{"id":935,"date":"2010-04-20T00:42:56","date_gmt":"2010-04-20T00:42:56","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.ice-dance.com\/site\/2010\/04\/20\/2008-eastern-sectional-championships-easterns-experience-blog\/"},"modified":"2026-04-06T00:49:21","modified_gmt":"2026-04-06T04:49:21","slug":"2008-eastern-sectional-championships-easterns-experience-blog","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.ice-dance.com\/site\/2008-eastern-sectional-championships-easterns-experience-blog\/","title":{"rendered":"2008 Eastern Sectional Championships &#8211; Easterns Experience Blog"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; TRAVEL DAY<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>by Michelle Wojdyla<\/p>\n<p>In all my years covering figure skating, I have never attended a Regional or  Sectional Championship. This week marks my first, as I am in Raleigh for the  Eastern Sectional Figure Skating Championships, a.k.a. \u201cEasterns.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>With no fall invitational event (Campbell\u2019s) and my Skate America plans shot,  I was antsy for a cold rink and the smell of Zamboni fumes. OK, not the fumes,  exactly. That doesn\u2019t sound right. More like the smell that floats around after  the ice is freshly flooded. I love that smell. I looked to see where Easterns  was being held, and was pleasantly surprised to read it was in Wake Forest. My  sister, Monica, lives in Raleigh, so I had a place to stay. It works out very  well for her, too, because she needed a cat sitter for Sunday and Monday while  she goes to The Police concert in Atlanta. Perfect!<\/p>\n<p>Through e-mail conversations, it became clear that four of us who  photographed the Lake Placid Ice Dance Championships would be at the three  Sectionals. Howard Mager is out at Pacific Coasts, and his son Travis  volunteered to be an athlete blogger. Katie Weigel and Melanie Hoyt were  tag-teaming Mids in Michigan. Daphne is home, coordinating everything. Of course  she\u2019s already sent multiple spreadsheets with scheduling information and work  flow matrices. In my next life, I want to come back with Daphne\u2019s organizational  skills (and Julianne Hough\u2019s body, but that\u2019s another story). <\/p>\n<p>Since my  accident, I have become extremely night blind. This poses a huge challenge,  especially now that we are off Daylight Saving Time. It\u2019s a 500-mile  door-to-door trip from New Jersey to my sister\u2019s, so I\u2019m racing the clock to  make it before sundown. The route is pretty easy: straight down I-95 into I-85  then a couple of smaller roads to get to her apartment.<\/p>\n<p>Rain was on and off through New Jersey and into Maryland, but nothing too  bad. I never needed my windshield wipers on the fastest speed. The short stretch  of Delaware is one of my least favorite highways. After the toll booth, it feels  like 8 lanes\u20148 narrow lanes\u2014of non-stop speeding and weaving traffic all trying  to get to one of the million exits both left and right. I guess people who drive  it all the time aren\u2019t that flustered by it. I can\u2019t say the same for myself.<\/p>\n<p>Probably my absolutely least favorite place to drive in the U.S. is the I-495  beltway around Washington, D.C. Again, I\u2019m sure it doesn\u2019t faze those who drive  it regularly, but I have some serious hate on for that circle of doom. I know a  lot of people think New Jersey drivers are insane, but that\u2019s second nature to  me. Go figure. I tried to distract myself from the fear of Death By Diplomat SUV  by playing Vietnam-era protest songs, because, yeah, my music selections will  subliminally impact those I am driving past.<\/p>\n<p>As I pass signs for Greenbelt, I take a moment of silence in memory of the  glory days of \u201cLandover.\u201d &lt;sniff&gt;<\/p>\n<p>Virginia is much bigger than it looks on the map. My mom refers to this  section of the trip as \u201cand then you drive for 10 hours through Virginia.\u201d It  didn\u2019t seem so bad this time, though. Traffic significantly died down soon after  leaving the D.C. area. I entertained myself by checking out vanity license  plates. A couple days ago I read that Virginia has the highest percentage of  vanity plates in the country, over 16%. It seemed a little higher than that, but  I wasn\u2019t keeping track. Can\u2019t really play License Plate Bingo when you are  driving alone.<\/p>\n<p>Part of my plan to make it before dark is to avoid stops, aside from the one  to refuel. I made it pretty far south before I needed to find a gas station.  Somewhere in the middle of nowhere Virginia, I took an exit because I could see  the station was right at the top of the exit ramp. When I pulled up to the pump,  everything looked deserted. Not a human in sight. The pump worked, though, so I  was able to fill up, but the complete lack of other cars or people was really  creepy. I felt like a Lifetime movie waiting to happen. I could not get out of  there fast enough.<\/p>\n<p>Most of Virginia was in perfect fall foliage glow. The temperature was  perfect to roll down the windows and just drink in this gorgeous time of year.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps the most exciting part of the drive was the change in route 85 in  southern Virginia. The speed limit is now 70. I\u2019ve never even seen signs for a  speed limit over 65! (I didn\u2019t do much driving when the nationwide 55 mph max  went into effect in the early 70s.) Last time I drove to my sister\u2019s, it was  still 65. Thanks to my friend Google, I learned that the new speed went into  effect July 1. And then I wound up spending too much time reading the Wikipedia  entry on speed limits throughout the U.S. and boring my sister with trivia  regarding my new knowledge.<\/p>\n<p>Although I heard of the drought in the Atlanta area, I wasn\u2019t aware that the  Triangle Region was also having problems. Once we got my luggage into Monica\u2019s  apartment, she hit me with this request: \u201cthey\u201d prefer it if toilets are not  flushed unless necessary. Oh.<\/p>\n<p>One of my sister\u2019s cats, Seamus, needs heart medicine twice a day.  Fortunately for everyone, he is the best pill-taking cat ever! He\u2019s pretty easy  going in general and spends much of his time on neighborhood watch duty from his  window. Her other cat, Ringo, however, is not quite so easy to get along with.  I\u2019m his personal favorite (NOT!) just ahead of the vets who have labeled his  medical file with warning labels about his biting issues. Last time I catsat, I  took camera phone photos to send to my sister to let her know I was keeping them  alive. Seamus was a natural in front of the camera. Ringo? Not so much. Note the  warmth and affection in the photo I took of him. You\u2019d think he was Oksana  Domnina and I was a flower sweeper in the kiss and cry!<\/p>\n<p>Well, that\u2019s it for now. I will write more as I can throughout the week. My  rink time will be limited because of the driving in the dark issues, so I\u2019m at  the mercy of my sister if I can stay past 4:30.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>###<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div>\n<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; DAY 2 &#8211; THE EVENT BEGINS<\/strong><br \/>by Michelle Wojdyla<\/p>\n<p>InIt\u2019s nearly 2 a.m. and I\u2019m ready to fall asleep, but want to get some  things down in case I forget them.<\/p>\n<p>Monica came with me tonight, since I only needed to shoot novice compulsories  and it wouldn\u2019t be too long. It felt weird being in long sleeve sweaters when  it\u2019s in the upper 70s, but it didn\u2019t take long for Monica to add another layer  of clothing. Spending some time in the rink can do that to a person.<\/p>\n<p>My mom and I always were the skating fans in my house. My sister never got  into it. Having her around for sectionals is very cool. She gets some insight  into my work covering events, and I get to look at a competition through fresh  eyes.<\/p>\n<p>The complex the rinks are in is under major construction. Unfortunately,  Monica\u2019s GPS system did not know this. It took us a while to find out which door  led to skating. Good thing we found it when we did, because we almost drove  through a skateboard park in the complex. While driving around all the various  buildings, I kept telling my sister to look for Zambonis and we\u2019ll know we are  close. Finally found one, so we knew we were getting warmer. Then I spot a girl  with her hair in a perfect bun. She also had the bottom of some chiffon strips  showing under her jacket. Finally we find a row in the parking lot that has  license plates from all over the Eastern U.S. This has got to be it!<\/p>\n<p>I asked a woman outside for a smoke, if this was the right place to confirm.  Monica didn\u2019t know why I thought this woman would know. Elementary, my dear  sister. How many women with fur coats do you see outside in this weather?<\/p>\n<p>We went over to registration to pick up our credentials. It went very  smoothly. Almost immediately I spy familiar faces. It\u2019s Pilar Bosley and her  mom, Sherry. We then go on a quest to find Scott Cudmore, who is the go-to guy  for critical things like photo positions. He offers me judges\u2019 side, next to the  trial judges. And they have high barstools on various raised boxes. Rink  lighting is really decent for a non-televised event.<\/p>\n<p>On our trek to the other side of the rink (which involves a variety of  passages) it become a who\u2019s who of skating. Chatted with Karl Kurtz for a little  bit. Spotted Kristi Yamaguchi, a baby, and Mrs. Yamaguchi taking in the action.  Right behind the judge\u2019s stand is a banner honoring Brent Hedican, Other  notables in and around were (in no particular order) Ron Luddington, Philip  Dulebohn, Aren Nielsen Eve Chalom and Matthew Gates.<\/p>\n<p>While novice men\u2019s short program was ending, the divot patrol was slushing  the ice. Monica pointed out that the girls have pink gloves and the guys green.  However, both guys have an actual full pair while the girls are splitting a  pair.<\/p>\n<p>I keep falling asleep and I don\u2019t know if this blog is coherent. I\u2019ll wrap up  for now with a few random thoughts:<\/p>\n<p>Pilar ate my cookie. Well, the cookie that was for supposed to be for me.  That\u2019s just mean. (Just kidding, Pilar!)<\/p>\n<p>I chatted with Ben Nykiel for a while. Ben designed and wrote the codes for  ice-dance.com\u2019s new partnersearch. I mistakenly called him a geek (in the  affectionate tone of voice used by a person who graduated from Carnegie Mellon  University). Ben would like to make it clear that he is not a geek. Prodigy,  genius\u2014those are acceptable terms.<\/p>\n<p>Nap time for me and then a reread of this to see how poorly I butchered  sentence structure before heading back to the rink. More later.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>###<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div>\n<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; DAY 2.25 &#8211; KITTEI &#038; JACK HELP MAKE IT WORK<\/strong><br \/>by Michelle Wojdyla<\/p>\n<div>\n<p>On Wednesday when I was photographing the novice compulsory dance, I was  having a lot of trouble focusing properly. After remounting the lens, checking  all my settings, and making sure the little switch was on autofocus, I still  couldn\u2019t get it working. The skaters were already on the ice, so I shot the  first group on manual focus. I\u2019m not denying that today\u2019s photographers are  spoiled by many of the advancements in technology. Doing skating photography  with manual focus? That\u2019s just mean.<\/p>\n<p>Kittie Deemer (<a href=\"http:\/\/kdeemer.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">kdeemer.com<\/a>),  who was shooting the event for the official photographer who sells to the  parents, also had a Canon camera. She tried my lens on her body and couldn\u2019t get  it to work either. Not good.<\/p>\n<p>It was too late to call Canon and ask to borrow a lens. Kittie gave me the  name of some photographers in Raleigh who might be able to loan me equipment.  Big problem is that the hours of the competition don\u2019t allow me to get away from  the rink.<\/p>\n<p>In the spirit of Ice-Dance.com\u2019s unofficial motto, Tim Gunn\u2019s \u201cmake it work!\u201d  I put on my 28-70\/2.8 lens and hoped that I was able to get usable images.  Fortunately, we weren\u2019t running anything large on <a href=\"http:\/\/ice-dance.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">ice-dance.com<\/a>, so I could crop to my heart\u2019s content.<\/p>\n<p>And then I met my hero, Jack Deere.<\/p>\n<p>Jack runs Three Oaks Photography (<a href=\"http:\/\/threeoaksphotography.com\/\" target=\"_blank\">threeoaksphotography.com<\/a>), who was the event photographer  Kittie was working with. Jack had finished his shooting for the day and hands me  his 70-200\/2.8 lens so I can finish the compulsory dance. During breaks in the  action, he checks out my camera and lens, but doesn\u2019t know what is wrong with  it. Between his lens and mine, I know that my camera body is not the  problem.<\/p>\n<p>I was leaving right after the CD scores were posted and I was able to get my  quotes. Jack asked if I would like to borrow his Tamron 18-200\/3.5-6.3 lens. Of  course I would rather use a 2.8 lens, but I heard Tim Gunn\u2019s voice in my head  and knew that a 200mm would be workable, especially since I wasn\u2019t using any of  the photos for print, only web. I was grateful for Jack\u2019s offer and he really  saved my butt.<\/p>\n<p>Monica was pretty shocked that a man I just met gave me, a woman he just met,  a lens worth hundreds of dollars. I told her it was just the wonderful karma\/pay  it forward attitude that so many photographers have. I\u2019ve been the lender on  occasion. Things happen, and it is wonderful when someone is willing to  help.<\/p>\n<p>So for the skaters and their families out there who didn\u2019t have a chance to  buy photos during the event, please check out the Three Oaks Photography website  for photos from the event.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>###<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div>\n<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; DAY 2.5 MINI BLOG<\/strong><br \/>by Michelle  Wojdyla<\/p>\n<p>1:04 a.m.<\/p>\n<p>Just finished transcribing quotes from junior dancers. Still  have to do novice free dance. And then actually write the reports.<\/p>\n<p>Daphne  has all the competition photos from yesterday and today. I still have a bunch of  random ones for some of the special galleries. Will have to look through all the  files to find them.<\/p>\n<p>Got an email from Mel, who&#8217;s doing Mids coverage.  Fell asleep in the middle of my reply email. Not good.<\/p>\n<p>Tomorrow is a  frighteningly early day for me, and then I have a seven hour break. I am  promising to do my best to get caught up. It&#8217;s really difficult to do all this  alone. Monica&#8217;s been amazingly helpful at the arena, but she isn&#8217;t able to write  up the reports and such.<\/p>\n<p>I have a ton of mental and written notes for  some bloggish-type stuff. I can&#8217;T wait to be able to put it all  together.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>###<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div>\n<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; DAY 3 &#8211; SLEEP BLOGGING<\/strong><br \/>by Michelle Wojdyla<\/p>\n<p>Someone today told me they were amused by my mini blog from Thursday night  when I said I fell asleep replying to email. Tiny problem with that.<\/p>\n<p>I don\u2019t remember writing a mini blog or sending it to Daphne to post for  me.<\/p>\n<p>Could I have been sleepblogging? When I was really young, I would  occasionally sleepwalk. I\u2019ve heard about people who\u2019ve been taking sleeping aids  binge eating in the middle of the night and not remembering it. But  sleepblogging?&nbsp; Really?<\/p>\n<p>I love that commercial for some new medication whose side effects can cause  intense urges to gamble. Gotta say, that\u2019s a new one to me.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s 2:04 a.m. and I am getting close to catching up. I have sent all my  photos to Daphne, and I think she\u2019s uploaded them all. I still need to do a few  event reports (novice and intermediate free dance, junior OD) but I\u2019d I may not  be awake right now, so how can I trust myself to do the right thing? It also  doesn\u2019t help that the stack of papers I thought was the novice FD protocol is  actually a judging guide to pre-prelim through senior pairs free skates. I have  no idea why I have that. I\u2019m guessing that someone who really wanted the  breakdown of pairs elements and the required number of each at the various test  levels may not be thrilled with the 11 pages of novice free dance GoEs now in  their posession.<\/p>\n<p>I still have my list of random things I wanted to write about, and my goal is  to do that tomorrow and\/or Sunday. Someone asked me when everything would be  online. It\u2019s not that I\u2019m complaining, because I am truly enjoying myself at  this event. It is just challenging time-wise because I am responsible for all  the action, podium, and backstage photos\u2014both taking them and editing them to  ice-dance.com\u2019s specs. I also have event reports on each of the individual dance  events across five levels. And blogs. And occasionally proofreading writing  coming in from the other sections. If I could clone myself, this would be so  much easier! But, unless I\u2019ve been sleepcloning, I don\u2019t see that happening. I  probably would have had to go to sleepuniversitying, too. Hmm. Well, actually, I  do recall my 8:30 a.m. Music History class causing some serious head bobs. It\u2019s  not like Gregorian Chants before breakfast give the same peppy feeling as the  Silver Samba.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s now 2:18 and I really need to sleep. Monica is heading to Atlanta in the  morning for The Police concert. I swear if I asked her who were the three teams  who competed juvenile dance, she would reply Sting, Andy and Stewart.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div>\n<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; DAY 4 &#8211; CLARE &#038; CHASE <\/strong><br \/>by  Michelle Wojdyla<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>Unfortunately I was unable to make it to the senior events. I was able to  catch up with Clare Farrell and Chase Fishpaw. Here\u2019s the scoop from them:<\/p>\n<p>Clare: Two weeks ago we were just practicing. Took a tumble, both of us. I  broke my thumb. It\u2019s an avulsion fracture on one of the thumb joints. I broke a  piece of the bone off. They didn\u2019t set it. I just have to make it as immobile as  possible. I have a cast that I wear every day and then one for when I\u2019m skating.  Everybody at University of Delaware was really helpful and found a way I could  still skate and wear a cast. Jeff Schneider was really helpful. We didn\u2019t know  if we\u2019d be able to skate [at sectionals], but we knew if we just came and stood  on the ice, that we would make it.<\/p>\n<p>Chase: We trained last week and it was working all right. Not fully training,  but doing what we could. It was feeling good on Monday.<\/p>\n<p>Clare: It\u2019s day-by-day whether we can skate or not. I\u2019ll be healed by  mid-December, so I\u2019ll be fine for nationals.<\/p>\n<p>Chase: I get hit with it occasionally. It\u2019s really quite nice. I enjoy it a  lot, especially right on my nose.<\/p>\n<p>One other Farrell-Fishpaw tidbit.<\/p>\n<p>Chase wears the hinge boot for his skates. Instead of lacing all the way up  like regular boots, the top part uses a wire for the crisscrosses around the  ankle. Chase\u2019s wire snapped.<\/p>\n<p>In the spirit of good sportsmanship, junior pairs champion Michael Chau took  the wire out of his own skate and let Chase use it for  competition.<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<p>###<\/p>\n<p>\u00a0<\/p>\n<div>\n<p><strong>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; WRAP-UP<\/strong><br \/>by Michelle Wojdyla<\/p>\n<div>\n<div>\n<p>The fire I had going in my sister\u2019s fireplace is on its last crackles of  life. As of 11:40 p.m. Sunday night, Ringo has only drawn blood twice. I think  that makes today a success. Before I call it a night and rest up before my drive  home tomorrow, I wanted to write my wrap-up blog about this week.<\/p>\n<p>After the heat and sunshine of Wednesday, Thursday was a shocking change. It  was raining. Really, really raining. Monica and I pack on the layers and head  for the rink. We opt to park in a different location because it\u2019s closer to the  door. Nevertheless, we are drenched. Monica is juggling an umbrella and a travel  mug of tea. A gust of wind blows, and Monica is now wearing much of the tea all  over her left\u2026let\u2019s just say she was wearing tea. I couldn\u2019t help but laugh,  though, when she bent over and squeezed to try to get some of it out of her  sweater. It just looked so wrong.<\/p>\n<p>My thin coat is water proof-ish, but not deluge-proof. When we got to our  section in the rink next to the judges\u2019 stand, I spread my coat out so that it  could dry off.&nbsp; It never did. Definitely not the most comfortable we\u2019ve ever  been.<\/p>\n<p>Since we are in serious drought mode, no one is allowed to complain about the  rain. We embrace it. Everyone keeps reminding each other of this.<\/p>\n<p>Although she\u2019s not completely hooked, I can tell Monica is enjoying this  skating thing. She got a decent digital camera (not an SLR, but otherwise a  great point and shoot) and is trying to take action photos. I think she now has  a new appreciation for what I do and how hard it can be. A few times she goes  off in search of off-ice photos and various score sheets. She\u2019s also taking  notes for me so that I can write up my reviews. I get a kick out of her being  able to pick out things I should write about. She\u2019s intrigued by the costumes  and declares Ilana Morse\u2019s free dance dress her favorite.<\/p>\n<p>At one point during a warm-up, we see a green crystal on the ice, and people  skating too close. Worried that someone might hit it and fall, we are able to  catch the attention of Ben Nykiel, who picks it up and puts it on the ledge in  front of Monica. She gets a souvenir and saves someone from a potential  accident. It\u2019s win-win.<\/p>\n<p>During a results run, Monica spots a credential awaiting pick up. It\u2019s for  Elaine Zayak. Monica has heard of Elaine Zayak, so she gets a kick out of  that.<\/p>\n<p>On our drive home, Monica mentions she needs to stop for glitter. It\u2019s been a  long day of ice dancing, so this kind of statement doesn\u2019t faze me in the least.  I asked her what color. Color? Oh. She said she needs to stop for <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">litter<\/span>.  That makes more sense. The cats need to pee much more than they need  bedazzling.<\/p>\n<p>Because there were only two media people in attendance (Lynn Rutherford was  writing for Ice Network) we didn\u2019t have a mixed zone. It was all just casual.  Most of the older ice dancers know me from years of covering them. It got to the  point where instead of me tracking them down, they found me and asked if I  needed quotes. Justin Morrow asked if he could say that he just wants to \u201chave  fun and skate his best\u201d rather than the oh-so-trite \u201cI just want to skate my  best and have fun.\u201d No, that\u2019s not allowed, either.<\/p>\n<p>Katie Wyble and I have a discussion about Pittsburgh (her home, my former  home) that winds up with us chatting about hair color. My assignment now is to  Photoshop a picture of her with red hair so she can see what it would look like.  I also have the same assignment from Danielle Gamelin.<\/p>\n<p>Speaking of Gamelins, one of my favorite parts of the week was getting to  meet Donna (Danielle and Alex\u2019s mother). We had a long conversation about brain  injuries, and it was just amazing to talk to her.<\/p>\n<p>The pacing of sectionals was very comfortable to me, mostly because I was  just covering the ice dance events. It had many opportunities to sit down and  just chat with skaters and their parents. In Lake Placid, I\u2019m over in section 8  and am cut off from civilization. Easterns was different. Chase Fishpaw and I  got into a linguistics conversation that was very cool. Chase has got to be one  of the easiest people to talk to that I\u2019ve ever met. Whatever path he takes in  the medical field, I know he will be great at it.<\/p>\n<p>During an interview with Una Donegan and Andrew Korda, Hilary Gibbons says  her wedding to Justin is the week before St. Paul nationals. I can\u2019t even  imagine what January is going to be like for them.<\/p>\n<p>Saturday afternoon while waiting for the junior free skate scores, Pilar and  I try to pull Trophee Eric Bompard results via internet on my cell phone.&nbsp; We  must find out how Meryl &#038; Charlie did. Fortunately, Daphne calls with the  news of their bronze, before I can figure out how to look the info up.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s almost 1 a.m. so I\u2019m going to wrap this up even though I know I\u2019ve  forgotten a million things.<\/p>\n<p>I want to thank Scott Cudmore and the amazing volunteers for making Easterns  an incredible event. It was one of the smoothest I have ever been to. Southern  hospitality made everyone feel welcome. I can\u2019t think of a single complaint. The  facilities were wonderful and being inside a mall-like setting with multiple  food options was so convenient. I am so lucky to have had the opportunity to  cover this event. Even though I never set foot on the ice, I am leaving Raleigh  feeling like I am the biggest winner of all.<\/p>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>EASTERNS EXPERIENCE &#8211; TRAVEL DAY by Michelle Wojdyla In all my years covering figure skating, I have never attended a Regional or Sectional Championship. 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