fair admission: $8 for adults, $4 for kids 6 to 10 and free for anyone 5 and younger. Reserved seats are $15 extra.

Country singer David Nail (“Whatever She’s Got”) launches the concert series at 8 p.m. Thursday. The rest of the lineup:

  • Def Jam singer-songwriter Jeremih, 8 p.m. Friday.
  • Hard rockers Jack Russell’s Great White, Dokken, Sebastian Bach and Jackyl beginning at 4 p.m. Saturday.
  • Pop sibling act R5 featuring Disney Channel star Ross Lynch (“Austin & Ally,” “Teen Beach Movie”) at 3 p.m. Sunday.
  • Mexican-American hip-hop artist Baby Bash, 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
  • San Diego alt-rockers Switchfoot at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday.
  • Oakland hip-hop artist G-Eazy at 8 p.m. next Thursday.
  • Headbanging rockers Tesla, 8 p.m. April 24.
  • Country singer Joe Nichols, 8 p.m. April 25.
  • Mexico’s Banda Los Recoditos, 8 p.m. April 26.

Race co-director: Runners 'can really find the meaning of life'

Tim Bentley wants Southern Arizona runners to know one thing in advance of Saturday’s Spring Cross Country Classic 5K: Fastest, slowest, it doesn’t matter. Just run.

Well, another thing: Bring a mug.

The 3.1-mile race will be followed by a potluck, egg toss and beer garden, a key selling point to thirsty runners, and is expected to draw more than 250 entrants.

The Star talked to the event’s co-director:

From the beer garden afterward and the egg toss, it seems clear that you are seeking participants from across the spectrum of ability:

A: “Regardless of where our finishers are on their journey, everyone is on the journey to better themselves. I tell people all the time, there’s only one winner of the race, but 400 or 500 finishers, sometimes 1,000 finishers. Everyone has a story about why they run the race. I love fast people; that’s fun to watch. But I’m just as inspired, if not more, by someone running in their first race, setting a goal, accomplishing it. They’ve made the decision. Those stories are just as valid as the winner who ran the fastest. Everyone invests the time to practice, run, train, get up in the morning. You can’t discount the story.”

What is the community aspect of an event like this, and how does it bring people together?

A: “The community aspect is everybody facing the same challenge, and everyone is usually running for themselves or a someone else or a cause. Getting to the starting line, the same nervousness, understanding that everyone is running the same trails, hills, and that it’s going to be hard. Fastest, slowest, everybody has to face the same challenge. There is a shared, common bond. We looked at this course, we ran it, we conquered it. We did it together. That’s what draws people to these races. There’s been such a running boom the last eight to 10 years, and 5Ks are one of the fastest growing races in the country. It’s huge. It’s because people have the desire to take care of themselves, family and community.”

You mentioned that people often run for someone or something; as a non-Hodgkin lymphoma survivor, how important is it to find that thing to run for, and how much more important does it make these events?

A: “What I think that people find in themselves is that personal challenge of overcoming something in your life and how running can help. For me, personally, running gave me a lot of tools to fight that battle. That was a determined attitude, a commitment to do the hard things, the understanding that if I don’t get up and run, no one is going to do that for me. You can find that in life. If I don’t get to work, no one does it for me. This little $15 race — you can really find the meaning of life in Tucson.”

Running a marathon, even a half-marathon, can be daunting for a lot of non-runners. Does having this event be a 5K encourage people not to be scared at the distance?

A: “If you’re going to say, ‘I’m doing a marathon,’ that’s lots of preparation, time, mileage — even a half-marathon. But a 5K — if you had to, you could go out and walk 3 miles today. It might take an hour and a half, but you could do it. But if you invested five weeks into this, you might complete it in 45 minutes. That’s a goal you can set for yourself that’s achievable. ‘I’m going to run a marathon for my 40th, or 50th’ — why not make a commitment to run, and it doesn’t have to be a marathon, but just start running and incorporate it in your life?”

This is billed as the only 5K in Southern Arizona with a beer garden — you called it a picnic with a 5K. Why is that important?

A: “I’ve been the director of this for about six or seven years, and we’ve had a beer garden since then. We had UA kids do a study in 2006, 2007, and we found people were often intimidated at a race. They thought it was all fast people. We thought, let’s make it fun and inclusive so people can have a good time from start to finish. You’re done, and there’s food, beer, an egg toss, you take some pictures. For $15 you had a great time. Maybe you didn’t run the fastest, but maybe it’s your first 5K and you want to do it again. Four hours of your Saturday morning, it was a riot and now you have a good taste in your mouth about running.”

Restaurant news

Viva La Local Food Festival Saturday

Viva La Local Food Festival is teaming up with Living Streets Alliance’s Cyclovia Tucson for what organizers are calling Tucson Tandem — a weekend of celebrating local food and five miles of car-free streets.

Viva La Local takes place from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at Rillito Park, 4502 N. First Ave., and Cyclovia is Sunday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., connecting Tucson’s downtown near Armory Park to South Tucson.

The food festival is presented by Heirloom Farmers Markets.

Viva La Local features more than 25 restaurants serving $5 plates, plus more than 80 farmers market vendors, local beer and wine, and local bands. Admission is $6, and kids under age 12 enter free.

Living Streets Alliance is offering complimentary bike valet parking.

Restaurants include Mama Louisa’s, Queen Creek Olive Oil, Mama’s Hawaiian Bar-B-Cue, Mother Hubbard’s, Gourmet Girls, Augustín Kitchen, Loews Ventana Canyon, JW Marriot, Café at The YWCA, Pasco Kitchen, Veg In a Box, Frankie’s South Philly Cheesesteaks, Rod’s KC BBQ, The Twisted Tandoor, Snow Peas, Pastiche, Renee’s Organic Oven and Boca, among others.

Beer and wine provided by Iron John’s, Borderlands, Barrio, Sentinel Peak, Arizona Stronghold and Quench Distributing. More info at vivalalocalfoodfest.com

Mexican restaurant opens in Tucson Mall

Eat Fresh Mexican Food Raspados opened their second mall outpost at the Tucson Mall food court last week. It also has a raspados stand on the second floor of the mall.

The restaurant offers a full menu of Mexican entrees including burritos, tacos and sandwiches. It’s open during mall hours.

‘Primal Grill’ chef
to talk BBQ history

Steven Raichlen, who was here for the Tucson Festival of Books, returns to Tucson next Thursday for a lecture called “Up in Smoke: The History of Barbecue.” The talk is free and starts at 7 p.m. in room 100 in Social Sciences, 1145 E. South Campus Drive on the University of Arizona campus.

Raichlen has won five James Beard awards for his cookbooks. His 780- page book, “BBQ USA,” won the 2004 award for Tools and Techniques.

Every day’s a dance party for Zumba instructor

“I come to party,” says Patricia Matthews, decked out in a black Zumba T-shirt, chartreuse pants and turquoise-colored tennis shoes — along with her trademark sporty cap.

She also wears long dangling pink earrings and a couple of bracelets along with a Fitbit on her wrist that has already recorded that she’s burned 1,305 calories by early Sunday afternoon — and she’s just getting started.

She’s taking part in a sold-out session for Zumba instructors, taught by a Zumba jammer from Austria, that will stretch into the early evening.

“Zumba is very addicting, but it is addicting in a good way,” she says with a wide smile during a break from the choreographed steps to merengue and salsa tunes. “You dance with your friends for an hour.”

Devotees swear they can burn hundreds of calories.

Getting it all done

Matthews — who is married and the mother of teenagers — is always moving.

She teaches Zumba and other movement classes, including Tabata Boot Camp, every day of the week except Friday. Wednesday she teaches three classes in a row, which pushes that Fitbit up to nearly 3,000 calories.

Zumba is a class for all ages and abilities.

“I’m here to help them with an amazing workout,” she says, excited by the excitement she sees in her students when they master a move.

In addition to the Lighthouse/City YMCA and the Lohse Family YMCA downtown, she also teaches at the Tucson Jewish Community Center and to teachers at Davis Bilingual Magnet School, as well as a RIPPED class to employees at a private company.

She also hosts training sessions, such as the one Sunday, for instructors.

“In between all of this I am an extremely organized woman,” says Matthews, 42, who works as an accounting clerk and office administrator at Zonge International, which specializes in geophysical services.

Matthews also directs her passion for fitness to charitable causes such as the Zumba Fundraiser Party she’s organizing at the Tucson Chinese Cultural Center on Saturday. Proceeds will benefit two Tucson families through the Melonhead Foundation.

Events that help people with cancer are especially close to her heart, she says, explaining that many of the women in her family have had some form of it. “This is the way I want to give back,” she says.

She’s organizing the Susan B. Komen Party in Pink in October, and participates in about one charitable event a month.

Zumba changed her life

Zumba helped Matthews feel at home in a new country.

Born in Copiapó, a community in northern Chile, she grew up enjoying dance classes and cheerleading.

She met her husband, Josh, when he was doing a geophysical survey in Chile, and knew no English when they moved to the United States.

She was at home with two young children when her husband encouraged her to join a nearby big-box gym. It was there she discovered Zumba, and felt at home with the music, movement and camaraderie. Her instructor encouraged her to get certified.

“Everything started from that point,” she said.

Related to this collection

This is Tucson: Weekend of April 17th

This is Tucson: Weekend of April 17th

Irene and Samantha discuss free events in and around Tucson this weekend.

This is Tucson: Weekend of April 17th

This is Tucson: Weekend of April 17th

Irene and Samantha discuss free events in and around Tucson this weekend.

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